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READY FOR V-DAY. Angeli, a 24-year veteran florist and flower arranger, makes bouquets of roses in preparation for Valentine’s Day on Saturday. Lean Daval Jr.
Rody to PNoy:
TAKE THE BLAME P RESIDENT Benigno Aquino must take full responsibility for the operation to capture terror suspect Zulkifli bin Hir, alias Marwan, in Mamasapano, Maguindanao on January 25 that resulted in the death of 44 members of the elite Police Special Action Force (SAF), Davao City Mayor Rody Duterte on Wednesday said. “I do not want to offend the President but somebody has to tell him that he has to stop this blame game by taking full responsibility for what happened in Mamasapano,” Duterte said in a statement issued in Dumaguete City. “As Mayor of Davao City, for example, I take full
responsibility for whatever happens in an operation which I order to be implemented,” he said. The mayor cited a case in which policemen who were following his orders were charged for alleged excesses in the killing of suspected kidnappers in the city last year. Duterte visited two universities in Dumaguete Wednesday to push his advocacy for federalism which he considers the best option should the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law fail to pass Congress. He said somebody should own up the responsibility for the Mamasapano tragedy to
stop the blame game between the military and the police. Duterte was referring to statements issued by the police and the military to media and during the congressional investigation. Both institutions attributed the high number of casualties to the alleged lapses done by either of them before and during the actual operation. Marwan was reported killed in the operation based on a DNA test done by the Federal Bureau of Investigation on a biological sample taken from the encounter site in Mamasapano. Eighteen Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF)
guerrillas and at least four civilians were also killed during the gunfight. The MILF said they did not know they were fighting government forces since they did not have prior knowledge about the operation. The government and the MILF have an existing ceasefire agreement. They signed last year the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro, which is the product of on-and-off negotiations since 1987. In his address on February 6, Aquino blamed sacked SAF chief Director Getulio Napeñas Jr. for the tactical lapses that led to the death of the 44 SAF personnel. (MindaNews)
INSIDE EDGE
7 OLD-SCHOOL WAYS TO WIN YOUR LOVE’S HEART Affairs of the Heart A VALENTINE’S DAY SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT
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2 THE BIG NEWS EDGEDAVAO
VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
THE SEARCH BEGINS. Mutya ng Dabaw 2014 Francesca Enriques (right), together with Sinag ng Dabaw Jowielle Dawn Dogma (center) and Diwa ng Dabaw Mary Joyce Villanueva, announces the upcoming 2015 Mutya ng Dabaw screening on February 21 at The Royal Mandaya Hotel. The three women graced yesterday’s I-Speak media forum at City Hall. Lean Daval Jr.
Work on underground cables to start after Araw ng Davao By ARMANDO B. FENEQUITO JR.
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abf@edgedavao.net
HE Davao City Wires and Cable (WAC) technical team is set to start burying the electrical and communication wires between City Hall and the Sangguniang Panlungsod (SP) building next month after the Araw ng Davao delebration. Speaking in yesterday’s “I-Speak Media Forum,“ Office of the City Building Official (OCBO) assistant head lawyer Joseph Dominic Felizarta told reporters that the
team will start the excavation in the vicinity after the Araw ng Davao celebration so that the activities will not be disturbed. Felizarta said representatives from the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), National Telecommunications Commission (NTC), Davao City Water District (DCWD), PLDT-SMART, Globe Telecom, DC Tech, Sky Cable, Abratique and Associates, and BayanTel partici-
P17.3B in investments expected in Region 11
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NVESTMENTS worth P17.3 billion are expected “to be on the ground” in Davao Region this year, according to data from the regional office of Department of Trade and Industry (DTI). Data from DTI 11 said these came from the investment leads that the department recorded last year, where 28 companies committed to set up projects. The biggest project was
the P9.9 billion-oil and gas venture being planned in Davao del Sur. The oil and gas project was followed by the P5 billion-real estate development and transportation services projects which would cost at least P1 billion. Both will be set up in Davao City. Last year, the Board of Investments (BOI) 11 recorded P12.544 billion
FP17.3B, 12
pated in an ocular inspection yesterday initiated by the Davao Light and Power Company (DLPC). City Hall and the SP Building will be the pilot project on the proposed underground cabling system in the city. “It is part of the preparation... because if the underground cabling will be started there are lines from DCWD, DPWH, and cable companies that will be affect-
ed,” Felizarta said. He said the companies were included in the inspection so that the areas where the digging would be done would be identified. DLPC will initiate the excavation, allocating more than P70 million for the underground cabling. The wires and cables of the telecom and cable companies will be included so that there would be no more digging afterward. Felizarta, however, urged
the other companies to allocate a budget for the excavation and not to rely on the DLPC’s budget. The project is targeted to be completed by December this year. Felizarta gave assurance that the operations of the two government buildings will not be interrupted. Last January 28, Mayor Rodrigo R. Duterte signed Executive Order (EO) No. 2 series of 2015 constituting the WAC technical team based
on Ordinance No. 0177 - 14 series of 2014 which states that all electrical and telecommunication wires and cables within the vicinity of City Hall and the Sangguniang Panlugsod will be placed underground. The ordinance aims to bolster the image of the city as internationally competitive, making it tourist- and investment-attractive while sustaining and enhancing its environment.
Driz said the case against Baslan, who has returned to his poast at Sta. Ana Police Precinct, is now under the Regional Investigation and Detective Management Division (RIDMD). Driz said Baslan cannot immediately be suspended because he has the right to due process. “We are still waiting for the result of the investigation of the RIDMD. We cannot just suspend him without due process of the law
through hearing, summon, or investigation,” she said. Police Regional Office (PRO) 11 spokesperson Superintendent Antonio Rivera said Baslan’s case is now under evaluation through the RIDMD. “The evaluation will be the basis for filing a case against him,” Rivera said. Authorities are looking to file an administrative case of infidelity in the custody of prison against Baslan.
Cop in hot water as detainee escapes A By FUNNY PEARL A. GAJUNERA
POLICE officer is in hot water after a detainee at Sta. Ana Police Precinct escaped while throwing away garbage outside the precinct on Monday morning. Operatives of the Davao City Police Office (DCPO) have also mounted a manhunt operation against Reymart Padada, who had been detained for a theft case. Police said Padada escaped while throwing
garbage upon orders of Police Office (PO)3 Roman Baslan. Police said Padada fled after pushing Baslan and ran towards nearby Mini Forest. Sta. Ana Police Precinct station commander Superintendent Royina Garma said Baslan admitted that he let the detainee out without permission from his officers. DCPO spokesperson Senior Inspector Milgrace
VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
NEWS
EDGEDAVAO
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AFP ready to crush coup plotters: Palace
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ALACAÑANG on Thursday assured the Filipinos that the military is ready to face threats to national security. Presidential Communications Operations Office (PCOO) head Herminio Coloma Jr. stressed this after Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago confirmed that she received information about a new coup plot allegedly being hatched by a well-known businessman. Coloma said it is the duty of the Armed Forces of the
Philippines (AFP) to prevent and crush enemies of the state. “At ginagampanan nila ang tungkuling ito sa lahat ng pagkakataon,” he said in a Palace press briefing. Coloma noted that Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin confirmed the readiness of the AFP to perform its duty. “Lahat ng mga banta laban sa estado ay tinututukan at ganap ang kahandaan ng ating Sandatahang Lakas laban sa mga bantang ‘yan,” he added. (PNA)
Former rebs focused on livelihood: CSSDO GOING UNDERGROUND. Office of the City Building Official (OCBO) assistant head lawyer Joseph Dominic Felizarta tells reporters that the Davao City Wires and Cable (WAC) technical team will start the excavation between City
Hall and the Sangguniang Panlungsod (SP) building for the underground cabling system after the Araw ng Dabaw celebration next month. Felizarta was a guest in yesterday’s I-Speak media forum at City Hall. Lean Daval Jr.
Iqbal: Atrocities cannot be immediately blamed on MI
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ANGSAMORO Transition Commission (BTC) Chairman Mohagher Iqbal said on Thursday it would be unfair to immediately blame on the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) the reported atrocities and brutality in the killing of 44 Special Action Force (SAF) commandos in the Mamasapano encounter. “The delicate task of finding out who did what, especially the reported atrocities, cannot immediately be blamed on the MILF. That would be unfair,” Iqbal
said at the resumption of the Senate inquiry into the bloody encounter last Jan. 25 in Mamasapano, Maguindanao. Iqbal said the MILF was not the only group but there were also the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) and other private armed groups present when the SAF conducted ‘Oplan Exodus’ to capture two high-profile terrorists Zulkifli bin Hir and Basit Usman. “The SAF fought other armed individuals belonging to different networks and groups,” the BTC chair-
Rotarians, Bucana folks conduct free dental clinic
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DENTAL care mission was conducted last February 8 as part of the celebration of the 66th foundation day of Cesareo Villa-Abrille Elementary School on February 13, Friday, as revealed by school principal Jean Fe Colango. Henrietta Macapundag, president of the Federation of Bucana Homeowners Association, and Wesley Capute, president of the Rotary Community Corps of Bucana and their members spearheaded the implementation of the free dental clinic at the school gym in Bucana. The Rotary Club of South Davao, led by president Gerry Munda, president-nominee Sheryl Sardido and working secretary Charito Ceniza, also supported the dental clinic. The Rotarians brought 11 USEP Rotaractors headed by Mildred Baguio who helped in cleaning the dental
instruments and in dispensing medicines. The Bucana school was adopted by the South Davao Rotarians in 2004 when past Rotary governor Leoncio Villa-Abrille was club president. The City Mayor’s Office headed Mayor Rodrigo Duterte supported the dental activities by providing free lugaw and free ice cream to the patients that Bucana Kagawad Bing Apa had requested. The Don Cesareo Villa-Abrille Foundation Inc., a major sponsor of the dental mission, also provided snacks, lechon, food, and drinks for 100 people. All in all, the team of Dr. Jessie Mar Culaste, Dr. Hexel Verano, and Dr. Julius Cezar Mirto, helped by dental assistants Ann Luay and Quennie Curambao, served 100 pupils of the school and 50 residents of the barangay, or a total of 150 beneficiaries. Frances Marian VA Castaña
man told the joint Senate committees on public order and dangerous drugs, and peace, unification and reconciliation. He denied allegation that the MILF and the BIFF are conniving with each other. Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago, however, did not buy the claim of the MILF official. “I submit this failure to convey vital information such as the presence of Marwan in their area is a subject of bad faith,” Santiago said. Iqbal said the ‘unfortu-
nate encounter’ resulted not only in the killing of 44 SAF commandos but also 18 MILF fighters. “We must honor them by making sure that their sacrifice would not be in vain. While we cannot change the past, we can do something about the future,” Iqbal said. Iqbal, however, has no mention how many have been killed on the part of the BIFF. In the first Senate hearing, relieved SAF chief Gen. Getulio Napenas estimated that the groups that en-
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FREE DENTAL CLINIC SPONSORS. From left, Lawyer Leoncio Villa-Abrille, president of Don Cesareo Villa-Abrille Foundation; Rotarian Pres-Nominee Sheryl Sardido; Bucana Homeowners Federation Pres. Nanette Macapund-
By ARMANDO B. FENEQUITO JR.
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abf@edgedavao.net
HE Davao City Social Services and Development Office (CSSDO) is monitoring the 47 former members of the New People’s Army (NPA) who were given P50,000 each in livelihood assistance in December last year after surrendering to the government. In yesterday’s “I-Speak Media Forum,” Comprehensive Local Integrated Program (CLIP) focal person for rebel returnees Annabelle T. Lugo said the 47 ex-rebels are now focusing on their respective livelihoods. Lugo said after the returnees received their livelihood assistance, which came from the Office of President on the Peace Process (OPAPP), most of them invested in livestock and poultry production and vegetable farming. “Before they received the livelihood assistance, upon
surrendering, we already conducted an activity and different programs in line with their reintegration program,” she said. Lugo said they conducted a spiritual activity, basic business management skills training, and medical mission. “As of now, they are being monitored by the city social workers in the districts where they lived,” Lugo said. The rebels surrendered on separate occasions since 2011. Based on CSSDO data, there are 51 rebel returnees recorded in the city but only 47 received the P50,000 assistance from OPAPP. Lugo said two died due to illness, one had already received the assistancer from CLIP of Davao del Sur, while one could notbe located. The data showed that at the time of their entry to the NPA, 39 of them were farmers,
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ag; CVA Elem School principal Jean Fe Colango; RC South Davao Pres. Gerry Munda; and Rotary Community Corps Pres. Wesley Capute. Photo by Robinson Niñal Sr.
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VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
5 ECONOMY
EDGEDAVAO VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
Little Tokyo design due in July By CHENEEN R. CAPON
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crc@edgedavao.net
HE concept, design and costing of the proposed revival of “Little Tokyo” in Barangay Mintal will be available by July, the City Tourism Operations Office (CTOO) announced. “We still have to meet with barangay officials of Mintal because it’s their flagship project for this year,” CTOO head Lisette Marques told edge Davao in an interview at the Marco Polo
Davao. Marques said a task force will be created for the revival of Little Tokyo, which is eyed to become the city’s next tourist destination. The concept, design and costing of the revival will be done by the local government unit of Barangay Mintal. The proposed plan is to revive Little Tokyo by developing vital Japanese mementos in the area.
Tagum City all set for Trio Celebration
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AGUM City is set to go on a two-week revelry as the City Government of Tagum and the Tagum City Tourism Council are all set for the second instalment of the city’s Trio Celebration. The aforesaid trio celebration is comprised of the 2015 Tagum City Musikahan Festivals, the Tagumenyo Bisa’g Asa and the 17th Araw ng Tagum and will run from February 23 to March 7. The celebration, together with its calendar of activities, were adeptly presented during a Press Conference held on February 6, at the NCCC Mall, Ma-a, Davao City and at the February Edition of the Tagum Biz Talk at Big 8 Hotel on February 10 by its respective committee chairs: Ms. Marlene R. Alastra for the 2015 Tagum City Musikahan Festivals, Ms. Norma R. Pereyras for the Tagumenyo Bisa’g Asa and Ms. Carmen B. Apura for the 17th Araw ng Tagum. On February 12, their group is also set to promote the city’s Trio Celebration in a morning live TV guesting in Maayong Buntag Mindanao of ABS-CBN and on GMA’s Una Ka Bai on February 16. Specifically highlighted at the two media events was the fledgling Tagumenyo Bisa’g Asa (TBA) which was conceptualized on the premise that the expatriated constituents of the City of Tagum, including
the Overseas Filipinos Workers, will have to be recognized by the local government in consideration of their valued support and contribution to the economy of Tagum. The TBA will celebrate its second year after its inception. It was also stressed that the Tagum City Music Makers Concert is a newly- added event which will be held during the 2015 Musikahan Festivals. The concert will feature all the beneficiaries-graduates of the Tagum City Musical Instrument Workshop Program, which is one of the city’s literacy programs and is currently on its 11th year. Meanwhile, one of the major events of the 17th Araw ng Tagum is the Tagumpay Awards and Recognition 2015. During this event, the Tagumpay Excellence Award will be presented to any Tagumenyo, either individual or group, who has greatly contributed to the city’s growth, honor and glory through their distinguished and exemplary achievements whereas the Estorya ng Tagumpay Award will be conferred to any Tagumenyo whose story of success has been an inspiration to others and whose contribution to the economy of the city has not only substantially impacted the city and its constituents, but also the people outside of Tagum. (Richi Gulle/CIO Tagum)
CB flies 17M passengers
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EBU Pacific flew 16.9 million passengers in 2014, an increase of 17.5% from 14.4 million passengers flown in 2013. On average, CEB flights were 84% full during the year. CEB achieved notable passenger growth in both domestic and several international markets, with increased presence in the Middle East and Japan, and entry into Australia. The Cebu Pacific Air group increased flights to domestic markets, as its newly acquired subsidiary, Tigerair Philippines, launched eight domestic routes from its hubs in Manila and Cebu to Butuan, Clark, Cagayan de Oro, Davao, General Santos, Roxas, and Tagbilaran. In 2014, the airline launched direct non-stop flights from Manila to Kuwait,
Riyadh, and Dammam. CEB also launched a five times weekly service from Manila to Sydney. These are additional routes to its existing long haul service from Manila to Dubai. CEB expanded its operations in Japan with the launch of daily services from Manila to Tokyo and a four times weekly service to Nagoya. The airline also increased its flights to Osaka, from thrice weekly to a daily service. “Last January, CEB flew its 100 millionth passenger. We thank our passengers who have allowed us to fly with them throughout the years. Our passengers constantly inspire us to find ways to serve them better, and we look forward to enabling even more Filipinos to fly,” said Candice Iyog, CEB vice president for marketing and distribution.
“Officials of the Barangay Mintal were the ones who identified areas that will be rebuilt, not the officers from CTTO or City Planning and Development Authority,” Marques said. Once done, the proposal will be submitted to Tourism Infrastructure and Enterprise Zone Authority (TIEZA) of the Department of Tourism (DoT for possible funding.
However, Marques said there’s no specific timeline for the revival of the Little Tokyo which used to be a settlement for Japanese businessmen and farmers before the World War II broke out. Earlier last year, Marques said the restoration of Little Tokyo “will include the mapping of the Japanese heritage sites and the refurbishment and renovation of existing
Japanese monuments and relics in Mintal.” According to an earlier report, anyone can still find relic and ruins of Japanese hospitals at present, the Japanese cemetery, an artesian-well that was constructed and the source of potable water by Japanese abaca farmers and a monument in Mintal. Marques also said the proposal to bring back the
Little Tokyo in Mintal will need a budget between P50 million and P100 million The area, she said, needs to be restored because it is not in good condition anymore. Marques said reviving and enhancing the site is very important given that around 13,000 Japanese tourists, the second biggest tourist visitors in Davao City every year.
RELIGIOUS STORE. An elderly man checks out a miniature Sto. Niño figurine at a makeshift store selling religious items inside San Pedro Cathedral compound in Davao City yesterday. Lean Daval Jr.
DTI: Domestic sales up by 14.8% in 2014
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HE Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) in Davao Region reported an increase of 14.8 percent in domestic sales resulting from its initiated interventions. Based on its annual accomplishment report, DTIDavao reported that from a total of P942.78 million of domestic sales in 2013, it grew to P1.082 billion in 2014. Furthermore, it can also be noted that the 2014 accomplishment is four percent higher than the annual target of P1.040 billion.
Of the 2014 accomplishment in domestic sales, 53 percent was generated through market matching, 41 percent from monitored sales, four percent from Pasalubong Centers, and the remaining two percent from trade fairs. DTI-Davao officer-in-charge Maria Belenda Q. Ambi said the domestic sector’s remarkable performance can be attributed to the various marketing, product development, and productivity interventions provided by the agency to the region’s micro,
small and medium enterprises (MSMEs). “DTI has really been implementing programs, projects, and activities that will surely help our MSMEs improve,” Ambi said. Meanwhile, DTI-Davao was able to assist 7,169 MSMEs in 2014. This is higher by 57 percent as compared to 4,579 in 2013. Majority of these MSMEs, or 57 percent of them, have been previously assisted already, while the remaining 43 percent are newly developed
and assisted. Most of these entrepreneurs are found in Davao City, with 1,853; Davao Oriental with 1,483; Davao del Norte with 1,344; Davao del Sur with 988; and Compostela Valley with 678. Ambi said these MSMEs in the region benefitted from DTI’s programs and projects like the SME Roving Academy, Shared Service Facility (SSF), rehabilitation program for Typhoon Pablo-affected areas, and Industry Cluster. (DTI11/ JenMendoza)
ple as they take the crazy and bumpy road to the altar. Starring Carey Wilson as the highstrung Annie and Ken Marino as the easy-going Jake, each episode is about the couple’s funny and often heartwearming misadventures. Sitcom fans mustn’t miss this great new show. Debuting on Valentines’ Day, February 14, are two blockbuster Filipino movies. Airing on PBO (CH 409) is the Trophy Wife. Starring Heart Evangelista, Cristine Reyes, John Estrada, and Derek Ramsey, the movie centers on the conflict between two powerful women as they
vie for the hunky, party-going Chino. Fans of these great stars must watch this film to witness how romance quickly descends to maddening, suspense-ridden thrills. Airing on Cinema One (CH 401) is the romantic hit, Starting Over Again. Starring the country’s best dramatic actors, Toni Gonzaga, Iza Calzado, and Piolo Pascual, the film tracks the rise and fall of Ginny and Marco’s epic romance. Stretching from each character’s youth to the height of their careers, drama fans can witness the tension between the characters as the ultimate question is
asked: Do I stay with my true love or do I return to the woman that broke my heart? Don’t miss these great stories of love and loss this February. Only SKYcable provides quality home entertainment with the widest-range of standard and high definition channels with over 190 channels and other top-of-the-line services such as flexible subscription options via SELECT; iRECORD that records, pauses, and rewinds live TV; as well as real-time coverage of live concerts and sporting events via FREE VIEW and PAY-PERVIEW.
Celebrate romance this February only on SKYcable
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ET ready to fall in and out of love this month of hearts. SKYcable, in partnership with local and international networks, brings three great stories of romance to the TV screen. Catch them this February and be enthralled by the highs and lows of passion, on how love can bring couples joy, and how trials can break them apart. Premiering this February 13, Friday at 9:30pm on RTL CBS Entertainment (SD on CH 616, HD on CH 739) is Marry Me. A hit romantic comedy series from the US, it follows the love story of a long-time cou-
6 THE ECONOMY
EDGEDAVAO
VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
Coal-fired power plant in DavSur 37% complete By CHENEEN R. CAPON
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ONSTRUCTION of the 300 megawatt (MW) coal-fired power plant in Malita, Davao del Sur is now 37 percent complete, the Regional Development Council (RDC) 11 reported. Construction of the San Miguel Consolidated Global Power Corporation (SMC-GPC)owned coal-fired power plan, started with a ground breaking in July 2013 and will have an initial capacity of 150 MW.
“Construction of two units of 150 MW power plantsare scheduled for full commissioning in 2016,” Davao del Norte Gov. and RDC 11 chair Rodolfo del Rosario said in a recent media forum. Del Rosario said the power plant is upgradeable to 600 MW, and the initial 150 MW is scheduled for completion in second semester of 2015. “SMC-GPC’s 300 MW power shall be 36 percent of the
HE Social Security System (SSS) expects to increase by 50 percent its membership in the eastern part of Cagayan De Oro as it opens a new branch in Lapasan, Agora on February 12, 2015. The new SSS Lapasan Branch will serve about 7,600 members but projects 3,000 more by year-end as it starts to intensify mapping strategies for social security coverage. “We had initial discussions with the 10 municipalities and seven barangays under our jurisdiction to encourage membership especially among job-order personnel and farm workers,” said SSS Lapasan Branch Head Valentine Viajar-Aunzo. Areas covered by SSS Lapasan are the municipalities of Libona, Malitbog, Manolo Fortich, Villanueva, Claveria, Tagoloan, Balingasag, Lagonglong, Jasaan, Salay and seven barangays. SSS members will have easier access to the new branch located at the ground floor of the Market City building in Agora Complex. The complex houses jeepney terminals of the 10 municipalities covered by SSS Lapasan as well as bus terminals bound for Butuan, Davao, and Bukidnon. “The SSS is increasing its
presence all over the country to make SSS transactions easier and more convenient to our members. This also affords more segments of society immediate access to social security,” Officer-In-Charge for Northern Mindanao Edwin M. Alo said. SSS Lapasan Branch issues SS number; accepts and processes applications on salary loan as well as claims on retirement, disability, funeral and death including sickness notification. It also has a UMID Data Capture Station and e-Center facilities. Pensioners can also visit the Branch to comply with the Annual Confirmation of Pensioners to continue receiving their monthly pension. To date, SSS Lapasan has 755 employer accounts with 4,146 employees with a projected average collection of about P2 million per month. It also monitors membership of 2,707 self-employed members and 606 AlkanSSSya members which will remit about P2.7 million every month. Started in 2011, the AlkanSSSya program which derived its concept from a piggy bank, is a large metal safety box with secure individual compartments in which members can put their savings to pay their monthly SSS contribu-
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836 MW total power supply capacity of Davao Region by year 2016,” he said, adding that the SMC-GPC is planning to expand up to 1,200 MW its power generation capacity until 2020. The construction of the 300 MW coal-fired power plant is just one of the power project in Mindanao that would bring availability of excess power supply including contingency reserves in Mindanao for the first time since 2009.
Based on the report of Mindanao Power Monitoring Committee (MPMC), other power projects was Therma South Inc (TSI).’s 300 MW Coal-fired Energy Project in Barangay Binugao, Toril, Davao City and Barangay Inawayan, Sta. Cruz, Davao del Sur. The plant is reported to have started its steam blowing last month. The management of the Therma South said in a press release that there’ no
located in Maasim, Saranganni and owned by Sarangani Energy Corporation by the third quarter of this year. Mindanao Development Authority (Minda)- investment promotions and public affair director Romeo Montenegro also said earlier that the excess power supply in the grid will be Mindanao’s big ticket in inviting investors from the manufacturing and agribusiness sectors.
CHAMBERMEN IN DIALOGUE WITH JAPANESE. Top officers of the Davao City Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Inc. (DCCCII) Daniel T. Lim and Wilfred “Evoy” Teves, an architect and an engineer, took time out of their busy schedules to participate in the Philippine-Japan Economic Dialogue jointly organized by the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry
(PCCCI), the Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry (JCCI) and the Philippines-Japan Economic Cooperation Committee at the Rizal Ballroom of Shangri-la Makati Hotel on February 5. The event brought in more than 70 high-ranking officers of various Japanese companies to the country. (Contributed)
N a bid to enhance the province’s thriving small-scale mining industry, the provincial government of South Cotabato has opened a support facility for the industry in T’boli town. South Cotabato Gov. Daisy Avance-Fuentes said Thursday they established a Minahang Bayan Center at the town proper of T’boli to properly cater to needs of the small-scale mining operators and other industry players.
permits and licenses,” the governor said. Fuentes said the Minahang Bayan Center is a project of the Provincial Environment Management Office (PEMO). She said the PEMO will handle the operations of the center through its mines and geosciences division. Aside from being a onestop-shop, Fuentes said they are planning to also utilize the center as a training facility for jewelry-making.
She said they will collaborate with the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and the Department of Science and Technology for the implementation of the project, which is mainly aimed to enhance the province’s gold and silver mining industry. In 2012, the provincial government initially launched its jewelry development project in the area. The project, which is a joint
Philippine imports of lamb last year grew by 18 percent year-on-year to 566 tons; however, it is lower than imports of Malaysia with 7,389 tons, Singapore with 2,124 tons, Vietnam with 2,902 tons, and Thailand with 652 tons. Likewise, Australian mutton meat imports of the country surged by 73 percent to 62 tons while Malaysia imported 15,939 tons; Singapore with 9,052 tons; Vietnam with 1,685 tons; and Thailand with 17 tons. “More restaurants now are offering a wide range of red meat options,” Perez noted. “Acceptance with meat is
growing,” he added. He mentioned that the key drivers of red meat imports in Southeast Asia were the free trade agreement of ASEAN with Australia and New Zealand (ANZFTA), population growth, expansion of the middle class, fast urbanization, and gradual shift to a DIET with more protein. However, Perez noted that there will be 15 percent contraction on global supplies of beef this year until 2016. The 15-percent contraction was pushed by climate change, feed prices, currency changes, and global economic activity. (PNA)
SoCot opens support facility for small-scale mining I She said the facility was put up at an open space within the municipal gymnasium of T’boli in Barangay Poblacion. It was built through a funding of around P960,000 that was drawn from the budget of the Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office, she said. “The center will serve as a one-stop-shop dedicated to address the needs of the industry players, especially the processing of their required
Saturday, 10:30 – 11:30 AM at DXUM Radyo Ukay 819 kHz, aims to give relevant information to Davao Light’s stakeholders. The topic for next Saturday, February 14 is the application procedure and requirements for new commercial accounts. Listeners will get a chance to win exciting prizes when they participate in the program’s Q&A.
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Phl imports of Australian beef highest in ASEAN
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NEW APPLICATION. Davao Light and Power Company’s customer retailsServices department supervisor Ruby Barnes (center) and Engr. Jeffrey Jomer Madolora (left) discuss the application procedure and requirements for new residential accounts during the company’s radio program last Saturday, February 7. The program, Kaalam Sa Kuryente which airs every
harmful chemical in steam blowing and it was executed to clear chimney. Del Rosario reported that TSI’s300 MW power will account for 56 percent of 536 MW total power supply capacity of Davao Region by this year. Another power project that will provide excess power to Mindanao grid by 2016 is the operation of the first unit of the 200 MW Southern Mindanao Coal-fired Power Station-
HE Philippines has the largest imports of Australian beef among ASEAN countries, Meat and Livestock Australia (MLA) said in a briefing Thursday. MLA country manager Peter Paul Perez said that beef exports to the Philippines in 2014 increased by 27 percent year-on-year to 34,352 tons. This is higher than Malaysia’s imports of Australian beef at 13,105 tons; Singapore’s 10,094 tons; Thailand’s 5,422 tons; and Vietnam’s 2,092 tons. Perez said the country’s demand of sheep meat is also growing.
7 BIGGER PICTURE
EDGEDAVAO VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
All we need is love
By HENRYLITO D. TACIO
“
THE person who tries to live alone will not succeed as a human being,” Pearl S. Buck once wrote. “His heart withers if it does not answer another heart. His mind shrinks away if he hears only the echoes of his own thoughts and finds no other inspiration.” The award-winning author, of course, was talking about love. Marguerite De Valois readily agrees: “Love works in miracles every day: such as weakening the strong, and stretching the weak; making fools of the wise, and wise men of fools; favoring the passions, destroying reason, and in a word, turning everything topsy-turvy.” It seems that everyone has his or her own idea about love. Mark Twain said, “Love is the irresistible desire to be irresistibly desired.” Oliver Wendell Holmes thinks: “Love is the master key that opens the gates of happiness.” British actor Peter Ustinov believes: “Love is an act of endless forgiveness, a tender look which becomes a habit.” American actor Robert Mitchum has another idea: “Maybe love is like luck. You have to go all the way to find it.” Mignon McLaughlin rhapsodizes: “In the arithmetic of love, one plus one equals everything, and two minus one equals nothing.” Albert Einstein declares: “How on earth are you ever going to explain in terms of chemistry and physics so important a biological phenomenon as first love?” Henry Ward Beecher quips, “Love cannot endure indifference. It needs to be wanted. Like a lamp, it needs to be fed out of the oil of another’s heart, or its flame burns low.” To which Aristotle philosophizes: “Love is composed of a single soul inhabiting two bodies.” William Shakespeare, the father of English literature,
writes: “Love is a smoke made with the fume of sighs. Being purged, a fire sparkling in lovers’ eyes. Being vexed, a sea nourished with lovers’ tears. What is it else? A madness most discreet, a choking gall and a preserving sweet.” Some noted authors have poked fun at the subject. “Love is like war: Easy to begin but hard to end,” writes one. “Love is like playing the piano. First you must learn to play by the rules, then you must forget the rules and play from your heart,” writes another. “Love is an electric blanket with somebody else in control of the switch,” Cathy Carlyle notes. Germaine De Stael shares: “Love is the history of a woman’s life; it is an episode in man’s.” UB40 compares: “Love is a thing, well, it’s kind of like quicksand: The more you are in it, the deeper you sink. And when it hits you, you’ve just got to fall.” Those who have experienced love have words of wisdom to share. Hollywood actor Woody Allen states, “To love is to suffer. To avoid suffering one must not love. But then one suffers from not loving. Therefore to love is to suffer, not to love is to suffer. To suffer is to suffer. To be happy is to love. To be happy then is to suffer. But suffering makes one unhappy. Therefore, to be unhappy one must love, or love to suffer, or suffer from too much happiness. I hope you’re getting this down.” British singer John Lennon offers: “We’ve got this gift of love, but love is like a precious plant. You can’t just accept it and leave it in the cupboard or just think it’s going to get on by itself. You’ve got to keep watering it. You’ve got to really look after it and nurture it.” Elbert Hubbard advices: “Love grows by giving. The love we give away is the only love we keep. The only way to retain love is to give it away.”
Robert Indiana’s 1977 Love sculpture spelling ahava (from Wikipedia)
Iris Murdoch says, “We can only learn to love by loving.” D. H. Lawrence admits, “Love is the flower of life, and blossoms unexpectedly and without law, and must be plucked where it is found, and enjoyed for the brief hour of its duration.” Nobel Peace Prize winner Mother Teresa urges: “Spread love everywhere you go: first of all in your own home. Give love to your children, to a wife or husband, to a next-door neighbor.” Love, so goes a song, comes from the most unexpected places. This happened to Lt. John Blanchard, a soldier in basic training in Florida during World War II. One evening, he wandered into the post library and found a book to read. The feminine handwriting in the margins intrigued him, so he turned to the front of the book and found the name of the previous owner – a certain Miss Hollis Maynell. Blanchard did some research and found her address in New York. The following day, he was shipped overseas. For 13 months, the two corresponded by letter and started to open their hearts to each other. He asked for her picture, to which she refused by saying that if he really loved her it wouldn’t matter what she looked like. To make the long story short, the two decided to meet each other in Grand Central Station in New York City. “You’ll recognize me by the red rose that I’ll be wearing on my lapel,” she told him in her letter. (If only there were cellular phones at that time!!!) So, what happened next? Blanchard tells the rest of the story in his own words: “A young woman was coming toward me, beautiful, trim, blonde, eyes were blue as flowers, and in her pale green suit she was like springtime come alive. I started toward her for-
Archetypal lovers Romeo and Juliet portrayed by Frank Dicksee (from Wikipedia) getting that she was not wearing the rose – and then I saw Hollis Maynell! She was standing behind the girl. A woman with graying hair. But she wore a red rose on the rumpled brown lapel of her coat. So deep was my longing for the woman whose spirit had captured me that I approached her. There she stood, face was gentle and sensible and her gray eyes had a twinkle. I didn’t hesitate. My hand gripped the small worn blue leather book which
was to identify me to her. “I squared my shoulders and saluted and held out the book to the woman while choking back the bitterness of disappointment. ‘I’m Lt. John Blanchard and you must be Miss Maynell. I am so glad to meet you. My I take you to dinner?’ “The woman’s face broadened into a smile. ‘I don’t know what this is about son,’ she answered, ‘but the young lady in the green suit who just went by, asked me to wear this rose.
Lovers kissing on the street (from Wikipedia)
And she said if you were to ask me out to dinner I should tell you that she is waiting for you in the large restaurant across the street. She said it was some kind of test!’” It was Erica Jong who said, “Love is everything it’s cracked up to be. That’s why people are so cynical about it... It really is worth fighting for, risking everything for. And the trouble is, if you don’t risk everything, you risk even more.” And, yes, love makes the world go round!
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EDGEDAVAO
VANTAGE
VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
EDITORIAL Who is Purisima fooling?
W
HEN is an advice an order? And when is an order an advice? In this apparent play with words, resigned PNP chief Alan Purisima sought refuge from linguistics and etymology in a desperate move to save his behind and that of the bigger gods that be in this imbroglio on the Mamasapano massacre. In perspective, when a police general speaks to an officer lower in rank, will the former’s words be taken merely as an advice? Let’s put it this way: When then suspended PNP chief Purisima spoke to SAF commander Getulio Napeñas on a very delicate operation to arrest a terrorist, did the latter take it as a mere advice? An order and an advice are two words closely similar and likewise vastly different. An order is something you follow, never to break under the rigid laws of hierarchy of command. An advice is guidance or recommendation offered with regard to prudent action. One’s acting on an advice is discretionary. On the other hand, acting on an
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order is mandatory. In a system such as ours, the words of a superior come down as an order, unless specifically stated otherwise. A subordinate failing to act on something the superior tells him could be guilty of insubordination – an omission that could cost him his job. So when in doubt, it is incumbent upon a subordinate to heed the words of his superior as a sacred order and in this discreet operation like the Mamasapano, only those who speak the language are involved in the entire scheme of things to the exclusion of all others. Purisima’s telling Napeñas to exclude the military and the DILG Secretary from the operations given the privacy and exclusivity of the information can only be taken as a directive and not merely an advice. So if Purisima is telling us that if at all, he only gave an advice, who is he fooling? Definitely not the Senators he faced in the hearing. And yes, definitely not the people. ANTONIO M. AJERO Editor in Chief
NEILWIN JOSEPH L. BRAVO Managing Editor
AGAPITO JOAQUIN JR. Associate Editor
CHARLES RAYMOND A. MAXEY Consultant
ARMANDO B. FENEQUITO JR. KENNETH IRVING K. ONG 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 ARLENE D. PASAJE Correspondents 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
A
RE there marriages made in heaven? Below is a copy of letter of American evangelist Billy Graham to his wife, Ruth Bell Graham, given two days before their twentieth wedding anniversary: “How can I find words to express my appreciation for all you have meant to me. Your love and patience with me in my ups and downs… have meant more to me than you will ever know. Your counsel, advice, encouragement and prayer have been my mainstay – and at times I have almost clung to you in my weakness, in hours of obsession, problems and difficulties. ‘Whoso findeth a wife findeth a good thing, and obtaineth favor from the Lord.’ (Proverbs 18:22) One reason that in spite of my lack of spirituality, discipline and consecration I have found favor of the Lord is because of you. I found a good wife and as a result have found favor with God. “It seems that in the recent months of my capacity to love you has been increased – I did not think that age would bring greater and deeper love – but it has and is. I love the wife of my youth more every day! When we are apart, I miss you so much more than I used to. A week seems like a month. Yes, I am thankful to God for you. What a wonderful helpmeet He provided – certainly our marriage was planned in heaven. I am thankful for the five precious children you bore me – each one a bundle of joy. And what a wonderful mother you have been to them! No child ever had a greater mother than our children. You may compare yourself to Susana Wesley and thin you are a failure – but she did not rear her family in a modern, secular society. For our generation, you are near perfection.” “For this reason, a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and they will become one flesh.” This is the first marriage
T
HE initial effort to work for the beatification of Fathers Mateo Gisbert and Saturnino Urios, former Davao parish priest, was launched on November 7, 2005 when Oliverio Suazo Divino, a Dabawenyo residing in Gaithersburg, Maryland, furnished the Vatican with voluminous historical documents, photos, and maps gathered from Centro Borja, San Cugat del Valles, in Barcelona, Spain, which were related to the life and works of the missionaries. He also submitted scholarly articles written by eminent Jesuit historians Miguel A. Bernad and Jose S. Arcilla. Thirteen days later, the Postulazione Generale della Compagnia di Gesu, the Jesuit office in Rome, responded by facsimile. Prof. Fr. Paul Molinari, S.J., signatory of the response, acknowledged that the documents he received were “very interesting… and [the] pages are certainly throwing some light on the activity accomplished by [the missionaries] and the situation of that part of the Philippines where they spent themselves to spread the Good News and evangelize the members of the [B]agobo and others.” Father Molinari cited two key points, based on the norms in the Causes of Beatification and Canonization, which he cited from his “long experience.” First, the bishops who were approached to support the beatification have “to ascertain that there exists among the people of God a widely spread reputation for holiness”
VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
VANTAGE POINTS
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Happily married, thank you! instituted by THINK ON THESE! God as recorded in Genesis 2:24. Since then, people from all over the world tied the nuptial knot. Gina Cerminara commented: “Marriage is not for a moment; it Henrylito D. Tacio is for a lifetime. henrytacio@gmail.com It requires long and serious preparation. It is not be leaped into, but entered with solemn steps of deliberation. For one of the most intimate and difficult of human relationships is that of marriage.” Adam and Even had an ideal marriage. You know why? Bob Orben replied, “Adam didn’t have to hear about all the men she could have married – and Eve didn’t have to hear about the way his mother cooked it.” “There are some four-letter words which shock new brides – like cook, wash, and iron,” Joan I. Welsh said. On the opposite, here’s what a husband tells: “When we got married, my wife promised to love, honor and obey – and she does – she loves new clothes, honors her credit cards, and obeys her whims.” Being married is no bed of roses, however. “Marriage is neither heaven nor hell. It is simply purgatory,” Abraham Lincoln said. Beverley Nichols pointed out: “Marriage is a book of which the first chapter is written in poetry and the remaining chapters in prose.” Flora Davis explains: “Almost all married people fight, although many are ashamed
to admit it. Actually, a marriage in which no quarreling at all takes may place well be one that is dead or dying from emotional undernourishment. If you care, you probably fight.” Sholem Aleichem (aka Solomon J. Rabinowitz) said: “I have a wife, you have a wife, we all have wives, we’ve had a taste of paradise, we know what it means to be married.” Robert Burton thinks otherwise: “One was never married, and that’s his hell; another is, and that’s his plague.” George Jessel forwards: “Marriage is a mistake every man should make.” “By all means marry,” Socrates advised. “If you get a good wife, you will become very happy; if you get a bad one, you will become a philosopher – and that is good for any man.” Ogden Nash has an advice for married couple: “To keep your marriage brimming with love in the loving cup; whenever you’re wrong, admit it; whenever you’re right, shut up.” Man and woman have different views about marriage. “When a girl marries, she exchanges the attentions of many men for the inattention of one,” Helen Rowland claims. “Why does a woman work ten years to change a man’s habits and then complain that he’s not the man she married?” singer Barbra Streisand wonders. In marriage, love is always there. Oscar Wilde said, “One should always be in love. That is the reason one should never marry.” Zsa Zsa Gabor agrees: “A man in love is incomplete until he has married. Then, he’s finished.” Of course, there are marriages made in heaven. So, one wonders: What makes a marriage work? Well, there’s no basic formula. But allow me to share to you a thoughtprovoking piece below. I don’t know who wrote it but I am sure you will agree with author:
“Blessed are the husband and wife who continue to be affectionate, considerate and loving after the wedding bells have ceased ringing. “Blessed are the husband and wife who are as polite and courteous to one another as they are to their friends. “Blessed are they who have a sense of humor, for this attribute will be a handy shock absorber. “Blessed are the married couples who abstain from alcoholic beverages. “Blessed are they who love their mates more than any other person in the world, and who joyfully fulfill their marriage vow of a lifetime of fidelity and mutual helpfulness to each other. “Blessed are they who remember to thank God for their food before they partake of it, and who set aside some time each day for the reading of the Bible and prayer. “Blessed are they who attain parenthood, for children are a heritage of the Lord. “Blessed are those mates who never speak loudly to each other and who make their home a place ‘where seldom is heard a discouraging word.’ “Blessed are the husband and wife who faithfully attend the worship service of the church. “Blessed are the husband and wife who can work out their problems of adjustment without interference from relatives. “Blessed is the couple who have a complete understanding about financial matters and who have worked out perfect partnership with all the money under control of both. “Blessed are the husband and wife who humbly dedicate their lives and their home to Christ and practice the teachings of Christ in their home by being unselfish, loyal and loving.” Cecil Myers said it best: “Successful marriage is always a triangle: a man, a woman, and God.”
Pastells and Gisbert as future saints. Even in the development of an accurate biography, the Jesuit professor called such enterprise as “very demanding” if the rules of beatification are considered. Meanwhile, the Catholicization of Davao region, initiated in the first quarter of the 17th century, went full speed ahead only in the last three decades of Spanish rule (1868-1898). This was largely due to the untiring efforts of the Jesuits. Across hostile territories, braving the unpredictable gulf, infiltrating unfriendly regions, and risking lives under threat of ambuscades, the missionaries, mostly in their twenties, were more than just strangers introducing a brand-new religion. They were men whose dedication to God and country, using persuasion, grit, gutsiness and charm disarmed tribal leaders and Moro datus. They also became a source of legends. While the conversions were made less perilous by the presence of law enforcers that accompanied the padres in their travels, the unusual courage the priests showed in the face of adversity surprised the non-Christian chieftains. Actually, there were missionaries who stood out as models, but the most iconic among those who made a big religious difference in Davao region were Fathers Pablo Pastells, Gisbert, Urios, and Marcelino Vivero. Fondly called the “apostle of the Bagobos,” Fr. Gisbert was born on July 6, 1847, in Cherta,
Tarragona, Spain. He joined the Jesuit order on March 14, 1876 but only arrived in eastern Mindanao three years later at age 32. His first assignment was in Caraga where he stayed for half a year. He was reassigned to the Davao mission where he was missionarius excurrens (roving missionary) for 14 years, three as local superior. He was relieved by Urios in 1893 and was sent to Baganga where he stayed for six years. Due to the American takeover in 1898, he was moved to Manila to become administrator of the parish of Ermita. In 1901 he returned to Davao and took charge of the Jesuit mission until 1906. Ill health forced him to return to Manila where he died. Born on November 12, 1843 in Jativa, Valencia Province, Father Urios entered seminary at the advice of the parish priest and with the support of his barber-father, who allowed him to pursue studies, first at Játiva, and later at the Seminario Conciliar in Valencia. He was ordained diocesan priest on June 6, 1868, but in January 1870 left for France where the Jesuits, exiled from Spain by the September Revolution, had established their novitiate. On July 30, 1874, he found himself boarding from Marseilles for Manila and Mindanao, where he worked as a Jesuit missionary for 40 years. He evangelized the natives and founded towns along the Agusan River and its tributaries. He was better known as the “apostle of the Upper Agusan Valley.”
Future Davao ‘saints’
FAST BACKWARD BY THE ARCHIVIST
(italics not mine) of the person being processed for Ecclesiastical Inquiry, and second, there has to be “profound methodological difference” with regard to “recent” causes (actual testimonies of people who know the life, activity and virtues of the missionaries) and “ancient” or “historical” causes (documentary evidences as reliable bases in reconstructing the biographies). As an essential preliminary condition for a cause of beatification, Molinari said the status of piety attributed to the two clerics should be extensive and well known to the large segment of the Christian community where they evangelized, the absence of which “would mean to work in vain” for the recognition of
10 ICT HUB EDGEDAVAO
VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
Globe Game Changer Challenge attracts the best and the brightest students
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LOBE Game Changer Challenge, a competition launched by the leading telecommunications company for ideas to revolutionize the Filipino digital lifestyle, attracted the best and the brightest graduating students in the country. The completion has attracted top students from major colleges and universities that include University of the Philippines, Ateneo de Manila University, University of San Carlos, Ateneo de Davao and De La Salle University Manila. GGCC is a rigorous and prestigious competition to determine which top students from leading universities in the country will be able to help Globe achieve its vision of enriching the digital lifestyle of its consumers. The GGCC competition involved around 300 outstanding students of major colleges and universities in the country including University of the Philippines, Ateneo de Manila University, University of San Carlos, Ateneo de Davao and De La Salle University Manila. Based on their academic standing, excellence in extra-curricular activities, the 300 aspirants were then trimmed down to 25 after going through a series of interviews and workshops on
CHALLENGE. (From right) Globe President and CEO Ernest Cu; Camille Calma, Catherine Villarosa, Selynn Co, Christine Chicano, Greg Tolentino, Pebbles Sy-Manalang, Globe head of Product
Management, Vince Yamat, Globe Director for Innovations; and Globe Chief Human Resource Officer Ato Jiao.
innovation. The top 25 students were then grouped into five teams and were asked to work on their big idea that would enhance Filipino digital lifestyle. Their proposals were judged by the senior leaders of Globe Telecom. “Globe has been at the forefront of innovation and the people at Globe need to be innovative, customer-cen-
tric and this is what we envisioned to achieve through the GGCC. It’s important for us to bring a lot of new ideas, for young people to deliver disruptive, creative, innovative thinking unto the company because that is our life blood. Through the GGCC, we hope to bring the best of the best into the company,” Globe President & CEO Ernest Cu said. The winning GGCC team
is composed of Camille Calma, a BS Business Administration student from the University of the Philippines, Diliman; Greg Tolentino, a BS in Applied Economics student from the De La Salle University, Manila; Catherine Villarosa, a BS Management student from the Ateneo de Manila University; Christine Chicano, a BS Business Administration student from UP Diliman; and Selynn
Co, a BS Management Engineering student also from ADMU. The winners will go to an all-expense paid trip to Singapore for an exclusive immersion in the SingTel Innovation Center. They were also awarded a cash prize of P50,000 and were each given an Ipad mini. The winners will also have a chance to be part of the company’s Management
Development Program Batch 2015. The Management Development Program, intended for promising young talents, aims to develop effective cross management abilities, honing their decision-making skills that will help in achieving organization goals and prepare them to take the company forward amid intense competition and increasing demand for innovation.
Counter Terrorism Center, which was established after 9/11 to coordinate terrorism intelligence. The lack of such an
agency before led to missed opportunities to thwart the 2001 terrorist attacks. Lisa Monaco, assistant to the president for homeland security and counterterrorism, announced the new “Cyber Threats Intelligence Integration Center” in a speech Tuesday at the Wilson Center in Washington. U.S. companies have been buffeted by a series of damaging
cyber incidents in recent years — some from nation states, others from criminal groups. Government expertise in analyzing the various cyberthreats resides in a number of agencies, including the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security, the National Security Agency and U.S. Cyber Command. White House cybersecurity coordinator Michael Daniel has concluded that cyberintelligence at the moment is bedeviled by the same shortcomings that afflicted terrorism intelligence before 9/11 — bureaucracy, competing in-
terests, and no streamlined way to combine analysis from various agencies, the official said. The hack on Sony’s movie subsidiary, for example, resulted in a variety of different analytical papers from various agencies. Each one pointed to North Korea, but with varying degrees of confidence. Unlike the National Counter Terrorism Center, which gets most of its information from intelligence agencies, the new cyberagency may rely to a much larger extent on private companies, which are regularly seeing and gathering cyberintelligence as they are hit with attempts by hackers to break into their networks. Gathering threat signatures, and profiling hacker groups, has become a key component of collecting cyberintelligence — a discipline practiced both by government agencies and private firms. U.S. intelligence officials
have been warning about the dangers of cyberattacks for years, and the public is starting to pay close attention. Fifty-seven percent of Americans in a new Associated Press-GfK poll conducted Jan. 29-Feb 2 think there is an extremely or somewhat high risk of a foreign country or terrorist group making a major cyberattack on computer systems inside of the United States. That is more than the 50 percent who say the risk of a terrorist attack is somewhat or extremely high. On the other hand, fewer Americans say the risks posed by computer hackers are important to them personally (57 percent) than say the same of terrorism (71 percent). Just over half of Americans, or 51 percent approve of the way Obama is handling threats posed by computer hackers, the survey found. KEN DILANIAN, AP Intelligence Writer
Obama to create new agency to examine cyberthreats T HE White House is setting up a new agency designed to coordinate cyberthreat intelligence that currently is spread across the U.S. government. The agency will be modeled after the N a tional
COMMUNITY SENSE 11
EDGEDAVAO VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
1840 more‘Pablo’shelters completed in Davao Oriental
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TOTAL of 1,840 more families in the towns of Baganga, Cateel and Boston received their Certificate of Occupancy to their permanent homes through the modified shelter assistance program (MSAP) of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) in coordination with the Provincial Government. DSWD provides funding while the Provincial Government handles acquisition and development of resettlement sites. “Only our houses blown by ‘Pablo’ left us, but the hope still remains,” typhoon Pablo survivor Reysalina Donaldo said. “For two years, my family never slept in a comfortable home but I am still grateful that blessings from the government flooded our municipality. They never left us during our most trying days,” Donaldo recounted. DSWD 11 assistant regional director for operations Rebecca A. Santamaria said she is optimistic that all remaining houses targeted for construction will be completed by the end of March this year. “These homes mark a new beginning for you. Now that we are given the security of a home, DSWD can now focus more in accessing different livelihood activities under the Sustainable Livelihood Program so that you can totally rise and get going. Houses built under MSAP may not be your dream house but at least government can offer you a comfortable and secure place you can happily call your own home.” “Dili nako mapugngan nga
muhilak nga nakabalay napud kami kay mahinumduman nako akoang bana nga namatay sa depresyon human sa Bagyong Pablo. Sakit pa pero kailangan nako mutindog kay kabalo ko dili ko pabayaan sa gobyerno (I can’t help but cry with this new home because I remember my husband who got depressed and died after typhoon Pablo. It is so painful yet I need to move on for I know government will not neglect us),” said survivor Gertrodes D. Purazo of Baganga. Meanwhile, Governor Corazon N. Malanyaon said the downpour of support from the national government agencies especially DSWD has made her province grow stronger and resilient. “Despite the mounting challenges, there are still people with kind hearts that will help meet the urgent needs and help the province build resilience,” she said. To date, 13,780 permanent housing units have been already completed on the ground, offering typhoon survivors opportunity for a fresh start. During the turnover ceremony, Santamaria announced the upcoming Listahanan second round of assessment and encouraged everyone to cooperate in the data collection process. Listahanan-identified poor families will benefit from social protection programs of DSWD and other line agencies. She also bared that age requirement for qualified beneficiaries of social pension has already been lowered from 77 to 65 years old. DSWD/Florame B. Espada
A red heart for a green school
C
HILDREN learn language and arithmetic through music, movement, and art in a nature setting at Tuburan Institute, Inc. – the Steiner/ Waldorf-inspired school in Davao City. This coming school year 2015-2016, Tuburan Institute, Inc. will transfer to a donated farmland located in Purok 8, New Loon, Barangay Tugbok Proper, Tugbok District. The Ramon Aboitiz Foundation, Inc. and Milow, an interna-
tion of the Tagum Biz Talk at Big 8 Hotel on February 10 by respective committee chairs Marlene R. Alastra for the 2015 Tagum City Musikahan Festivals, Norma R. Pereyras for the Tagumenyo Bisa’g Asa, and Carmen B. Apura for the 17th Araw ng Tagum. The group also promoted the city’s Trio Celebration in a morning live TV guesting in Maayong Buntag Mindanao of ABS-CBN on February 12 and will go on GMA’s Una Ka Bai on February 16. Specifically highlighted at the two media events was the fledgling Tagumenyo Bisa’g Asa (TBA) which was concep-
ella negra, pumpkin soup, bokchoy with shiitake, beef caldereta, breaded chicken, steamed tilapia, pasta in pesto sauce, fruit salad, and camote tops juice. On February 14, Balik Bukid located along Quimpo Boulevard will also offer a buffet meal for P500/person: farm salad with three dressings, callos, steamed fish fillet with ginger, buttered vegetables, tarragon iced tea, and mascarpone cheese cake. On February 14 and 15,
both Riverwalk Exotic Resto Grill and Kaonanan sa Tribu K’ Mindanawan located in Crocodile Park, Maa will offer plate-in meals for P350/person: chicken barbecue or grilled pork chop, pinaputok na tilapia, rice, and calamansi juice. Meal tickets are inclusive of entrance to the Crocodile Park, the butterfly house, the cultural show, and the fire dance show. For reservations, please contact Weng at 09328692851.
the school’s founders as well as to recognize and motivate incoming freshmen who did exemplarily well in the DDC Entrance Examination. This competitive grant will be awarded to the topmost 44 examinees based on raw score ranking in the entrance examination. It is open to all High School graduating students in the region, regardless of school or place of residence. Four awardees will be given the Founders’ Memorial Scholarship for garnering the top four places in the entrance exam. This scholarship grant will allow them to take any course at DDC with free tuition. On the other hand, 40 awardees
will be granted the Founders’ Scholarship for Merit, giving them 50 percent discount on tuition when they enroll in the school’s developmental courses: Bachelor of Secondary Education major in Biological Sciences, Bachelor of Science in Biology Major in Medicinal Horticulture, Bachelor of Science in Entrepreneurship and Bachelor of Science in Tourism Management. Recognizing the potential of HS graduates who are not necessarily in the top of their class but are willing to strive hard to pursue their dreams, Davao Doctors’ College offers more opportunities for success in their chosen fields, especially those geared towards the sciences. As a premier institution of learning, primarily in the healthcare sciences, DDC continues to shine in its banner courses in Nursing, Radiologic Technology, Physical Therapy, Biology, Pharmacy, Medical
Laboratory Services (popularly known as MedTech), Optometry and Occupational Therapy, producing graduates who garner top places in the medical licensure examinations. Just recently, Davao Doctors College got another feather in its cap in the recently-conducted nationwide Physical Therapy Board Examination. Staying true to DDC’s pursuit of academic excellence, Derek Bayquen, a DDC alumnus of the school’s Physical Therapy Program, garnered the 5th place among the 766 examinees all over the country who took the examination. DDC’s Class 2014 of the Physical Therapy Program registered a 100% passing mark in the same examination. To know more about the DDC Founders’ Scholarship Grant or admission to Davao Doctors College, interested students may contact the DDC Admissions Office at (082)222-0850 to 53 loc 112.
DDC announces search for 44 Founders’Scholars
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N celebration of the 40th Foundation Anniversary of Davao Doctors College this year, 44 slots are being offered for High School graduates who are aspiring to finish a college degree at Davao Doctors College. The DDC Founders’ Scholarship Grant is put up to honor
All set for Tagum’s Trio Celebration T AGUM City is set to go on a two-week revelry as the city government and the Tagum City Tourism Council are all set for the second installment of the city’s Trio Celebration. The trio celebration is composed of the 2015 Tagum City Musikahan Festivals, the Tagumenyo Bisa’g Asa and the 17th Araw ng Tagum and will run from February 23 through March 7. The celebration, together with its calendar of activities, were presented during a press conference on February 6 at the NCCC Mall in Maa, Davao City and at the February edi-
tional singer, donated funds to construct the first three green buildings under the supervision of Architect Edmundo Viacrusis. To keep school fees to a minimum for low-income families, Tuburan is holding a series of Red Heart for a Green School fundraising dinners this Valentine’s week. On February 12, Belito’s Vineyard located along Palm Drive, Bajada will offer a buffet meal for P500/ person. The buffet offers pa-
tualized on the premise that the expatriated constituents of the City of Tagum, including the Overseas Filipinos Workers, have to be recognized by the local government in consideration of their valued support and contribution to the economy of Tagum. The Tagum City Music Makers Concert is a newlyadded event which will be held during the 2015 Musikahan Festivals. The concert will feature all the beneficiaries-graduates of the Tagum City Musical Instrument Workshop Program, which is one of the city’s literacy programs and is
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ALL SET. Officers of the Tagum City Tourism Council promote the city’s upcoming Trio Celebration at press conference at NCCC Mall in Davao City. From left, Norma R. Pereyras for the
Tagumenyo Bisa’g Asa, Carmen B. Apura for the 17th Araw ng Tagum, and Marlene R. Alastra for the 2015 Tagum City Musikahan Festivals. Photo by Edwin B. Lasquite CIO Tagum
12 NEWS
EDGEDAVAO
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worth of investments. It said majority of the investments were on transportation, logistics and storage projects in Davao del Norte. Romeo L. Castañaga, provincial director of DTIDavao del Norte, said earlier in an interview that these were the projects of Hijo International Port Services Inc., San Vicente Terminal and Brokerage Services and HLC Construction and Development Corp. which were granted fiscal incentives by BOI. Based on the records from BOI 11, Hijo International Port Services Inc. is pouring P5.724 billion for a seaport and container yard in Tagum City that can accommodate 450,000 20-footer equivalent units (TEUs) a year. The other investor, San Vicente Terminal and Brokerage Services, a
unit of Anflocor Group of Companies, has set up a P2.653-billion Davao International Container Terminal in Panabo City. The terminal has a capacity of 400,000 TEUs per year. BOI 11 added that HLC Construction and Development Corp. ventured into the Oakwood Residences project in Panabo City to the tune of P116.210 million. Apart from BOI 11, Castañaga said Robinsons Land Corp. was also able to gain fiscal incentives from the local government of Tagum City for its P2.7 billion-mall. The company planned to start commercial operations by the end of the year. “It is the first project that the local government of Tagum City granted with fiscal incentives last year,” he said. (MindaNews)
gaged the SAF in the bloody encounter suffered at least 250 casualties. Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) Gov. Mujiv Hataman said among the casualties were three civilians, including an eight-year-old whose house is near the firefight. Iqbal said the MILF has also been investigating the conduct of their men “to see if anyone violated the rules of conduct.” “We thought that we had effective protocols and mechanisms in place that would prevent things like these from happening,” Iqbal said. The BTC chief said that aside from their own investigation, the MILF is also pushing for a truly independent group similar to the Truth Commission being proposed in the Senate that would conduct ‘a fair and impartial investigation on the incident.’ During the hearing, Iqbal revealed that the MILF had rescued 28 SAF men who were part of the first team holed up in an area one kilometer northeast of Tukanalipao. “They were already being fired upon by unidentified armed groups. The 28 SAF men are alive today because of the efforts of the MILF and finally, it is the will of God,” he said. He also clarified that the MILF is against all forms of terrorism and in fact, have made solemn vow to fight terrorism in their areas. “The MILF did not harbor Marwan and Usman. The MILF has no links with these terrorists and terrorist organizations. Marwan
and Usman were in areas outside the MILF-controlled areas,” Iqbal said. Iqbal said he has not seen a video showing a gruesome killing of a wounded SAF man but he described it as a monster act that was “more than a terrorist act.” Iqbal also assured that the MILF is committed to peace which they have been advocating for the last 17 years. “We signed the Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro, the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro and the draft of the Bangsamoro Basic Law. Each of these agreements is a testament to our commitment to pursue our objectives through peaceful means,” he said. He appealed to the lawmakers to help achieve the peace in Mindanao. “We promised to our people that peace will be our legacy. We seek your help in making this promise possible. We cannot do it by ourselves. We seek you to help us live in peace. Let us be partners for peace,” Iqbal appealed. Meanwhile, Iqbal said MILF chairman Al-Haj Murad Ebrahim is expressing his condolences to the families of the so-called fallen 44. Iqbal clarified also that the MILF will no longer be a revolutionary movement once the BBL is finally passed into law by both the Senate and the House of Representatives. “Once the final peace has been achieved, the MILF will no longer be a revolutionary movement but a social movement,” Iqbal said. (PNA)
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HOT LUNCH. A group of elementary students take their lunch under the scorching heat of the sun at Rizal Park in Davao City yesterday. Lean Daval Jr.
Lawyer withdraws legal services to Sen. Revilla
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HE lead counsel of detained Senator Ramon “Bong” Revilla has formally cut his legal relations with the senator, a two-page document submitted to the anti-graft court reveals Thursday. Lawyer Joel Bodegon, in his manifestation sent to the Sandiganbayan First Division, said he was officially terminating his legal services to the senator. “Undersigned law firm respectfully withdraws as counsel for Sen.
Ramon “Bong” Revilla, Jr. in this case. Sen. Revilla’s conformity is indicated herein below,” the document said. The two-page document did not mention the reason or reasons why he cut legal ties with Revilla. Revilla has been accused of funneling millions of pesos in his Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) otherwise known as “pork barrel fund” to fictitious non-government organizations for kickbacks owned and controlled by
Former... FFROM 3 four were students, two were drivers, two were babysitters, two were delivery boys, and one was a gold miner. Last December, Mayor Rodrigo R. Duterte said aside from the financial assistance, he will also give the former rebels where they can build
their permanent houses. Lugo, however, said those who already have houses will not be given that assistance. “Dili tanan ang makakuha kay uban kay naa nay mga luna (not all of them can avail it since some of them already have houses),” she said.
currently on its 11th year. One of the major events of the 17th Araw ng Tagum is the Tagumpay Awards and Recognition 2015. On this event, the Tagumpay Excellence Award will be presented to any Tagumenyo, either individual or group, who has greatly contributed to the city’s growth, honor and glory through their distinguished and exemplary
achievements. The Estorya ng Tagumpay Award will be conferred to any Tagumenyo whose story of success has been an inspiration to others and whose contribution to the economy of the city has not only substantially impacted the city and its constituents, but also the people outside of Tagum. Richi Gulle of CIO Tagum
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his co-accused businesswoman Janet Lim-Napoles. Revilla and his co-accused allegedly received Php 224.5 million in kickbacks from 2006 to 2010. Just last year, the Sandiganbayan First Division chaired by Associate Justice Efren dela Cruz, denied Revilla’s bid for temporary freedom. He has filed a motion for reconsideration that is currently pending before the anti-graft court. Bodegon asked that all of Revilla’s documents
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related to the pork barrel scam be sent to the senator’s office at the Senate, until a new lawyer is named. “Henceforth, it is kindly requested that copy of all orders and processes of the Honorable Court as well as pleadings, motions and other submissions be served directly upon accused at Room 506, GSIS Building, Financial Center, Roxas Boulevard, Pasay City, until appearance of new counsel,” Bodegon said. (PNA)
public and private sector undertaking, is a pet initiative of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources’ Mines and Geosciences Bureau-Region 12. It was supported by the DTI, Tribal Mining Corporation (TMC), National Economic and Development Authority, barangay
and the municipal governments of Tboli and the Soccsksargen Responsible Miners Association. TMC, which is a foreign-backed mining firm operating in T’boli town, had acquired a package of jewelry-making equipment to help train local residents on jewelry-making. (MindaNews)
tions. An SSS account officer goes to the site every month to credit the contributions. SSS signs an agreement with partner associations that represent self-employed or informal sector workers. The SSS will continue to open additional branch-
es this year with five new branches and five service offices in the pipeline this year. As of December 2014, SSS has 262 offices across the Philippines located in NCR (60); Luzon (118); Visayas (41), and Mindanao (43).
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DAVAO EDGE Affairs heart VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
of the
A VALENTINE’S DAY SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT
Taking good care of your
heart By CHARLES RAYMOND A. MAXEY
P
eople in Davao City or elsewhere in Mindanao who are suffering from heart diseases need not go to Manila or abroad to seek medical services. All they have to do is visit the Davao Doctors Hospital to have their ailing hearts cured. The Davao Doctors Hospital offers a full array of medical services when it comes to cardiology and boasts state-of-the-art equipment to answer to the needs of the patients. The hospital has two centers that attend to patients with heart problems—the Cardiac Rehabilitation Center and the Cardiac Diagnostic Center. This is, of course, aside from heart operations which the hospital is capable of doing. Dr. Raul Martin Coching, head of the department, said that based on available technology worldwide, the Davao Doctors Hospital can cover 85 to 90 percent of the medical needs of the patients as far as facility is concerned. “We offer a full array of medical services as far as cardiology is concerned,” said Dr. Coching. “We can practically diagnose most if not all the possible conditions on the book.” But while they perform heart surgeries, Dr. Coching admitted their services are limited when it comes to equipment and manpower. “If you go to our invasive treatment like surgery we are bit limited as far as surgery is concerned because sometimes it is limited by the equipment needed. Sometimes, it’s limited by available skilled physicians to do that,” Dr. Coching said. Silvery Ann Carbonnel, unit manager of the Cardiac Rehabilitation Center and Cardiac Diagnostic Center, said they are planning to enhance their operations at the hospital by using a system that will speed up transmittal of data to their doctors. Called the Picture Archiving Computer System or PACS, this method will have the hospital’s equipment connected to the system which allows the transmittal of data to the doctors wherever they are.
FTAKING, S4
Davao’s History P.4
Conquest in the Name of Love
Pamper your love on
Valentine’s
P.2
7 old-school ways to win your love’s heart P.5
S2 EDGE
Serving a seamless society
Affairs of the DAVAO
heart
VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
Pamper your love on
Valentine’s By CHENEEN R. CAPON
M
aking Valentine’s Day memorable is quite a challenge, especially to men. You women must admit this: you want to be pampered and treated extra special on every hour of this day. Some have high expectations while some totally lose the spark. But this sill can be revived on Valentine’s.
They say celebrating Valentine’s Day doesn’t need to be expensive, but if you have the money to make this day special so that your love will feel extra special, do it. Here are some of the places just in the heart of Davao City that you want to check out: 1. Marco Polo Davao
Let love come your way this Valentine’s Day as Marco Polo Davao make your evening more romantic with live serenades and special giveaways. Dine out at Café Marco where the buffet features roasted US Prime Rib, Australian Leg of Lamb, Whole Tuna Sashimi, and other in-
ternational dishes. The Lotus Court’s savory Cantonese spread includes Roast Peking Duck, Lechon, and premium seafood items. Polo Bistro offers an enticing Carvery station with US Roast Beef, Polo Bistro’s Famous baby back
ribs, and others. For reservations and inquiries, please call 221-0888 local 7222 for Café Marco, 7232 for Lotus Court and Polo Bistro at 7955. Stay in Marco Polo’s Superior rooms for only P3,900 net per night inclusive of breakfast for two. Take delight in the Cabana rooms for only Php7,888 net or Deluxe suite at P10,888 net and enjoy a special breakfast in bed, bottle of wine and late check out. 2. Waterfront Insular Hotel Davao Spend the night with love songs while sipping a glass
of wine as Waterfront celebrates February 14 with its event dubbed BLACK IS THE NEW RED: A VALENTINE GALA. It will be held at the Grand Agila Ballroom on Feb. 14 from 6 - 11 pm. Tickets are at P1,350 nett per person, inclusive of buffet dinner and a glass of wine and 1 round of soda. Entertainment during dinner will be a pianist and saxophonist who will be playing your favorite love songs. Come dessert time and onwards, the Songspell Philippines Inc. will do their renditions of Broadway excerpts from plays like Les Miserables, Miss Saigon.
Enjoy this on the beach as Waterfront offer special Room Package available at P5,500 nett, which includes an overnight gift certificate in a Deluxe Room with buffet breakfast for 2 persons and 2 tickets to the Valentine’s Dinner event. Guests have the option of using the gift certificate any time in the month of February 2015, and not necessarily just on Valentine’s Day. 3. Park Inn by Raddison Planning a romantic getaway on the 14th? Check Park Inn’s “Thrill of the Grill,” a station where guests can choose from a selection of savory meat cuts and the freshest local fish and seafood for grilling. “Aside from premium grilled items for your
main course, it also has Seafood Paella, Morcon, Chicken & Tomato 4-Cheese Melt and Shrimp Scampi.” Regular buffet rate is at P950 net per person, inclusive of bottomless juice and one glass of wine. Premium buffet package is at P1,250 net, with unlimited local beers and spirits. Dinner is served from 6:00 PM to 10:00 PM. Book the Romance Package and delight your loved one with a number of treats to add sparkle to your overnight stay. This package for Standard Room accommodation is priced at only P4,500.00 net per night. Aside from the complimentary bottle of wine and breakfast for two, you also get to partake of RBG’s Valentine dinner buffet.
VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
EDGE
Serving a seamless society
Affairs of the DAVAO
heartS3
L ve is everywhere
By CHENEEN R. CAPON and ARMANDO B. FENEQUITO JR.
IT is the love month and, naturally, love blossoms during this time of the year. Love, actually, is eternal, but when February 14 comes along each year people renew their intense feeling of deep affection to one another. Chocolates and flowers abound, and Cupid goes overtime finding the right couple and fire that arrow straight to the hearts, as the story of the classical mythology says. But, what do people, err, lovers do on Valentine’s Day? Edge Davao asked some officials on what they will do on the day of the hearts and they provided some straight and interesting answers.
“I’m celebrating my birthday and Valentine’s Day as one by inviting my sisters, brother, who grew up with me, and their spouses. A good time to recollect the beautiful past, enjoy the present and remind each other of the limited future God have long decided.” – Davao City Chamber of Commerce and Industry Inc. chairman John Gaisano
“We will have dinner with family in our house on Valentine’s Day.” – Davao City 3rd District Rep. Isidro T. Ungab
“Hahahahaha. Believe it or not, I am working. We are participating in one of the biggest Travel Expos in SMX Mall of Asia, the Philippine Travel and Tour Expo. Promoting our summer event, VISIT DAVAO FUN SALE. No other Valentine but Davao City. I love Davao!” – City Tourism Operations Office head Lisette Marques
“Since it will be most difficult to get a table for two, I decided to will cook a nice dinner for my chef wife for a change.” – Davao City Investment and Promotion Center head Ivan C. Cortez
“Punta ako Manambulan research station and oversee preparation for Sec. Alcala’s visit for the mass distribution of farm mach. Date with the personnel at the station. Dami nila.” Department of Agriculture 11 director Remelyn Recoter
“February 14 will be the birthday of my first grandchild with my son, Councilor Karlo Bello and my wife and my youngest child agreed that I will attend my grandchild’s birthday. Then, I will fly back to Manila and have a Valentine dinner with my wife and my youngest. I will be also holding a Valentine medical and dental mission in Barangay Panacan,” – 1BAP Party List Rep. Sylvestre Bello “Will you introduce a Valentina to me on Valentine’s Day? I will be very happy if you do.Hahaha. Anyway, for me nothing special on that day. I will still be working on Valentine’s Day. Meeting some Japanese buyers of vegetables for our farmers in Buda.” - Mindanao Business Council chairman Vicente Lao
“This year’s Valentine’s day happens to be my 17th wedding anniversary Che. So i will be spending this special day with my hubby. Actually wala mi plan. Siguro spontaneous na lang kung unsa ang maisipan. I’m in Palawan until tomorrow and my husband is also out of town so no definite plans yet. Dine out lang siguro kasi Sunday I have to leave again for Manila. Kaya walang time mag weekend vacation.” – Department of Trade and Industry Regional Director Maria Belenda Q. Ambi
“I will be spending my day with the one and only, the love of my life in a “quiet” restaurant here in Davao City.” DCCCII past President Daniel Lim
“I will be spending my Valentine’s Day with my family since I do not have any special someone. I will just make the celebration the most out of it with my father.” - Davao City Police Office spokesperson Sr. Insp. Milgrace C. Driz
“I will spend time with my family, then I will go out with my boyfriend. Since the food trip is already and traditional and boring, so, we will have a nature trip. We will rediscover the Philippine Eagle Center because we believe we should not be estranged from our homeland.” - Ateneo De Davao University English Instructor Consuelo Celine O. Fuentes
“Although I was born on a love month I usually don’t celebrate Valentine’s Day except greeting my love ones a sincere Happy Valentine’s Day. For me, like Christmas, Valentine’s Day should be celebrated daily like the love of God to us daily for He’s the source of real love as He sent His only begotten Son Jesus Christ as our Savior and Lord. HAPPY VALENTINE’S DAY.” - DCCCII president Antonio Dela Cruz
S4 EDGE
Serving a seamless society
Affairs of the DAVAO
Davao’s History
heart
VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
Conquest in the Name of Love By Antonio V. Figueroa
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EBRUARY is deemed a love month. Whether in literature, cinema or history, romantics talk about battles that have been waged in the name of LOVE. In Homer’s historical novel, Iliad, Helen of Troy, the most beautiful Greek woman, married Menelaus, king of Sparta. But the wedded bliss was short-lived. Paris, son of King Priam of Troy, fell in love with Helen. She was abducted and brought back to Troy. To retrieve her, the Greeks assembled a large army under Agamemnon, Menelaus’ brother. As a result of the siege, Troy was ruined and Helen was returned safely to Sparta to reunite with her spouse, Menelaus. The love story of Antony and Cleopatra is also immortalized in literature. They fell in love at first sight and would place Egypt in a dominant position. But the love affair enraged the Romans. Amid threats, the two still got married. It was while fighting the Romans that he got hold of the bogus news of his wife’s death; devastated, he fell on his sword. When Cleopatra learned of her hubby’s death, she also took her own life. The most moving portrayal of love in a movie was immortalized in Margaret Mitchells’ Gone with the Wind, a story of love and hatred between Scarlett O’Hara and Rhett Butler, who entered into a stormy marriage.
TAKING S1
Scarlett, who was teasing, loose, and alluring, had another suitor, Ashley Wilkes. When she eventually decided to settle down with Rhett, her promiscuity forced her spouse to move away just as the American Civil war was raging. Rhett left town while Scarlett longed for the day when they would be reunited. Close to home, the Siege of Baler, a historical war drama, tells of a forbidden love between a Spanish mestizo soldier and a Filipina at the turn of 19th century. The young couple fought with great effort to keep their illicit love alive despite family opposition and political tensions that culminated in 11-month-long cordon. The event took place while the Filipino revolutionaries laid siege to a fortified church manned by colonial Spanish troops in Baler, Quezon Province. Conversely, Davao’s history, which is about the conquest of Datu Bago by Basque colonizer Don Jose Oyanguren, was launched in the name of love. According to the Suazo family tradition, Maria Luisa Azaola and her brother Antonio, both Spanish orphans, were living in Sigaboy when she met Oyanguren. Antonio, a trader, was then opening new trade links with the fiefdoms around the gulf but she opposed her brother’s plan to go to Davao for fear he would
“We are planning for our doctors who have clinics and patients here to get updates through their phones, whether they are at home or out of the country,” Carbonnel said. She said the Cardiac Rehabilitation Center is for patients who have just undergone operations. Cardiac rehabilitation is a physician-supervised rehabilitation program which helps and guides patients recover from a heart attack or a serious cardiac event like open heart surgery. “Ang amin lang dito ay makabalik kung anu yung ginagawa nya before (What we do here is to give back what the patient has been doing before (the operation),” Carbonnel said. “We make sure that when the patient goes out, this patient is already fine,” she added.
meet the pirates. With the pledge to bring back brassworks, pearls, and gold dust they would sell in Spain, and the assurance his trip would be safe, he eventually prevailed. (The Suazo patriarch was recruited in Tandag by Oyanguren.) The Bislig (now a city in Surigao del Sur) governor arrived in town just days after Antonio and an interpreter left for Davao. His arrival, expectedly, drew public attention. Brash and arrogant, he had been a frequent visitor to the place. The people knew he was not coming to town simply to visit the settlement as part of his control. Everybody also understood he was courting Maria who, until then, was more focused in helping his brother. That night, she was listless knowing her brother was travelling to uncharted territories. Fortunately, she did not have to worry about meeting the governor because the following day the politician left. Antonio’s trip to Datu Bago’s kingdom, fortuitously, was a success. He was diplomatically welcomed by the chieftain and his lieutenant, Datu Nakoda, although there were times when the datus had to wrestle with the idea of harming him because he was a Spaniard. The Muslims never disappointed Antonio. Bronze ornaments from the best foundries, pearls and other commodities were bar-
The cardiac rehabilitation team is composed of a primary attending physician, cardiologist and senior medical resident, physical therapist and cardiac rehab nurse, psychologist and nutritionist. Carbonnel said when the center opened back in 2010, they initially had five patients, two from Davao City and one each from Cotabato, Kidapwan and Manila. As for the Cardiac Diagnostic Center, Carbonnel said they have two beds for the vascular and one bed each for ECG and 2D Echo. Presently, the center is offering what they call Heart Packages to those needing their services. The center offers echocardiogram, treadmill stress-echocardiogram, treadmill stress test, dobutamine stress echocardiogram,
tered. Both sides exchanged pleasantries. At one point, Datu Bago encouraged the Spaniard to bring Spanish muskets during his return, but Antonio was quick to retort that such act was against colonial laws. Feigning satisfaction, the two datus simply smiled and bade the trader adieu, assuring him he was still welcome in his next visit. The second stopover at Datu Bago’s turf, true to Maria’s fear, ended in tragedy. Antonio was allowed to trade peacefully. While on his way home to Sigaboy, though, he was intercepted in the open sea, arrested, and accused of betraying the Muslims. The charge was an offshoot of the tragic incident that happened while Antonio was in Datu Bago’s territory. A Muslim fleet that left a few nights after the Spaniard’s arrival was badly decimated by a superior force, which the Muslims thought was the handiwork of a Spanish navy, with the knowledge of Antonio, to spy on the Muslims. In exchange for Antonio’s freedom, Datu Bago wanted 10,000 pesetas. To make his intention known, he allowed Pantayani, the Spaniard’s trusted interpreter, to sail on a small boat to Sigaboy. The Muslim ruler wanted the ransom delivered in two weeks, inclusive of the length of travel Pantayani had to make in bringing the demand to Maria’s attention. But the
transesophageal echocardiogram, fetal echocardiogram, contrast echocardiogram, 24-hour holter monitoring, ECG, arterial and venus vascular duplex scan of both upper and lower extremity, ABI procedure and carotid duplex scan. Clinic hours are from 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. from Monday to Sunday and also 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. on holidays. To Dr. Coching, Davao Doctors Hospital is the right place for people with heart diseases. “This facility, the Davao Doctors Hospital facility is pretty much capable of doing most of cardio active diseases that need to be treated,: Dr. Coching said. “I’d say as far as Davao Doctors Hospital is concerned, I am comfortable that we can serve adequately the needs of Davao City.”
amount being asked was only partially complied. But, the trusted ally had to hurry back to Davao to offer what was collected in the hope to save Antonio from imminent death. The effort was not worth it because by then Antonio had already been killed. Pantayani still managed to escape from his Muslim captors despite being injured, and reached home to convey the sad news. The historical accounts, though, differ slightly from folklore. Towards the end of the first half of the 19th century, unrest was brewing in Madrid, and Oyanguren, a hidalgo (knight), was forced to leave Spain after his maverick political stance did not sit well with authorities. The Constitution passed by the Cortes, the Spanish legislature, embraced the liberal idea the Charter was not exclusive to Spaniards in their homeland but also to Spanish subjects the world over. Oyanguren, a Basque born in 1800, resented the liberalism of the law, which was contrary to the position of the Basques, who were mainly Carlists. Oyanguren and other Carlists were rounded up for execution, but the Spanish authorities thought it was prudent to banish them to Marianas, far from the motherland, to undergo hard labor. It was while in exile that Oyanguren heard that in the
Philippines a fellow knight and Basque, Claveria, was incumbent governor general. He sought transfer and, with the help of the usual bureaucratic connections, got an approval to be banished to Manila. When Oyanguren arrived in Manila in 1825, Spanish rule in the country was on the decline. Muslim raids in many parts of the archipelago were sapping the government’s resources. There were ongoing revolts in various areas of the country, mainly against colonial abuses. While Europe was on the brink of industrial revolution, the condition in the islands was deteriorating, in part due to excesses committed by the colonizers. Still, these unsettling developments did not dampen Oyanguren’s interest to explore possibilities in the islands. Claveria treated Oyanguren well during his exile in the islands. He issued him three ships which the latter used for opening trade with the Provincias de Moras (Moro Province) in the 1830’s. It was in one of his sorties in Tandag that he met Luisa, the daughter of a capitan general by a local resident. The two agreed to live together as partners because Oyanguren, a Catholic, could not marry her because he left behind a wife in Spain. She bore a son by a Monteroso years after the Basque colonizer died.
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VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
EDGE
Serving a seamless society
Affairs of the DAVAO
heartS5
old-school ways to win your love’s heart
By CHENEEN R. CAPON
W
AYS to win someone’s heart have changed so fast over the years. Today everything is convenient, high-tech, and handy – even in the early days of courtship. There’s Facebook (FB), Viber, and Twitter, online tools that have made distance reasonable. But this Valentine’s day, wouldn’t it be nice to be just beside your sweet potato or hubby (whatever you call her/him is valid) and surprise her/him with old school Valentine’s Day stuff? These might help you make your girl or boy fall in love with you again using the old moves: 1. Go snail mail. Effort always counts. Forget posting your sweet messages on her/ his FB wall. Why not pull a sheet of paper and a pen? Write your personal message, hope, and dreams that you might want to spend with her/him. Put some personal touches, of course. If possible, you can surprise your “lovey” by sending it through snail mail. 2. Print pictures. Remember the first date you had, your out-of-town trips, the photo of his or her eyes and lips? How about the photo of your hands locked together? Print them. Pictures do not only paint a thousand of words but capture special moments that can be treasured forever. Remember, nothing’s sweeter than reminiscing those minutes
when everything seemed so perfect that even the stars aligned to make a perfect heart! 3. Wrap those gifts. Flowers, chocolate bouquets, teddy bears, couple shirts, and jewelry – name it, girls love them! These items transcend time and have already proven their worth during Valentine’s Day. However, your girl will soon realize that everyone, if not all, in the street is holding one or two these Valentine’s Day gifts. 4. Sip a cup of personalized coffee. How long have you two been celebrating February 14 together? Maybe one, two, or even longer. But what’s more important is to remind each other of the ups and downs that the two of you have conquered. Brew some coffee and then sit back, relax, and sip. Savor its aroma while the two of you talk of your past and how you want to spend the future together. If you really want to enjoy this moment, do it at home when you’re not time bound and it’s cheaper. Do this when the kids are asleep (if you have any) and when you’re just waiting for Valentine’s Day to end. 5. Do the harana This would be probably the most outdated in this list but
guys, try this because it might be the “corny-iest” and the sweetest. Snatch your bakada and show the talents that your momma gave you. What girl will not melt if her boyfie will sing her Ed Sheeran’s “Baby I will be loving you till 70”? 6. Go stargazing in the beach. Escape the city night and drive somewhere where the sky is clearer. Remember, Davao City is just 10 minutes away from Samal Island where some of the region’s best beaches are located. Go skinny dipping and stargazing. Wait for a shooting star and wish something forever. The constellation of stars in the night sky might be the same stars your folks once gazed in the old days. 7. Turn off your phone and other gadgets. This will surely complete your old school Valentine’s Day celebration. Whatever the two of you will be into this day, stop checking your phone, email, Facebook, and candy crush or Clash of Clans. Savor every moment and spend each time talking, dreaming, and planning. To make this moment immortal, take a photo using a Polaroid (if have one) and snap those extra special moments on Valentine’s Day.
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heart
VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
9 ways to a healthy heart
By Henrylito D. Tacio
“
THE most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched,” said Helen Keller, “they must be felt with the heart.” The average human heart, which throbs at 72 beats per minute, will beat approximately 2.5 billion times during an average 66 year lifespan. Among males, a heart weighs 300 to 350 grams while it is between 250 to 300 grams among females. The heart is one of the most important organs in the human body, as it is responsible for pumping blood and delivering all the nutrients your body needs in order to function correctly. Nonetheless, some of your habits take their toll on your hearts and you do not realize this until it is too late. Here are some of the things you need to do: 1. Have regular exercise. According to the Geneva-based World Health Organization (WHO), physical inactivity is the fourth leading risk factor for global mortality, causing an estimated 3.2 million deaths around the world each year. The WHO says regular moderate intensity physical activity -- such as walking, cycling or participating in sports -- can reduce the risk of cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, colon and breast cancer, and depression, as well as cutting the risk of bone fractures and helping to control body weight. 2. Get enough sleep. In a
large study done in the United States, people who tended to get less than six hours of sleep nightly were more likely to have high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, and to be obese. Researchers at the University of Chicago reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association that too little sleep can promote calcium buildup in the heart arteries, leading to the plaques that can then break apart and cause heart attacks and strokes. 3. Quit smoking. Smokers who quit may cut heart risk faster than earlier thought. Previous studies showed that older former smokers who had consumed less than 32 pack years of cigarettes could reduce their risk of dying from heart disease to the level of lifelong nonsmokers after 15 years. 4. Avoid drinking alcohol excessively: Having a drink every once in a while will not have a major impact on your heart (especially if you consume wine, which has a series of health benefits). In fact, alcohol has mild anti-coagulating properties and might help prevent blood clots that can lead to heart attack or stroke, the Women’s Heart Foundation reports. Moderate alcohol consumption lowers the risk of
coronary heart disease by 20 to 40 percent, says the Hopkins Hospital. Moderate consumption is defined as 1 to 2 drinks per day. But the American Heart Association does not promote alcohol use as a preventative for heart disease. Once an individual begins consuming 3 or more alcoholic drinks per day, the risk f o r alcoholic cardiomyopathy, which is a
weakening of the heart muscle, increases, and other heart related problems increases as well. 5. Think before you drink those sugary beverages. Women who imbibe sugary soft drinks almost every day are 83% more likely to have certain health problems, including heart attacks. This was the findings of a study
conducted in Japan and was published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. From nearly 40,000 people who answered a dietary, health and lifestyle questionnaire, the researchers tracked how many people developed heart disease or had a stroke from the beginning of the study period until 2008. Out of 11,800 women who rarely had a soft drink, 205
(1.7%) went on to have an ischemic stroke. Some 921 women drank a soft drink every day and 28 (3%) of them had experienced a stroke. 6. Don’t eat foods with too much salt: There are some definitive evidences that linked heart disease and salt. A recent report said that eating too much salt contributed to 2.3 million deaths from heart attacks, strokes and other heart-related diseases
throughout the world in 2010, representing 15 percent of all deaths due to these causes. “Eating too much salt may raise your blood pressure, and having high blood pressure increases your risk of developing coronary heart disease,” the British Heart Foundation claims. “So to keep your heart healthy it’s important that you don’t eat too much salt each day.” 7. Find a pet. If you want to cut your risk of suffering from a heart disease, consider getting a pet. According to the American Heart Association, owning a pet may help to decrease a person’s risk of suffering from heart disease and is linked with lower levels of obesity, blood pressure and cholesterol. “Pet ownership, particularly dog ownership, is probably associated with a decreased risk of heart disease,” pointed out Dr. Glenn N. Levine, a professor at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, in a statement published online in the journal Circulation. 8. Don’t take stress for granted: Stress has emerged as one of the most serious health issues of the 21st century as it makes people around the world vulnerable to many diseases, according to a recent report released by the International Labor Organization. “When stress is excessive, it can contribute to everything
from high blood pressure, also called hypertension, to asthma to ulcers to irritable bowel syndrome ,” said Dr. Ernesto L. Schiffrin, professor and vice chair of research for the Department of Medicine at McGill University in Montreal. 9. Avoid eating fatty foods: They are high in calories, which can increase your weight. Yet when it comes to heart disease, all fats are not equal. Healthy fats, such as monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats, may lower your risk of heart disease, whereas, unhealthy fats, such as saturated and trans fats, may increase your risk. Saturated fat – which is found in animal products such as beef, pork, poultry and dairy – may increase your risk of heart disease. In a study published in Diabetes Care in 2008, scientists at Athens University Medical School in Greece discovered that a meal rich in saturated fats harms the endothelium, the layer of cells that line the interior of your arteries, whereas a monounsaturated-fat-rich meal does not. Impairment of the endothelium may cause your arteries to narrow and increase your risk of coronary heart disease. Now, you have no reasons why you can’t take good care of your heart. “Keep love in your heart,” Oscar Wilde once pointed out. “A life without it is like a sunless garden when the flowers are dead.”
VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
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EDGEDAVAO
VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
PNP, AFP affirm support for BBL T
HE Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and the Philippine National Police (PNP) have affirmed support for the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) even with the outrage over the unfortunate incident in Mamasapano, Maguindanao. Expressing the apprehen-
sions of people from Mindanao that the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law will be delayed or scrapped off in the wake of the Jan. 25 Mamasapano incident, House of Representatives’ Deputy Speaker and Lanao del Sur second district Representative Pangalian Balindong asked top police
and military officials if they support the passage of the BBL as a way forward in achieving peace. To this, both PNP officer-in-charge Deputy Director Leonardo Espina and AFP Chief of Staff General Gregorio Catapang responded “Yes” and affirmed their support to
the passage of the BBL during the HOR’s first public hearing Wednesday on the incident that claimed lives of 44 Special Action Force (SAF) policemen, armed rebels and civilians. Balindong, a Muslim, appealed that the “peace process should continue so our (referring to the people of Mindan-
ao) hearts may be at ease.” He urged the conduct of an “uninterrupted review of the BBL” parallel to the Congressional probe on the Mamasapano incident. Meanwhile, Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process Teresita Quintos Deles said the passage of the BBL is really in the hands of Congress and expressed her respect to the power of the body to legislate a law that will address the aspirations of the Bangsamoro people. The passage and ratification of the BBL shall establish a Bangsamoro government that will exercise genuine autonomy, and replace the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao. The BBL is the enabling law of the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB) signed by the Government of the Philippines (GPH) and the Moro Islamic Liebration Front (MILF) on March 27, 2014. The CAB also provides a normalization process that includes decommissioning of the MILF weapons and forces, simultaneous to the establishment of the Bangsamoro. Earlier, Espina emphasized in a very emotional manner that, “we (the PNP) are for peace, we are first and foremost your peacemakers. Whatever it takes to attain the peace, let us do it po.” Implication of non-passage of BBL In response to a question from Caloocan City second dis-
trict Rep. Edgar Erice on what will be the effect on the ground if the BBL will not be passed into law, Catapang pointed out the security repercussions. According to the AFP chief, government forces and MILF had a zero skirimish record for three years since 2012 until this year when the tragic incident in Mamasapano happened due to the ceasefire accord. However, Catapang noted that in the past, encounters between the government and MILF forces from 2001 to 2012 resulted to: 491 deaths among AFP and PNP; 841 deaths among civilians; and 1,267 deaths among MILF members. The record for the wounded were 1,089 among AFP and PNP; 1,673 for civilians; 237 for the MILF. Catapang expressed “Pahihintulutan po ba natin na mangyari at maulit ito kung hindi natin itutuloy ang national endeavour na magkaroon ng kapayapaan? (Do we allow this to happen again if we do not continue the national endeavour of achieving peace?)” Deles on her part said, “Your honor we already know what the situation is when there is no ceasefire. I thank Gen. Catapang for already having stated that. I think your honor it also has some implications on what we tell our people about our capacity to be able to make peace. What it tells our people about our capacity to fulfill a constitutional mandate on autonomy.” (PNA)
EDGEDAVAO Sports
VOL. 7 ISSUE 235 • FRIDAY-SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 - 14, 2015
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ENSURING THE INTEGRITY Davao del Norte leads drugs-free sports campaign
By NOEL BAGUIO
T
HE province of Davao del Norte has taken the lead in the campaign against the use of performance-enhancing drugs to ensure the integrity of sports. With 81 days more to go before its crucial hosting of the Palarong Pambansa 2015, the province organized the Sub-National Anti-Doping Conference, in coordination with the Philippines Sports Commission (PSC) and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). Governor Rodolfo del Rosario said the province is committed to uphold the integrity of sports, particularly the country’s largest sporting event, by impressing the values of fair play and promoting a drug-free culture among the young athletes. He vowed the Palaro officials will never allow banned performance-enhancing substances to corrupt the ideals of the athletic competition, which he tagged as a powerful tool in promoting peace in the region. “Never will we allow dop-
ing to directly challenge the fairness of the competition,” he stressed during the commitment campaign on anti-doping in sports at the Bulwagan ng Lalawigan, Mankilam, Tagum City. Over 200 coaches, trainors, medical doctors and nurses from the Davao Region attended the event, which was the first of its kind in the island of Mindanao. Dr. Alejandro Pineda, Jr., Medical Director and Doping Control Head of the PSC, said the conference intended to provide fundamental information on anti-doping in sports and everyday living to sports stakeholders. It also sought to inculcate upon the athletes the values of true play and clean game, while creating a sporting environment conducive to healthy living. Pineda bared well-trained athletes can win even without prohibited drugs particularly if they have the right preparation and confidence for an event. “Athletes do not need performance-boosting drugs provided that they were given
Gov. Rodolfo del Rosario, right, receives the plaque of appreciation from Dr. Alejandro Pineda, Jr., Medical Director and Doping Control Head of the PSC, for his all-out support to the anti-doping in sports awareness and commitment campaign. noel baguio/davnor pio proper endurance-building, as well as, physical training and conditioning,” he said. He also asked the coaches and trainers to be wary of
sports drinks and other substances that might have already been declared as banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency.
Aside from the applicable policies and the health and legal consequences of using prohibited substances, experts from the PSC and the UNES-
CO also provided enlightening talks on sports medicine, sports science and sports nutrition, which contain the best “formula for winning”.
a 24-15 bomb to grab the lead, 41-40 in the 2nd quarter. In the third canto, Tugbok suffered a big blow after Bangkas injured his left knee that totally removed him out of the game. Agdao then widened its lead by nine points, 70-61 as Kagawad Jose Roy de Lara scored all of his seven points and Flordelito Cagampang and Randibol Villasenda each made six points apiece. Cagampang, a head coach of the Jose Maria College men’s basketball team, continued to wax hot in the final quarter by hitting 11 points to top Agdao with 24 markers. Villasenda finished with 20 followed by Karlo Godoy with 14. Joel Crisanto had 8 while Peter Epe contributed 7
with one 3-pointer. Bangkas still topscored Tugbok together with Jeje Juntong with 22 points each. Armando Caparoso made 10 while Barangay Captain Jerry Ceballas shot 8. “I hope na maka laro na ulit si Bangkas sa next game,” said Ceballas. The winner will face the winner of the other semifinal match between top qualifier Poblacion B and no. 4 Bunawan District slated today (Feb. 11). Poblacion B, which swept the elimination round, also enjoys a twice-to-beat advantage against Bunawan. Both teams are played by three barangay captains. Poblacion B has barangay captains Rolando “Antoy”
Bantaya, , Erlan Guevara (34D) and Lito Maguiling (25-C) while Bunawan has barangay captains Dante Apostol (Panacan), Erwin Piatos (San Isidro) and Allan Simo-ag (Lasang). Poblacion B is also composed of Kagawads Zaldy Aporto, Gary Barriga, Rogelio Cabantug, Harrish Ratag, Ronald Valenzona, Joel Valles, John Paul Rosalada, Abdullah Ameril and Romeo Yap. Coach is Barangay Captain Jorgio. Bunawan, on the other hand, is also powered by Kagawads Welfredo Calag, Robert Calvo, Arnulfo Sumalinog, Margo Babao, Ronald Galendez, Clyed Tan, Ronnie Odenia, Basildy Delica, Ging Aban, Geovanni Labrica, Jerry Rebosa and Doce Apostol. (LDR/CSDDCMO)
In Miami, the two protagonists finally had a chance encounter, unplanned perhaps, providential even. The Miami encounter led to the hotel truce complete with video footages captured clandestinely by the Mayweather camp. In the Mamasapano encounter, footages were apparently also shot by the MILF showing morbid execution of brave SAF commandos. Given the clandestine moves by the other camp, would the GPH do a Bob Arum move? This is where I think
Bob Arum, a living study in the art of negotiations, could teach us a lesson or two in statesmanship. In Bob’s case, salesmanship. He is a master of this craft, holding his own in a long protracted battle with the Mayweather camp. In his 50 years or so in this business, there are no fight negotiations handled by Arum that he came out shortchanged. He always is on the upside. In control from start to finish. So don’t be surprise if the current negotiations with the Mayweather camp will take time. Don’t be surprised if
Make it a dozen: CMO wallops Agdao upsets Tugbok in DBL Inter-Political Basketball tourney th Everball for 12 straight win
C
HRISTOPHER “Bong” Go and Glenn Escandor rallied the City Mayors Office to push its winning streak to 12 against Everball Columbia Center with a 93 – 82 decision on Tuesday night at the Genesis 88 Gym. Escandor, the spot-up shooting businessman sportsman, anchored the early offensive assault as Go led a sensational finishing stretch to keep the City Hall dribblers roaring. The trusted aid of Mayor Rodrigo Duterte piloted a remarkable fight back by the CMO which was trailing at the start of the fourth period. Go, who had game-best 34 points, opened the final canto with three consecutive triples to take the lead and never looked back to pull away with
I
N a situation clouded with doubt and distrust, is it wise to push forward with the negotiations? That is the big question lawmakers are throwing to the government negotiating panel on the ongoing peace talks with the MILF. Senators Alan Peter Cayetano and Miriam Defensor Santiago lashed out at the MILF questioning their sincerity in the peace negotiations. Whatever this leads to, the ultimate goal of achieving peace in Mindanao is in great peril.
another come from behind victory. Escandor came through with 17 baskets on a great offensive game for the City Hall dribblers who kept the Everball Columbia winless in the first 12 games of the series. Everball Columbia was determined to end its losing streak, dictating the tempo of the match from the opening tip. But they could not cut loose as the CMO remained within the striking distance behind the big first half of Escandor. Suarez paced Everball Columbia with 23 points. Earl Angsinco and Cabrera had 15 and 12 respectively. Michael Peloton chipped in 10 for the CMO. (Rico Biliran)
I could not help but compare that with the ongoing Manny Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather megafight negotiations. On one hand you have the Pacquiao negotiating panel with Bob Arum at the helm. On the other, the Mayweather negotiating team led by Al Haymon. It’s much like the GPHMILF negotiations with both panels pushing forward their agenda with the aim of achieving the envisaged peace and autonomy in Mindanao. Then came Mamasapano.
A
GDAO District pulled off a 94-81 win against early-favoriteTugbok District yesterday to force a do-or-die Game 2 of their cross-over semifinal match in the Duterte Basketball League (DBL) Inter-Political Basketball Tournament at the Almendras gym. Game 2 is set on Monday, Feb. 16 at 1 p.m. according to tournament chair Goldie Delvo, officer-in-charge of the organizing City Sports Development Division-City Mayor’s Office. Agdao had an erratic start and trailed by eight, 17-25 after the first quarter as Tugbok’s prolific scorer Kagawad Roy Bangkas made 15 of his 22 points. Agdao, however exploded
Like Mayweather
LET’S GET IT ON
Neil Bravo The peace talks were on its way to its final stages until a cabal impeded its way. In the case of Pacquiao-Mayweather, it is Miami not Mamasapano.
this fight won’t happen on May 2 but later. Bob is in charge here and he knows what he’s talking. Are we also doing well with our GPH negotiating team? It’s hard to lay judgment but let’s put it this way. If someone in the panel had the mind of a Bob Arum, we will surely be negotiating from a stronger side of the table. We can move fast but we don’t need to hurry. Postscripts: Listen to “Let’s Get It On with Neil Bravo” on 105.9 Balita FM every Saturday 8-10 a.m.
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