Friday, April 19, 2019

Retards in the Government 98

It's your weekly compendium of foolishness and corruption and murder in Philippine politics. 



https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1067070
The village chief of Barangay San Pedro in Sta. Catalina, Negros Oriental was shot dead while two other women were wounded in a broad daylight shooting incident in that southern town on Thursday. 
An initial police report from the Negros Oriental Provincial Police Office (NOPPO) identified the fatality as acting San Pedro village chief Samuel Ragay, and the two injured as Nimfa Herosa, the barangay treasurer, and Lorna Vingcoy. 
Initial police investigation disclosed that three unidentified armed men barged into the barangay hall of San Pedro at around 10 a.m. and told the victims to drop to the floor, said Police Corporal Mark Anthony Dicdican of the Sta. Catalina police station.
He didn't even offer any resistance. He got on the floor and died like a dog.


https://www.rappler.com/nation/228022-duterte-says-new-drug-lord-western-visayas-will-also-die
There's a new drug lord in Western Visayas and President Rodrigo Duterte is sure that person will die soon.  
President Duterte, who led the campaign of Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan at the Bacolod City Government Center football field on Thursday night, April 11, claimed that someone has taken over the illegal drug operations in the region after the death of alleged Iloilo drug lord Melvin Odicta
Sino naghahawak dito? Bakit maraming ugok dito noon? Odicta. Sino nagpalit? Huwag ko munang sabihin. Patay rin ‘yan. ‘Yan ang sigurado,” he said. 
(Who’s handling the operations here? Why were there many fools here before? Odicta. Who replaced Odicta? I won't say who yet. He will be dead, too. That’s for sure.) 
According to the police, Odicta’s illegal drug operation covered the region, including Negros Occidental and its capital city, Bacolod.
A new drug lord? Sounds like the drug war is going just fine.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1067162
Police officials and personnel in Region 12 (Soccsksargen) who are facing charges and undergoing disciplinary proceedings have received a break for some “reflection.” 

Brig. Gen. Eliseo Rasco, Police Regional Office 12 director, said they sent police personnel facing various charges to the Our Lady of Lourdes Parish in Polomolok, South Cotabato to undergo a two-day recollection starting Friday. 

Rasco said the spiritual enrichment activity or the PRO-12’s 2019 Lenten Recollection focuses on the theme, “Repentance, a Pathway to Forgiveness”. 

“The participants are uniformed personnel who are facing pending administrative or criminal cases and those who have been embroiled in controversies,” he said in a statement. 

The initiative is part of the Philippine National Police’s (PNP) spiritual uplifting program, which “aims to boost the morale of the PNP personnel in their approach to law enforcement,” the police official said.
Does Duterte know about this? Does he know PNP officers are on a retreat at a Catholic Church?

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1106362/former-military-comptroller-ligot-found-guilty-of-perjury
The Sandiganbayan’s First Division has convicted retired Lt. Gen. Jacinto Ligot, the former military comptroller, of perjury and sentenced him to six years in prison. 
In a 74-page decision promulgated on Friday, the antigraft court found Ligot guilty on six counts for failing to declare P135 million of his properties in his statement of assets, liabilities and net worth (SALNs) from 1998 to 2003.
The tax evasion case stemmed from a 2011 Senate inquiry into allegations that Ligot and other former high-ranking AFP officials were involved in the multimillion “pabaon” (parting gift) funds misuse scandal.
Convicted of perjury for lying on his SALN but likely involved in a whole lot of corruption.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2019/04/14/1909842/duterte-rights-groups-you-defend-i-kill-criminals
“I don’t care about criminals, the robbers and their kind – they can be killed like dogs,” the President said in Filipino. 
“Each of us has our own tasks in this world. You defend criminals, I kill criminals,” Duterte said.
The Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) yesterday transmitted to the Commission on Elections (Comelec) the complaints against 52 barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) officials who engaged in partisan politics. 
According to DILG Undersecretary Epimaco Densing, the complaints came from concerned residents who reported that these officers involved themselves in the campaign for the May 13 midterm polls.  
The 52 are part of the more than 700 complaints received by the DILG, he added. The rest are still being validated. 
Comelec spokesman James Jimenez refused to comment on the complaints, but pointed out that the Comelec has “to wait for them to file verified complaints.” 
“The documents brought to the Comelec are, in effect, merely letters which are not actually in the nature of verified complaints,” Jimenez pointed out.
That last highlighted part is very important. No complaints have been filed. Only letters have been sent. These people probably think writing a letter is enough and do not know the proper process to file a complaint which means no actual complaints will be filed and no village officials will be held accountable for their actions.


Bansalan Mayor Quirina Sarte refused to step down last week to serve a six-month suspension order for grave misconduct after she allegedly allowed a sports club to use the municipal gymnasium for free. 
In its March 11 resolution, the Office of the Ombudsman suspended Sarte for violating Republic Act No. 3019, or the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act. 
But when the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) in Davao del Sur served Sarte’s suspension order on April 11, the mayor questioned the agency’s authority to enforce suspension orders during the election period. 
The DILG installed Vice Mayor Edwin Reyes as acting mayor. 
Sarte and Reyes are rivals for the town’s mayoral post in the May 13 elections.
This lady does not want to lose her position as mayor. 


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1106541/conviction-of-5-ex-nha-execs-for-graft-upheld
All five were earlier convicted of graft for their involvement in an overpriced construction project in Bacolod City in 1992, and were sentenced to a minimum of six years and one month imprisonment to a maximum of 10 years, and were perpetually disqualified from  public office.
A nearly 20 year appeal!


https://www.mindanews.com/top-stories/2019/04/wanted-ex-mayor-shows-up-in-pdps-marawi-rally-intercepted-by-military-after-but-released/
A former mayor who was in President Rodrigo Duterte’s August 2016 list of personalities allegedly involved in illegal drugs and who went into hiding since late May 2017 as he was ordered arrested for alleged involvement in the Marawi siege, showed up at the rally of the Partido ng Demokratikong Pilipinas (PDP) Friday, was publicly acknowledged by senatorial bets but was intercepted by the military as he stepped out of the Dimaporo Gymnasium and brought to the headquarters of the 103rd Infantry Brigade. 
The military said they did not arrest but merely “invited” former Marawi mayor Omar Solitario, who has been wanted since his name was listed in Arrest Orders 1 and 2 issued on May 29 and June 5, 2017 by Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana, the Martial Law administrator. 
Solitario is one of nine candidates for mayor of the Islamic City of Marawi in the 2019 polls, running under the People’s Consultative Party. 
MindaNews asked a government official-friend of Solitario if he was arrested. He said he verified and was told that Solitario “went there to drink coffee with the officers and gentlemen.” 
“But he is still wanted, right?” MindaNews asked. Solitario’s friend replied “di na daw kuno” (not anymore). 
Asked how he was cleared, the friend said he had no details but added that Solitario “is campaigning with so much ease in movement.” 
“We just invited him for an interview,” Col. Romeo Brawner, 103rd Infantry Brigade commander, said in a text message Friday night in response to MindaNews’ query if Solitario was arrested. 
Asked where Solitario was, Brawner told MindaNews he had been released. “We received orders to release him,” he said.
This is a very strange story. The man was wanted for involvement in drugs and the Marawi siege, is apprehended, and is subsequently released. How? Why? Likely Duterte gave the order to release him. Who else would have the authority to make such a decision?

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/691298/palace-duterte-effectively-invoked-arbitral-ruling-by-telling-china-to-lay-off-pag-asa/
"Effectively his previous statement earlier—when he said ‘do not touch our property and if you do any harm to our soldiers, we will respond in kind’—that effectively has already made a very strong assertion of sovereignty and statement relative to the arbitral ruling," presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo said at a news conference. 
Asked if the public should take it as the President invoking the arbitral ruling, Panelo said: "Exactly. Yes." 
Panelo reiterated the Philippines' call for China to avoid any acts that will be considered as harassing Filipino fishermen in disputed waters or that "might provoke hostility and it can even affect the bilateral relations between two countries." 
The Palace spokesman also said China should "respect" the arbitral ruling "although they do not believe in it." 
"As we said earlier, as far as we are concerned there has been an arbitral ruling issued by a tribunal based on the law on the seas and accepted by international law. So we feel that we have a judgment, a judgment which has a stamp of permanence. It cannot be taken away from us," he said.
Given how he has downplayed the ruling in the past as well as lashes out against the UN and the ICC the fact that he would invoke this ruling is laughable.
http://www.visayandailystar.com/2019/April/12/topstory5.htm
A ranking military official yesterday revealed that they are closely monitoring four local government officials in Himamaylan City, Negros Occidental, who are allies of the New People’s Army.  
Without mentioning names, Brig. Gen. Benedict Arevalo, 303rd Infantry Brigade commander, said yesterday that those government officials are not just supporting the NPA, but are allies of the rebel group.  
“We have to see to it that they do not use the NPA rebels as their private armed group,” Arevalo said, as he reminded them of their pledge to support the government as elected officials.  
Arevalo, who had revealed earlier that more than 30 officials in Negros Occidental are allegedly supporting the CPP-NPA, maintained that he will not release their names in public, stressing that he does not have immunity like President Rodrigo Duterte. 
Ok so there are maybe 30 LG officials associated with communists but he won't release the names because he does not have immunity like the President? Does this mean Duterte can simply accuse anyone of anything and get away with it? 
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1107306/vacc-expels-central-luzon-exec-over-alleged-corruption
The Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption (VACC) has expelled one of its coordinators in Central Luzon over alleged corruption, VACC president Arsenio “Boy” Evangelista announced on Tuesday. 
He said the expulsion of Pyra Lucas was formalized through a resolution approved by the board on April 4. 
VACC, he said, acted on the complaint of a couple whose son has a pending rape case in the Department of Justice. 
Evangelista said he was also checking reports that Lucas had used a unit of the National Bureau of Investigation in an illegal quarrying activity.
Irony? 


https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/691447/gov-t-officials-sued-at-supreme-court-for-neglect-of-west-phl-sea/story/
A group of Palawan fishermen and farmers on Tuesday asked the Supreme Court (SC) to order the government to enforce environmental laws in the Philippines' waters and exclusive economic zone. 
They also sought the issuance of a writ of continuing mandamus requiring the government to perform acts mandated upon them by Philippine environmental laws. 
Citing evidence submitted by the government to the Permanent Court of Arbitration, the international arbitral court that ruled for the Philippines in 2016, the group alleged that Chinese fishermen and vessels have harvested endangered species and used cyanide and dynamite in Panatag and Ayungin Shoals, violating the Philippine Fisheries Code.
They also assailed Chinese construction activities in Panganiban Reef. 
The environmental damage, they said, covers Masinloc, Zambales and Kalayaan, Palawan. 
"The marine environment and resources in the abovementioned areas were damaged severely and extensively in spite of adequate Philippine laws to protect them," the petition stated. 
"Clearly, the damage is brought upon by lack of enforcement of Philippine environment laws by respondents," it added.
Not only are the Chinese creeping steadily on Philippine territory in the WPS but they are also damaging the environment.

(You know, I still have friends from other countries. What you did not know is that you were being listened to while you are doing that. I’ll release that in a few days. It’s an intelligence report, not from us but from another country.)
This is not the first time Duterte has threatened people with foreign intelligence reports and likely won't be the last? It is also probably not true but if it is and he knows a foreign country is spying on the country and would wilfully use those reports to his advantage rather than call them out then that is just a a step shy from treason.

https://globalnation.inquirer.net/174570/palace-us-could-have-stopped-china-in-south-china-sea
“Well, like America is there, they could have stopped China from the inception, but they did not,” Panelo said in an interview over ABS-CBN News Channel on Wednesday.
How exactly could America have stopped China's activities in the WPS?  Maybe the Philippines should not have raised the rent on Subic Bay and Clark military bases which is what caused the US to leave thus creating a void of which China could readily take advantage. The blame falls on the Philippines for not having a solid policy on the WPS and China and Duterte's inaction is only making things worse.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1107846/calabarzon-police-chief-sacks-3-cops-sleeping-on-the-job-in-batangas
Three policemen were relieved after they were caught sleeping on the job in Sto. Tomas, Batangas City on Holy Wednesday. 
Brig. Gen. Edward Carranza, director of the Calabarzon (Cavite, Laguna Batangas, Rizal and Quezon) police, said he saw the three policemen just woke up at a police outpost near the National Shrine of Saint Padre Pio. 
He also said he discovered the Community-Police Assistance Center (COMPAC), where the three police officers were stationed, messy.
You snooze, you lose...your job that is.


Guban, Fajardo, and Acierto, based on the complaint of the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI), are the “core conspirators” in trying to smuggling the shabu into the country. 

Acierto earlier surfaced and linked President Rodrigo Duterte’s former adviser Michael Yan in the illegal drugs activity. 

Aside from the three, also facing the same charges are Chan Yee Wah; Zhou Quan/Zhang Quan; consignees Vedasto Cabral Baraquel Jr. and his wife Maria Lagrimas Catipan of Vecaba Trading; and Emily Luquingan, the ex-wife of Hsu Chun Chung.
So now the guy who alleges one of Duterte's advisors is  drug lord is charged with smuggling shabu in to the country.  Neat.

Thursday, April 18, 2019

Did You Know? (Unanswered Questions and Unsettling Facts About the Marawi Siege)

Today is April 18th, 2019. It is now two years to the day that the AFP was notified about an impending attack in Marawi and in other cities in Mindanao. This fact is included in the documents the government submitted to the Supreme Court in defence of Duterte's declaration of martial law. That the AFP was aware Abdullah Maute had dispatched men to specific cities to create chaos and havoc yet did not stop them is just one of the many intelligence failures and anomalies in the lead up to the Marawi siege.

Last year I made a video which compiled statements from Duterte, Lorenzana, and Bato among others in which they discussed the failures which allowed the siege to occur. As of yet there has been no investigation into what happened, how it happened, or why it happened in Marawi. The video is rather long at 30 minutes and the transcript of the video is also rather long and not a lot of people have either watched the video or read the transcript.

Perhaps it is better to start smaller. To start by asking a few questions which bring to light facts that people may not know in order to get them thinking. It is in that spirt that I offer these infographics  five of which I have previously posted all over Twitter but have not published in this blog.














There are plenty more such infographics that could be made because there are quite a number of facts left undiscussed by both the media and politicians. This wilful lack of discussion shows across social media as when one attempts to discuss this issue they are quickly beaten down with a bevy of false information. The public at large is seemingly totally unaware of any of the anomalies regarding the lead up to the Marawi siege. Media outlets like Rappler and pundits such as Thinking Pinoy would have the public believe they are out fighting in the name of the truth for the average man. Many politicians would have their constituents also believe the same.

But the fact is no one, not a single media outlet, not a single columnist, not a single pundit, not a single politician in the Philippines has dared bring up these facts listed above. Nor have they dared to question the narrative given to us by the Duterte administration. How then can they dare claim to be fighting for the truth? They are not fighting for anything except their partisan worldview.

What is needed is an investigation of the Marawi siege but that is not likely ever going to happen which is a travesty of justice. Truth does matter even if everyone else is believing a lie. Even if knowing the truth awakens one to the fact that they are powerless to remedy the situation. Such is the jarring reality which comes with taking the redpill. 

Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Sidewalk to Nowhere

This article is a year in the making. Everything below happened in April 2018. I wrote it in October but got sidetracked and decided to wait for a whole year to pass just to see if the situation would change. It did not.

A few months ago a shed popped up out of nowhere!


Turns out the shed was to house the men who were about to reupholster the sidewalk






See how hard they are working? What they are doing is placing faux red bricks onto an already existing sidewalk to....beautify it? I have no idea. But they sure are working hard. And that means sleeping hard too.


A hard day of work follow by a few hours of well-deserved drinking and snoozing. What a life. But then one day the shed disappeared and so did the workers. The sidewalk was not even finished. Where did they go?

Down the street to the next barangay!





And you know what? They actually finished the job in that new location. However it is now October and has been SEVEN MONTHS and the original location they were at remains unfinished!






It's doubtful they will finish the job anytime soon. Besides this is literally a sidewalk to nowhere in the middle of nowhere. Why even waste the time and money to beautify it? What is the point? In several spots across town they are adding brick to an already perfectly good sidewalk. What for? When they do this work they dump the sand and bricks in the road which impedes traffic flow.  In some places they have had to use huge boulders to fill in ditches and build the sidewalk. 

In places where they are upgrading the sidewalk they not only have to place the brick but they also have to redo the curb with a whole lot of cement and it looks bad.  Even in places where they originally had brick it looks terrible. Like this sidewalk near the mall.  







The lack of sidewalks is a big problem in the Philippines. Why bother fixing what is just fine the way it is? Sidewalks are for walking. They don't need to be beautified. They are purely functional. But if they are going to spend the money to beautify the sidewalk they should spend the money on the upkeep. That this sidewalk, which is one big trip hazard, is allowed to remain in this state is ridiculous.

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Martial Law: Duterte Flip-flops

The world is cheering at the demise of ISIS half way around the globe in Syria. Whether or not such jubilation is premature the AFP has a message to any jihadis attempting to set up shop and continue their activities in the Philippines.

https://businessmirror.com.ph/2019/04/13/leave-or-die/

THE capture by US-backed forces of the last stronghold of the Islamic State (IS) in Syria last month that spelled the terrorist group’s defeat has put on alert countries where the IS has put up so-called caliphate provinces, including the Philippines, and to be exact, Lanao del Sur, or even the whole of Mindanao. 
The alert was borne by the belief that these countries, whose citizens have enlisted as IS fighters, or are hosting jihadist groups allied with the IS, should brace for the influx of returning fighters following the collapse of their group’s adventure in Syria. 
While the warning could not be taken lightly, Col. Romeo Brawner, commander of the Army’s 103rd Brigade headquartered right in the heart of Marawi City in Lanao del Sur, said the IS and its mixture of local fighters are already finished in the province. 
The government declared at the end of the campaign that it would take years before the IS, or even any home-grown terrorist group, can mount a siege in the scale of the Marawi attack again, given the death of its leaders and fighters and the continuing decline of its influence. 
Military officials even confidently declared that the siege would be the last in the country’s battle against terrorism, jihadism and Islamic radicalization. 
“No more, they are done here,” said Brawner as he not only echoed the line of the military leadership, but cited the progress of their operations against the IS and its followers, now tagged by the military as Dawla Islamiyah. 
Brawner said the IS, even if it attempts to recruit, may find it overwhelmingly difficult to recover in Lanao del Sur. In fact, he said, IS is already on its way to oblivion, given the successive deaths of its leaders and the consistent surrender of its followers and sympathizers as a result of the continuing operations by Brawner’s Army brigade. 
“The death of Abu Dar lends to the end of the IS here,” Brawner said, adding that up to his death, the terrorist leader only had no more than 25 fighters. 
“He was a preacher,” he added, underscoring the capability of Abu Dar to recruit members if he would still be alive. 
Other than killing the leaders of the IS and operating continuously against the group, the military has secured the surrender of at least 160 IS followers and sympathizers since Brawner assumed his post as 103rd Brigade commander. 
Brawner, a Special Forces by training, said they would hunt IS members to the last man, while guarding against any effort of the group to recruit.
Tough talk from Col. Brawner but is he only echoing the line of the military leadership with very little progress to back it up? He says ISIS is done then he says they are on the way to oblivion. Then he says they would hunt ISIS members to the very last. Will it be a game of whack-a-mole in Mindanao? How many times has the military leadership declared the CPP-NPA irrelevant only to end up eating their words as they remain as strong as ever? Terrorists do continue to surrender en masse even while the AFP clashes with Abu Sayyaf.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1067208
Government troops killed 12 Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) bandits while five soldiers were wounded in four separate clashes as offensives against the ASG continue in the hinterlands of Sulu, military officials said Friday.
Same with the NPA. Plenty of surrenderees including top leadership.

https://pia.gov.ph/news/articles/1020736
A Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP)-New People’s Army (NPA) Terrorist (CNT) leader identified as Jomar Martinez Mapando voluntarily surrendered to 36th Infantry “Valor” Battalion Headquarters based in Barangay Dayoan, Tago around 5:00 PM, April 6, 2019, 36IB Civil Military Operations (CMO) officer said. 
Lt. Jonald Romorosa, CMO officer of 36IB, said that Mapando also known as “Peter” is a resident of Sitio San Isidro, Barangay Anilong, Rosario, Agusan del Sur. He brought with him a homemade shotgun, and a .357 pistol with ammunition and other documents with high intelligence value.
As well as plenty of clashes.

http://mindanaotimes.com.ph/2019/04/12/troops-engage-npa-rebels-in-five-firefights-in-one-day/
The combined troops of the 3rd Infantry Battalion, 56th Infantry Battalion and 101st Division Reconnaissance Company (DRC) figured in five combat encounters against the New People’s Army in one day. 
The said operation led to the recovery of recovery of five high-powered firearms, two fragmentation grenades, and one improvised explosive device. 
Col. Nolasco Mempin, the commander of the 1003rd Infantry Brigade, said the troops encountered members of the Front Committee 56, Sub-regional Command 5, Southern Mindanao Regional Committee at the outskirts of Barangay Sinuda, Kitaotao, Bukidnon. 
Mempin said the skirmishes also led to the recovery of a 20-meter wire, one generator set, five backpacks, seven cellphones, one power bank, and subversive documents.
The NPA leader Peter who surrendered with a homemade shotgun brings to light a part of the terrorism problem which many are aware of but which also still remains in the dark.  That would be the problem of homemade weapons.

Illegal gun making is a livelihood that has helped put food on the table and send the family’s children to school since the 1970s, and Mr. Launa, who asked that only the initial of his first name be used for fear of being arrested, is just one of a host of such small-scale gunsmiths in the region. His village alone is home to about a dozen. 
The trade — which contributes to the estimated two million unregistered guns in the Philippines, slightly more than the 1.7 million legally registered weapons — is able to flourish in a remote place where jobs are scarce, police presence is thin and lawlessness runs deep. 
Gun making “is an essential craft passed on from one generation to another here,” said Mr. Launa, 63, who learned the craft from his father and has now taught it to his son. 
Gunsmithing blossomed in the area during World War II, as locals were taught to make weapons to support a guerrilla movement fighting the Japanese. By the 1960s, Danao had become the go-to place for outlaws and ordinary citizens wanting cheap but high-quality replicas. 
In the 1990s, an effort was made to legalize the trade by regulating gun makers, but the project failed to win government support. 
The handguns — which even an enthusiast would have a hard time determining are illegal copies, down to the “Colt Automatic Caliber .45 Government Model” engraving — are sold to buyers for around 7,000 pesos, about $130, much cheaper than authentic models. 
Other weapons, like submachine guns, can be commissioned, too, although orders for the higher caliber weapons have become slow amid a government crackdown. 
The police have said the guns have also made their way into the hands of Abu Sayyaf, a small but violent terrorist group in the south that is increasingly allying itself with the Islamic State. 
“Right now, anyone can buy a gun here, as long as you have the money to pay, even if you were a thief, a killer or a gun for hire,” said the local police chief, Col. Jaime Quiocho, who noted the appeal of such illicit purchases to criminals. “Will you buy a gun that is licensed and can be traced back to you?” 
Asked whether he ever felt guilty knowing his guns might have been used in summary killings, Mr. Launa said, “I make guns, but I don’t tell people to kill others.” 
Colonel Quiocho acknowledged that the gun makers had little incentive or opportunity to abandon a trade that has provided a livelihood for generations. 
“It has been a way of life for many,” he said. “If they stop it, what will happen to them?” 
The police chief suggested legalizing the industry so that Danao guns could be properly tracked. 
“They will make guns whether we like it or not,” he said. “So why not control the industry, their quality and where they go?” 
The city government has tried to offer alternative livelihoods, though it has been a tough sell in a place where gun making is ingrained in the fabric of society.
Mr. Launa's statement rings hollow and false. He knows these weapons are being used to kill. Nobody is commissioning him to make hunting rifles so they can shoot game and feed their families. He may not tell people to kill others with the words of his mouth but his willingness to make guns which will inevitably be used in the commission of a crime makes him complicit. That he is a known personality and is still able to work his craft speaks volumes about the unwillingness of the PNP and AFP to stop the manufacturing of illegal weapons. Are they serious about stopping motorcycle gunmen as well as terrorists? It seems not.

Not even the president appears to be serious about the war against the NPA. Last month he said peace talks are permanently off the table.  Now he has changed his tune. Again.

https://www.manilatimes.net/duterte-flip-flops-opens-door-to-peace-with-reds/539442/
“I made the announcement that I’m no longer willing to talk to them. But who knows? It is not my wish, wishes that would count. It is not my predilection that would be important. It’s the welfare of the people,” he said. 
The President added that he would look into the best possible move. 
“So, I cannot talk with finality. You cannot talk with finality, because this office I am currently holding is not mine. I hold it for the people. I cannot say anything, with finality,” he said. 
Last month, during the Philippine Army’s 122nd founding anniversary rites, Duterte announced that he would finally shut the door on the peace talks.
“I am no longer entertaining any interventions or persuasions in this democratic state of the Republic of the Philippines,” he said. 
The President added that the NPA could talk peace with him.
He is even mulling opening new peace talks panel!

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/691267/duterte-mulls-creation-of-new-panel-to-talk-peace-with-communist-rebels/story/
“If you want to talk to me, I’ll send someone else. You talk to each other. I don’t want to talk anymore,” he said in Cebuano at the PDP-Laban campaign rally in Bukidnon. 
“I’ll look for another way and new people to talk to. Maybe one, two, or three from the military, and… Maybe around five. Two civilians and three from the military,” he added.
Malacañang earlier said localized panels will be formed following the dissolution of the government panel. It said sectoral representatives, local government units and the military will make up the panels for localized peace talks. 
Panelo added the government will still push through with the localized peace talks.
Duterte has no idea what he is doing. Likely he feels caught in a trap.  He loves the Philippines and has a duty to the Filipino people but he is also best buds with the CPP-NPA. He did say once:
“I am not qualified and besides, I am a compromised public official. Both left and right are my friends. How can I discharge properly my duty if the rebel forces are also my friends,”
What's a man to do? If he can't stop them perhaps he can issue a nationwide proclamation declaring the CPP-NPA persona non grata. Maybe that will make them put down their weapons. A few cities have tried this tactic.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1067177
Palma said the PPOC resolution declaring the communist rebels unacceptable in the province was adopted during the joint PPOC and Provincial Anti-Drugs Council (PADAC) meeting held on Monday and was attended by the heads and representatives of all sectors.  
Brig. Gen. Bagnus Gaerlan, the Army’s 102nd Infantry Brigade commander, said the declaration would help undermine the influence of the NPA and its affiliated organizations.
How exactly will this declaration undermine the influence of the NPA? They don't say.

How the BARMM will function is not said either and there is a lot of speculation about its viability.

https://www.eurasiareview.com/12042019-breakthrough-for-bangsamoro-can-they-overcome-the-odds-analysis/
The plebiscite was to be subsequently followed by the appointment of an 80-strong Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA), a parliamentary-style legislature which would fuse law-making and the implementation of new infrastructure projects. The new BARMM’s major difference from the ARMM is the greater share the BARMM gets from natural resources extracted from the Bangsamoro region. 
The BARMM will also see a normalisation process for former MILF combatants. The Independent Decommissioning Board (IDB) is tasked to oversee the demobilisation of 30 percent of MILF combatants by the end of 2019. 
While the BTA has much promise, it does not have the luxury of slowly easing its way into governance. The BOL, which acts as the founding charter of the BARMM, needs to be supported by a framework of enabling laws and codes. Without such policy instruments, the entire bureaucracy meant to execute the will of the BARMM would grind to a stop. 
Civil servants employed in the now defunct regional government face the very real threat of massive lay-offs if the mandate of their respective offices either lapses or become redundant. Promotions and salary adjustments would also likely be affected, as the BARMM needs to promulgate its own rules for its civil service. 
Without clarity in funding mechanisms, disaster relief plans would likely be disrupted. This can exacerbate the effects of an exceptionally dry summer in Mindanao, as it faces the El Niño phenomenon. 
Funding for BARMM infrastructure would come from block grants from the national government, which can be as much as three times the amount allocated for the former ARMM. 
The question is whether the BARMM’s fiscal policy can be truly independent, given that the new political entity still needs to develop its bureaucracy. The BOL anticipates that the BARMM will sustain itself through the exploitation of natural resources. 
Compared to other regions in the Philippines, the BARMM would get 75 percent of proceeds from resource exploitation (including offshore oil and gas) instead of 40 percent. There are concerns if the BARMM can transcend the endemic corruption that beset the former ARMM. 
Under the BOL, the new BARMM would have its own regional security force, in charge of internal security. 
The other important security-related question is the normalisation process for combatants of the MILF’s armed wing — the Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces (BIAF). The process will be overseen by the Independent Decommissioning Body (IDB), which includes members from third-party countries like Turkey, Norway and Brunei Darussalam. 
Validation of the 12,000-strong MILF list of combatants will be an arduous process, with some members of the security services expressing scepticism over the ability of the BIAF command to compel their fighters to turn in their weapons. Further complicating the matter is the need to secure the budget for the arms buyback schemes that would incentivise the disarmament process. 
Without tangible improvements to peace and development, the Bangsamoro constituency may be disillusioned and trigger another cycle of secessionist-inspired violence. If the current mood in Cotabato City is to be the gauge, the question is no longer whether there will be frustration and impatience at the grassroots. The challenge now for the BTA is to manage frustrations in the short-term while building sustainable institutions by 2022.
Obviously there are a lot of issues with the BARMM. First of all there needs to be a framework of laws to support the BOL which created the BARMM. As of now there is nothing. There is a body of appointees forming the Bangsamoro Transition Authority who's duty is to create that framework. They are hoping to get huge block grants from Manila as well as compensation from the exploitation of natural resources but the national budget has not even been passed nor is the BARMM's block grant included in that budget. They have to create a security force but they are in the process of decommissioning their forces which is a massive effort that is undermined by the lack of a budget to buy back weapons. But is it likely that a hardened MILF terrorist would give up his arms for a pittance? Why not just transition the MILF fighters to become the security force?

The BTA has a long road ahead of them.

Monday, April 15, 2019

Jeepney Art 23: Holy Week Special Edition

Being that this week is Holy Week let us take a look at a few jeepnies with outstanding religious art.











Saturday, April 13, 2019

Picture of the Week: Hang in There

For many Filipinos work and home are synonymous. None more so than construction workers who generally live onsite for the duration of the project which could be several months. For others it could be just a weekend away from home.



It seems these guys are returning back to the shop after a weekend of working the sound system at a fiesta. A close look near their heads reveals a rice cooker and the top of the ever ubiquitous 5 gallon water jug. Perhaps there are also blankets rolled up and tossed onto the speakers and cases. Likely they slept in the truck in shifts with one keeping a watchful eye on the equipment. In the Philippines the party does go all night long.

But why are they riding like this? Why has the equipment been arranged in such a manner that these men cannot comfortably sit down? For that mater why don't they ride home on a motorcycle? Surely one of the men hanging on the back or sitting in the cab have a motorcycle? Why not make arrangements to transport everyone safely if the cab is full? Why drive with the doors open and have two men hanging on the back for dear life risking both the equipment and the men? One quick swerve and all those expensive speakers and soundboards will fall out into the road making quite a mess. Why? Why? Why? Why!?

Well, you know what Alfred Lord Tennyson says:
Theirs not to make reply,
Theirs not to reason why,
Theirs but to do and die
https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poem/charge-light-brigade