Monday, January 13, 2020

The Attempted Assassination of Bill Clinton in Manila 1996

Annie Jacobsen's latest book about American clandestine services, "Surprise, Kill, Vanish: The Secret History of CIA Paramilitary Armies, Operators, and Assassins" is an interesting look at covert operations of the CIA around the world. Towards the end of the book she mentions a surprising story about the attempted assassination of Bill Clinton in Manila in 1996.
President Clinton with then Sen. Arroyo and President Ramos
It was November 24, 1996, and Lew Merletti accompanied President Clinton to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in the Philippines. Security was intense, with an estimated 26,000 police and soldiers assigned to protect visiting dignitaries. The U.S. State Department warned its citizens to be on alert for a possible terrorist attack. In Manila, President Clinton was scheduled to visit a local politician. The route chosen would take him across a bridge in central Manila. 
“As the presidential motorcade began to move,” recalled Merletti, he received a “crackly message in one earpiece.” Intelligence agents had picked up a message using the words “bridge” and “wedding,” which Merletti “interpreted to be terrorist code words for assassination.” Merletti ordered the motorcade to change course, something only he had the authority to do. “The motorcade agent Nelson Garabito did a great job rerouting the president under those difficult circumstances,” he says, and that agents “discovered a bomb on the bridge.” The assassination attempt was not made public. The Secret Service keeps all assassination attempts against a U.S. president classified Top Secret so as not to encourage copycat attacks. The details of the Manila bomb were made known to only a handful of members of the U.S. intelligence community.
Pg. 330-331
A much fuller account of this incident can be found in "The Death of Virtue: Clinton Vs Starr" by Ken Gormley
One incident that Merletti kept locked in his mental file and that was unknown to the rest of the world related to a disagreement he had with President Clinton in November 1996. In this episode, Merletti had overruled Clinton and, in doing so, saved the president’s life. Merletti had been traveling with the president to Manila in the Philippines, when a snap decision confronted him as head of the presidential protective detail. Clinton was scheduled to attend a late-afternoon appointment with a senior member of the Philippine government. As was common for the gregarious Clinton, he was running late. The motorcade route from the hotel, where Clinton was wrapping up his meeting, to the government official’s office would take approximately “fifteen minutes. President Clinton instructed Merletti, “You gotta get me there fast. I’m really late.” 
One of the jobs of the Secret Service was to “make the president’s schedule work.” Merletti understood that. As they climbed into their long, black car, however, Merletti received a crackly message in one earpiece: Intelligence operators in the field had picked up a radio transmission in which the unknown speakers used the words “bridge” and “wedding” in close proximity. The latter word, he knew, was a code word once used by terrorists to mean a hit, or an assassination. On the motorcade route that had been mapped out, the president’s car was scheduled to cross a bridge. 
Merletti urgently requested if intelligence could get “more information.” After a momentary buzz in his earpiece, the response came back: “Negative.” In the meantime, the president was still pushing Merletti, “Let’s go, let’s go. We’re late!” As head of the PPD, Merletti had to take a stand. His paramount job was to protect the chief executive, regardless of what the president wanted. Merletti climbed into the car and looked directly at Clinton: “Mr. President, I have bad news for you,” he said. “We’re going to be real late, because we’re taking a different route.” 
There followed a “strong discussion” between the president and Agent Merletti. It was “professional” in every way, Merletti recalled, but the conversation involved “strong language” on “each side. In the end, Merletti directed the motorcade to travel the direction he wanted, and the president sunk back in his seat, unhappy but overruled. 
As the presidential entourage wound forward along its altered route, a U.S. intelligence team was dispatched to the bridge. The structure was a white concrete span in a busy downtown area of Manila and was flanked by picturesque palm trees and neat pedestrian sidewalks. Underneath the bridge, explosives specialists uncovered a bomb powerful enough to blow up the entire presidential motorcade. 
This thwarted assassination attempt was never made public; it remained top secret except to select members of the U.S. intelligence community. The American government’s subsequent investigation of this plot to kill Clinton, however, revealed that it had been masterminded by a Saudi terrorist living in Afghanistan—a man named Osama bin Laden. Intelligence reports revealed that this bearded criminal’s nascent terrorist organization, known as al Qaeda, had engineered the effort to murder the American president. The Secret Service was already watching bin Laden—he had been involved in at least one earlier attempt to assassinate Clinton in the Philippines in 1994. The plot to kill Clinton in Manila had failed only because members of the PPD were trained to put the safety of the president first, regardless of conflicting instructions, even from the chief executive himself. In Merletti’s view, “If you’re not capable of making decisions like this, you don’t belong in that position.”
Pg. 491-492
Clinton arrived in Manila for the APEC summit a day before the attempted attack. How did his would be killers know the route his motorcade would take? Was there a mole? Was the bomb placed just shortly before Clinton's motorcade was due to cross the bridge? A boat stopping under a bridge so a man could hide a bomb would be noticeable. Neither account tells what bridge it is but from the description (white concrete, palm trees, pedestrian walk way) it might be the Jones Bridge. 


According to The Manila Standard there were two other bombs discovered, one at the airport and one at the APEC venue.

Manila Standard, November 23rd, 1996
But Philippine security sources said police had reported “srong indications” a leftist hit squad would launch terror attacks - including bombings and assassinations - to disrupt the summit, to be attended by US Presidney Bill Clinton, Chinese Presdeitn Jian Zemin, and other key leaders.  
An intelligence report obtained by Reuters meanwhile indicated explosives found at Ninoy Aquino International Airport on Wednesday night were not part of a drill as originally announced. 
The report, for President Ramos, said a bomb made up of three hand gernades with their safety pins already removed and wrapped in tape had been found in a black bag on a stairway of the arrival area. 
It said members of an airport security task force were still investigating the incident. 
Officials at the time inisisted the explosives has been placed there as part of a security drill. The same explanation had been given for a pipe bomb discovered a few hours earlier inside the gates of Subic Freeport where the summit is to take place. 
The top secret, high-level Philippines police report on the overall terrorism threat did not specifically mention Americans as targets.
It is not surprising that Philippine security officials would lie to the public about the bombs found at both NAIA and Subic Freeport. That the report focuses exclusively on "a leftist hit squad," the Alex Boncayao Brigade, and excludes Islamic terrorists shows that Philippine security officials were not up to speed on the threat posed by Islamic terrorism and in particular al Qaeda despite uncovering the Bojinka Plot a year prior in January 1995.  The Bojinka Plot was a large scale terrorist attack planned by al Qaeda to blow up 11 planes and assassinate the pope. Prior to this plot al Qaeda made plans to assassinate Bill Clinton during his visit to the Philippines in 1994 which begs the question of why security officials did not consider a second attempt on his life from this same terrorist organisation as very likely.
He left Manila for several days, but was met by Islamist emissaries upon his return to Metro Manila. They asked him to attack United States President Bill Clinton, who was due to arrive in the Philippines on November 12, 1994, as part of a five-day tour of Asia. Yousef thought of several ways to kill the president, including placing nuclear bombs on Clinton's motorcade route, firing a Stinger missile at Air Force One or the presidential limousine, launching theater ballistic missiles at Manila and or killing him with phosgene, a chemical weapon. He abandoned the idea, as it would be too difficult to kill the President. However, he incorporated his plan to kill the Pope into the Bojinka plot.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bojinka_plot
The "he" is Ramzi Yousef. Ramzi curently resides at ADX Supermax Prison in Florence, Colorado for his role in the 1993 and 2001 World Trade Centre attacks. How was al Qaeda able to place a bomb under a bridge in Manila with no one knowing?  Security for APEC was tight.
As part of the preparation for the summit, the Philippines strengthened its security force. At least 26,000 police and soldiers were deployed to ensure the security of the delegates and guests. President Ramos assured APEC participants of their security in his speech during the inauguration of Subic Bay International Airport. On 22 November 1996, two days before the Economic Leaders' Summit, the US State Department, through its spokesperson Nicholas Burns, warned American citizens in the Philippines to take security precautions following threats against American diplomats attending the summit.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/APEC_Philippines_1996
Despite all the security precautions taken one of the more interesting incidents of the 1996 APEC meeting was when Vice President Estrada welcomed President Clinton at the airport and was blocked by the Secret Service.

Manila Standard, November 25th, 1996
Security was so tight when US President Bill Clinton flew into Manila Saturday night for an Aisia-Pacific summit that his minders stopped VIce President Joseph Estrada when he went to welcome the US leader at the airport. 
“You cannot tell me what to do right here in my country,” Estrada snapped to the US security men. “I am the Vice President.” 
Estrada, who described the incident to reporters, was blocked when he tried to approach Clinton after the US leader flew into Manila Saturday night for the annual summit of the 18-memeber Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum. 
Estrada was allowed through after explaining who he was. 
Estrada headed the Philippine welcoming party for Clinton which also included House SPeaker Jose de Venecia and Sen. Gloria Mcapagal-Arroyo, a calssmate of Clinton years ago when she was studying in the United States. 
Summit security is tight due to fears that Philippine leftiss may try to mount an attack during the APEC conference. The Clinton motorcade made a last-minute  switch in its route from the airport after two men were reported acting suspiciously at a traffic signal control box on the original route.
The Bojinka Plot was discovered in January 1995 and by then Yousef was long gone from the Philippines. So who orchestrated this attempted assassination in 1996 at the behest of bin Laden? Who was left with ties to al Qaeda except the MILF and Abu Sayyaf? In fact just last year a bin Laden associate was arrested in Mindanao.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2019/08/02/1939912/bi-deport-jordanian-linked-bin-ladens-brother-law
The Bureau of Immigration (BI) is set to deport a Jordanian man, an alleged former henchman of the brother-in-law of Osama bin Laden, a few weeks after he was arrested in Zamboanga City.   
Mahmoud Afif Abdeljalil, 51, is now under custody of the government pending his deportation after the BI, military and police operatives arrested him last July 4, according to Immigration Commissioner Jaime Morente.  
Quoting authorities, the BI said that Abdeljalil had served as the point man of Saudi businessman Mohammed Jamal Khalifa, bin Laden’s brother-in-law, in managing several charity organizations in the south that funneled money to al-Qaeda and the Abu Sayyaf group.
The public can never expect the government to tell them the true extent of security threats to the nation until long after the fact which leaves one wondering what is the real security situation in this country? The government continues to reassure the public that everything is fine and safe for tourists and investors despite the presence of communist and Islamic terrorists throughout the country. If anything the lesson to learn from the attempted assassination of Bill Clinton in Manila in 1996 is that Philippine security officials are not always up to snuff about the threats facing the Philippines. 

Friday, January 10, 2020

Retards in the Government 136

It's your weekly compendium of foolishness and corruption in the Philippine government. 


Typhoon “Ursula” (international name: Phanfone) swept through the Visayas on Christmas Eve, leaving Boracay Island with damaged houses and buildings, flooded communities and power outages that also led to fuel shortage due to the use of generator sets. 
But Boracay, which relies heavily on tourism for its economy, is facing another problem as uncollected garbage starts to pile up on street corners, by the roadsides and in other areas on the resort island in Aklan province. 
In a statement on Thursday, the municipal government of Malay, which includes the three villages on the island, said the typhoon “disrupted” the delivery of services of the local government. 
“The LGU (local government unit) of Malay [has] already coordinated with different haulers in the municipality to augment the [collection] of waste and debris left by the typhoon. In addition, we have coordinated with capable establishments in the [town] to assist us as part of their social responsibility,” according to the statement. 
Environment Undersecretary Benny Antiporda, who oversees local governments and solid waste management, appealed for understanding from residents and business owners in Boracay, saying the task force’s manpower was also severely affected by the storm. 
In a press briefing on Wednesday, Antiporda said the delay in collection was “not because of the holidays, but because [the collectors] were victims of Ursula, too.” 
He said that despite the lack of manpower, some haulers had already started mobilizing on Dec. 29, noting that Boracay’s Stations 1 and 3 had already been cleared of trash and debris. 
“We were also unable to immediately clean up due to the shortage of trucks. Our trucks in Boracay that would have been used to haul trash were also inundated,” he said, adding that six trucks had been sent from Malay mainland to assist in clearing operations.
This is not the first time Boracay has been hit by a typhoon. So why is there not a proper plan in place to resume garbage collection immediately? Especially after the six months closure for rehab it seems dumb that LGUs would not have gone over and revamped their emergency plans.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1089882
Mindanao Development Authority (MinDA) Secretary Emmanuel Piñol on Thursday responded to an allegation of a certain Renato Castro of Bulacan who accused him of swindling. 
In his Facebook post on Thursday, Piñol said he appeared before Davao City Fiscal Shahruddin Roberto Sencio, Jr., along with his legal counsel, lawyer Israelito Torreon, to submit his answer to a claim that he swindled Castro of PHP100,000 last year. 
"I have asked my lawyer to also prepare a counter-charge for the hassle and inconvenience this Castro has inflicted on me," he said. 
In a complaint before the Bulacan Prosecutor's Office, Castro alleged that a certain "Emmanuel Piñol" who claimed that he was working for Senator Ronald dela Rosa asked him to shell out PHP1 million in exchange for a certain project. 
The amount was later reduced to PHP100,000, which Castro alleged, was sent to a money remittance in Cebu City and claimed by a person who presented an ID card of "Emmanuel Piñol." 
When the promised transaction did not materialize, Castro went to Assistant Prosecutor Ralph David So of Bulacan and accused "Emmanuel Piñol" of swindling. 
"Prosecutor So filed the information accusing ‘Emmanuel Piñol’ of swindling and mailed a copy of the complaint and an order for me to respond. 
Following the incident, Piñol recounted several instances where his name was dragged to swindling activities.
Piñol claims to be the victim of false allegations and that this is not the first time. Perhaps he was guilty previously but was simply not convicted due to faulty prosecution.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1089871
Supreme Court Administrator Jose Midas Marquez on Thursday said his office is looking into reports that a Baguio City judge allegedly ordered the release of a taxi driver who figured in an altercation with a policeman. 
"The OCA (Office of the Court Administrator) is already looking into this issue,” Marquez told reporters in connection with the incident involving an unnamed judge.  
“We would like to get all available information before we require the concerned judge to comment," he added. 
Baguio City Mayor Benjamin Magalong earlier ordered an investigation into the incident including the supposed judge who, according to media reports, is a relative of the taxi owner.
Looks like a case of favouritism based on relationship.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1089854
The Court of Appeals (CA) has said the re-election of a local government official facing charges of misconduct in his previous term can no longer be considered as a condonation of the act. 
In a 14-page decision dated December 13, the appellate court, through Associate Justice Japar B. Dimaampao, dismissed a petition filed by Guagua, Pampanga Mayor Dante D. Torres questioning the charges filed against him before the Deputy Ombudsman for Luzon. 
The case arose from a complaint filed by a certain Juan Pring alleging irregularities in the upgrade and rehabilitation of the Manuel P. Santiago Municipal Town Plaza, also known as the MPS Park. 
The complainant said the project was overpriced and that no competitive public bidding was conducted for a sole contractor that was entertained. 
Bidding was conducted a month before the completion of the project in June 2014 and was implemented without coordination with the National Historical Commission of the Philippines, despite monuments of important personalities in the area. 
Charges of technical malversation were eventually filed by the Ombudsman against the mayor for applying to the MPS Park PHP2.76 million in municipal funds originally earmarked for other projects. 
A separate charge for simple misconduct was likewise filed by the Ombudsman and ordered his suspension from office without pay for three months, prompting the mayor to appeal his case. 
This mayor hoped to get out of these charges of malversation and irregularities by saying his re-election condones his behaviour. An absolutely stupid defence not only because the SC threw out that doctrine a few years ago but because criminal activity in public officials is never to be condoned even if the people knowingly vote him back into office.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1209060/pangasinan-town-employee-killed-on-his-way-home
A municipal employee was shot dead on his way home at 10:15 p.m. on Friday along the village road of Ambonao. 
Gunmen riding a motorcycle attacked Edu Gabriano, a 42-year-old job-order employee, as he rode a motorcycle to his home in Barangay (village) Lasip. 
Gabriano reportedly worked as a security aide of Mayor Joseph Bauzon.
A security aid for the mayor gunned down by motorcycle assassins.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1208981/ex-pnp-official-in-maguindanao-massacre-case-asks-cas-help-for-his-release
An accused in the Maguindanao massacre case whose name appeared as both convicted and acquitted went to the Court of Appeals and asked for his immediate release. 
Based on the 761-page decision by the QCRTC, a certain Superintendent (now Lieutenant Colonel based on the new police rank classification)  Bahnarin Kamaong is among the 28 convicted for the death of 57 people including 31 journalists. He is meted with the penalty of reclusion perpetua without parole. 
The convicted Kamaong is identified in the decision as the Regional Commander of the Philippine National Police’s Regional Mobile Group who offered his troop for the ambush. 
However, the same ruling mentioned a certain Police Lieutenant Bahnarin Kamaong as one of those acquitted and ordered the immediate release. 
In the original charge sheet filed by government prosecutors before the Quezon City Court, there is only one Bahnarin Kamaong as accused–the one with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. 
Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra and Senior Deputy State Prosecutor Richard Anthony Fadullon both said that it is a matter for the court to clarify.
Clearly the court messed up here by placing the man's name on both the convicted and the acquitted lists. It should be an easy matter to clear up by the court but don't count on it. The courts move very slowly. That is one reason why they are so backlogged with cases and why the SC is hiring 50 judges to roam the country.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1208956/sc-hiring-50-judges-at-large-to-ease-case-backlog
Republic Act No. 11459 of the Judges-At-Large Act of 2019 created a total of 100 positions for RTC judges at large and 50 for MTC judges at large. 
Under the law, judges at large shall have no permanent courts and may be assigned by the Supreme Court as acting or assisting judges in any regional trial court or municipal trial court “as public interest may require.” 
Sen. Richard Gordon, who authored the bill in the Senate, cited in June last year some 160,000 cases pending in the country’s 1,200 city and municipal courts, and 640,000 more cases in 1,100 regional trial courts, as of 2017. Such clogged dockets were causing “great delay” in the disposition of cases, he added. 
“The congestion of our courts’ dockets deprives the courts of time. Judges need time to study, analyze and research to come up with good, reasonable decisions that affect the quality of justice. There are not enough courts or judges to meet the demands of our countrymen,” Gordon said. 
The senator also cited data from the SC’s Court Management Office which showed that as of Dec. 31, 2018, there were 528 vacancies in the city, municipal and regional trial courts.
Rather than hiring wandering judges the wise and proper thing to do would be to fill this 538 vacancies or else the dockets will get crowded again once they have been cleared.

The Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) has filed administrative charges against Ginatilan town in Cebu and nine other local government units (LGUs) in the country for failure to comply with the directive of President Rodrigo Duterte to clear the public roads of obstructions. 
(They have zero clearings; failed everything. The passing score is 70, but their scores is 50. It is their responsibility to maintain the roads, sidewalks so these can be accessible to people and cars. Obstructions are one cause of traffic.) 
Out of the 1, 534 cities and municipalities, 101 failed during the assessment, 15 of which earned the lowest score, the statement said.
The Mayor of Ginatilan says these charges are frustrating and unfair.
(I am frustrated. I no longer want to work because even if we followed their directives, this happened. The efforts of the town community was wasted.)  
The mayor said the process left little chance for appeal from the LGUs and is an unfair treatment to those who improved after the assessment.  
He also said that the DILG did not visit Ginatilan after the first assessment or after they submitted their explanation. 
“We should have been given another chance,” he said.  
https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/279181/ginatilan-mayor-dilgs-unclear-process-case-filed-are-frustrating
It will be left up to the court to decide.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1209143/pnp-eyes-getting-speed-guns-for-traffic-enforcers
Lt. Gen. Archie Gamboa, officer-in-charge of the Philippine National Police (PNP), made a proposal on Saturday for the purchase of speed guns to make it easier for law enforcers to be certain about the speed of vehicles so that they can catch those overspeeding motorists. 
“How can you tell if [a motorist] is going 60 kilometers per hour? So we need a gadget for that,” he said in Filipino in an interview over AM radio station DZMM. 
Gamboa pointed out that most road accidents had been caused by drivers going very fast.
“As we have seen in recent tragic incidents, vehicles lose their brakes. If they were going at 30 kilometers per hour, maybe the damaged would not be as big,” he said.
This should have been done long ago. It's a step in the right direction.  A very tiny baby step.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1209468/village-watchman-wounds-colleague-in-batangas-shooting
The chief of the barangay tanod (village watchmen) in Lipa City in Batangas province turned himself in after admitting to shooting his fellow tanod, police said on Monday. 
Gerry Marasigan, 42, also surrendered to the police a homemade gun, which he allegedly used to shoot the victim, Manolito Adaya, 41. 
Lipa City police chief Lt. Col. Rotol Antonio Gabaisen Jr., in a phone interview, said the tanods in Barangay San Celestino were drinking on Sunday afternoon when the two began to argue. 
Adaya walked away and went to his sister’s house in the same village, but Marasigan followed him on a motorcycle. 
Marasigan then reportedly shot Adaya several times and even attempted to chase the victim, before he fled.
Not the first village watchmen to get into a rowdy drinking bout ending in a shooting. With a homemade gun no less!

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1090081
The Court of Appeals has affirmed an Office of the Ombudsman ruling disqualifying former Makati City Mayor Jejomar "JunJun" Erwin Binay, Jr. from holding public office over an administrative case involving a school building. 
The Ombudsman earlier found Binay guilty of serious dishonesty, grave misconduct and conduct prejudicial to the service in connection with the irregularities in the construction of the Makati Science High School (MSHS). 
Aside from Binay, 12 other former employees of Makati City Hall were found guilty of the same offenses. Former Makati City Administrator Eleno Mendoza was also found administratively liable for simple misconduct and was meted the penalty of suspension of six months without pay.
Because Binay did not hold a proper bidding process for a school building he is now perpetually disqualified from holding political office.
Motorcycle-riding gunmen ambushed and killed the former vice governor of Sultan Kudarat on Tuesday. 
Former Sultan Kudarat vice-governor Rolando “Rolly” Recinto was driving his Mitsubishi pick-up (LDF-237) heading for home from Tacurong City when shot by unidentified gunmen at past 2 p.m. along the national highway in Barangay Bilumin in Lambayong town. 
Police rushed Recinto to a hospital in the city but he was declared dead on arrival, according to radio reports. 
Recinto also served as mayor of Lambayong, where his son, Francis Eric Recinto, is the vice mayor.
Another former politician gunned down by motorcycle assassins.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1209793/cop-killed-wife-wounded-in-highway-ambush-in-bohol
Unknown assailants shot dead a police officer and wounded his wife in an ambush in Maribojoc town on Monday night. 
Col. Jonathan Cabal, director of the Bohol Provincial Police Office, identified the victims as Cpl. Arnel Bayot and his wife Richelle. 
Bayot, a resident of Barangay Tinangnan in Tubigon town, was a member of the Provincial Mobile Force Company based in Ubay town. 
Cabal said the couple were on their way home aboard a Toyota Corolla going to Tubigon town at around 8 p.m. on Monday, Jan. 6, when they were ambushed at the national highway in Barangay Guiwanon, Maribojoc town.
Another cop shot dead by assailants. No word on motive or identity of killers. Interestingly his father met the same fate.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1209710/ex-soldier-charged-with-murder-of-popular-baguio-cleric
A case of murder has been filed against Joselito Fernando, an Islamic convert from Zamboanga City, on Monday (Jan. 6), according to Col. Allen Rae Co, Baguio police chief. 
Co said evidence suggested that Vidad had a grudge against Bedejim although police have yet to determine if it was personal or religious.
Muslim convert who happens to be a former soldier kills beloved Imam.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1209829/fwd-pdea-chief-robredos-drug-war-assessment-based-on-wild-assumption
Citing data from the Philippine National Police Drug Enforcement Group (PDEG), Robredo said in her drug war report on Monday, that the approximate minimum consumption of shabu in the country per week is 3,000 kilograms, or about 156,000 kilograms a year. 
But according to Aquino, the figures on the average drug consumption mentioned by the Vice President were only an estimate. 
“Sabi ni Col. Caramat sa akin, that is a wild assumption. Hindi official figure ‘yan (Col. Caramat told me that is just a wild assumption. That’s not an official figure),”  he said in an interview with DZMM, referring to Col. Romeo Caramat Jr., acting director of PDEG. 
“Hindi tugma na magcocompare ka ng estimate versus factual data. Mali ‘yung comparison ng ating Vice President na ‘yun (It’s not appropriate to compare an estimate versus factual data),” added Aquino, who explained the ICAD holds no official data on the average consumption of prohibited drugs in the country. 
He added that the estimate of PDEG was also too high.
Do the PNP, PDEA, ICAD, PDEG or any other group have accurate numbers on the drug problem or is everything just an estimate or a wild assumption? If the figures are not accurate at all then why is Robredo led to believe they are accurate?

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1209959/fwd-ano-tells-fire-officers-shun-any-form-of-corruption
Speaking before BFP personnel at the turnover-of-command ceremony for Chief Supt. Jose Embang Jr. as the new officer-in-charge, Año said it is high time that the uniformed personnel of the government put an end to the public’s negative perception of them. 
“We must have what we call the moral courage, for it is very important—the moral courage to shun any form of corruption, to refuse any bribery attempt or any temptation. Just a simple refusal will lead you to a habit of an ideal public servant so you must possess that moral courage,” he said. 
The BFP is an attached agency of the Department of the Interior and Local Government.
Even firefighters have to be warned not to be corrupt.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1090128
Two town mayors of this province maintained they did not violate the road-clearing policy of the national government after they were included in the list of local officials charged by the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) for non-compliance. 
The DILG has charged Mayors Helenio Abecia of Guinsiliban town and Joseph Uayan of Sagay in the administrative charges it filed against 10 other municipal mayors in the country. 
In a statement on Sunday, DILG Secretary Eduardo Año said the local officials committed gross neglect of duty and grave misconduct for failing to comply with the government’s directive to clear roads of illegal structures and other obstructions in their jurisdiction within 60 days. 
However, Abecia and Uayan insisted that they should not be charged as they have followed the order. 
“We have not violated the order. We have implemented it. That’s why I was wondering why we have been charged by the DILG,” said Abecia in an interview Monday (Jan. 6)
Two of the ten mayors charged by the DILG for not cleaning their roads say they are being unfairly targeted because they did clear the roads. It seems the DILG's guidelines were not clear. Perhaps therein lies the problem.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1090193
Two personnel of Bacolod City Police Office (BCPO) Station 3 have been charged while undergoing investigation along with their superiors and colleagues for the escape of four detainees, including three arrested for illegal drugs, on Monday. 
Duty jailer, S/Sgt. Eric Olverio and desk officer, Cpl. Orwayne Jade Nadado are facing a criminal case for infidelity in the custody of prisoners under Article 223, Section 1, Chapter 5 of the Revised Penal Code. 
“They are directly responsible for the custody of the (detainees). (To post bail), that is their right, but I will make sure that there will be an airtight administrative case (against them),” Biñas said in a press conference. 
“If negligence is proven on their part, they will be held liable for gross neglect of duty which is punishable by dismissal from the service. It is very unfortunate that one of them (Olverio) is retiring soon,” he added. 
The four detainees, including high-value target Sunny Capa, 22;  Ely Lawrence Sazon, 20; Michael Peñoso, 25; and Jeffrey Elangos, 38, escaped around 12:45 a.m. on Monday after cutting one of the steel bars surrounding the custodial facility, and passed through the back door.
What did they use to cut through the steel bars and how did they get that instrument? Sounds like they did have a little help whether from the cops charged or from friends outside.

Lieutenant Richard Gonzalez, Pitogo police chief, said Vecinte Bolusan Teofilo, a retired member of the Philippine National Police and resident of Pitogo town, was driving his passenger van when two men pretending to be passengers stopped him and shot him afterward. 
Teofilo suffered three bullet wounds on his head, resulting in his immediate death.
Another retired cop shot dead by assassins.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1210400/fwd-ano-pnp-to-change-public-perception-despite-filipinos-belief-on-ninja-cops
As far as the PNP is concerned, we will make sure na mabago yung perception ng public [to change public perception] by actions and by deeds,” he told reporters when asked about the recent Social Weather Stations (SWS) surveywhich showed that 78 percent of Filipinos believe that some police officers are “ninja cops” or engaged in drug recycling. 
PNP spokesman Brig. Gen. Bernard Banac said that while they cannot stop the public from believing negative issues hounding police officers, the PNP will not be tolerating rogue police officers. 
“Tinitiyak natin sa publiko na ganitong gawain ay hindi natin kinokonsinte upang tanggalin na ang ganitong illegal na gawain at maibalik ang tiwala ng mamamayan sa PNP. [We assure the public that these illegal acts will not be tolerated to remove errant policemen in PNP and to regain the public’s trust from PNP.],” Banac said in another interview with reporters.
This is the same old song and dance from the PNP. Remove the bad cops and try to change the public's perception.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1090206
Police and Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) operatives in Negros Oriental have arrested a job order employee of the provincial government and seized from him some PHP200,000 worth of suspected shabu in a buy-bust operation here on Monday. 
A report from the Negros Oriental Provincial Police Office (NOPPO) identified the suspect as Jason Olarte Mapili, 50, single, and a resident of Barangay Mangnao in this capital city. 
Mapili is in the police’s watch list of suspected drug personalities, the NOPPO report said. He has been detailed at the Provincial Social Welfare Office for about seven years on a job order status.
A job order employee for seven years at the capital and on the drug personality list. But for how long? With all that shabu he was likely dealing. Who was he dealing to?


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1210194/robredo-marcos-file-final-plea-in-poll-protest-at-sc
In their respective memoranda filed on Dec. 19, 2019, Robredo cited the court’s own rules and argued that the protest should be dismissed since Marcos had failed to get more votes during the ballot revision and recount in the pilot provinces that he himself had chosen and that the recount actually added to her votes. 
On the other hand, Marcos asked the Supreme Court acting as the Presidential Electoral Tribunal to annul the votes in the provinces of Lanao del Sur, Maguindanao and Basilan due to alleged election violence, regardless of the test recount results.
Final plea means a final ruling should be handed down soon enough.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/279607/sachet-of-suspected-shabu-found-inside-zapatera-barangay-hall
A sachet of suspected shabu was found inside an office at the barangay hall of Zapatera here late Monday night, January 6, 2020. 
Barangay employees found the sachet inside an envelop in the office of suspended barangay captain (village chief) Francisco Benedicto at the end of a session at around 10 p.m.
Mysterious and lone bag of shabu found in office of suspended barangay chief.  Who's could it be? The barangay chief was suspended on December 20, 2019.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1209908/fwd-breaking-duterte-warns-water-firms-accept-new-contract-or-get-contract-canceled
“The Chief Executive is giving the water concessionaires the option of accepting the new contracts without any guarantee of not being criminally prosecuted together with those who conspired to craft the very onerous contracts which are void ab initio for violating the Constitution and the laws of the land,” Panelo said in a press briefing.
https://news.abs-cbn.com/business/01/07/20/like-a-gun-on-their-heads-economist-blasts-new-water-concession-contracts
"It's like putting a gun on their heads," said Calixto Chikiamco, president of the Foundation for Economic Freedom.  
He also warned that the "take it or leave it" contracts may have a negative impact on investments and the country's credit rating.  
If the two firms refuse the new agreements, President Rodrigo Duterte said he would order the cancellation of their existing concessions and the "nationalization of water services" in their respective areas. 
Chikiamco said this move would have a "reputational cost" for the country. If the concessionaires accept the new contracts, the impact on investments will be limited to deals involving public-private partnerships, he said.  
"But if the outcome is cancellation and nationalization, that will have a negative impact across the board, all foreign investments," Chikiamco said in an interview with ANC.  
"Any unilateral cancellation, abrogation will have a negative impact on credit rating," he added.  
The capital's water security will also be affected by a government takeover of water distribution.  
"We know already what happens whenever the government runs something, whether that's the MRT or even the old Nawasa."
Hey that's the price of doing business under Duterte.  Still no word about Arroyo and Ramos and their hand in signing this "onerous" contract.


https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1090421
A former barangay official of Baloi town in Lanao del Norte was arrested past 3 p.m. Wednesday in an anti-drug buy bust here. 
Maj. Allan Abalde, chief of Iligan City Police Station 5, identified the suspect as Jamil Solaiman Camid, 44, who is on the drug watchlist of the police and considered a high value target. 
Camid was a former barangay councilor of Poblacion East in Baloi.
Another former village councillor busted for drugs.

POLICE arrested Dumanjug, Cebu Mayor Efren Guntrano “Gungun” Gica on Wednesday, January 8, 2020, for graft. He promptly posted bail and was released pending court hearing. 
His arrest stemmed from a complaint filed against Gica before the Office of the Ombudsman-Visayas for graft and corruption after he hired Filipino singer Bamboo Mañalac during the town’s 2015 fiesta without undertaking a bidding.  
The complaint was filed by former Dumanjug mayor Nelson Garcia, Gica’s long-time rival and critic.
This was not the first time Garcia’s anti-graft complaint against Gica had prospered. 
In 2014, Gica was sacked as Dumanjug mayor after the anti-graft office found that he committed serious dishonesty and grave misconduct for tampering with a restaurant receipt amounting to P11,435 and bloating the amount to P21,435. 
Gica appealed the matter before the Court of Appeals and was eventually reinstated as town mayor in 2019. He ran and won in the May 2019 elections.
What sense does it make to do a public bidding when hiring a singer? This is not the first time he has been accused of financial misconduct by his political rival.

https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/01/09/20/sandiganbayan-suspends-mandaue-councilor-over-pdaf-case
The Sandiganbayan has suspended a former Cebu lawmaker and now Mandaue City councilor for 90 days in connection with her Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) scam cases. 
In a resolution dated December 4, 2019 and released just recently, the court's 5th Division ordered Mandaue City Councilor Nerissa Soon-Ruiz's suspended as she faced proceedings for 17 counts of graft, 7 counts malversation of public funds and 10 counts of malversation of public funds through falsification.  
She was charged for the supposed misuse of her PDAF from 2007 to 2009, when she was still a lawmaker. 
Charged with misuse of PDAF money 13 years ago. An old case now coming to light.


https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/01/09/20/ex-batangas-congressman-found-dead-charred-inside-car-in-quezon
A former congressman of Batangas province and 2 other unidentified persons were found dead, their bodies set on fire inside a vehicle in neighboring Tiaong, Quezon on Thursday.  
Residents reported that the vehicle was burning in Barangay San Francisco before dawn. Authorities discovered the remains of former Batangas 2nd District Rep. Edgar Mendoza and two others inside after putting out the fire, police said.
A former Congressman and his driver were murdered and then set on fire.

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/regions/721594/ex-pangasinan-police-chief-killed-in-calasiao-ambush/story/
A retired Philippine National Police (PNP) official was gunned down in an ambush incident in Calasiao, Pangasinan on Thursday. 
In a phone interview with GMA News Online, Police Regional Office 1 spokesperson Police Lieutenant Colonel Crystal Peralta identified the victim as retired general Marlou Chan. 
Citing initial reports, Peralta said the victim was inside his vehicle in Barangay Nalsiyaan around 2:50 p.m. when the ambush took place.

Ex-police chief dunned down by assassins.

https://business.inquirer.net/286779/corruption-eats-up-15-35-%E2%80%8Dof-construction-firms-budget
Construction companies allot up to 35 percent of their budgets for infrastructure projects to pay off government officials and employees and prevent them from causing any further delays, a think tank said, citing confidential interviews with industry players. 
In some cases, companies have had to compromise other parts of the construction— such as the quality of raw materials—in order to accommodate the additional cost and to keep the projects moving. 
In a presentation on Wed­nesday, the Reid Foundation gave a breakdown of the expenses that construction firms spent on average in putting up new infrastructure both for the public and the private sector. All the commonly disclosed expenses were there such as raw materials and labor. But the breakdown shaded a part of the graph in an ominous black, which claimed 15 to 35 percent of the expenses were spent on “other costs of doing business.” These “other costs” referred to a company’s budget for corruption as small and big companies were left with no choice but to play along in an abusive cycle that rarely gets brought to light, let alone stopped. “This is the problem that we want to address but nobody wants to talk about,” said Ronilo Balbieran, Reid vice president for operations, at the 4th Philippine Construction Industry Congress. 
Reid interviewed various stakeholders in the construction industry from October 2018 to March last year to make sure the figures were as precise as possible. Balbieran deferred from disclosing who they interviewed or how many companies they talked to.
Corruption is still the name of the game when it comes to constriction projects. The only losers are, as always, the public.

Thursday, January 9, 2020

The Parable of the White Russian

I was attending an event at a swanky hotel and I was bored. This was not my event.  I was a tagalong.  A plus one. After a while I decided to go to the bar and order a white russian. Where this desire came from I do not know but not having had one in quite some time I followed my heart. 

I sat down at the bar and placed my order. "I'd like a White Russian please."

"What's that?", the smiling bartender said to my disbelief.

"It's Khalua, vodka, and milk mixed together," I said pointing to each ingredient on the shelf as I listed them.

"Sorry, sir but we only have what is on the menu."

"But you have all the ingredients to make a White Russian. Just mix them up and make the drink."

"We can only serve what is on the menu," was the reply.

What kind of bartender will not make you the drink you request but only serve what it on the menu? That is ludicrous! Not to mention he had no idea what a White Russian is.

There was no point in arguing so I ordered a drink from the menu, a frozen mango margarita. I don't remember what the other drinks listed were but none of them were interesting. The mango margarita was delicious and I ordered one more but I was disappointed to not get a white Russian.

Months later at a different restaurant I placed the same order for a White Russian. It was not listed on their menu but a drink called a Bailey's shake was. I looked at their bar and saw all the proper ingredients for making a White Russian and I asked if the bartender could make one.


This picture is a little blurry but the Khalua and two kinds of vodka, Absolut and Stolichnaya, are clearly visible. The waiter returned and said sorry but they ran out of ingredients! That means this restaurant ran out of cream and milk? Really? So I ordered the Bailey's shake which is a shot of Bailey's with Tanduay.  What I got was totally unexpected.


Now I think these stories are very illustrative of the Philippines and Filipino society at large. Not many people here think outside of the box. They have all the ingredients to make anything they wish but they only make what is on the menu. It's only the same old over and over again. Nothing new. It's the same old corruption in politics. It's the same old manipulation in families. It's the same old societal failures with no one picking up the slack. It's the same old oligarchs running the show.

The bar is very much like the nation. It appears to be fully functioning and well stocked but the bartender does not even know how to make a simple drink. Much like the Philippines appears to be like a modern "democracy" with three branches of government but no one knows what the heck they are doing.

Perhaps what I have stated here is rather general. The Philippines is a large place yet the same things generally happen all over. I would like to think there is much room for improvement here but if no one is willing to improve anything then there is no room to improve. I am not sure anyone even knows how to improve.

In the meantime I just want a White Russian!

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

The ATM Apocalypse

Never take anything for granted in the Philippines. Just because the ATM's have been online and there have been no long lines the past 20 times you used them does not mean the 21st time will be the the same. It's not the end of the world when ATM's are offline but it sure is inconvenient. The lack of ATMs at convenience stores like iMart and 7-11 is also inconvenient and I am sure their absence is due to fear of robbery. Can't trust anyone in the Philippines!

I was eager to withdraw my money and quickly get all my errands done. What a disappointment when I came upon this scene.



Thankfully there are two banks in the area close by. First up Metrobank.


Offline. No good. BDO is just down the sidewalk.



Both of them are out? Both! There is a Metrobank ATM across the street. Maybe that one's online.


Well it was online but I did not have time to wait in that line. It was just as long as the one at SM and since I was meeting someone at SM I returned there to wait in line. The wait wasn't so long. Sometimes you get an old lady who checks her balance two or three times and has no idea what she is doing. There was also money in the machine when my turn came. Like I said it wasn't the end of the world but it was sure inconvenient and in the Philippines conveniences are often turned on their head.