Friday, May 10, 2019

Retards in the Government 101

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



https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1113157/marcoses-keep-control-of-ilocos-norte
Outgoing Ilocos Norte Rep. Rodolfo Fariñas on Thursday dropped his bid for governor, leaving Matthew Manotoc, a son of Gov. Imee Marcos, unopposed in the race and ensuring that the Marcos family will stay at the provincial capitol after the May 13 elections. 
Fariñas, who is serving his last term as representative of Ilocos Norte’s first congressional district, went to the Commission on Elections provincial office here at 9:30 a.m. to withdraw his certificate of candidacy (COC). 
He said he never intended to seek the post and was only “provoked” to run when former Ilocos Norte Gov. Michael Keon, a member of the Marcos clan, decided to challenge Chevylle Fariñas, his niece, for city mayor of Laoag, the provincial capital. 
Fariñas, in a statement last year, had said he had been given assurance that no Marcos family member would run against any of his relatives in the 2019 polls. 
From Day 1 of the campaign until today, having covered 272 of my district’s 285 barangays, I’ve been announcing in my speeches that I was not running for governor,” he added.
The ego of Filipino politicians knows no bounds. He was running for governor out of revenge but on the campaign trail he announced he was not running for governor. That makes zero sense and it will be a good thing when he retires later this year since he obviously does not view himself as a public servant.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1068839
The former mayor of Bugasong, Antique, convicted for gun ban violation, can still run for re-election on May 13, according to the Commission on Elections (Comelec) here. 
Antique Comelec acting provincial election supervisor Atty. Wil S. Arceño, in an interview Friday, said former mayor John Lloyd Pacete can still run because his conviction has no final decision yet. 
Pacete was convicted by the Branch 64 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC), 6th Judicial Region here but it is currently on appeal before the Court of Appeals (CA). 
He said that although Pacete’s conviction can still be appealed with the higher court, but then it has no probation. 
“Pacete will really have to serve his conviction,” he said.  
He said that should Pacete win in the May 13 election, the Comelec can proclaim him. But whether he could really sit or not as mayor of Bugasong is up to the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) to resolve. 
“The decision whether Pacete would be installed as re-electionist mayor would be up to the DILG,” Arceño said.
The Comelec will allow him to run because he can still appeal his conviction which is a process that could take years. But why would anyone vote for him?

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/231950/persons-in-white-van-attack-osmena-allys-car-showroom
The Chevrolet showroom of Franklin Ong, president of the Association of Barangay Councils in Cebu City, was peppered with bullets by unidentified persons around 1:45 a.m. on Saturday, May 4, 2019. 
The showroom is located in Mandaue City. 
Ong is allied with Bando Osmeña-Pundok Kauswagan (BO-PK), the party led by Mayor Tomas Osmeña.
Lots of political violence in Cebu that extends even to the friends of politicians.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1113917/village-leaders-trade-blows-over-rice-campaign-giveaways
Five kilos of rice for your vote? It’s not that cheap or uncomplicated, as a candidate in the May 13 elections in Isabela City, Basilan, may soon find out. 
Not after village officials fought over the distribution of the rice packs to residents and ended up punching each other. 
Gadayan said Barangay Riverside Councilor Nurmina Abduhalim Abbas, 43, complained to the city’s police station that one of her colleagues, Councilor Kadil Bapora, 53, punched her in the face while they were trying to get hold of the rice packs being distributed at the barangay hall. 
“Abbas suffered facial injuries and her denture was broken,” Gadayan said. 
He did not say what prompted Bapora to punch Abbas or whether Bapora also sustained injuries. 
After the 2013 midterm polls, the Commission on Elections disqualified the Mayor of Roxas, Isabela province, for vote-buying. 
The petition for the disqualification of Mayor Benedict Calderon accused him of distributing cash gifts, rice and pigs to voters. 
Election observers in Isabela City said candidates in past elections in the city usually distributed rice packs to residents in hopes of securing their votes.
Vote buying using rice as a gift.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1114025/village-watchman-to-file-rap-vs-mayor-he-accuses-of-slapping-him
Mateo Ribagos Mondaga said Trinidad Mayor Judith Del Rosario-Cajes hit him four times as two men held his hands. 
During the altercation, Mondaga said Cajes accused him of spreading lies to malign town councilor Joan Robie Cajes, her daughter. 
Mondaga said he would file charges against the mayor so that justice would be served.
Five witnesses, in an interview, said they saw the mayor slap Mondaga. 
Both Mondaga and Cajes have reported the incident to the police. 
The mayor said Mondaga bumped her on her way to the barangay hall’s comfort room. 
“After which he (Mondaga) threatened her (Cajes), saying ‘Mr. BB, you won’t reach the election,” the mayor alleged.
Stupid drama.

https://www.philstar.com/nation/2019/05/05/1915242/2-barangay-captains-shot-dead-zamboanga-peninsula
Police Brig. Gen. Emmanuel Luis Licup, director of Police Regional Office 9, identified the victims as Edgardo Podpod Viñas, 49, barangay chairman of Dapaon, Sindangan town, Zamboanga del Norte and Ibrahim Ungad, chairman of Barangay New Labangan in Labangan town, Zamboanga del Sur. 
Licup said Viñas was gunned down just before noon on Saturday in the ABC Hall at Barangay La Roche, Sindangan town by an unidentified gunman. He said the victim had just adjourned a session at the ABC Hall when the killer emerged with a long firearm and shot him dead. 
Police said the shooter escaped on a motorcycle.

Ungad, on the other hand, was gunned down by two unidentified shooters in front of his residence in Purok Caimito, Tuburan District in Pagadian City on Saturday evening. 
Ungad was coming out of his house when he was shot with a 12-gauge shotgun. His killers fled on a motorcycle in the direction of Barangay Tiguma in Pagadian City.
Police aren't sure if this is election related violence because violence happens all the time in the Philippines. Could be drugs or a family feud or who knows what.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1114234/batocabe-slay-case-daraga-mayor-baldo-ordered-arrested
The Legazpi City Regional Trial Court Branch 10 has ordered the arrest of Daraga, Albay Mayor Carlwyn Baldo for the murder of Ako Bicol party-list Rep. Rodel Batocabe and his police escort.
Finally arrested for a murder he was accused of being the mastermind of back in December. But he was already arrested on separate charges a few months ago.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1114271/reelectionist-camarines-sur-mayor-3-others-survive-ambush
Only a week before the May 13 midterm elections, incumbent Garchitorena town, Camarines Sur Mayor Nelson Bueza, his wife, his running mate, and a driver were attacked by still unidentified armed men before dawn Monday, police said, and survived. 
The 57-year-old reelectionist and wife Yolly, 50; Garchitorena town councilor and vice mayoral candidate Marcelo Aragdon, 58; and driver Errol Arcilla, 30, were aboard an SUV and negotiating Fuentebella Highway in Barangay (village) Toytoy when gunmen attacked them around 1:25 a.m. 
Police said aside from gunshots, an explosion was also heard during the ambush. 
The four were unharmed, according to police, but the vehicle was damaged by a suspected improvised explosive device.
An IED used in a political assassination attempt is a new twist. Usually it's just guns.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1114357/moises-padilla-town-in-negros-occidental-placed-under-comelec-control
In an advanced copy of the resolution read by Comelec Spokesperson James Jimenez on Monday, the poll body cited the “intense political rivalry” in the municipality as the reason for placing it under Comelec control.
Surely the violence will stop now.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/232303/osmena-documents-say-cebu-city-police-director-is-illegal-gambling-protector
Cebu City Mayor Tomas Osmeña released a bombshell in his grand rally speech on Sunday, May 5, 2019: Cebu City’s police director is a protector of illegal gambling operations in Central Visayas. 
Osmeña made this announcement on the same day that a photo of a group of men allegedly involved in an illegal gambling activity in Cebu City circulated online. One of the men in the photo is believed to be Osmeña.
Cebu's Mayor is accused of being involved in illegal gambling and the local police chief is accused of being involved in illegal gambling. Just accusations being thrown back and forth like mud.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/232316/do-not-vote-for-me-if-you-fear-for-your-safety-osmena
Incumbent Cebu City Mayor Tomas Osmeña told supporters to not vote for him if it means putting their lives on the line. 
Osmeña made this statement a day after another strafing incident transpired at 11:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 4, in Barangay Sudlon 1. 
A group of unidentified men, armed with pistols, reportedly went to the house of Amor Cabiles, head of the Barangay Mayor’s Office. 
About the same time, another group of unidentified men forcibly opened the wooden door of Dennifer Aguilar and slapped her several times on the face. The men reportedly fired shots on the air before the left.
Election time is very vibrant in the Philippines. You can get killed just for voting for the wrong guy!

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1069008
Motorcycle-riding gunmen shot dead a village chairperson in Lambayong, Sultan Kudarat and his aide along a busy street here before noon Monday, police said. 
Lt. Colonel Jeofil Siason, Tacurong City police director, said Abdul Daud, 44, chairperson of Barangay Lilit, Lambayong town, died while undergoing surgery at a private hospital following the 11 a.m. shooting. 
Daud's unarmed escort, Tahir Tangkilisan, a member of Barangay Peacekeeping Action Team (BPAT), was killed on the spot, Siason said.
Another dead LGU official. Election related? Sultan Kudarat is violent even without elections.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1114861/court-allows-brains-of-jee-ick-joo-killing-to-post-bail
The Angeles City Regional Court has allowed the alleged mastermind in the killing of South Korean businessman Jee Ick Joo to post bail. 
The court granted the prayer of Police Lieutenant Colonel (formerly Superintendent)Rafael Dumlao to post bail for his temporary liberty. 
Dumlao has been identified by witness Police Executive Master Sergeant (formerly SPO4) Roy Villegas as the “sir Dumlao” who talked on the phone with accused Police Chief Master Sergeant (formerly SPO3) Ricky Sta. Isabel before Jee was strangled to death. 
Sta. Isabel, Jerry Omlang and Dumlao are charged with kidnapping for ransom and homicide, while Gerardo “Ding” Santiago, owner of the Gream Funeral Services in Caloocan City where the body of the South Korean businessman was brought, was charged as an accessory to the crime. 
Why? WHY!?

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1115129/driver-wounded-as-gunman-fires-at-govt-ambulance-in-cebu
A government ambulance carrying supporters of Mayor Lakambini Reluya of San Fernando town in Cebu province was fired at by an unidentified gunman in Naga City on Monday night, police said. 
The ambulance driver, Arman Navarro, was wounded while his three passengers were unharmed. 
Investigators were looking at political feud as a motive in the attack.
A shameful new low in Philippine politics.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1115283/leyte-town-administrator-shot-dead-in-mayors-house
The municipal administrator of San Isidro town in Leyte was killed after unidentified assailants strafed the house of Mayor Susan Ang in Barangay Capiñahan past 7:30 a.m. on Wednesday, May 8. 
Levi Mabini, 44, a resident of Barangay Daja Diot in San Isidro, suffered gunshot wounds on his back and left foot. 
Zendy Bonite, secretary of the mayor, said in an interview that the victim had just arrived at the mayor’s house when the assailants on board a gray Ford Ranger opened fire at the mayor’s home.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1115418/village-councilor-slain-in-samar
A village councilman was shot dead by an unidentified assailant in Barangay Poblacion Oquendo District, Calbayog City at 8:45 a.m. on Wednesday, May 8. 
Lt. Col Joie Pacito Yape, chief of the Calbayog City police, identified the victim as Benjamine Mayran, 57, and a councilman of Barangay Cagbilwang, Calbayog City. 
Investigation revealed that the victim was driving his motorcycle on his way to Calbayog when two men on board another motorcycle drove alongside him.
Two more LGU officials gunned down.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1115303/breaking-lp-magdalo-media-outfits-tagged-in-duterte-ouster-plot
“The President has received intelligence information that has been validated and appears to show that there is deliberate attempt to discredit this administration, as well as to boost the candidacies of the opposition, senatorial candidates,”  Presidential Spokesperson Salvador Panelo said in a Palace briefing. 
“And it appears that there are certain groups who are working together to achieve this goal. This group appears to be the Liberal Party. Some personalities identified as advocates or very active in social media, dishing out anti-Duterte statements and sentiments and validated to be allied with the Liberal Party,” Panelo added. 
”The other group by the way is Magdalo. It appears from this diagram that Liberal Party, the Magdalo and other groups indicated in the matrix are working hand in hand,” he said. 
Duterte is actually calling the normal way of doing politics evidence of an ouster plot.
https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/regions/693868/judge-killed-in-zamboanga-del-norte-sc/story/
The Court said Lacaya is the 30th judge to be killed while serving in the judiciary since 1999. 
Under the 2005 guidelines, a judge who receives a direct threat may apply for protection with the Philippine National Police or the Court's Security Committee, it said. 
The Court added that judges "are granted permits to carry firearms even outside their stations" under a memorandum of agreement the tribunal signed with the Philippine National Police in 2005.
“Yung election violence po ngayon ay worrisome. I am worried about it, because before this has never happened in Negros Occidental   but it’s happening now,” Comelec commissioner Rowena Guanzon said in her interview on GMA News’ Balitanghali.
Election violence might have never happened in Negros Occidental before but it happens in spades elsewhere.  The shedding of blood is simply part of the political process in the Philippines.

Thursday, May 9, 2019

Ferdinand Marcos' Greatest Achievement

If you ask anyone what Ferdinand Marcos' greatest achievement is you will get a host of varied answers. Many think it's his multitudinous public works projects including roads, public buildings, power plants, and universities. On this list the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant is touted as an accomplishment despite the fact that it was never even operational.

Are public works really the greatest accomplishment of Marcos? What makes an accomplishment great? The great men of the past are men who transcended their nation and their culture and their era, men who tapped into the eternal longings of humanity and have shown us what we are capable of. Think of the deeds of Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, Plato, Da Vinci, Columbus, or any other man who has brought light to humanity.

What did Marcos do that transcends the bounds of the Philippines and rises above all his other works? No one in Germany or the USA will be driving down roads he built or use electricity from power plants he constructed or study at universities he founded. There is only one thing that Marcos did which extends beyond the bounds of the Philippines and qualifies as a great achievement.

He allowed Francis Ford Coppola unlimited use of the military to film Apocalypse Now in the Philippines.

The Apocalypse Now Book, Peter Cowie, pg 15

Background

President Marcos and his wife were patrons of the arts. Imelda built the Philippine Cultural Centre as well as the Manila Film Centre. Marcos knew the power of film in molding society and encouraged Filipino filmmakers to improve their art. In a September 26, 1970 speech before the Manila Motion Pictures Producer Association he said:
When I speak to this gathering of film producers, artist and technicians. I am aware that I am speaking to a group whose work is vital and whose influence is enormous in our society. Those of us whose work is to lead and govern; look to this community to provide our people a vital and purposive entertainment industry and to harness that industry for the task of building progressives and healthy nation.

The present state of the industry, where it is indeed and how it is making use of its opportunities, suggest to my mind that there is a great deal that we can do to upgrade the quality of our films and to make them  truly relevant to our  lives and to our history as a nation. 
Philippine cinema has simply reached the point where it must either advance or regress, either live or die. 
It is for us now to seize these opportunities and make our film industry a truly vital force in the lives of our people and in the economy of our country. And I would like to tell you tonight that you are not alone in dreaming of this advancement; this concern, this hope, we share in common.
Perhaps it was not what Marcos had in mind but during the 70's the Philippines attracted low budget sleaze and grindhouse film productions from America.
They Call Him Chop Suey. They Call Her Cleopatra Wong. They also called them cheap trash. Low-quality American-produced ‘70s movies for kids to make out to in drive-ins and small town cinemas. But they were also some of the most fun films ever to come out of the Philippines. 
Standing in for other tropical locations, the filmmakers would often, whether by design or not, obscure their actual settings. The jungles of Quezon province and beaches of Baler became the homes of crazed American doctors, the Viet Cong, even Satan himself. Filipino henchmen’s voices were dubbed to sound stereotypically Chinese, female Filipino prison guards were the “best gunslingers south of Pango Pango,” and black pirates attacked remote Philippine islands. Sometimes, Filipinos remained behind the camera, directing American actors.
Apocalypse Now co-producer Fred Roos cut his teeth in the Philippines making these types of films.
Production coordinator Fred Roos had already made two low-budget films there for Monte Hellman, and had friends and contacts in the country.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apocalypse_Now
These films would go on to inspire the likes of Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez. Perhaps Marcos saw some of them. Surely he saw both Godfather films and knew the name Francis Ford Coppola.

Securing Marcos' Support

The production of Apocalypse Now is the stuff of legend. Everyone went crazy and the principal actors were all stoned out of their minds during the whole shoot. Getting the film off the ground and greenlit was a chore as well. What Coppola needed was the support of the US military who had bases in the Philippines at that time. From Peter Cowie's book, The Apocalypse Now Book, pages 14-16 we read:
Still hoping for support from the American military, Frederickson dispatched the following brief to both the Deaprtment of National Defense in Washington, and the Armed Forces of the Philippines HQ in Manila. 
The story is set in Vietnam in 1968. It is about the demoralization wreaked by the Vietnam war on the young Americans who reluctantly served in the most unpopular war in US history. Nothing in it is derogatory to the Vietnamese nor American people, although its effect would be to question certain once-popular values and attitudes that made the Vietnam possible. 
Frederickson requested military technical advisers, military escorts, aircraft (mostly Huey helicopters), ordnance (firearms, artillery, etc.), military vehicles, and a radio communication system. The project budget is $13,000,000…Preparations and construction will take about 3 to 4 months. Actual filming, desired to start January 1976, may take anywhere from 4 to 6 months. Principal stars will be Marlon Brando, Steven McQueen or Clint Eastwood, James Caan, Yves Montand and Maria Schneider…There will be a staff of 65 foreigners plus about 500 Filipinos. As much as 2,000 local technicians, bit players and other talents will be hired…Locations for the filming have not been finalized. Pagsanjan, Los Baños, Batangas, Zambales, Davao, Mondora and Baler are tentatively considered. 
Meanwhile booth Roos and Frederickson had returned several times to the Philippines, criss-crossing the country in search of locations and dealing with the government. One of Frederickson’s best pals during his school days in Switzerland had been Giovanni Volpi, whose family had founded the Venice Film Festival. During a trip to Manila, Frederickson and Volpi met again by chance in the lobby of thier hotel. They chatted beside the pool and Frederickson explained his need to get the Filipino generals to provide Apocalypse production with helicopters and permit access to their military facilities. “He invited me to dinner that night,” smiles Frederickson. 
I went down to meet him in front of the hotel and there were these long limousines with flags on the fenders, and we drove over to the palace and had dinner with President Ferdinand Marcos and his aides. They put us in touch with the generals, and from then on its was pretty smooth. 
Coppola and Roos subsequently had an audience with Marcos to formalize his support for the venture. 
So, in the face of continued aloofness from Washington, a contract was signed between the Philippines Department of National Defense and Coppola Cinema Seven, dated 1 October, 1975. This imposed on the production no fee as such for the use of equipment and personnel, other than actual expenses and insurance against death and damages. Had there been no assurance that twenty Huey helicopters would be made available for the aerial attack sequence, the Philippines would never have been chosen as the site for filming and quite possibly the project might have been scrapped.
What a coincidence that co-producer Gray Frederickson just happened to run into an old friend in Manila. What an even stranger coincidence that this man happened to the be the son of the founder of the Venice Film Festival and was able to set up dinner with President Marcos that very night! Could it be that Volpi was assisting Marcos with putting together the 1975 Metro Manila Film Festival? That is likely and would be in line with his desire to advance the Philippine film industry into the future.

Filming

Filming the movie was, of course, a nightmare. Typhoons, drunkenness, drugs, uncooperative actors, pressure from the studios, and pressure from the AFP.
The Filipino Army and Air Force had, following Roos and Frederickson’s negotiations, been placed at Coppola’s disposal. President Marcos was involved in continual skirmishes with the “Communist“ rebel forces, and so the Huey helicopters assigned to Apocalypse Now were sometimes recalled at short notice throughout 1976.   
Cowie, pg. 49 
The first two weeks of April involved daily use of the helicopters on loan from the Philippine Air Force. There were only twenty-four operational Hueys in the country, and Coppola demanded fifteen of them for Kilgore’s dawn attack at Baler (after all, the US Army had ordered 838 Huey Cobras by the spring of 1968!) The machines were painted with US Army markings in the morning and repainted with Philippine Air Force decals at night. On 2 April, in the midst of rehearsing for a complicated shot, the choppers were diverted urgently to engage rebel forces in the south of the country. 
Cowie, pg. 50
Because of the civil war in the south, everyday, the government sends different pilots who haven't participated in the rehearsals, wrecking tens of thousands of dollars worth of shots. All day today, a Philippine air force general was on the set. There were rumors that the rebels were in the hills about 10 miles away. The Filipino commanders were afraid there could be an attack on the helicopters we were using. In the middle of a complicated shot, the helicopters were called away to fight the rebels.
Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmakers Apocalypse



Marcos even showed up on set towards the end of filming.
The loss of his leading man made Coppola even more defiant. He refused to shut down the production, however temporarily, and shooting continued at the Kurtz compound. Tavoularis had constructed a kind of bunker at the very core of the complex, packed with wires and switches that enabled both lighting and pyrotechnics to be operated by remote control. On one of these March days, President Marcos visited the area and no explosions could be set off by the crew in case he thought it was a rebel attack. 
Cowie, pg. 94
How fitting that President Marcos visited the set while scenes at the megalomaniac Kurtz's compound were being filmed. That particular set employed hundreds of Ifugao's as extras and the atmosphere was very wild.

Filming Apocalypse Now in the Philippines is best summed up this way:
For Coppola, the Philippines was a cheap stand-in for Vietnam. Where else could he rent an army, build and destroy whole villages and enlist thousands of extras for pennies a day? 
Premiere and Legacy

Apocalypse Now had its premiere at Cannes on May 10, 1979 as a work in progress but ended up winning the Palme d'Or.
Apocalypse Now won the Palme d'Or for best film along with Volker Schlöndorff's The Tin Drum – a decision that was reportedly greeted with "some boos and jeers from the audience".
The film was a success upon release earning a Best Picture nomination but winning for Best Cinematography and Sound and has gone on to be included in many lists as the best film of all time and certainly the best war film of all time.

Aside from influencing filmmakers and popular culture the world over the film also turned the spotlight on the Philippines' film industry. The contract Coppola signed with DND Secretary Juan Ponce Enrile set a precedent for future productions to be filmed in the Philippines.
Through it all, the movie left a lasting impression on the thousands of Filipinos who worked on the production, hung out with production staffers, and rubbed elbows with some future Hollywood heavyweights. Careers have crashed, burned, and flourished in the shadow of Apocalypse. Across 1976 and 1978, the Philippines became the unwitting center of Coppola’s hurricane. For a brief pocket of time, the country became a place of interest for Hollywood productions looking for cheap but adaptable locations. According to Henry Strzalkowski, an extra in Apocalypse’s production, George Lucas expressed interest in shooting Star Wars here, only to change his mind after hearing about Coppola’s troubled production. 
“It was Martial Law and we had a contract with the Department of National Defense,” explains Juban. “Naka-pirma si Enrile [Secretary Juan Ponce Enrile signed]. It was an honored contract. . . . The guns came from the Philippine Army, the AK47s came from the Philippine Constabulary, the trucks came from the Army Support Command . . . anything they wanted was here.”  
That contract was the first of its nature done and it set the precedent for other films,” he says, “films like Platoon, Born on the Fourth of July.” Coppola had a deal with Marcos, according to the documentary. Production was to pay the military thousands of dollars per day, as well as overtime fee for the pilots. In return, Coppola could use the government’s entire fleet of helicopters, as long as they weren’t needed for the communist insurgency in the South. 
Remember the surfing scene with Robert Duvall? Charlie don't surf but Filipinos do. Apocalypse Now gave birth to Filipino surfing culture.
https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-21941069
When a scene from Apocalypse Now was shot on an obscure beach in the Philippines in the late 70s, little did the film-makers know they were giving birth to the country's surfing culture. 
Apocalypse Now was not actually filmed in Vietnam, but in the little fishing town of Baler in the northern Philippines. 
As the cameras rolled, local Filipinos like Edwin Nomoro watched from the sidelines.  
Nomoro was 10 at the time, and he came down to the beach every day to see it transformed into a battle scene, complete with an entirely fake Vietnamese village and helicopters swooping overhead. 
But what excited him most was the sight of the actors surfing - something he'd never seen before. 
"When the filming finished, some of the crew left their surfboards behind, and my friend and I picked up the boards and taught ourselves how to surf," he says. "We've been surfing ever since." 
At first, Nomoro and his friends found it difficult because there was no-one around to teach them. 
"But we studied it, and learned, and now - no-one can explain what it feels like. Only a surfer knows the feeling," he says, smiling. 
Once they got the hang of it, the boys started teaching others, and as word spread, tourists began coming to the little town to learn to ride the waves at Charlie's Point, as it became known. 
Nomoro was able to turn his passion into a way of making a living, and more than 30 years on, he still earns money from the industry he helped to create. 
"I have several rooms to rent. I also have some surfboards for hire," he says. "It's really improved my life. It helps me feed my family." 
Baler's success as a surfing centre has rippled out to other parts of the Philippines, such as Surigao, La Union and Pagudpud. 
"Baler is the birthplace of Philippine surfing," says Mac Ritual, a local tour guide.
Apocalypse Now continues to live and breathe. In 2001 Coppola released an extended version, Apocalypse Now Redux. This year, the film's 40th, anniversary, he has released a third version of the film, Apocalypse Now: Final Cut

Without Marcos allowing Coppola unlimited use of AFP equipment, during martial law and a communist insurgency no less, this film would not have happened. In light of the impact Apocalypse Now has made globally I believe Marcos' deal with Coppola is his greatest achievement.  Just imagine if Marcos had denied Coppola's proposal and he was forced to abandon the project?

"The horror, the horror."

Wednesday, May 8, 2019

Blaring Election Truck Speakers

If you think those trucks blasting out popular songs with altered lyrics all about a candidate are annoying then you ain't seen nothing yet. Check out this behemoth!







Just look at that huge stack of speakers! When I walked by I could feel my whole being rattle. What is the point of that? This is not the only candidate using a wall of speakers to get your vote.




Again what is the point?  I hope the point is that as this was a festival these guys are not driving around every day blaring music from these speakers but they are just being festive. Somehow I doubt it.

Remember BOOM BOOM BOOM to BOOM BOOM BOOM vote for BOOM BOOM BOOM me!

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Martial Law: Clan Wars

In the Philippines' war on terrorism the spotlight has been cast upon communist rebels and Islamic jihadis but violence, especially in Mindanao, is also due to clan wars and rido.

https://www.kalinawnews.com/government-troops-clash-with-the-armed-lawless-group-in-north-cotabato/
Combined troops of 34th Infantry Battalion and Midsayap MPS encountered with the armed lawless group (ALG) in Barangay Kapinpilan, Midsayap, North Cotabato on Tuesday afternoon, April 30, 2019. 
The security forces responded to the reported gunfires believed to be a rido between the ALG under Mama Macalimbol and Dule Dulua, member of 105th Base Command.
https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1068770
Intermittent clashes between two warring clans in Midsayap, North Cotabato, has forced the evacuation of some 417 families from two villages. 
Maj. Arvin John Encinas, Army’s 6th Infantry Division spokesperson, said sporadic clashes in Barangays Tumbras and Kapinpilan have been going on starting April 30. 
“Our security forces have secured the evacuees as local officials and elders are pacifying the quarreling families,” Encinas assured. 
Encinas identified the warring families like those of Mama Macalimbol, an alleged leader of an armed lawless group, as against the Dule Dulua and Taha clans that are affiliated with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front 105th Base Command. 
Army officials said the opposing families, locked in deep-seated political and land dispute, have both suffered casualties over the past three days of retaliatory fighting.
It's a little ironic that one of these families is affiliated with the MILF because the MILF is now responsible for securing the region with the BARMM being praised as the way for peace. It's also a little confusing that this article does not mention that Mama Macalimbol is associated with the ISIS-affiliated BIFF.
“The armed men withdrew toward the marshy area of Barangay Tumbras en route to the Maguindanao marshland,” he said, adding that the state forces encountered the group of Mama Macalimbol, a bomber and a known member of the terror group Dawlah Islamiyah-BIFF faction.
https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1051280
Is this a clan war, a rido, or is it a confrontation between the MILF and BIFF? It could be both! The reasons given for violence in Mindanao inevitably include the canard "historical injustices" which really translates to colonisation of Mindanao by Christians and which can only be rectified by independence. But here we get a peek behind the scenes at infighting between Moro families over politics and land.  Truly they can say, "We have met the enemy and he is us."

The head of the BARMM, Murad, recognises the importance of ending these clan wars and has made it a priority to do so.
https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2019/03/03/1898226/palace-barmm-resolve-clan-wars
Major Gen. Cirilito Sobejana of the Army’s 6th Infantry Division in central Mindanao and Chief Supt. Graciano Mijares of the Police Regional Office-BARMM have said in separate statements that they are ready to help Ebrahim broker the settlement of conflicts involving big Moro clans and groups identified with local MILF leaders. 
“There is a need to settle as early as possible some rido (clan wars) involving MILF commanders, conflicts involving certain families, in preparation for the decommissioning process,” Ebrahim said. 
Ebrahim said the BTA is aware that unsettled family feuds can cause reluctance among protagonists to lay down their firearms and be reintegrated into mainstream communities in the BARMM. 
The 6th ID and the Maguindanao Task Force Reconciliation and Unification under the office of Gov. Esmael Mangudadatu have settled more than a hundred clan wars since 2011, some of them involving MILF field commanders. 
The conflicts stemmed from landownership issues, affronts to clan honor and political rivalries. 
Peace advocacy groups, some operating with the help of foreign benefactors, blame the weak judicial system in Moro areas due to lack of prosecutors and judges as the main cause of the proliferation of clan wars.
The AFP  and PNP say they are ready to help settle these clan wars but they are more than ready. They have been brokering miniature peace deals between warring families consistently over the years

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1068521
https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1066712

https://www.rappler.com/nation/216427-army-battalion-ending-clan-wars-mindanao
Those settlements are within the past year. In 2009 a camera crew filmed PNP Col. Julasirim Kasim attempting to enforce a peace agreement between clans based in Sulu.


Sadly it was only a little over a week after this video was posted that he died while engaging Abu Sayyaf.
[It is sad to lose Col. Kasim, considering he is nearing retirement age at 55 yet stayed at the frontlines. That shows how hardworking and active he is]," Bartolome said in an interview on dzXL radio. Kasim and four of his men were killed in an encounter with the Abu Sayyaf Thursday. Bartolome insisted the incident was an encounter and not an ambush, adding Kasim had several reinforcements with him at the time. He added Kasim took to heart PNP chief Director General Jesus Verzosa's directive to stomp out crime in their areas of responsibility.
https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/regions/160401/pnp-mourns-death-of-sulu-police-chief/story/
BARMM leader Murad says clan wars make the decommissioning and normalisation process much more difficult. If families are warring why would anyone make themselves vulnerable by laying down their arms?  From the video above:
Most people when they talk about insecurity it's insecurity from a fellow clan. From armed members of rival clans.  That's where people's number one threat comes from. Whether they be in the police, whether they be in the military, the local government, even in the Abu Sayyaf group. Their number one enemy, chances are, is a rival clan.
David Gorman - Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue
The Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue is most certainly one of the "foreign benefactors" mentioned above. They have been involved in the Philippines since 2005 helping negotiate a deal between the MNLF and the PNP over the detention of Misuari.
HD first became involved in the province of Sulu after a serious outbreak of fighting between the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) and the Philippines Armed Forces in February 2005. HD facilitated a series of talks between representatives of the MNLF Chairman, Nur Misuari, and the Government, represented by the then Secretary Teresita ‘Ging’ Deles. The parties met for five rounds of talks and agreed to resolve the detention of Nur Misuari. Under HD’s guidance, a GPH-MNLF Peace Working Group (PWG) was set up in Sulu to address security issues in the region. 
The Peace Working Group was a bold experiment in local third party mediation in an active conflict zone. It worked initially, but with the lack of political progress in implementing the 1996 agreement, continuing violence perpetrated by lawless groups such as Abu Sayyaf, and explosive clan conflicts, the two armed forces continued to be drawn into conflict. 
It soon became evident that the violence and dislocation was occurring for much more complex factors relating to clan conflicts within indigenous Tausug (ethnic group in Sulu) society. These conflicts were in turn exploited or exacerbated by local politics and the underlying Bangsamoro struggle. 
The Peace Working Group was therefore transformed into a more locally-anchored body, the Tumikang Sama Sama – which means “Together we move forward” in Sinug, the language spoken by Tausugs. 
The group is composed of a small body of well-respected local individuals including from the security sector and the Office of the Mufti, and is assisted by a secretariat drawn from the local community. Based on experiences from specific conflicts, the TSS derived an approach to conflict resolution that combines the influence of local tradition with international third party presence.
https://www.hdcentre.org/activities/philippines-mindanao/
The CHD appears to be engaged in productive work which has helped gradually bring peace to the region. With the in-depth commitment they have put into the peace process they surely understand just what is at stake. Right?
HD began providing advice to the Malaysian facilitator, the MILF and the Government on the peace process in 2007. Following the collapse of the agreement on Ancestral Domain in 2008, HD helped put together the International Contact Group (ICG), which was officially launched in November 2009 to advise and assist the two parties and the Malaysian Facilitator in the talks. HD has sent representatives to every round of talks since December 2009 and has regularly held bilateral talks with each party’s representatives. In addition to HD, the ICG is composed of the Governments of Japan, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Turkey and the United Kingdom as well as international non-governmental organisations: Conciliation Resources, Muhammadiyah and the Community of Sant’Egidio (an original member, the Asia Foundation later joined the Third Party Monitoring Team in 2013).
https://www.hdcentre.org/activities/philippines-mindanao/
It appears this NGO was disappointed that the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain collapsed as a result of being found unconstitutional by the Supreme court. For all their talk about the "underlying Bangsamoro struggle" one has to wonder if they know that said struggle is all about independence. That for the MILF peace does not mean cessation of violence but liberation from the Philippines and Mindanao to be returned to them which they claim as their own. Such was the sum and substance of the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain which I wrote about previously.
MILF leaders said they plan to press Manila for self-governance and recognition of their "ancestral domain" to end their insurgency.  
MILF deputy chief Ghazali Jaafar, speaking at his heavily fortified home in Mindanao, said Manila should acknowledge that the Bangsamoro, or Muslim people, historically ruled the south of this mostly Roman Catholic country.  
"Mindanao was ruled by our ancestors and should be recognized as such and returned to us," Jaafar told Agence France Presse in an interview as he sat under the insurgents’ flag and closely guarded by two guerrillas wielding M-16 assault rifles.  
"We want self-governance, a system by which we Muslims can solve the problems of our own people. And not just an agreement favoring a few Muslims leaders," he said.  
This will all depend on President Arroyo, the rebel leader said but added the MILF leadership "is willing to sign an agreement if there is a favorable solution to the problem of the Bangsamoro who remain colonized."  
"We are not negotiating for surrender," Jaafar said. "But we have been fighting for three decades and it is time we find a solution."  
However, joining the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) is "unacceptable," he said, because it has been a failure and does not reflect "the will of the Bangsamoro."  
"The so-called ARMM is not a real autonomy. It did not have power and answers still to the Manila government. It also did not contribute to the improvement in the lives of Muslims," Jaafar said.  
"Look around you, we are still a poor people." 
After the collapse of the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain the CHD helped create the International Contact Group. This group has the following objectives:
Committed to ending conflict in Mindanao through peaceful negotiations; 
Dedicated to the successful outcome ofthe GRP-MILF Peace Process; 
Recognizing the role that interested countries and international non-government organisations (INGO) can play in supporting the success of the GRP-MILF peace process
https://peacemaker.un.org/sites/peacemaker.un.org/files/PH_090915_Framework%20agreement%20on%20the%20contact%20group.pdf
The third objective about recognising the importance of outside parties is interesting in light of the fact that one of the parties to the ICG is the Asia Foundation. Even more interesting is that The Asia Foundation is a member of the Third Party Monitoring Team which is described as:
An independent body mandated by the Government of the Philippines and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front to monitor, review and assess the implementation of all GPH-MILF signed agreements, including in particular the Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro (FAB) and its annexes.
http://tpmt.ph/members-third-party-monitoring-team
What makes The Asia Foundation's involvement in the peace process between the GPH and the MILF fascinating is that this group is a CIA founded and US government funded organisation. Blogger Thinking Pinoy recently posted his discovery that Vera Files receives much of their funding from The Asia Foundation with his thesis being that this CIA front is funding groups to be critical of Duterte in a bid to demonise and oust him. I have proven how this conclusion is far from conclusive. How backwards is it that the CIA would be attempting to both destabilise and stabilise the Philippines? Does TP know that the peace process between the MILF and the GPH is backed by the CIA? Do those who claim the CIA is funding ISIS in the Philippines and helped bring about the Marawi siege as an attempt to topple the Duterte administration know that they are also facilitating in the peace process? Why would the CIA be funding terrorists and critical journalists as well as the peace process?  I cant even begin to answer but it should also be noted that Abu Sayyaf has also received money from al-Qaeda which is an organisation founded by Osama bin Laden who was allegedly trained by the CIA to fight the Soviets when they invaded Afghanistan. What exactly is the CIA up to in the Philippines?

What the endgame and real interests of these NGOs are I do not know nor will I attempt to guess. One thing is certain: clan wars are a major source of violence in Mindanao and they are not going to be stopping anytime soon despite the interference of international peace groups. Clan wars are a way of life in Mindanao.


https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2005/06/27/283688/deadly-clan-wars-way-life-mindanao
Studies jointly funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Asia Foundation have documented 1,220 clan conflicts since 1930 in 11 provinces of Mindanao, home to the mostly Roman Catholic nation’s four million-strong Muslim minority. 
The Asia Foundation? Obviously the documentation of 1,220 clan conflicts since 1930 is just dirty CIA propaganda meant to cast aspersion on the Philippines.

Saturday, May 4, 2019

Picture of the Week: Christmas Banner and Leaning Electric Pole

This week's picture of the week is a double whammy. A two for one.  


A local politician's Christmas banner, still hanging in April, right next to a leaning electric pole. There is not much to say about it really. The picture speaks for itself. A self-serving politician who cannot be bothered to take down her Christmas banners. A leaning pole giving visible proof of the unreliable electric grid in the Philippines.

The only thing that could make this picture better is if there was a dog eating from a tipped over trash can.