Tuesday, August 20, 2019

Martial Law: Wake Up

It's August in the Philippines and that means the year is almost over. This is the so-called lean month which transitions into the -ber months and the holiday season. What better time to reflect on the status of the Philippines' war on terrorism than now as we rush toward the end of the year? If you are a news junkie or you follow this blog then perhaps you think you are up to date on what is happening.  But let's take a closer look at what some analysts are saying about the situation in the Philippines.

The National Intelligence Coordinating Agency (NICA) predicts there will be more suicide bombings.
https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/704458/nat-l-intel-agency-sees-more-suicide-bombings-happening-in-phl/story/
"Almost every six months we had one incident. We pray that none will follow but we are sure that there will be," NICA Director-General Alex Paul Monteagudo told GMA News. 
"The terrorists are training and recruiting children as young as 10, 12 years old," he added.  
National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon Jr. said that there are vulnerable sectors that must be carefully guarded so that they would not be recruited by terrorists. 
These include students attending madrasah or Islamic schools, religious leaders, overseas Filipino workers, prisoners, and even netizens.
In this same video Sen. Lacson says:
"I hope we won't experience another suicide bombing before we wake up to the reality that we really need a strong anti-terrorism law."
The DND hopes to strengthen the current anti-terroism law by allowing suspected terrorists to be held for up to 60 days.
The proposal of granting powers to law enforcers to hold a terror suspect for a period of 14 days sans formal complaints is also being discussed in the Senate to add more teeth to the Human Security Act of 2007. 
Under existing laws, a terror suspect may only be held in custody for 36 hours if there are no formal charges filed against him or her. 
The Department of National Defense proposed to extend it up to 60 days. 
"Sixty days, that's quick. Two months lang po 'yun Mr. Chairman just to give them time, more time to develop their case," Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said. 
The NICA seconded the proposal. 
"If you let them loose, they are going to infect the rest of the society, they are going to radicalize children. And therefore we need laws that will allow us to hold them longer," Monteagudo said.
Madrassas are the standard indoctrination schools for Islamic terrorists so it very well could be that young Filipino children are being recruited to join the folds of ISIS.  The goal is to eradicate ISIS and all their affiliates here in the Philippines but just how that will happen as a result of being able to hold a suspect for 60 days the DND does not say.

Lacson's statement about waking up to reality regarding this new problem of Filipino suicide bombers is fraught with irony. Have the AFP and DND really been asleep this whole time? Yes they have. They have ignored what experts have been saying for years and what ISIS has been telling them directly.

https://news.siteintelgroup.com/Jihadist-News/ansar-al-khilafah-in-the-philippines-threatens-philippine-government-american-soldiers.html
“Ansar al-Khilafah (Supporters of the Caliphate) in the Philippines”, a group that pledged allegiance to the Islamic State (IS) in August 2014, released a video threatening to deploy suicide bombers in the Philippines and make the country a “graveyard” for American soldiers.
August 2014, five years ago, is when we hear the first threat of suicide bombers being deployed in the Philippines. Two years later in 2016 ISIS finally recognised the pledges of several Philippine groups.

https://www.rappler.com/nation/118850-experts-warn-ph-not-to-underestimate-isis
ISIS or the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, also known as IS, ISIL, or its loose Arabic acronym, Da’esch, is set to exploit homegrown conflicts in Southeast Asia, with risks of a mass casualty attack growing significantly higher in the Philippines, according to counter-terrorism and security officials from 4 different countries interviewed by Rappler. 
In a 7-minute video released on January 4 and announced last week in Arabic on ISIS’ official newsletter, Al-Naba, Filipinos and Malaysians united 4 “battalions” in the Philippines, and their leaders pledged allegiance to ISIS’ self-appointed caliph, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, formed a shura or leadership council, and named Abu Sayyaf ideologue Isnilon Hapilon their leader. 
"The next step ISIS is likely to take is the proclamation of wilayatMindanao," terror expert Rohan Gunaratna told Rappler over the weekend. 
The military has not only dismissed our report on this. It also declared, through its public affairs chief Colonel Noel Detoyato, that "there is no ISIS here."  
Detoyato said: “There is a difference between ISIS-directed and ISIS-inspired.” 
No ISIS here. That mantra was repeated time and again by the AFP until the Marawi siege and even then they kept insisting ISIS was not behind the attack until they had to admit they were wrong. One would think the AFP would constantly be on their toes and believe just about every rumour that comes their way until disproved otherwise since the discovery in 1994 of the Bojinka Plot which was being hatched right under everyone's nose in Manila.
The Bojinka plot (Arabic: بوجينكا‎; Tagalog: Oplan Bojinka) was a large-scale, three-phase attack planned by terrorists Ramzi Yousef and Khalid Sheikh Mohammed for January 1995. They planned to assassinate Pope John Paul II, blow up 11 airliners in flight from Asia to the United States with the goal of killing approximately 4,000 passengers and shutting down air travel around the world, and crash a plane into the headquarters of the CIA in Fairfax County, Virginia.
Despite careful planning, the Bojinka plot was disrupted after a chemical fire drew the attention of the Philippine National Police – Western Police District (PNP-WPD) on January 6–7, 1995. Yousef and Mohammed were unable to stage any of the three attacks. The only fatality resulted from a test bomb planted by Yousef on Philippine Airlines Flight 434 which killed one person and injured 10 others. They also planted two other bombs in a shopping mall and theater in Southern Philippines.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bojinka_plot
This plot was financed by Al-Qaeda which included front groups posing as charities, such as the International Islamic Relief Agency, run by Osama Bin Laden's brother-in-law Mohammed Jamal Khalifa.
Funding for the Bojinka Plot came from Osama bin Laden and Hambali, and from front organizations operated by Mohammed Jamal Khalifa, bin Laden's brother-in-law. 
Wali Khan Amin Shah, an Afghan, was the financier of the plot. He funded the plot by laundering money through his girlfriend and other Manila women, several of whom were bar hostesses and one of whom was an employee at a KFC restaurant. They were bribed with gifts and holiday trips so that they would open bank accounts to stash funds. 
The transfers were small, equivalent to about 12,000 to 24,000 Philippine pesos ($500 to $1,000 US), and would be handed over each night at a Wendy's or a karaoke bar. The funds went to "Adam Sali", an alias used by Ramzi Yousef. The money came through a Filipino bank account owned by Jordanian Omar Abu Omar, who worked at International Relations and Information Centre, an Islamic organization run by Mohammed Jamal Khalifa. 
A company called Konsojaya also provided financial assistance to the Manila cell by laundering money to it. Konsojaya was a front company that was started by the head of the group Jemaah Islamiyah, an Indonesian named Riduan Isamuddin, also known as Hambali. Wali Khan Amin Shah was on the board of directors of the company.
The organisations run by Khalifa served to finance Abu Sayyaf and other terrorist groups in Mindanao most notably the MILF who now run the BARMM. What a tangled web that all is which shows just how foolish the Philippine government is to have entered into any deal with the MILF as that contained in the BBL.

Will the AFP  and the politicians running this country ever wake up? If they aren't still asleep they at least are underestimating the enemy. But they are not alone in their inability to fully grasp the depth of the situation in the Philippines. The Americans are also guilty.

This week the US DoD released their 7th quarterly report of Operation Pacific Eagle.  It covers he months April 1 - June 1. Here is the brief overview.

On June 28, 2019, a suicide bombing killed at least 5 and wounded 22 at an Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) camp on the island of Jolo. This was the first confirmed suicide bombing by a Philippine national. While the Philippines has struggled with violent extremism for decades, suicide attacks were extremely rare, and U.S. and Philippine officials operated under the assumption that the Filipino people are culturally averse to suicide attacks. Since Operation Pacific Eagle-Philippines (OPE-P) began in 2017, the small number of suicide bombings were all carried out by foreign fighters. An AFP spokesperson stated that security forces will need to adapt to this apparent change in enemy tactics.
pg. 2
In response to the bombing, an AFP spokesperson told reporters, “The most significant implication now that we have a Filipino suicide bomber...is that this should open a new mindset that we have a different security environment.” While U.S. and Philippine officials have previously operated under the assumption that the Filipino people are culturally disinclined to conduct suicide attacks, an Indonesia-based terrorism analyst cautioned the authorities not to take this for granted, stating, “This isn’t about culture, it’s about indoctrination, and no one is culturally ‘immune.’”
In responses made to the DoD OIG before this attack took place, USINDOPACOM stated that ISIS-EA was “not shifting tactics to place greater emphasis on suicide attacks,” that “Filipinos are not culturally or ideologically inclined to conduct suicide attacks,” and that future suicide bombings in the Philippines would likely incorporate foreign fighters from outside Southeast Asia. In previous quarters, USINDOPACOM stated to the DoD OIG that an absence of indigenous suicide bombings was one indicator that Philippine jihadist groups had co-opted the aesthetics and reputation of ISIS without fully incorporating its ideology. According to Philippine officials, this quarter’s suicide bombing in Indanan was evidence that Philippine jihadists have not universally rejected the extremist ideology of ISIS.
pg. 8
It is 2019 and since the establishment of ISIS in the country in 2014 the Philippines has seen the destruction of a major city by ISIS affiliated groups and experts around the world keep telling us this is the new land of jihad. How insane is it then that USINDOPACOM (that means US Indo-Pacific Command) would spout nonsense about Philippine jihadist groups only co-opting the aesthetics of ISIS and not their ideology? Clearly they adopted their ideology years ago. Suicide bombings were only a matter of time. Why use cultural stereotypes as a basis for measuring what Filipino jihadists are and aren't inclined to do? Why not look at the broader picture which is that ISIS preaches an ideology which transcends culture. Why else would foreign fighters be making their way to he Philippines?
The relationship between ISIS-EA and ISIS-Core is a major factor USINDOPACOM uses to assess the relative strength of the Philippine affiliates. USINDOPACOM stated that it was not aware of any financial or other support from ISIS-Core to ISIS-EA this quarter and reported no change in the dynamics between the two groups since last quarter. Additionally, USINDOPACOM reported no changes in ISIS-EA’s command and control structure or the group’s operational capabilities, including its ability to build explosive devices. 
USINDOPACOM reported to the DoD OIG that despite several high-profile terrorist attacks, ISIS-EA was incapable of conducting large-scale attacks and would likely remain limited in this capacity for the near future. USINDOPACOM has defined “large-scale” attacks as having a casualty toll of more than 100 and cited the 2002 Bali, Indonesia, bombings as an example. USINDOPACOM stated that a lack of unified leadership, funding, cohesion between factions, and support from ISIS-Core would prevent ISIS-EA from carrying out large-scale attacks.
According to USINDOPACOM, ISIS-EA did not gain or lose any territory this quarter and continued to operate in the same regions of the southern Philippines, specifically the island of Mindanao and the Sulu archipelago. In response to a question from the DoD OIG about the strength of the various ISIS-EA factions, USINDOPACOM cited figures from an AFP assessment that put the total strength of ISIS-EA at 574 fighters, including 424 members of the ASG; 85 members of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters-Esmael faction; 59 members of the Maute Group; and 6 members of the Ansar Khalifa Philippines faction. 
These numbers suggest that the ASG’s relative strength within ISIS-EA has grown over the last year. During the same quarter in 2018, USINDOPACOM estimated that there were approximately 200 ISIS-affiliated fighters in the Philippines, split roughly evenly among ASG, the Maute Group, Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters, and Ansar Khalifa Philippines.
pg. 9 - 10
An increase of 374 fighters is not much. Not when you include all those who have died the previous year in clashes with the AFP. However the fact that there was any growth should be a cause of concern that all is not as it seems. Especially when the NICA is telling the Senate that terrorists are recruiting young children and more suicide bombers can be expected in the future. USINDOPACOM probably ought not to be so confident ISIS-EA (that is their code for ISIS East Asia but refers primarily to the Philippines) is incapable of conducting large-scale attacks.

Another recent analysis by the Institute for the Study of War tells us that ISIS is on its way back from the dead in Syria and Iraq and looking to establish Caliphate 2.0. This is contrary to the claims of the US DoD that ISIS is dead or dying. From the overview we read the following.
The Islamic State of Iraq and Al-Sham (ISIS) is not defeated despite the loss of the territory it claimed as its so-called ‘Caliphate’ in Iraq and Syria. It is stronger today than its predecessor Al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) was in 2011, when the U.S. withdrew from Iraq. AQI had around 700-1000 fighters then. ISIS had as many as 30,000 fighters in Iraq and Syria in August 2018 according to a Defense Intelligence Agency estimate. ISIS built from the small remnant left in 2011 an army large enough to recapture Fallujah, Mosul, and other cities in Iraq and dominate much of eastern Syria in only three years. It will recover much faster and to a much more dangerous level from the far larger force it still has today.
The slow-motion reduction of ISIS’s territory and strength initiated by President Obama and continued by President Trump gave the group plenty of time to plan and prepare for the next phase of the war. It had a plan to recover ready before the “caliphate” fell and has been executing it during the anti-ISIS campaign conducted by the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF), the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), and the U.S.-Led Anti-ISIS Coalition. ISIS deliberately withdrew and relocated many of its fighters and their families from Mosul, Raqqa, and other important cities into new and old support zones in Iraq and Syria. ISIS’s forces are now dispersed across both countries and are waging a capable insurgency. ISIS retained a global finance network that funded its transition back to an insurgency and managed to preserve sufficient weapons and other supplies in tunnel systems and other support zones in order to equip its regenerated insurgent force.
ISIS’s insurgency will grow because areas it has lost in Iraq and Syria are still neither stable nor secure. In Iraq, ISIS has systematically eliminated village leaders and civilians who cooperated with anti-ISIS forces. Its goal is to weaken resistance and to fuel the population’s distrust of the Government of Iraq. It has re-imposed taxes on local populations in its historical support zones, displacing civilians and de facto controlling small pockets of terrain in Iraq.
ISIS's Second Comeback, Executive Summary pg. 8
"ISIS retained a global finance network." Does that mean ISIS affiliated groups in the Philippines can hope to see funds flowing in soon? With Marawi still in ruins and the AFP seeking for another yearlong extension of martial law in 2020 Mindanao also remains neither stable nor secure which could contribute to any growth of ISIS in the Philippines. What a resurgence of ISIS in the Middle East means for the Philippines is not made clear in this report. In fact except for a brief history of the organisation the Philippines is hardly mentioned at all. There is an interesting blurb about the Marawi siege on page 16.
In the Philippines in 2017, ISIS repeated its tactic of destroying cities. It defended Marawi for five months with tactics similar to those it used in urban battles in Iraq and Syria, including extensive use of snipers and IEDs that drew heavy artillery fire and airstrikes on the Armed Forces of the Philippines. ISIS covered the battle extensively in its social propaganda, including the front pages of Rumiyah. The battle damaged over 95 percent of the buildings in central Marawi, while the destruction further alienated minority Sunnis from the Philippine government, which declared much of the city a military reservation a er the battle.79
pg. 16
ISIS affiliated groups in the Philippines have adopted ISIS tactics used elsewhere and used them during the Marawi siege. This should not be surprising as these groups have pledged loyalty to ISIS and that would naturally mean they would begin employing their tactics which would eventually include even suicide bombers. But this fact seems to have caught the AFP and even the US DoD off guard and now they are "reassessing previous assumptions."

The gist of all this is that ISIS is here to stay for the immediate future. Despite the AFP telling the public they will destroy Abu Sayyaf by year's end we learn that the NICA predicts more suicide bombings and the US DoD reveals that the number of Abu Sayyf fighters has increased. The nature of this enemy is incredibly hard to pin down and any celebration of victory is going to be by necessity premature.

April 2019
https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1066885
“I am especially pleased with our military's recent accomplishments against the Abu Sayyaf Group. Your efforts have brought us even closer to our ultimate objective of totally crushing violent extremism at its roots,” Duterte said in his speech. 
“With this, I can confidently declare that ISIS will never gain foothold anywhere in the Philippines,” he added.
August 2019

https://www.cnnphilippines.com/news/2019/8/5/Rodrigo-Duterte-ISIS.html
“Just like Iraq, Syria, na maraming inosenteng tao ang nadadali [where many innocent people are affected],” Duterte said during the oathtaking of newly-appointed officials in Malacañang. 
The President said he hopes the Philippines will be spared from a possible ISIS attack. 
“I’m praying - I really pray, talagang lumuluhod ako sa Diyos [I am kneeling before God] to spare us that kind of brutality and cruelty in our country - because it will really be bloody,” he added.
Again and again the politicians and security forces of the Philippines continue to make the biggest mistake in dealing with ISIS which is underestimating them. There is no greater danger than underestimating your opponent.

Monday, August 19, 2019

Philippines Civil Service Exam

In order to work for the government you have to take the Civil Service Exam. Once you are in and you want a promotion you have to take another version of the Civil Service Exam. It's a key test making sure no slackers get by. Only the best of the best in the service of the Philippine government. Like Elizabeth Mabana.

https://twitter.com/anjo_bagaoisan/status/1157801829322936330/video/1

This lady, who is already part of the bureaucracy, is taking the Civil Service Exam for the third time in hopes she will be promoted at her agency. But she has already taken and passed this test by virtue of her being a government employee. So what is the problem? Is there a limit on the number of attempts on can make at passing this exam? Perhaps there should be. If it takes so many tries to pass the test that is an indicator you are not so bright. Obviously if you try a million times at anything you are going to get it right eventually. Hopefully anyway.

There are three types of Civil Service Exams. Mrs. Mabana will be taking the promotional exam.

https://civilserviceexaminformation.blogspot.com/2019/03/june-23-2019-pre-employment-promotional-test-and-eopt.html
The test consists of math and grammar questions as well as questions about leadership competency meaning creative and strategic thinking and managerial and coaching abilities. Did she pass on the third try? I don't know but the passing rate for the CSE is not very high. It is actually abysmally low.

https://blog.edukasyon.ph/college-life/everything-you-need-to-know-about-the-civil-service-exam/
An average of 11% of all takers pass the test. That would seem to mean either the test is very difficult or people are really stupid or the test works just fine and only the best and brightest are working in the Philippine bureaucracy. 

What kind of questions can one expect to see on the exam?  
The Civil Service Exam is an aptitude test. Like your college entrance exam, the CSE includes multiple-choice questions in English, Filipino, Mathematics, and General Information. However, since it’s meant to evaluate how fit you are for public service, the exam will specifically test your knowledge about the (1) code  of conduct and ethical standards for public officials and employees; (2) environment management and protection; (3) peace and human rights issues and concepts; and (4) the Philippine Constitution. 
https://blog.edukasyon.ph/college-life/everything-you-need-to-know-about-the-civil-service-exam/
There are many sample tests available online. You can read one at this link which is where I will be taking questions from. Of the 210 questions on this sample test only 14 deal with the Philippine government, the constitution. The rest vary from math to logic to grammar. 

There is graph reading comprehension.


Vocabulary.

Idiomatic Expressons and Grammar.


Analogies and Logic.


Reading Comprehension.


Paragraph Organisation.


There is absolutely no reason to think these questions are not representative of what is on the real test.  Take a look for yourself and see if you can pass. Are you part of the 11%?

The description above says the CSE is an aptitude test. What any of these questions have to do with determining if someone has the proper aptitude for working in the Philippine bureaucracy is beyond me. Here are a few questions from the math section.


Some people might sweating bullets just looking at questions 141 and 142. How knowing how to calculate square roots will assist one in working in the Philippine bureaucracy is a mystery to me. Of course they don't want dimwits but then again it seems so many are and that goes for bureaucracies around the world. Just remember though the next time you are dealing with some numbskull he passed this exam. He can calculate square roots, read graphs, and put sentences in order to form a coherent paragraph. What he cannot do is think outside the box. What bureaucrat can?

Rather than have math whizzes in the civil service wouldn't it be better for each prospective test taker to study the Constitution and the "code of conduct and ethical standards for public officials and employees?" That would be a great way to nip corruption in the bud. An attempt anyway.

The sample test questions above are all from the pre-employment CSE and not the promotional or ethical exam.  I do not know what is on those tests but they surely are not much different. So why can't Mrs. Mabana pass? If she ever does and is finally given that promotion she can look forward to this:


Her employer will make a huge banner emblazoned with her face and hang it outside for all to see!

Friday, August 16, 2019

Retards in the Government 115

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



The National Capital Region Police Office (NCRPO) on Friday ordered the relief of a policeman from the Quezon City Police District (QCPD) who allegedly got involved in a road rage incident along Commonwealth Avenue. 
NCRPO chief Maj. Gen. Guillermo Eleazar also ordered the reassignment of Police Master Sergeant (PMSg) Wilson Q. Aquino from QCPD’s Police Station-3 Tactical Motorcycle Reaction Unit to the NCRPO Regional Headquarters Support Unit.  
In a statement, Eleazar said a complainant only identified as “Robert” personally appeared before him at NCRPO on Thursday and reported to him the incident that took place last July 26.
“This will serve as a lesson for everybody at nagpapasalamat ako dahil na-expose ang mga pulis na abusadong ito,” Eleazar said in a statement. 
Another bad egg gone. Again. I'm sure this will "serve as a lesson for everybody."
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1152255/duterte-ok-with-cops-accepting-gifts-out-of-gratitude-earning-extra-cash-from-video-karera

Speaking at the 118th Police Service anniversary in Camp Crame, Duterte argued that receiving gifts out of “gratitude” cannot be considered a violation of the law. 
“It is not bribery because it is allowed by the law. What I mean is if there is generosity and then sabi ng anti-graft you cannot accept gifts, kalokohan ‘yan,” Duterte said. 
“If you’re able to solve a crime and the family would like to be generous to you or nurture a feeling of gratitude for what you accomplished then you accept wala akong…but to us that is something,” he added. 
The President also claimed that he doesn’t mind that some policemen are earning extra money from “video-karera” (a betting game using video machine playing horse racing). 
“‘Yung machine diba ‘yung karera…inyo naman ‘yan. Wala man akong pakialam. Eh hindi mo rin naman talaga mapigilan,” he said. 
“Alam mo ang pulis even sa pamilya niyan hirap ‘yan. I know because I have been mayor (of Davao City) for 23 years and I’m a prosecutor for 8 years,” he added.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1152461/pnp-to-file-raps-probe-cops-accepting-gifts-involving-corruption
The Philippine National Police (PNP) will not hesitate to investigate and file cases against police officers guilty of accepting gifts that involved corruption. 
“Our intensified campaign on internal cleansing is ongoing and we will never hesitate to investigate and charge PNP personnel found doing illegal acts,”  PNP spokesman Brig. Gen. Bernard Banac said in a statement on Saturday. 
“At any rate, the PNP remains to be bound by rules that govern our conduct under any given situation,” he added. 
PNP noted that it strictly complies with Republic Act 6723 or the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for government officials and employees. 
The PNP also reiterated its message to the public that there is no need for people to render gifts to law enforcers “who are just doing their job.” 
“We always explain to the public that there is no need for them to give gifts as we are just doing our job and we get paid by the Filipino people through our salaries,” Banac said. 
The PNP, likewise, affirmed Duterte’s statement, saying it is “harmless” to accept gifts if there is no corruption or abuse of authority involved.
Duterte says its ok for cops to accept gifts and the PNP says that is true and that they strictly comply with RA 6713 (6723 is a typo) which says gifts of any kind cannot be accepted by government officials. The act of accepting a gift IS corruption in and of itself. Duterte and the PNP are both sanctioning corruption.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1152493/barangay-chief-shot-dead-in-manila
A barangay chairwoman in Manila died after being gunned down by two unidentified motorcycle-riding men on Friday night. 

The Homicide Section of the Manila Police District (MPD) identified the victim as Aileen Guidotong, 47, chairwoman of Barangay 314 Zone 31 District 3 in Santa Cruz District. 

The woman’s secretary, Maricel Rubio, 35, told police that they were seated in front of the barangay hall, which is at the corner of Lope De Vega and T. Alonzo Streets, when the two assailants got off their motorcycle and shot Guidotong. 

The assailants then fled through Lope De Vega Street while the woman was rushed to the nearest hospital where she later died. 

According to Lt. Paul Dennis Javier, deputy chief of MPD Homicide Division, Guidotong was included in the government’s drugs watchlist. 

“Before the barangay elections, the President mentioned here as being listed as a narco-politicians,” Javier, speaking in Filipino, said in an interview with AM radio station dzMM on Saturday.
Another political tagged on Duterte's narco-politician list assassinated by motorcycle assassins.


Three policemen are facing complaints for allegedly torturing two suspected robbers in Manila on Saturday. 
Manila Police District Station 5 commander Lt. Colonel Igmedio Bernaldez relieved S/Sgt. Ariel Papa and Cpls. Joshua Salazar and Raymond James Magdangal after complaints were filed by the relatives of Rowell Manlapig, 22, and Emil Joseph Dianela, 27. 
Bernaldez also ordered Paz police community precinct chief Capt. Joseph Bocalbos to explain the incident that allegedly happened at the precinct. 
In her affidavit, Norelyn Manlapig, sister of Manlapig and Dianela’s former partner, said police officers from the precinct arrested the two men along Pedro Gil street at around 8 p.m. Saturday while they were on their way home. 
Manlapig and Dianela were taken to the precinct, reportedly on charges of robbery. 
Their relatives, however, alleged that they saw the two men swathed in bandages, their faces and bodies apparently scalded and bearing marks of torture, at a hospital when they were taken for physical examination following their arrest. 
“You’re lucky to have seen them alive. Tomorrow they will be inside a box,” Dianela’s mother quoted a certain Corporal Catacutan as saying in Filipino.
Messed up if true and why wouldn't it be true? It's not as if it hasn't happened before.

https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/08/12/19/bato-admits-receiving-gifts-as-a-cop-how-do-i-stop-them
Dela Rosa, who served as Davao City Police chief during the time of Duterte as mayor, said it was normal for him to receive gifts, especially during Christmas season. 
(I admit that every Christmas I receive so many gifts, including Lacoste T-shirts. How do I stop them? I could not stop people from bringing gifts to my office. There were fruits, queso de bola, ham.) 
Dela Rosa said there were also instances where people gave gifts to policemen to thank them for their service. He cited an incident where a family of a rescued kidnap victim sent lechon (roasted pig) to the police station to thank the cops. 
“It does not constitute bribery because you were not influenced to do something in his favor. The gift was given to you in the form of goodwill, through gratitude or generosity,” he said. 
Dela Rosa emphasized that accepting gifts from people with questionable characters and motives was however prohibited. 
(It’s a different thing if you will accept gifts from a drug lord or a gambling lord. That’s not good. But if you will accept gifts from a credible person who was just appreciating your service, what’s wrong with that?) 
“The spirit of the law is to avoid bribery from taking place. Anong bribery dyan? (Where’s bribery there?)”
The letter of the law is just as important as the spirit of the law.  He knew people would bring gifts. He could have put up a sign saying "No Gifts."  He could have taken gifts given to him and his office and donated them to charity. There are many ways to stop the reception of gifts which are prohibited in toto under the law.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1153252/albayalde-admits-accepting-food-as-gifts-during-special-occasions
Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Gen. Oscar Albayalde said he also accepted gifts but only limited to food items during special occasions. 
“Pagkain? Of course, I am not a hypocrite. Hindi ako ipokrito kumain din ako ng lechon,” Albayalde told reporters after the 118th National Capital Region Police Office (NCRPO) police service in Taguig City on Tuesday when asked if he accepts gifts from the public. 
Albayalde said the PNP also receives food from the public during anniversaries. 
“Pagkain, yes of course during anniversaries we accept food… These things are consumable,” Albayalde said.
The Philippines' top cop admits he too has taken gifts. How does the gift being food on a special occasion make the law against taking gifts void? It doesn't!


https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/251136/3-north-cebu-cops-to-face-relief-admin-charges-for-sleeping-on-the-job-failure-to-wear-prescribed-uniform
Three policemen assigned at the police stations in Catmon and Sogod towns in northern Cebu may be ordered relieved from their post after they were found sleeping and not wearing the prescribed PNP uniform while on duty on Sunday, August 11. 
The violation was discovered after he sent Police Lieutenant Colonel Melbert Esguerra, deputy provincial director for administration, to conduct a random inspection of the different police stations in northern Cebu, Sunday dawn.
The Commission on Audit has flagged 299 irrigation contracts worth P20.70 billion that have been delayed for up to 2,287 calendar days due to poor performance of contractors and other factors. 
COA’s audit report of the National Irrigation Administration (NIA) for 2018 released this August 9 also revealed that liquidation damages were not imposed against contractors who defaulted in 44 contracts amounting to P12.24 billion. 
This is aside from NIA’s decision not to terminate or rescind 20 additional contracts which have incurred negative slippages.  These were worth P9.039 billion. 
One reason, according to COA, why the projects incurred significant delays is the performance of contractors and NIA’s “inadequate planning, inefficient execution of surveys and investigations and the recurring issues on the acquisition of Right of Way (ROW)”. 
“Review disclosed that Management had not been able to fully address the recurring issue on considerable delays in the implementation of NIA projects,” COA said. 
As the country’s official irrigation authority, NIA is mandated to help the country’s program on rice self-sufficiency by infrastructure projects in line with irrigation and agricultural development. 
However, with the delays, farmers relying on water from irrigation projects would have to find other ways to nurture their crops.
Farmers depend on this agency and they have been let down. In turn the nations rice self-sufficiency goals are not reached. It's all connected.
https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/251213/awol-cop-who-tried-to-rob-a-blue-guard-killed-in-tisa-shooting
A police corporal who went on AWOL  last year was killed after allegedly robbing a security guard, who was also wounded in the same incident, at  Teresita Village, Barangay Tisa, Cebu City,  at around 2:30 p.m. today, August 13, 2019. 
Police Major Henrix Bancoleta, Labangon Police Station chief,  identified the slain policeman as  Jobie Libradilla Antipolo, based on the identification card found in his pocket. 
Initial police investigation showed that Antipolo, along with a cohort,  fired a shot at Edwin Velos, a security officer of the Sarsalejo Security Agency who was passing in the area driving a motorcycle and carrying with him P500,000 intended for the salary of the agency’s security guards.
This is not the first time, nor will it be the last, that an AWOL cop has gone off the rails into criminality. The PNP ought to do a better job checking up on AWOL cops.

"We're only human," a Department of Education official said Tuesday when asked about the hundreds of errors found in P254 million worth of Grade 3 textbooks and learning materials flagged by the Commission on Audit in its audit report for the department. 
In a report by Cecille Villarosa on 24 Oras on Tuesday, Education Undersecretary Annalyn Sevilla went on to say that teachers can spot and correct any "typographical" errors they might find in the books as they are used.  
The COA report had observed that the errors were spotted in the learning materials "despite [their] undergoing the three-step review process of the Department." 
The teachers are, indeed, having to make up for the textbooks' shortcomings.  
Another Education Undersecretary, Nepo Malaluan, said in a separate 24 Oras report that some of these "errors" were just a matter of semantics. 
"Some of these are not really downright errors, but sometimes semantics and editorial...you have a Commission on Audit that would now wish to substitute its editorial preferences to that of the Department of Education," he said. 
ACT Teachers party-list Representative France Castro decried the errors that escaped the DepEd's notice. 
"Teachers have been repeatedly told to learn financial literacy whenever they demand a substantial increase in their meager salaries, only to find out that the education agency itself has been inefficient and delinquent with the use of its funds," Castro said in a statement. 
"We will investigate this matter and call for accountability to look into the delinquencies and the misuse of education funds." 
The COA report also noted that over 3.4 million books and other learning materials worth over P113 million had been left unused in DepEd warehouses that were "in very poor condition"—left idle for so long that they may already fall under the Irregular, Unnecessary, Excesive, Extravagant and Unconscionable expenditures.
The DepEd orders books filled with typographical errors which the teachers have to correct and they have 3.4 million books sitting idle in warehouses. What a waste of funds. There's being human and then there is being negligent.


https://news.mb.com.ph/2019/08/13/nbi-agent-arrested-for-intimidating-cops-to-free-uncle-nabbed-in-makati-drug-raid/
Intelligence Officer 1 Monakiram Currie Batabor, 39, reportedly tried to intimidate Makati cops after his uncle was collared in a drug raid inside a house on Sgt. Fabian Yabut St. in Barangay Guadalupe, Makati on Monday around 7 p.m. 
Major Gideon Ines Jr., Makati City police Investigation Unit chief, said the NBI agent suddenly appeared at their headquarters an hour after his uncle and seven other men were reportedly caught having a shabu session. 
“When he appeared, he told us that he is an agent of NBI. He asked us to free his uncle, Manjahe Currie. He was was really intimidating us,” Ines said. 
“What he did was in violation of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act. He could be jailed for six to twelve years,” he further said. 
The whole intimidation done by Batabor, according to Ines, was caught on video, saying he cannot deny what he did. 
Apparently, Batabor was bringing his firearm, a caliber .40 pistol with serial no. AAFS026.

Sounds like he had his weapon and threatened to harm them but the writing is so bad in the article that one can only make an educated guess. Whatever he did it's certainly a an abuse of authority.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1153690/2-cabinet-secretaries-under-investigation-for-alleged-corruption-pacc
Belgica said one of the complaints was filed by an official from the Cabinet secretary’s department while the other was lodged by a private citizen. 
The two Cabinet members, Belgica added, have been cooperating with PACC investigators.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1153707/anti-corruption-agency-probes-at-least-200-govt-officials
The Presidential Anti-CorruptionCommission (PACC) revealed Wednesday that it has been conducting a lifestyle check to at least 200 government officials due to alleged corruption. 
PACC Commissioner Greco Belgica said the officials were from the Department of Transportation (DOTr), Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR), and Bureau of Customs (BOC). 
“My estimate is at least 200,” Belgica said in a press briefing in Malacañang. 
“DOTr. The whole department has asked to be investigated voluntarily,” he added. “We will start with the higher officials.”
What real power and authority does this extra constitutional body have? There is of course the Ombudsman and the COA to whom these cases should be referred if any wrong doing has been committed. And why even mention these investigations when they should be secret so as not to compromise them? Likely it's all for show.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1153727/mayor-of-naga-cebu-suspended-by-sandiganbayan-for-90-days
Incumbent Mayor Valdemar Chiong of Naga town in Cebu has been ordered suspended for 90 days by Sandiganbayan for graft charges. 
According to a resolution from the Sixth Division dated July 25, Chiong’s suspension is mandated for government officials accused of graft, in accordance with Republic Act 3019 or the Anti Graft and Corrupt Practices Act. 
Chiong is accused of giving unwarranted benefits to gas company Petronas Energy Philippines Inc. when he allegedly issued a business permit in April 2014 even if the said establishment has not secured a Fire Safety Inspection Certification from the Bureau of Fire Protection. 
In the last 2019 midterm elections, Chiong ran under the Nacionalista Party and edged out his opponent Delfin Señor by over 24,500 votes.  His daughter, former mayor Kristine Vanessa Chiong, meanwhile secured the vice mayoral post.
The article does not say what position he held in 2014. Mayor perhaps? It is a very tame charge in comparison to so many others. Also note that his daughter is the Vice Mayor. Another town run by a family dynasty. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1153997/pao-lawyers-ask-ombudsman-to-suspend-chief-forensics-head
Lawyers from the Public Attorney’s Office (PAO) have asked the Ombudsman to suspend the agency’s head, Persida Acosta, and forensics chief Erwin Erfe for alleged corruption. 
In a statement submitted to the Office of the Ombudsman, a copy of which was obtained by the Inquirer, the lawyers — PAO employees with Salary Grade 26 and higher — claimed that Acosta and her allies in the financial and management service had a “systematic scheme” for defrauding the government by doctoring purchase orders to make agency funds available to Acosta.
Acosta denied the lawyers’ accusations. She told the Inquirer by phone that she had not received a copy of the statement, but she believed it was part of a smear campaign. 
“They are just trying to destroy my reputation. And if it is anonymous, if there is no signature, that is just a malicious scrap of paper,” she said.
In his complaint filed in May, Garrido said Acosta and Erfe created the PAO forensic laboratory without authorization from Congress. 
Garrido accused Acosta and Erfe of graft, falsification of public documents, malversation of public funds, illegal use of public funds or property, as well as grave misconduct, serious dishonesty, grave abuse of authority and conduct prejudicial to the best interest of public service. 
But in the statement filed in intervention, the PAO lawyers alleged that Acosta and Erfe just established the forensic laboratory without authorization from Congress. 
They accused Acosta of “entrenched” corruption at the agency, since she had allegedly placed loyal staffers in the finance service. 
They also said Acosta “ambulance chases” families of children who had died after receiving the dengue vaccine Dengvaxia, coercing them to seek the PAO’s help in pursuing their cases. 
The lawyers said Acosta went as far as giving the families a sample letter soliciting PAO services, which they were then instructed to copy on pad paper for “authenticity.” 
Acosta and Erfe also used PAO funds to purchase tarpaulin, T-shirts and coffins that the parents used in rallies, the lawyers said.
Interesting charges and a standard response from Acosta. If the charges are true then the veracity of the PAO's dengevaxia investigations would be thrown into doubt. Not that they aren't already.


https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/08/14/19/ex-philhealth-official-tags-alleged-mafia-members
A former board member of the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth) on Wednesday identified 8 people who are part of the alleged "mafia" within the state health insurance agency. 
Former PhilHealth board member Roberto Salvador said the group wields great influence over state health insurance agency.  
He said its members, who have been with the agency for around two decades, have managed to avoid being assigned to other jurisdictions. 
Salvador identified the "mafia" members as PhilHealth regional vice-presidents Paolo Johan Perez (Region IV-B), Khaliquzzaman Macabato (Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao), William Chavez (Region VII), Dennis Adre (Region XI), and Masidling Alonto Jr. (Region X). 
He also tagged PhilHealth Assistant Corporate Secretary Valerie Anne Hollero, PhilHealth Caraga legal officer Jelbert Galicto, and former Region XII vice-president Miriam Grace Pamonag as members of the group. 
Salvador clarified that he was not accusing members of the group of criminal activities, but said they are known to wield great influence within PhilHealth.

Salvador names names, unlike many accusers, and then goes on to say he is not accusing them of criminal activities despite the whole controversy being about those in power at PhilHealth misusing funds.

https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/08/14/19/puzzled-over-lengthy-lgbtqi-term-sotto-asks-why-not-just-homo-sapiens
After Sen. Risa Hontiveros delivered her privilege speech pressing for the passage of the Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity and Expression (SOGIE) Equality bill, Sotto asked how the initialism LGBTQI came to be. 
“Why that lengthy letters? Why not just ‘homo sapiens?’ ” Sotto asked Hontiveros. 
“Why do we have to segregate the gays from the lesbians, the straight guys?” 
Hontiveros responded by saying: “Totoo po. We are all homo sapiens, we are all human beings, we are all one species.” 
“There would not have been a need to segregate, I agree with you, if human civilizations and societies evolved to a point where there is no discrimination, and there’s equality among all, regardless of identity, regardless of expression. But that’s not what’s happening.”
It's hard to believe the Sotto is not up to date with modern sexual politics. These things are happening in all countries not just the West.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2019/08/14/1943292/panelo-proposes-24-hour-workday-ease-traffic

How do you solve a problem like EDSA? 
Presidential spokesman Salvador Panelo is proposing a 24-hour workday, saying it can help ease traffic woes because it will reduce the number of vehicles on the road. 
“Personally, I think we should have a 24-hour activity, there will be night (shift), there will be day (shift) so it will be divided,” Panelo said in a press briefing yesterday. “Is there a system like that around the world? I think there is none. What if we give it a try?” 
Panelo claimed a 24-hour workday would improve the traffic situation because only half of the vehicles are on the road during the day while the rest would go out at night. 
“You will lessen (traffic) because there would be different schedules for work and school,” he said.
A stupid proposal. Isn't Manila a 24-hour city? Isn't there activity at every hour of the day and night?