Saturday, March 23, 2024

The God Culture: Does Timothy Jay Schwab Have a Worker's Visa?

Does Timothy Jay Schwab have a worker's visa which would allow him to sell his books online in the Philippines? Apparently he needs one to sell books via Shopee and through his website Ophir Institute. Take the case of vlogger Penelope Pop.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1391613/vlogger-penelope-pop-faces-deportation-over-immigration-rules-breach

Vlogger and social media influencer “Penelope Pop” is facing a deportation case for allegedly performing “gainful activity” without the necessary permit and visa.

In a charge sheet made public on Wednesday, Special Prosecutor Emmanuel Anthony Vera Jr. accused the internet celebrity of engaging in the online retail trade of lifestyle products such as notebooks, bags, and toiletries via www.theeveryday.ph without the required alien employment permit. Vera said Wang holds a special investor resident visa.

Penelope Pop is also known as Winnie Wong while her real name is Wang Yun-I/Yun-I Wang.

According to Vera, Wang’s involvement in the online retail business is a violation of the Commonwealth Act or the Philippine Immigration Act, which controls and regulates the immigration of foreign nationals in the country.

Bureau of Immigration (BI) Deputy Commissioner Tobias Javier has also ordered the inclusion of Wang in the immigration watchlist with remarks “Charged: engaging in gainful activity without a visa/permit.”

Foreigners cannot be involved in online retail without the necessary "alien employment permit." Does Tim have such a permit that would allow him to offer his books at a discount rate through his website Ophir Institute and Shopee?



This issue is actually a little complicated. First of all Tim is selling books he has written through his website Ophir Institute. Second of all we know that it is HIS website and business because he admits in his biography that he and his wife founded the Ophir Institute together. 


https://www.thegodculture.com/our-founder

Timothy Jay Schwab, with his Filipina wife Anna, is the author of the books The Search for King Solomon's Treasure: The Lost Isles of Gold and the Garden of Eden, Instruction Edition: The Search for King Solomon's Treasure, and Ophir Philippines Coffee Table Book, all supported by a 300-page SOURCEBOOK of very credible sources no one can disprove. They have founded the Ophir Institute in the Philippines to restore this knowledge. 

That information is not to be found on the Ophir Institute's "about" page. According to that page Tim and Anna are only partnering with the Ophir Institute.

Therefore, the Ophir Institute has proudly partnered with author, researcher, singer, former minister, and successful publisher Timothy Schwab and his wife, Anna Zamoranos-Schwab, a Filipina, who lead a team of researchers who tackled this topic. They published their findings on YouTube first with over 10 million views and now, even deeper research is available in book and eBook form. As of recent, this list of publishings includes, The Search for King Solomon's Treasure, INSTRUCTIONAL EDITION: The Search for King Solomon's Treasure, Ophir Philippines Coffee Table Book, and The Book of Jubilees: The Torah Calendar. 

Though we are a group, these authors' writings largely resemble the core of our mission to educate Filipinos about our lost history.

https://www.ophirinstitute.com/bio

Normally one would call this a lie. But in this instance it is actually a shrewd business move. Now Tim is only tangentially connected to the Ophir Institute as a partner. They are using his writings as their core mission and they are selling those same writings. He and his wife Anna are merely a disinterested third party. Of course one will have to ignore that little bit about he and his wife founding the Ophir Institute which is a part of the biography he has posted across several pages including Amazon.

Part of the shrewdness of this move is Anna using the surname Schwab in both of those biographies. At the bottom of each page we read the following:

© 2020 by Ophir Institute. DTI Registered as Ophir Publishing.

Searching for that registration we find this:

https://bnrs.dti.gov.ph/search?keyword=ophir+publishing&criteria=exact&sort_by=business_name&sort_order=asc

The Ophir Institute is registered as Ophir Publishing and is owned by one Anna Rose Gacayan Zamoranos. This person is not a Schwab. Officially there is no connection to Timothy Schwab or Anna Schwab in the registration. 

However it should be noted that Ophirinsititue.com is registered in Florida, USA.

https://ph.godaddy.com/whois/results.aspx?domain=ophirinstitute.com

It is also hosted on the same server as TheGodCulture.com which is most definitely registered to Timothy Schwab from Florida, USA

Name Server: NS10.WIXDNS.NET

Why is a website which is registered to Timothy Schwab in Florida, USA registered as a business in the Philippines to a woman apparently unrelated to him?

From this we can draw two conclusions.

1. Timothy Jay Schwab does not need a worker's visa because he is not involved in any gainful activity in the Philippines via the internet because he does not own the company selling his books, Ophir publishing. Someone else does. The owner is not a Schwab and appears to have no connections to Timothy though her name is suspiciously similar to the name of the divorcee he married. 

2. Because the owner of Ophir Publishing is not a Schwab it cannot be said with any certainty that Tim, as the brains behind both the God Culture and the Ophir Institute and the author of several books being sold by the Ophir Institute, is conspiring with his wife to circumvent Philippine law on a technicality so he can sell his books without having to procure the proper visa.

Of course if both of those conclusions are true then we must also conclude that Tim is not making any money from selling his books online in the Philippines. Is that a realistic conclusion? More importantly why is there all this chicanery as regards who owns what? We see have seen this same nonsense in his trademark registrations where ALL of his God Culture related materials are registered to an address in Florida.

https://philippinefails.blogspot.com/2021/08/the-god-culture-past-and-future-projects.html

But Tim has not lived in Florida since at least 2019. So, why is he registering everything to Angie Myers in Boca Raton, Florida? Who is this lady? She is Tim's former employee. See the link under the picture for more information. 

I suppose it all makes sense though. Tim is dishonest in his books and videos telling flat out lies about Philippine history, ancient maps, the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Bible Canon, and the divinity of the Holy Spirit among so many other things. It would only be consistent for Timothy Jay Schwab of The God Culture to not be above board in his business practices.  

Friday, March 22, 2024

Retards in the Government 357

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

 



https://mb.com.ph/2024/3/14/lanao-sur-town-councilor-nabbed-in-p6-8-m-quezon-city-drug-sting

Government anti-narcotics authorities arrested on Wednesday night, March 13 a Lanao Del Sur municipal councilor and another suspect during a buy-bust operation in Quezon City.

In an initial report, the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) said that the operation resulted in the arrest of Maguing, Lanao del Sur councilor Norhan Haron Ampuan, 31, and Jalanie Haron Mama, 30, who are both included in the agency’s high-value target (HVT) list.

After the surveillance, the PDEA and local police operatives mapped out a plan that led to the arrest of the suspects at around 8:45 p.m. along  Doña A. Roces Avenue in Barangay Paligsahan.

Apart from the 1,000 grams of suspected shabu concealed in a transparent plastic sachet, authorities also seized three deposit slips, three identification cards, a black wallet containing eight of various cards, a genuine P1,000 bill placed on top of one of the 10 bundles of boodle money, a black Toyota Avanza and two cellular phones.

The confiscated illegal drugs have a street value of P6.8 million.

A city councilor who is also a high value target has been arrested for drugs. 

https://mb.com.ph/2024/3/14/village-dad-shoots-tanod-dead-in-leyte

A barangay "tanod" or watchman was gunned down by a barangay councilor in an interior barangay here on Tuesday night, March 12.

Police identified the victim as Francis Berones of Barangay Bagacay East here.

Investigation said Berones figured in a heated altercation with the suspect, Julio Custudio, during the birth anniversary party of Custodio's daughter earlier that day.

Berones was driving his motorcycle on his way home when the suspect blocked his path. The suspect drew a firearm and shot Berones multiple times.

The victim was taken to a hospital in Burauen, Leyte where he was declared dead.

Custodio was arrested following the incident while he was drinking with friends. 

A barangay tanod has been assassinated by a barangay councilor. 

https://www.philstar.com/nation/2024/03/14/2340562/soldier-companion-hurt-maguindanao-del-sur-ambush

An off-duty motorist soldier was wounded in the neck in an ambush at a stretch of the Cotabato-Davao Highway in Pagalungan, Maguindanao del Sur that also left his civilian companion injured on Wednesday.

Col. Roel Sermese, director of the Maguindanao del Sur provincial police, told reporters on Thursday that the victims, Private 1st Class Roberto Dela Cruz Desierto Jr., and Eugenio Lamoste Gurang were riding a motorcycle headed somewhere when they were attacked by pistol-wielding men in Barangay Galakit, Pagalungan.

Desierto, who belonged to the Army’s 92nd Infantry Battalion, was assigned in Datu Saudi Ampatuan, Maguindanao del Sur.

Desierto’s motorcycle swerved toward the side of the highway and crashed after he was hit by a bullet in the neck, Sermese said, citing a report from the Pagalungan Municipal Police Station.

Gurang, who fell from the motorcycle as it flipped, rolled over and landed at one side of the concrete highway, sustained abrasions in his arms and legs.

Their attackers hurriedly escaped when they sensed that the gunshots that reverberated through the scene caused a commotion among villagers in houses nearby.

Sermese said responding policemen and emergency responders from the Pagalungan local government unit immediately brought the duo to the hospital for treatment.

A soldier has survived an attempted assassination. 

https://mb.com.ph/2024/3/14/driver-hurt-as-gunmen-shoot-mayor-s-vehicle

A driver was injured and his companion was unharmed when gunmen fired at their vehicle owned by the mayor of San Isidro, Leyte in Barangay Dapdap, Alangalang, Leyte, on Thursday, March 14.

Police identified the wounded as driver Ranel Batiquin Reubal, 44, from Barangay Linao, San Isidro.

Investigation said gunmen onboard a gray pickup shot the vehicle on its way to Alangalang town proper.

Reubal was wounded in the back and his companion, Carlo Emman Pauligue, 44, a resident of Barangay Daja Dako, San Isidro, was unscathed.

The suspects' vehicle maneuvered to Santa Fe and Reubal proceeded to Alangalang proper.

However, the pickup truck’s tires burst in Barangay Santo Nino, which prompted them stop in front of Alangalang National High School. Reubal was taken to the hospital.

The driver of the mayor's vehicle was hurt in an attempted assassination on the mayor who was luckily not in the car at the time. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1918884/raps-filed-vs-ched-chief-over-rigged-bidding

Suspended Commissioner Aldrin Darilag of the Commission on Higher Education (CHEd) on Thursday said the criminal charges—including graft and grave abuse of authority—he filed against his superior, Chair Prospero de Vera, stemmed from concerns raised by some heads of state universities and colleges (SUCs).

In his five-page complaint affidavit filed on Tuesday, Darilag claimed that De Vera forced him to favor pharmaceutical company Aspen Philippines as a provider of medical supplies for various SUCs during a series of biddings last year.

Knowing that the firm was incompliant with procurement laws, Darilag said he ignored De Vera’s directive.

In a message to the Inquirer, Darilag said he decided to file charges of graft, grave abuse of authority, harassment, and oppression, after a number of SUC presidents, whom he refused to identify, brought to his attention the alleged rigged procurement process last year for medical supplies.

“There are SUCs who don’t receive funding if they don’t let Aspen win the bidding as a supplier,” Darilag said, quoting the affected SUC heads.

Darilag, who oversees teacher education, gender and development, and extension programs, was suspended in mid-January for 90 days for alleged grave misconduct, neglect in the performance of duty, and oppression.

De Vera earlier noted that the order came from Malacañang. It also directed the agency to conduct a fact-finding investigation “to determine the existence of a prima facie (self-evident) case” to serve as basis for the filing of formal charges against Darilag.

But the commissioner doubted that the ongoing probe against him would be fair because he was never furnished a copy of the complaint or the order, which he said was “a violation of his right to due process.”

“They conducted the investigation, but I didn’t receive even a single complaint. Also, the head of the investigation committee is known to be an ally of De Vera,” he told the Inquirer.

Darilag accused De Vera of being “hostile to me throughout my stint as commissioner.”

This, Darilag said, was evident in the sudden ban allegedly imposed on his staff to enter CHEd premises and perform their work.

“In fact, they were subjected to needless inspection of their clothes and belongings every time they came out of my office,” he said in his affidavit.

The reason behind “De Vera’s hostility is not difficult to discern,” Darilag said, adding that the opposed De Vera’s recommendation to disallow Biliran Province State University to open a maritime program.

He also surmised that De Vera may suspect that he revealed the chair’s “wrongdoings” in the budget hearings in the House of Representatives last year.

De Vera, for his part, denied Darilag’s allegations, clarifying that he was not part of the bids and awards committee in the CHEd or in any similar committees in any SUC.

“I am not in a position to manipulate procurement activities,” De Vera said in the statement to reporters.

Charges have been field against the CHED Commissioner for rigged bidding. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1919758/police-colonel-faces-criminal-raps-for-blackmail-using-sex-video

A police officer is facing a string of criminal complaints for recording his sexual encounters with a woman he had an illicit affair with and allegedly using the recordings to blackmail her for wanting to end their relationship and pay off his debt.

The police officer is facing a complaint before the Quezon City Prosecutors’ Office for violating Republic Act (RA) 9262, the Anti-Violence against Women and their Children Law; RA 9995, the Anti-Photo and Video Voyeurism Act; RA 11313, the Safe Spaces Law; RA 10173, the Data Privacy Act; RA 10175, the Cybercrime Prevention Law.

He also faces complaints for grave coercion, intrigue against honor, and unjust vexation.

He was already relieved from his post.

In her complaint, the victim said she met the respondent when he sent her a friend request on Facebook in December 2020.

From there, she said they became friends as the police official provided her with emotional support because she was suffering from depression due to personal problems at the time.

She first met the respondent when she delivered the nameplate he ordered and talked about her money-lending business over lunch. She said this was also the first time the respondent kissed her without her consent.

On their second meeting, she said he invited her for a meal but took her to a hotel instead. She said this was where they first had sex. Then, he showed her the video “for fun.”

She said she tried to snatch the phone to delete the video, but the police officer refused, saying he would be the one deleting the video.

From then on, the victim stated that she felt unable to refuse the respondent’s request because he continually threatened her with the video.

In June 2023, she said she met the police colonel who started borrowing money from her. The total amount he borrowed was P245,000 with increments of P50,000, then P65,000 and P130,000.

In January 2024, she demanded payment and threatened to take the case to the barangay, to which the police officer said he would just tell the village chief that they had a relationship and show their sex video.

In the same month, a person who claims to be the policeman’s wife messaged her on Facebook, saying she had copies of their sex videos. The same social media account sent one of the videos to her daughter, who was then at school.

A day later, the video was also sent to her husband.

The case is currently undergoing preliminary investigation.

A PNP officer is facing charges of blackmail over a sex video.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1221076

The Supreme Court (SC) has upheld the dismissal from the service of former North Cotabato 2nd District congressman Gregorio Ipong in connection with irregularities in the use of pork barrel funds in 2007.

In a 13-page resolution released online last week, the SC Second Division affirmed the Court of Appeals (CA) which found Ipong administratively liable for grave misconduct and conduct prejudicial to the best interest of the service in the transactions involving PHP4.9 million. 

The Court, however, ruled Ipong’s liability as grave misconduct only and deleted the finding of administrative liability.

“Here, since the acts complained of relates to Ipong’s official functions and duties as a member of the House of Representatives and that the same are tainted with the elements of corruption and/or flagrant disregard of an established rule, the Court finds him administratively liable for grave misconduct only,” the SC said. 

The SC said grave misconduct is a “grave offense” which is punishable with dismissal from the service, along with accessory penalties of cancellation of eligibility, forfeiture of retirement benefits and perpetual disqualification from re-employment in the government service. 

“In the event that the penalty of dismissal can no longer be enforced due to petitioner’s separation from the service, the same shall be converted into a fine, equivalent to petitioner’s salary for one year, payable to the Office of the Ombudsman, and may be deductible from petitioner’s accrued leave credits or any receivables from their office,” the SC said.

The administrative case against Ipong was filed following his election as vice governor of North Cotabato in May 2016.

Ipong was forced to vacate his post following the ruling of the Ombudsman dismissing him from the service. 

The Department of Budget released Ipong’s Priority Development Assistance Fund to finance and implement his livelihood programs.

Ipong endorsed Aaron Foundation to the Technology and Livelihood Resource Center (TLRC), the implementing agency of PDAF, as partner for his projects.

The amount was transferred to Aaron Foundation on the sole basis of Ipong’s endorsement without TLRC conducting a public bidding and despite the absence of an appropriation law or ordinance authorizing the foundation as the implementing agency. 

Aaron Foundation was a bogus non-government organization, the Ombudsman said.

Investigators also found that the municipalities of Kidapawan and Makilala in North Cotabato did not actually receive any funded livelihood programs.

In September 2022, the Sandiganbayan sentenced Gregorio Ipong and TLRC Chief Accountant Marivic Jover up to 27 years of imprisonment for graft and malversation.

The decision was upheld a month later.

The SC has upheld the dismissal of a former Solon over PDAF misuse.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1221117

Death threats in recent months culminated in a gun attack on the vehicle of Bureau of Corrections (BuCor) Director General Gregorio Pio Catapang Jr. at the Skyway in Quezon City on Tuesday morning.

The bulletproof pickup truck with plate no. WDQ 811 was on its way to pick up Deputy Director General for Administration Al Perreras.

Driver Cornelio Colalong and companion Leonardo Cabaniero, both Corrections Officers 1, were unharmed.

The BuCor report said unidentified suspects on board a gray sedan overtook the back-up car, carrying BuCor officers Edwin Berroya and Michael Magsanoc, and fired at the pickup.

The vehicle was hit at the rear windshield, which shattered the bullet proof glass without penetration.

The suspects' car fled toward the Nagtahan exit going to Manila.

“Catapang said that both he and Perreras have been receiving death threats since they implemented various reforms in the agency and this incident will not deter them from continuing what they started,” BuCor said in a statement.

The BuCor Chief has survived an attempted assassination. 
https://mb.com.ph/2024/3/20/cop-nabbed-for-raping-14-year-old-daughter-in-cebu

A police officer was arrested for allegedly raping his 14-year-old daughter on multiple occasions in Cebu.

The suspect, who used to be a member of a special unit of the Cebu Police Provincial Office (CPPO), was arrested in a manhunt operation on Tuesday night, March 19, in Asturias town, western Cebu, by operatives of the Liloan Police Station.

Police Major Windel Abellana, information officer of the CPPO, said the victim was last raped at past 1 a.m. on Sunday, March 17.

The victim, accompanied by her mother, went to the police station to report the incident. The suspect fled after he learned that his wife and daughter reported the sexual abuse.

“According to the minor victim, her father abused her sexually on different occasions," said Abellana.

The Police Regional Office-Central Visayas (PRO-7) assured that appropriate action will be taken against the suspect.

Police Lt. Col. Gerard Ace Pelare, spokesperson of PRO-7 chief Police Brig. Gen. Anthony Aberin, said there will be no whitewash in the investigation.

"We reiterate the instruction of our regional director that there will be no sacred cows. Everyone will be treated fairly. If someone commits a crime, even if he is a police officer, we will file the necessary charges, administrative, criminal and civil if the evidence warrants,” said Pelare.

Pelare said after a criminal charge is filed, the filing of an administrative complaint will follow.

A cop has been arrested for raping his daughter. 

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/topstories/metro/901175/mmda-traffic-aide-picked-out-of-line-up-tagged-in-alleged-extortion/story/

A traffic enforcer of the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) suspended after he was seen on a viral video allegedly extorting money from a motorist on Commonwealth Avenue.

According to Raffy Tima’s report on “Saksi”, the MMDA asked the victim to identify the suspect from line-up of made up of traffic enforcers deployed in the area. 

(You were identified with or without a mask. This is not the first time it happened. It's the second.)

(We will give you the chance to answer the accusations against you. Until such time, you will report at the headquarters.)

The victim said the incident happened on Friday after he took a U-turn at the Technohub area, going to to Tandang Sora Avenue. The enforcer allegedly flagged him down for using his mobile phone while driving and for not using his seatbelt. 

When he denied the accusations, the traffic enforcer accused him of having an expired vehicle registration. The suspect asked him to pay P15,000 worth of fine but decreased it to P5,000. After saying he had no cash, the MMDA personnel allegedly told him to transfer the money via e-wallet. 

The victim caught the incident on a video and posted it on social media. 

(I checked the tickets while he was pretending to write. I logged in on my e-wallet, transferred the money, sent it to my sibling, and then left P2,500.)

If proven guilty, the MMDA said the suspect will be relieved from his post and may be charged criminally.

An MMDA traffic enforcer has been accused of extortion.

Thursday, March 21, 2024

Coronavirus Lockdown: Top Officials Blamed, Pandemic Trends, and More!

More news about how the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines is being handled by the public and the government.

The average number of daily COVID-19 cases in the Philippines continues to fall. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1918480/fwd-doh-covid-stats-feb-to-march-2024

The Department of Health (DOH) on Thursday reported that 251 new COVID-19 cases were logged in hospitals across the country from Feb. 27 to March 4, translating to an average of 36 cases logged per day.

“This is 27 percent lower compared to the average daily cases recorded last February 20 to 26,” the health agency said.

In comparison, the DOH logged an average of 34,903 new COVID-19 cases per day during the “peak” of the pandemic in January 2022.

However, the DOH also reported that among the new COVID-19 cases, seven people died—five of them within two weeks from Feb. 20 to March 4.

Among the reported new COVID-19 cases, three were also labeled as severe and critical.

Out of the 1,185 COVID-19 Intensive Care Unit (ICU) beds available, only 115 or 10 percent are presently occupied, while 1,119 or 11 percent of the 10,097 COVID-19 non-ICU beds are in use per the DOH’s latest data.

The health department said that its latest data shows “low severity and fatality” and is credited to the protection given by the high vaccination coverage among Filipinos.

“Moving forward, we have learned our lessons and we now know better,” Health Secretary Teodoro Herbosa was quoted as saying in the DOH’s statement.

The health department also said it “continues to be vigilant for any new infectious disease threats and many other health conditions affecting Filipinos.

Looks like the DOH is gaming for "disease X" which could strike at any moment. 

The Commission on Population is blaming social media on the rise in teenage pregnancies. And also pornography which they say was exacerbated by the pandemic. 

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2024/03/14/2340382/social-media-partly-blame-teenage-pregnancies

Too much social media exposure is partly to blame for the alarming rise in teenage pregnancies in the country, the Commission on Population (POPCOM) said yesterday.

“(Social media) is one of the factors. Exposure to pornography has been high, especially in 2021,” POPCOM Knowledge Management and Communication Division acting chief Mylin Quiray said during the Bagong Pilipinas public briefing.

Quiray cited the Young Adult Fertility and Sexuality Study in the Philippines, which found that high exposure to pornography in 2021 was exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Local government units must implement sex education programs, particularly among the 10 to 19 age group, she advised.

The Department of Education has started integrating sexuality education in the K-10 curriculum, Quiray noted.

Government records showed teenage pregnancy on the rise among those aged 10 to 19.

But its four years on. How long will these things be blamed on the pandemic? 

Some health workers have yet to receive their health emergency allowances. 

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1918866/top-officials-blamed-for-delayed-allowances

Private health care workers on Thursday called for the resignations of top government officials for bungling the release of their mandated health emergency allowances (HEA).

“Health Secretary Teodoro Herbosa and Budget Secretary Amenah Pangandaman should resign for their negligence and dismissing the plight of health care workers in the country,” said Edgar Aran of Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital Employees Association, as members of the United Private Hospital Unions of the Philippines (UPHUP) staged a protest outside the Department of Health (DOH) regional office in the National Capital Region.

“The fund has been with you (DOH) since January. What’s the reason why you have not given the HEA for private hospital workers?” UPHUP spokesperson Ronald Richie Ignacio said.

UPHUP members complained that the current situation was “mired in confusion,” as both the Department of Budget and Management and the DOH engaged in a “blame game” which caused the delay.

It's unbelievable that after four years the DOH cannot distribute the money for private hospital workers. 

Public hospital workers have finally received their allowance.

https://mb.com.ph/2024/3/16/group-lauds-release-of-covid-19-benefits-for-gov-t-health-workers

After a relentless two-year battle, health workers in Government-Owned and Controlled Corporations (GOCCs), the Philippine General Hospital (PGH), and the Department of Health (DOH)-retained health workers have triumphed in securing their long-overdue health emergency allowances (HEA) covering the period from January to July 2023.

In a statement released on Saturday, March 16, the Alliance of Health Workers (AHW) confirmed that health workers from GOCCs received their allowances on March 13, while those from PGH received theirs on February 22, and the DOH-retained hospital received theirs earlier in the second week of February.

The AHW hailed this development as a significant victory for the dedicated individuals who have been at the forefront of the fight against the Covid-19 pandemic.

AHW said these allowances, which were promised but previously unpaid, serve as recognition of the sacrifices made by health workers who risked their lives to provide care and support to patients.

The AHW congratulated the unions, health workers, and other organizations that tirelessly advocated for the release of these allowances.

It also highlighted that its unity, collective action, and unwavering determination compelled the DOH, the Department of Budget and Management (DBM), and the Marcos Jr. government to honor their commitment.

However, the fight for fair compensation is far from over, according to AHW.

The HEA for health workers in private and LGU hospitals remained “unreleased,” highlighting the ongoing challenges faced by the broader healthcare community.

But health workers in private hospitals are still waiting. Surely the money will be released...sometime.

Four years ago the pandemic struck and the government shut down everything and basically forced everyone to stay home. Here are five trends from that time.


https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/561528/five-pandemic-trends-in-the-philippines

Have you been seeing the post online saying, “This week was the last normal days of our lives?”

Ever wonder why? It was in mid-March in the year 2020 when the world paused and started a new way of living during the outbreak of the COVID-19 virus, which took the lives of many across the globe.

While most of us were settling in just fine in the comforts of our homes, some were looking for things to do to make good use of the stored energy while staying safe at home.

Buckle up and try not to relieve the moments but revisit some of the most trending things that happened during the pandemic here in the Philippines.

Dalgona coffee

Let’s start with something simple. This trending coffee took the world by storm and has gotten everyone whipping their arms out just to get the best consistency for this whipped coffee. With just three ingredients, instant coffee, sugar, and water, you get to join in the fun. But, to be honest, did you love the taste of this coffee?

Plantito/Plantita Era

At some point, almost all the households in the country were filled with snake plants, monstera, orchids, and all sorts of plants that they found online. It was when houses and condos were becoming too small all thanks to the plants that were occupying the place. People were selling plants with INSANE prices and what’s more insane about this one, people were also buying them.

Now, we are just left to wonder if those plants are still around now.

Zoom zoomed to popularity

Everything was virtually done, thus, Zoom led the way to make working from home bearable for many. Family gatherings were also made possible because of this tool.

From picking out fancy backgrounds during huddles to sharing the screen to your friends and family to watch movies together, pandemic style.

TikTok dances

#savagechallenge was such a big hit and we see it all the time in our For You Pages. This is just one of the many dance challenges that took off during the pandemic. But in the Philippines, this TikTok dance challenge takes center stage, #marikitdancechallenge.

Do you still remember the steps to these TikTok dance challenges? If not, is this your sign to practice them again?

Online exercises

Virtual runs were big during the pandemic. Online workout challenges from companies peaked, and people started getting into an active lifestyle by doing yoga, Zumba, and simple exercises at home. When restrictions were starting to loosen up, people got on their bikes and started biking, while others put on their running shoes and started running one kilometer at a time.

Now, that we are back to the so-called “regular life” are you still maintaining that lifestyle?

The pandemic altered not just the way we saw the world, but also something deeper than that. It reminded us of how life is too short, how we should be wise with our time, and how we should always take care of our health.

As we remember how it was four years ago during these times, may we also remember to offer prayers to the lives lost during one of the world’s hardest times in history.

Funny how in this remembrance of things past the writer cannot bring themselves to condemn the government for enforcing the needless and economically devastating lockdowns. Does the writer remember when Duterte issued shoot to kill orders against those refusing to wear face masks?

The Manila Bulletin has also written a glowing remembrance of four years of the pandemic. 

https://mb.com.ph/2024/3/15/philippines-covid-19-journey-4-years-later-1

Like many countries, the Philippines was not immune to the initial shockwaves of the Covid-19 pandemic.

To curb the rising number of infections, one of the Philippine government's first responses was to implement lockdowns, later categorized into "alert levels."

Four years ago, on March 15, 2020, Metro Manila was first placed under an enhanced community quarantine (ECQ).

On March 17, the strictest quarantine level was implemented in Luzon. Several areas of the country were then subjected to varying degrees of alert levels as the nation continued to grapple with the impacts of the pandemic.

In May 2023, the World Health Organization (WHO) formally declared that Covid-19 was "no longer a global health emergency."

Two months later, in July 2023, President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. also lifted the "state of public health emergency" declared due to Covid-19.

While the pandemic exposed weaknesses in the country's healthcare system, the Department of Health (DOH) believed it also paved the way for transformative improvements in healthcare response.

"Moving forward, we have learned our lessons, and we now know better," said Health Secretary Teodoro Herbosa in a statement issued on March 14.

DOH Officer-in-Charge Assistant Secretary and Deputy Spokesperson Dr. Albert Domingo also shared significant details about the country's Covid-19 journey during an interview on March 14.

Domingo noted that four years since the Philippines declared the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, the average daily nationwide new cases now hover around only 25 to 30.

"In terms of health utilization, our number of occupied beds in percentage," Domingo said. "Whereas before, the highest reached 70 to 74 percent, now it's down to only 11 to 15 percent," he added.

Domingo furthered that the "denominator" of the number of Covid beds has significantly decreased. "Before, there were around 10,000 beds nationwide, but now only about 1,000 beds remain," he said.

In response to inquiries about the Philippines' readiness for future pandemics, Domingo said: "We are very much prepared."

Despite the unprecedented challenges, the Philippines' journey through the Covid-19 pandemic, as reflected in the current changes, can be described as a story of resilience, adaptability, and collective determination."

No mention that the death rate has stayed level at around 1%. No mention of the break down in physical and mental health from being forced to stay inside. 

Filipino tourists arrivals in Hong Kong have breached pre-pandemic levels.

https://www.philstar.com/business/2024/03/16/2340874/january-2024-filipino-tourist-arrivals-hong-kong-breach-pre-pandemic-numbers

Filipino tourist arrivals in Hong Kong, China just surpassed the pre-pandemic numbers for the month of January.

This was revealed by the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in a dinner reception on Wednesday.

“The close ties between Hong Kong and the Philippines have been demonstrated by the strong inbound tourist figures,” HKETO Libera Cheng said.

Cheng cited that the tourist from the Philippines contributed 25% increase to the tourism numbers of Hong Kong in January 2024.

According to the data from Hong Kong Tourism Board, the city welcomed 85,878 tourists from the Philippines in January alone. This is a 25% increase from 68,588 Filipino tourists recorded in the same period in 2019, or before the COVID-19 travel restriction was imposed.

Hong Kong only fully reopened its borders in early February last year.

To attract tourists back to their city, Hong Kong launched a giveaway of 500,000 free air tickets for tourists last year. It also offered “Hong Kong Goodies” or visitor consumption vouchers containing a complimentary drink or a cash voucher redeemable at transportation, culinary, retail outlets and attractions.

Jack So, chairman of Airport Authority Hong Kong, last year said that the promotion was eyed to generate a “multiplier effect on boosting air traffic and enormous publicity for Hong Kong.”

I guess that means the pandemic is back to normal for wealthy folks who can afford to travel to Hong Kong?