Friday, August 30, 2019

Retards in the Government 117

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



https://www.philstar.com/nation/2019/08/24/1945846/taguig-cop-slain-wake
A policeman was killed by a still unidentified assailant at a wake in Taguig City yesterday. 
Pat. Ralph Calucag Aquino, assigned to Police Community Precinct 8 in Barangay Bagumbayan, died at the scene from a gunshot wound in the head. 
He was picked up by a certain “Toto” from the house of a common friend to attend a wake along Paso street, police said. 
While Aquino was at the wake, the assailant shot him and fled on foot. 
Aquino’s alleged gambling habit – he was said to play the coin gambling game cara y cruz – could be among the motives for the attack, said Maj. Ramon Christian Laygo, city police investigation unit chief.

This cop was shot dead at a wake by a man who got away on foot likely because he owed money from gambling.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1156684/locsin-on-sanchez-shoot-the-shit-in-the-back-of-the-head
Convicted rapist and murderer former Calauan, Laguna mayor Antonio Sanchez should be shot “in the back of the head,” Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. said on Friday. 
“Shoot the shit in the back of the head. Anything less is a sellout. Anything less clear is the same,” he said over Twitter. 
Reacting to Senator Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa’s remark saying that Sanchez should have been sentenced to death, Locsin said: “Well then, kill him.” 
“He won’t be the first to be shot to pieces behind bars. No loss, no regrets, no nothing,” the country’s top diplomat said. 
“People today talk a lot about killing but nobody kills when killing needs to be done. Fucking fairies. All talk,” he added. 
The DFA Secretary is literally calling for a man to be murdered. 


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1156806/sandigan-puts-bataan-town-mayor-under-90-day-suspension
The Sandiganbayan has placed Limay Mayor Nelson David under a 90-day preventive suspension, as the anti-graft court tackles the graft cases filed against him. 
David is facing two counts of graft charges due to the town’s allegedly anomalous purchase of land supposedly owned by his children. 
According to David, he should not be suspended as he has not been the town’s municipal mayor for more than nine years, and that it was complainant Lilver Roque who sat as Limay mayor for three consecutive terms. 
David only won the mayoral race for Limay in the May 13 elections. 
However, Sandiganbayan cited Section 13 of Republic Act 3019 or the Anti Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, which states that public officials charged of criminal offenses involving defrauding government may be preventively suspended to prevent the said official from impeding in the investigation.
The Mayor is being suspended because of an anomalous land purchase but he thinks he ought not to be suspended because he was not charged while mayor. David has not been mayor for nine years only recently winning back the seat. However the Sandiganbayan does not agree with his argument.


https://www.mindanews.com/top-stories/2019/08/dilg-serves-90-day-suspension-order-vs-gov-catamco/
The Department of the Interior and Local Government on Thursday served Thursday the suspension order against Cotabato Governor Nancy Catamco. 
The order stemmed from charges filed at the Sandiganbayan accusing her of supplying overpriced fertilizers worth P5 million to the local government of Porro, Cebu in 2004 when she was still a businesswoman. 
The anti-graft court said the purchase was done without a public bidding. 
Catamco said the suspension order made her feel “very, very hurt,” saying the case was “without merit.” 
She called the order “very oppressive,” as the court only used as basis a complaint letter from a nongovernment organization that has no interest in the case. 
She said the case has no merit and the Sandiganbayan ordered her suspension based simply on the fact that she is an incumbent official as provided for in the Local Government Code of 1991. 
The court did not consider the time the alleged crime was committed, she said during a press briefing on Friday.
Gov. Catamco is in the same situation as Mayor David. She is being suspended even though she is charged with a crime committed while not as a government official. She claims this is a gray area that the Supreme Court has not ruled on. Perhaps she will take her appeal to the Supreme Court and precedent can be set.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1157112/bataan-village-councilman-slain-in-town-market-2-hurt
A village councilman of Barangay Pag-asa was shot dead inside the Bagac public market at 9:50 a.m. on Saturday (Aug. 24). 
Edward Galazi, 35, was shot from behind by an unknown assailant. 
A man and his son were hurt in the crossfire.
Another LGU assassinated.  Sounds like this assassin was on his feet but still got away!


https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2019/08/23/1945762/duterte-targets-bir-next-cleansing
The Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) would be the next agency to be cleansed of corruption, President Duterte said, as he called for changes in the way corporate income taxes are assessed because of what he described as high-level corruption. 
Duterte said some companies are in cahoots with corrupt examiners and are not paying the right amount of taxes.  
The corruption is at the higher levels. I am monitoring it... well of course, it affects a lot of Filipinos. Checkpoint, Customs, BIR. So BIR is next,” the President said during the launch of a solar power facility in Romblon the other day. 
He said the assessing of tax dues based on the net income of corporations has resulted in leakages that benefit corrupt BIR examiners. 
“When we look at the net, net minus deduction... in the end, the examiner will tell you, that is not allowed and after some computations, the tax to be paid will be huge. The examiner will then say we will assess you at P5 million. You give us P2 million, you pay P3 million,” Duterte said.
Maybe this is why Duterte wants P4 billion in intel funds for his office? Better watch out BIR!  Duterte is coming for you! Just like he came for the Bureau of Customs and rooted out all the corruption there.


http://manilastandard.net/news/national/303229/taguig-tax-inspector-arrested.html
The suspect, 32-year-old John Paul Mabilin, was arrested inside a fastfood chain along the service road of Circumferential Road-5 in Barangay Ususan  at 4:50 p.m.   
Police said Mabilin’s modus consisted in bloating the tax amount to be paid by his client, after which he would offer to “help reduce” the amount. 
The authorities came up with an entrapment following a complaint lodged by one Jonathan Ablang against the suspect whom he accused of asking him P100,000 in exchange  for tax reduction.
Skimming off the top.  Pretty standard scam.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1157368/duterte-has-spoken-no-freedom-for-rapist-murderer-sanchez
The President has spoken and his words prevail. 
Malacanang on Sunday said President Rodrigo Duterte’s strong opposition to the release from jail on good conduct time of rapist and murderer Antonio Sanchez, former client of Presidential Spokesperson and chief legal counsel Salvador Panelo, should put the controversial issue to rest. 
The boss has already spoken so it’s already settled. We have nothing to discuss anymore,” Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles said in a radio interview. 
“It’s final. Since the President has spoken, everybody just follows because this concerns the executive branch,” he said.
The boss? This is not how justice works. The President doesn't speak and a man remains in jail. Sanchez would remain in jail based on what the law says and Duterte is not the law.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1157496/pnp-will-never-run-out-of-heroes
Banac added that the PNP has embraced the legacy of valor, service and sacrifice as its main principles as its core values in serving and protecting the public. 
“The PNP mission to serve and protect our country and people offers great opportunity for every hero to rise among the 195,000 brave souls in the PNP.  Even if it needs to happen everyday, the PNP will never run out of heroes,” Banac said.
The PNP remains one of the most corrupt agencies in the country. What a sick joke!


https://news.mb.com.ph/2019/08/26/i-will-dismantle-mafia-philhealth-chief/
If there is a mafia I will dismantle that mafia, that’s one of my initiatives,” said Morales in an interview with ANC.
“I put together a team in PhilHealth. I have been also joined people in the industry from the accounting, management and services, who are now working in PhilHealth. They are now conducting this internal probe but we are not yet ready to reveal the results because it’s still ongoing,” he added.
If. IF!!!  The existence of this "mafia" has been attested to by others and this guy says IF there is a mafia he will dismantle it. A misleading headline and it will probably be a whitewashed investigation.

Marcos said in 1995, the Philippine National Heroes’ Committee has officially recommended several figures to be designated as national heroes —Jose Rizal, Andres Bonifacio, Emilio Aguinaldo, Apolinario Mabini, Marcelo H. del Pilar, Sultan Dipatuan Kudarat, Juan Luna, Melchora Aquino, and Gabriela Silang. 
However, the issue deteriorated into a debate involving regional interests that never was resolved,” said Marcos, whose father, the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, was buried at the Libingan ng Mga Bayani at the insistence of the family and on orders of President Rodrigo Duterte, a beneficiary of an unspecified amount of campaign donation by the Marcos family. 
Marcos, in her statement timed for National Heroes’ Day, said the only measure seeking to proclaim a national hero had been filed in 2014 yet by Bohol Rep. Rene Relampagos, seeking to officially name Jose Rizal as the Philippines’ hero. 
The bill, however, remained pending at the House committee on revision of laws, said Marcos.
It seems Imee Marcos is right. The Philippines does not have any "official heroes" which means those approved by the government. Not surprisingly the discussions deteriorated into debates about regional interests. I guess every region wants their man to be proclaimed hero.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1158106/bucor-officer-shot-dead-in-muntinlupa
An officer of the Bureau of Corrections (BuCor) was shot dead by an unidentified armed man in Muntinlupa City on Tuesday afternoon. 
In a report from Col. Gerardo Umayao, Muntinlupa City police chief, the victim was identified as Ruperto Traya Jr., 53, a chief administrative officer 3 of BuCor at the Type B National Bilibid Prison Reservation in Muntinlupa.  
Traya had just alighted from his motorcycle to open the gate of a parking lot in front of Amparo Street in Barangay Poblacion when an unidentified gunman on board a motorcycle shot Traya in the head at around 1 p.m. 
Another government employee shot dead by a motorcycle assassin.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1158258/release-order-for-antonio-sanchez-dated-aug-20-children
The family of convicted rapist and murderer Antonio Sanchez, a former mayor of Calauan town in Laguna, revealed Tuesday that a release order dated Aug. 20 had been issued. 
Allan Antonio Sanchez, the former mayor’s eldest son, explained that an unnamed individual informed them that a release order had been released, setting their father free from prison after over 20 years in jail. 
Somebody, he said, called the family to inform them of the release order. So they went to the New Bilibid Prison to pick up their father. 
Just as some of the family members arrived at the NBP parking lot, they received a text message informing them that the release orders were put on hold as news of the ex-mayor’s possible release broke out in the media. 
“So we wondered: If the release order had already been issued, why was my father’s release put on hold? So that’s a big question. Why?” Allan Antonio said. 
He said his father had already been fingerprinted as part of the release procedure. 
Sanchez’s kin said they were surprised on hearing Faeldon’s seemingly changing pronouncements as the issue continued to draw public attention. 
According to Anthony Collioni, another son of Sanchez, when they arrived on Aug. 20 at the NBP, the other officials there congratulated them. 
“That means those inside Bilibid already knew that our father will be getting out,” he said. 
Asked about their reaction when Faeldon said in a press briefing that Sanchez might not be eligible for an early release, Allan Antonio said he was unsure if Faeldon succumbed to pressure or if indeed the intention was to keep the former mayor in prison. 
“We were shocked because the first time we talked [with BuCor officials] they said he was included. Mayor Sanchez will be able to get out within two months,” Allan Antonio said. “Then things changed somewhat. I don’t know if he was pressured or something or if they just didn’t want my father to be released.” 
“Sir Faeldon, we talked,” he added. “You said, you promised that you will release my daddy according to the GCTA, for which he was qualified. We believed that my daddy will be among those who will be released.” 
But Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra said that no release order was issued for Sanchez. 
“I have been informed that BuCor Chief [Nicanor] Faeldon denies having signed a release order for Sanchez,” Guevarra said.
This story continues to get more and more complex. What a whole lot of intrigue. Clearly there is some high level corruption happening. Did Sanchez bribe people?  Would he really have been released had not the public gotten wind of the story? Who signed the order for his release? Who is the anonymous person that told these people their father would be released? 


https://www.rappler.com/newsbreak/inside-track/238675-asked-explain-malasakit-centers-bong-go-ridicules-edcel-lagman-looks
Senator Bong Go fumed at Albay 1st District Representative Edcel Lagman after the latter called the Malasakit Centers, Go's pet project when he was still the President's aide, a "partisan tool." 
On Tuesday, August 27, Go spent about half of his 20-minute privilege speech getting back at the opposition congressman, particularly ridiculing the latter's looks. Malasakit Centers, he said, can't do anything to help repair Lagman's facial features. It was his first privilege speech as senator.  
(There's no legal basis for helping you have your face fixed. I will be frank with you, your image is beyond repair. Standing against the interests of Filipinos won't fix your face. 
During the House of Representatives hearing on the proposed 2020 budget of Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office on August 23, Lagman questioned the funneling of funds to Malasakit Centers. He requested a thorough investigation into Malasakit Centers after receiving complaints that the one-stop shops are not functioning as they should.
Congressman Lagman wants to know who is funding these centres and within what legal framework they operate. But instead of answering those questions Senator Go responds with invective and ad hominem. No only that but his fellow Senators agree with his reply which answered no questions.

https://cnnphilippines.com/news/2019/8/21/marikina-garage-permit-subdivision.html
Local government officials in Marikina City are implementing new local laws to make sure roads are accessible to all. 
In a statement, Marikina officials announced that the local government will remove the gates of subdivisions to allow the public to use their roads. 
"Ang totoo niyan ang roads kasi ay hindi naman owned by neither of the residents living or operating a business in the area. Wala sa kanila ang pagmamay-ari nun, pagmamay-ari noon ay nasa gobyerno," said Marikina City Councilor Donn Favis in the statement. 
[Translation: Roads are not owned by the residents or the businesses in that area. They don't own them, the government does.]
What a horrible law. People move to gated communities for privacy and safety and now the local government has deemed they shall have neither!


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1158729/coa-palace-bureau-paid-p100k-for-dead-phone-lines
No dial tone, no payment. 
But a Malacañang communication service still paid PLDT Inc. some P100,000 for landlines that were not working, clearly an imprudent use of public funds. 
The Commission on Audit (COA) has directed the Bureau of Communications Services (BCS) to recover the P110,081.51 it had paid to the telecommunications giant. 
In its annual audit report, the COA said the bureau paid bills for seven months although nine out of 12 lines for key officials had bogged down and were virtually unusable starting June 2018. 
“As there was no repair or maintenance made by the agency, the nine lines fully bogged down in October 2018. Despite the situation, BCS paid and [is] … still paying the monthly service fees for the inoperative lines,” the report said. 
It was only in November 2018 that the BCS reached out to its parent agency, the PCOO, to request a telephone technician to fix the problem. 
“It was diagnosed that the problem was caused by worn-out telephone wires and telephone units of BCS, and by faulty cabling from the PLDT main distribution frame,” the audit report said. 
It said that while “concerned maintenance personnel” reported the issues to PLDT, the company had not solved the faulty cabling, “to the disadvantage of the agency and the government.”
Even the government has issues with PLDT!


https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/254532/osmena-files-raps-against-labella-over-mayors-office-issue
Former Cebu City Mayor Tomas Osmeña has filed charges against incumbent Mayor Edgardo Labella and his men in the Office of the Ombudsman for stopping the “restoration” of the mayor’s office.  
In his complaint affidavit, Osmeña filed raps of Usurpation of Official Function, Grave Misconduct, and Conduct Unbecoming of Public Officials against Labella, City Administrator Lawyer Floro Casas Jr., and City Legal Officer Laywer Rey Gealon.  
Osmeña argued that Labella was still the vice mayor when his men, Casas and Gealon, intervened in the restoration of the Mayor’s Office being conducted on the midnight of July 28, 2019, or two days before Osmeña was set to step down.  
The former mayor said that this act was an usurpation of his authority as incumbent mayor at that time because they took over the mayor’s office when Labella had not been officially inducted as the new mayor.  
He reiterated that his purpose of stripping down the mayor’s office was to restore it to its 2016 state, before he renovated it with his own money amounting to P2 million.
What a ridiculous, time wasting, and petty lawsuit from a man so ridiculous and petty that he stripped the Mayor's office to the bare concrete when he lost the election claiming he owns all the furnishings and tiles since he paid for them.


https://www.rappler.com/science-nature/environment/238768-quezon-city-barangay-goofs-releasing-cane-toads-estero
A recent news story said a barangay in Quezon City released about 1,000 frogs into an estero as part of its anti-dengue campaign. Despite his good intentions, the barangay captain may have created a bigger problem in his area. 
Sanguila told Rappler that what the barangay released were not bullfrogs but cane toads. “Based on the video, these are not frogs, but are invasive Central American Cane Toads of the species Rhinella marina previously taxonomically known as Bufo marinus,” she said.
In order to kill mosquitoes and reduce the spread of dengue a barangay captain released 1,000 poisonous cane toads mistakenly thinking they were bullfrogs. But where did he get 1,000 toads???

Cagayan Economic Zone Authority (CEZA) allowed three contract of service personnel to hold managerial positions and travel abroad in violation of Civil Service rules, the Commission on Audit (COA) said. 
A government-owned and controlled corporation, CEZA is tasked to manage and supervise the development of Cagayan Special Economic Zone and Freeport. 
In the annual audit report on CEZA, state auditors noted at least three of CEZA’s contract of service employees respectively occupied the posts of acting senior deputy administrator, deputy administrator for Regulatory and Compliance, and corporate secretary in violation of COA, Civil Service Commission and the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) Joint Circular No. 1 s. 2017. 
The circular covers the Rules and Regulations Governing Contract of Service and Job Order Workers in the Government which states that “contract of service and job order workers should not be designated in positions exercising control or supervision over regular and career employees.” 
In response, the CEZA management argued that the current manpower of CEZA could hardly cope up with the fast-paced business expansion and development within the Economic Zone and Free Port, and that the technical expertise in emerging technological and market advancement among organic CEZA personnel is wanting. 
“While awaiting for the DBM’s approval of CEZA’s proposed new organizational structure, CEZA opted to engage COS personnel who possess the experience, proven track record and expertise needed to achieve with dispatch the lofty goals and objective of the agency,” CEZA told state auditors.
It sounds like there is a lot of red tape preventing CEZA from hiring regular employees. The solution would probably be to hire contact employees as regular employees.

Thursday, August 29, 2019

Philippine Political Cartoons Show the Same Problems 100 Years Ago

Recently I came across an interesting collection of Philippine political cartoons from the first half of the 20th century.  Philippine Cartoons: Political Caricature of the American Era, 1900-1941 features many political cartoons as well as commentary from the author as to their meaning and on Filipino society as it was under American rule. 

Unsurprisingly many of the issues facing Filipinos 100 years ago are still being faced today. Particularly the issues of Chinese merchants, drugs, and corruption as illustrated and explained in the following cartoons.  
During World War I Filipino hostility towards Chinese erupted into racism. As wartime demand pushed freight costs to unprecedented heights, the average price for a cavan of rice in Manila increased from ₱4.70 in 1914 to ₱15.90 in 1919. Much of the increase was, in fact, speculative profit and Manila consumers, sorely pressed by the price rise, blamed Chinese rice merchants for their plight. Through the informal Tutuban rice exchange, a small group of Chinese dominated the wholesale market for native rice. Petty Chinese merchants controlled some 80 percent of Manila's retail trade. After suffering from four years of painful speculative price increases, working class Manileños developed a steep antagonism towards the Chinese. 
While the Chinese Progresses shows that in the past decade foreign merchants, Chinese included, have grown from small traders into "now great merchants and bankers." The Filipinos by contrast, have remained hewers of wood and drawers of water.

When you think of Chinese businessmen in the Philippines perhaps Henry Sy is the first to come to mind. He is the founder of the SM Group which owns malls and supermarkets throughout the country. Likewise Tony Tan, the founder of Jolibee, is also a Chinese businessman whose fast food empire continues to expand nationally and internationally. With a new wave of Chinese migrants comes the same woes experienced by Filipinos in 1917. Many of the Chinese workers are working illegally while posing as tourists. Investors have caused housing prices to rise forcing many Filipinos out of the market. The government lacks the will to do anything about what some have called a creeping Chinese invasion.
Question of Time illustrates the subtle Chinese corruption of Filipino civil servants. While few public officials of the early American era would have dared accept a blatant bribe in cash or kind, the Chinese have, over the past quarter century, selected influential Filipino officials as their baptismal godfathers when they convert to Christianity. Every year the Chinese renew the bond by delivering its on their godfather's birthday, a custom that The Independent considers an indirect bribe.



This cartoon is very interesting in light of the recent pronouncement by Duterte that it is ok for PNP officers to take small gifts of little value if they are offered. Former PNP Chief Bato and current Chief Albayalde both admitted to taking gifts, food mostly, during "special occasions" which is exactly what is being depicted in this cartoon.  The politician is being offered a ham and some fruit on a special occasion and the implication is that this is an indirect bribe. Perhaps Duterte has not taken gifts from Chinese businessmen but he has met with plenty of them in Malacañang and their influence on him cannot be denied. Many of his closest friends, like Jose Kho and Dennis Uy, are Chinese businessmen.

Why is There Opium claims that the U.S. colonial government's ban on opium sales is not effective. According to The Independent's police source, Chinese avoid the prohibition by smuggling opium through Manila Customs in drums of cement, condensed milk and other bulk cargos, something almost impossible to detect. Once the opium has cleared the Customs House, Manila Police have proved incapable of preventing its distribution. While the "poor Chinos belonging to the lower classes are made to suffer the penalty" for smoking the "big fish" who own the opium dens always get away. The Independent suggest that, as in British colonies, opium should be legalised as a source of government revenue.


Is there anyone who does not know that China is a major source for illegal drugs in the Philippines? Duterte has said it, the PNP has said it, and the PDEA has said it. Most drugs come from China and even with the drug war there has been no let up.  They hide drugs in biscuit cans, pallets, vans, and even magnetic lifters and they sneak on through customs with no problem. When the drugs are on the street the police are incapable to prevent their distribution. Some police are even involved in selling drugs! And who has taken the heat in the drug war? The small fish. "The lower classes are made to suffer the penalty" of arrest, imprisonment, or even death at the hands of the PNP or motorcycle assassins. The big fish like Peter Lim swim away.

As of this writing Duterte is on his 5th visit to China. Chinese warships are making passage in the WPS. The Chinese military continues to build on islands that belong to the Philippines. A Chinese firm is leading the rebuilding of Marawi while Duterte's Chinese businessman friend Dennis Uy has been awarded a contract for a 3rd telecom. Chinese loans have been promised to finance Duterte's Build Build Build initiative. Everywhere you look in the Philippines it's China, China, China! But that is nothing new. As these cartoons demonstrate the problems with Chinese merchants is quite old as are charges of racism. Anyone who brings up the issues about the Chinese or questions China's true motives in wishing to be friends with the Philippines is accused of sinophobia.

For good or for ill the Chinese will continue to influence and dominate business, finance, and politics in the Philippines. Filipinos will have to get use to it. Perhaps they could learn a thing or two from  the Chinese work ethic.

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

1st Mayor Bing Leonardia Dog Fest 2019 Award

Last year I wrote about the Congressman Greg Gasataya Dog Show award which prominently featured his face and name. If you thought that was ridiculous then you haven't seen anything yet. You know that ought to be a DOT slogan.  "Welcome to the Philippines! If you thought that was ridiculous then you haven't seen anything yet!"

I present to you the award statue for the 1st Mayor Bing Leonardia Dog Fest 2019.



Ain't she a beaut? That is epal perfection. Why not call it the Bacolod City Dog Fest? Because then the Mayor couldn't slap his name and face on this award and event. Kind of funny that this Dog Fest was held on March 23rd which is just a few weeks prior to the election. One might think that this was totally a political event designed to score votes. Not that Bing had any real competition anyway but that is beside the point. 

The grammar on this statue is horrible. 1st Mayor Bing Leonardia Dog Fest 2019. Will there be another Mayor Bing Leonardia Dog Fest in 2019? Doubtful. That makes this the ONLY Mayor Bing Leonardia Dog Fest 2019. Likely the ONLY Mayor Bing Leonardia Dog Fest EVER! This event is not even mentioned on the Philippine Canine Club's list of dog shows for 2019.

That's because it's not an official dog show put on by a kennel club.  Look at this schedule of events.

https://vmelcidfamiliaran.weebly.com/activities/1st-mayor-bing-leonardia-dog-fest-2019-at-the-bacolod-city-government-center
Free rabies vaccine and a dog fashion show! Are those things that an official dog show would do? No.

Look closely at the symbol on the top of this picture. The green circle with the red eagle. Do you know what that is? It's on the Dog Fest award too.


It's the logo of the Mayor's political party Grupo Progreso! Undoubtedly this Dog Fest was nothing more than a way to score votes. But what better way for a group of political dogs to garner votes than by hosting their own Dog Fest!?

Tuesday, August 27, 2019

Martial Law: MNLF Region

It's been 7 months now since the referendum on the BOL which lead to the formation of the BARMM. Since then the leaders of the BARMM, the MILF, have been hard at work crafting legislation to govern the new region. As of now they do not have a budget and are working without pay.

https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/698382/bangsamoro-transition-officials-staff-unpaid-for-months-now-says-member/story/
The 80 members of the Bangsamoro Transition Authority and their respective staff have received no salaries since the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao was established four months ago. 
Lawyer Laisa Masuhud Alamia, a member of the BTA, said the transition panel remained largely unfunded. 
“I cannot say how much talaga ang amount… pero ‘yung salaries, wala. We also don’t have any physical office yet, all of us [BTA members] We are just using the Sharif Kabunsuan Cultural Center for our plenary sessions,” Alamia said. 
Alamia said the BTA had been making do with the leftover budget of the abolished ARMM’s Regional Legislative Assembly. 
She said it wouldn't be enough to cover the salaries of the BTA members and their staff, and the conduct of workshops and other meetings for parliament work. 
“That budget from the Regional Legislative Assembly] has no budget for personnel services and capital outlay. We have been spending from our personal money, including our staff,” Alamia said.
The lack of funds is due to the fact that when the budget was written there was no BARMM and the Congress could obviously not allocate funds to a non-existent entity. That is why the BARMM is utilising the leftover budget of the ARMM. Compounding the problems is that the 2019 budget was greatly delayed and not passed until April 2019.  Hopefully 2020 will see this problem rectified and the budget passed on time as the BARMM has been allotted P70.6 billion in funds.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2019/08/24/1945919/bangsamoro-region-get-p706-billion-budget-next-year
The Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) will be given some P70.6 billion next year to help boost peace and development in the region. 
Of the amount, P63.6 billion represents the annual block grant; and P5 billion as Special Development Fund. Included in the total allocation is P17.7 billion for infrastructure development. 
The BARMM, however, will also have its own internally generated funds in the form of retained taxes estimated at P1.4 billon annually; allocations from national government agencies, P15 billion; and Internal Revenue Allotment, P25 billion.
This money is not the only money allotted "to help boost peace" in the region. The AFP has also been granted funds by the Office of the Presidential Advisor on the Peace Process (OPAPP) to assist in the decommissioning of 40,000 MILF fighters.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1078587
The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process (OPAPP) forged an agreement on Thursday to formalize their partnership in decommissioning 40,000 Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) combatants and their weapons in the next three years. 
At the signing ceremony of the memorandum of agreement, AFP Chief of Staff, Gen. Benjamin Madrigal Jr. underscored the importance of the collaboration between OPAPP and the AFP in pushing forward the Bangsamoro peace process 
"The MOA that we signed today is not only about the transfer of funds from OPAPP to the Armed Forces but more importantly, it signifies our commitment to continue with the process of healing, and the process of normalization in the Bangsamoro," he said. 
"We have long dreamed for peace in the Bangsamoro region," Madrigal said, noting that maintaining the "mutual trust" between the government and the MILF is crucial in the normalization process.
How much funds will be transferred to the AFP to assist in the decommission of 40,000 MILF combatants? P781.3 million.

https://www.dswd.gov.ph/dswd-opapp-ink-agreement-to-implement-socio-economic-interventions-for-milf-decommissioned-combatants/
The agreement shall formalize the P781.3 million funding support of OPAPP to DSWD for the implementation of the socio-economic interventions to help decommissioned combatants (DCs) of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) settle in their communities and live normal lives. These include the Bangsamoro Transitory Family Support Package (BTFSP) with a cash grant of ₱80,000 and Livelihood Settlement Grant (LSG) amounting to ₱20,000. 

The BTFSP is an immediate cash assistance adapting the Emergency Cash Transfer (ECT) strategy. The project is designed to address the need for food and non-food items (family kit, hygiene kit, sleeping kit, etc.) of the DCs and their families. 

On the other hand, the LSG may be used as seed capital to start micro-enterprises or to purchase starter kits for the re-establishment of damaged livelihood.
That amounts to only P100,000 per fighter. Is that enough? It's certainly more than was offered in 2015.
During the ceremonies, the MILF firearms will be turned over to the Independent Decommissioning Body, while decommissioned combatants will undergo a registration, verification, and validation process, after which, they will be provided immediate cash assistance amounting to P25,000 and PhilHealth Cards.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/697970/milf-proceeding-with-decommissioning-process-as-ultimate-sacrifice-for-peace
According to a recent report buy the International Crisis Group many were disappointed with that paltry package.
The success of decommissioning rests foremost on the benefits package promised to former combatants who lay down their arms. Only a small proportion of former MILF fighters, numbering in the hundreds, are likely to be able to enter the regional police force, and others will be disinclined to do so given it is not controlled by the Bangsamoro authority. Socio-economic benefits made available to the 145 fighters demobilised in 2015 reportedly failed to meet those combatants’ and their communities’ expectations. That said, though details are still being worked out, the MILF leadership has expressed confidence that government and international partners who work on the issue will improve the package for the next phase. Officials have indicated that vocational training and scholarships will be offered to combatants and their family members. The government says it will offer 100,000 pesos ($1,925) in cash to each combatant as a goodwill measure.
https://www.crisisgroup.org/asia/south-east-asia/philippines/301-philippines-militancy-and-new-bangsamoro
While the DSWD has transferred P781.3 million to the OPAPP which has in turn been transferred to the AFP which will then be disbursed to decommissioned MILF terrorists much more will be needed to fully accommodate all 40,000 men.  Only 12,000 are set to be decommissioned for now and Presidential Peace Advisor Galvez believes much more is needed just for them.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1110850/galvez-p1-2b-needed-as-aid-to-milf-fighters
The government will need P1.2 billion as “goodwill” cash aid to some 12,000 combatants of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) who will be decommissioned as part of the normalization process in areas under the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), Presidential Peace Adviser Carlito Galvez Jr. said on Thursday. 
Galvez said each decommissioned MILF fighter would be receiving P100,000 in cash once the foreign-led Independent Decommissioning Body (IDB) had validated their identities. 

Scholarships and skills training would also be provided to the decommissioned MILF fighters and their families to help them become competitive and productive members of mainstream society, Galvez added.
The International Crisis Group's report warns that if the package is not good enough MILF members could defect to extremist groups.
Decommissioning will be vital to preventing former MILF combatants from joining militant groups. A minister in the transition authority said: 

I told the Philippine government we need a better package because we have com- petition [from extremist groups] [...] Combatants will be watching. Does some- thing good happen for the first batch [to decommission]? Important that it works well, for us and for the government.

Fighters who feel abandoned by their leaders could join armed groups outside the peace process. An MNLF supporter said, “If they can’t care for the [MILF] combatants, BIFF is waiting for them”.
How else can one read that except as the MILF holding the Philippine government hostage? Give us money or we will continue to fight. 

What the Muslims in Mindanao really want is self-rule and autonomy. That is why the MNLF was formed back in 1972 and is why the MILF broke away in 1977. The result of the MNLF's talks with the government lead to the formation of the ARMM in 1989 which was headed by MNLF terrorists only to fall apart and make way for the BARMM which is now headed by MILF terrorists.  MNLF leader Misuari has expressed hopes that the BARMM will bing peace but he also feels left out in the cold which is why Duterte is thinking of how he can best placate his friend.

https://www.manilatimes.net/duterte-open-to-creation-of-mnlf-region/603454/
President Rodrigo Duterte is open to the creation of a regional government for the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF), his top peace adviser said on Tuesday. 
“Titignan po natin kasi nakikita po natin na ‘yung (We will look into this because we see that the) BARMM is subdivided. Meron tayong tinatawag na (We have what we call) deputy for the mainland, and then deputy for Lanao, and then deputy for the Basulta (Basilan, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi) area. And I believe ‘yung MNLF na Misuari group, they are more predominant [in] the Basulta area,” Galvez said, referring to
MNLF founding Chairman Nur Misuari.
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1150451/duterte-praying-misuari-will-be-enlightened-to-settle-issues-with-mnlf
The President also reiterated that he is hoping Misuari would accept the “same terms’ the government offered to MILF chair and now BARMM interim chief minister Murad Ebrahim. 
“Meron tayong MNLF, that is the Sulu up to Tawi-Tawi area. I am praying that Nur Misuari will be enlightened and will be able to accept maybe the same terms that we have extended to Murad,” Duterte said. 
“That is the only way (for peace) without wreckage in our society,” he added.
Duterte recently met for the third time with Misuari and Bong Go indicates this is only the beginning.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1157532/duterte-meets-with-misuari-anew-bigger-meetings-eyed
Go said Duterte and Misuari are eyeing to meet again with “bigger groups” as the government seeks to further boost peace efforts in Mindanao. 
“‘Yung usapan, maybe magkakaroon pa ng mga follow-up meetings but between bigger groups na po. Siguro maybe para panel na ‘yung makikipag-usap on both sides (Perhaps there will a meeting with bigger groups in then future),”  Go told reporters on the sidelines of the National Heroes Day rites at the Libingan ng mga Bayani in Taguig City.
To what bigger groups could he be referring? BIFF? Abu Sayyaf?

Apparently the only prospect for peace is to allow terrorists to rule over a divided up Mindanao. If the ARMM failed and it was run by the MNLF then why would a new MNLF headed region succeed? Negotiating  with Misuari, who is only temporarily free from jail at the moment because of his role in the 2013 Zamboanga siege, in a bid to further divide Mindanao is a crazy notion. But is it any crazier than Duterte requesting P4.9 billion in intelligence funds for his office?

https://cnnphilippines.com/news/2019/8/22/panelo-office-of-the-president-intelligence-funds-2020-budget.html
Under the proposed budget, the Office of the President has a total budget of ₱8.2 billion, with ₱4.5 billion allocated for oversight management on national security concerns. 
"You really need money if you want to secure your country, and the Office of the President is one of the better offices that can secure the security of the land," Panelo said in a press briefing Thursday. 
Meanwhile, the Secretary of the National Defense has a proposed budget of ₱10 million for intelligence funds. The proposed intelligence funds for the Philippine Navy is ₱39.7 million. 
Panelo said that should the Defense Secretary run short of funds, he could always ask from the Office of the President. 
"The Office of the President can provide funds for that also pag humingi si Secretary of Defense (when the Defense Secretary asks) when it comes to security," Panelo said, adding funds can be released quickly. 
He also defended President Rodrigo Duterte when asked about possible corruption, and said that he is "number 1" when it comes to people who hate corruption.
Why would the Office of the President need more funds for intelligence that the DND and the Navy combined? That is absolutely nuts and so is the assertion that Duterte can simply transfer money to the DND if they run out. Where is the accountability and oversight? All the money spent on intelligence cannot fix the fact that, as per the US military, the AFP has an "inability to collect, process, and disseminate intelligence."
One of the primary objectives of OPE-P is to build the AFP’s capability to use ISR in operations against ISIS-P. USSOCPAC reported to the DoD OIG this quarter that the AFP had limited ability to collect information on a target and provide that intelligence to a unit on the ground to act on it. 
According to USSOCPAC, this inability to collect, process, and disseminate intelligence was the result of several problems. First, the AFP lacks ISR assets. Second, the AFP does not have a “Production, Exploitation, and Dissemination cell” capable of synthesizing ISR information and providing it to a decision-making entity. Third, the AFP suffers from an institutional problem, using its limited ISR assets for live tracking of active operations to “provide a semblance of battle tracking for friendly and suspected enemy elements” rather than strategic threat analysis. 
USSOCPAC stated that because of these challenges, the AFP relies heavily on the DoD and its contractors’ ISR capabilities to identify the locations of suspected enemy activity and provide intelligence products for their use. According to USSOCPAC, the desired end state is for the AFP to meet its own needs for ISR support to counterterrorism operations, including the capacity to target and conduct lethal operations against multiple violentextremist threats, without DoD assistance. 
USSOCPAC stated that the AFP lacks the infrastructure necessary for its ground units to communicate effectively with ISR air controllers. In order to improve the AFP’s ISR equipment, USSOCPAC was providing an intelligence training package, “analyst notebook software,” multiple unmanned aerial vehicle systems, tactical command posts, and other equipment to increase command and control, situational awareness, and operational security. Additionally this quarter, the AFP worked toward obtaining cellular applications to enable ground units to obtain data directly from their own ISR assets, according to USSOCPAC.
https://philippinefails.blogspot.com/2019/05/martial-law-hearts-and-minds.html
Who can forget the debacle of the Marawi siege? Intel was ignored and so the attack proceeded as planned. These funds would be better spent on the rebuilding of Marawi which everyone acknowledges is key to achieving peace and stability in the region.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1156489/govt-budget-for-marawi-rehab-from-2018-2020-just-28-of-the-needed-fund
The budget allotted for the Marawi rehabilitation from 2018 to 2020 is just 28 percent of the P60.506 billion needed to fully restore the war-torn Islamic city. 
This emerged during the interpellation of Lanao del Norte 1st District Rep. Mohamad Khalid Dimaporo to Department of Budget and Management Acting Secretary Wendel Avisado during the House appropriations committee budget briefing, Thursday. 
Avisado said the funding given for Marawi rehabilitation in 2018 and 2019 were P10 billion and P3.5 billion, respectively. Another P3.5 billion was earmarked for the rehabilitation under the P4.1 trillion proposed National Expenditure Plan of the DBM. 
In total, a measly P17 billion was allocated for the restoration of the city destroyed by fighting between the government forces and the ISIS-inspired Maute group in May 2017. This is far behind the P60.5 billion needed to fully revamp the area. 
“So we’ve established that we’re not even halfway in terms of funding the rehabilitation of Marawi,” Dimaporo lamented. 
Dimaporo also called “pitiful” Avisado’s confirmation that the utilization rate of the Task Force Bangon Marawi was “less than 10 percent.”
Less than 10% of P17 billion has been utilised in the rebuilding of Marawi. Of course not much rebuilding can be done because the AFP is still clearing the area of bombs but that hardly explains anything. Where is the P35 billion foreign governments have pledged for the rebuilding of the city?

https://www.dof.gov.ph/index.php/phl-receives-p35-1-b-pledges-for-bangon-marawi-rehab-program/
The Philippines has received a total of P35.1 billion (about $670 million) in pledges from the international community to aid in the ongoing rehabilitation and reconstruction efforts for the damaged city of Marawi in Mindanao, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III said here Wednesday (Nov. 28). 
Of the P35.1 billion in pledges, P32.7 billion will be in the form of concessional financing, while P2.4 billion will be in grants.  
He said the government’s planned issuance of Marawi bonds amounting to P13.5 billion (about USD258 million), budgetary support, and the P35.1 billion ($670 million) in pledges from the international community will more than cover the P47.2-billion financing requirement for the BMCRRP. 
According to Dominguez, the government determined that the overall financing requirement for Marawi would amount to P72.58 billion ($1.39 billion) over a five-year period up to 2022. 
Of this amount, P47.20 billion ($901 million) is needed for the BMCRRP; P17.20 billion ($328.3 million) that will be 100 percent sourced from local funding will be spent to rehabilitate the Most Affected Areas; and P1.25 billion ($23.9 million) will be spent for livelihood assistance, which would also be fully sourced from local funds. The overall financing requirement also includes the P6.9 billion ($131.7 million) in humanitarian assistance required during the early stages of the recovery program for Marawi.  
Dominguez said 58 percent of this overall financing requirement will come from foreign sources while local funds will be used for the remaining 42 percent needed for the entire effort to rehabilitate and reconstruct the city.
Where is all this money? Don't forget the COA has already flagged the HUDCC for transferring funds meant for Marawi victims to be used for Hajj pilgrims! Task Force Bangon Marawi also receives operating expenses totalling P500 million form the HUDCC. What little rebuilding could be done had to stop as the companies hired did not have the proper requirements. Rebuilding will not recommence until December. Maybe.

https://www.benarnews.org/english/news/philippine/Marawi-reconstruction-08152019151511.html
The rebuilding of war-ruined sections of Marawi will be delayed until December, after the military finishes clearing the southern city of unexploded ordnance left over from a 2017 battle with Islamic State-linked militants, an official in charge of reconstruction said. 
Apart from unexploded bombs, the delay in reconstruction is also being caused by a reluctance among homeowners to allow army engineers to demolish their badly damaged structures, he said. 
Del Rosario, who arrived here to inform residents at one relocation site, said he expected the government’s search for unexploded ordnance (UXOs) and the demolition of the ruined buildings to finally be completed before early November. 
“I was told that all the debris and unexploded ordnance will be cleared by late October,” del Rosario said Thursday. 
Reconstruction in the former battleground could only begin once safety engineers had determined the area to be safe, he said. 
Del Rosario said he expected construction of “vertical structures” like houses and buildings to start by December after the debris management and unexploded ordnances ceased. 
“That is our timetable to ensure that we can complete the rehabilitation of the most affected area by December 2021,” Del Rosario told displaced families at a camp in the village of Boganga. 
Del Rosario said owners who still refused to give permission would have to pay for the demolition of their buildings.
Call me cynical but I don't think debris will be cleared by October nor will all the unexploded ordnance be recovered by then either. It's a slow going process and the AFP has said there are at least 30 more bombs needed to be found. With their rate being one found per month this process is going to take much longer than they think.