Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Vegetable Vendors at the Grocery Store

There are a lot of things in the Philippines I do not and never will understand. One of those things is a grocery store, in this case Robinson's, allowing vendors to sell their vegetables on the steps of the store.








Look at these people.  They are simply in the way. In the last picture the vendor is leaning on someone's car! And in the picture before that the produce is in the of any car who wants to park!   Why does the management allow this?

Well it turns out they don't! I asked them about these vendors and they said they have been told to not come around but they cannot be controlled. They were told to go away but they keep coming back.  So what good are the security guards??

I think if Robinsons really wanted these people to leave they would make sure they left. It's not that hard to make unwanted people leave.

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Martial Law: Lessons Learned Part 2

This is not only the last blog post of 2019 but it is the last blog post about martial law in Mindanao and the last post about lessons learned during martial law. The remaining categories to look at are Policy, Foreign Assistance, and Marawi and Mindanao.

3. Policy

Duterte's decision to extend martial law a third time for the whole of 2018 was the spark that caused certain Senators to bring a suit before the Supreme Court.  Those who supported martial law thought the suit was stupid and superfluous but they were wrong because the verdict set a stunning legal precedent.

“The Constitution is silent on how many times Congress may extend a proclamation of martial law or the suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus,” the court said in a decision written for the majority by Associate Justice Noel Tijam. 
“The manner of Congress’ deliberation with respect to the President’s request for extension of martial law in Mindanao for one year is not subject to judicial review,” it added. 
The court said the 30-year-old Constitution “does not fix a period for the duration of any extension of a proclamation or suspension but expressly leaves the matter to Congress.” 
“Congress has the power to extend and determine the period of martial law and the suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus under Article VII, Section 18 of the 1987 Constitution,” the court said. 
“If the Constitutional Commission had intended to limit any extension to 60 days, it would have been expressly stated and would not have been left to Congress,” it ruled.
Like it or love it, indefinite martial law via extension is now 100% constitutional. Future presidents who decide to impose martial law can do so with impunity as long as Congress concurs with them. Surprisingly enough in the proposed federal constitution the statement about martial law is given word for word as in the current constitution with no change to reflect this ruling from the Supreme Court.
(b) In case of invasion, rebellion, or lawless violence, when the public safety requires it, he may, for a period not exceeding sixty (60) days, suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus or place the Philippines or any part thereof under martial law. Within forty-eight (48) hours from the proclamation of martial law or the suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, the President shall submit a report in person or in writing to the Congress. The Congress, voting jointly, by a vote of at least a majority of all its Members in regular or special session, may revoke such proclamation or suspension, which revocation shall not be set aside by the President. Upon the initiative of the President, the Congress may, in the same manner, extend such proclamation or suspension for a period to be determined by the Congress, if the invasion or rebellion shall persist and public safety requires it.
https://pederalismo.org.ph/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Concom-Final-Official-Copy-Proposed-Federal-Constitution.pdf
Maybe legal precedent precludes any need to change the wording in this part of the constitution.

Another policy change is the imposition of martial law itself which is to say the way it was carried out.  Last week I wrote that Mindanao was under the rigorous military rule of martial law but that is not exactly true. From the beginning we were told this would be a different kind of martial law.
https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/615054/afp-on-duterte-s-marcos-type-martial-law-nationwide-but-sans-abuses/story/
Padilla said the military is making sure human rights are not violated during the current implementation of martial law in Mindanao, based on Duterte’s Proclamation No. 216. 
“You can see how the military is implementing martial law now, its complete regard for human rights and IHL [International humanitarian law] and the other protocols that have been established. So if there are any complaints, we are open to receiving those complaints and acting on it immediately,” Padilla said. 
“And that is also one of the instructions of the President previously that you also may have heard that he must ensure we are able to protect and save lives,” he added, referring to Duterte’s statement that law-abiding citizens need not worry about martial law.
Aside from vowing to implement an abuse-free martial law it seems the AFP put in place an invisible martial law.

Martial law lets troops and police work together without normal legal checks and balances. Authorities can also enforce curfews and randomly search vehicles. 
But in much of Mindanao, martial law is hardly noticeable. Around the port city Cagayan de Oro, for example, cars stop only between the domestic airport and downtown for routine checks. Police do not enforce curfews in the downtown mega-malls, upscale restaurants and major high-rise hotel. 
Road checkpoints turn up more often on highways around the Bangsamoro region, home to some 3.8 million mostly Muslim Filipinos. 
Just how was martial law implemented in Mindanao? LGU's and the PNP claimed the crime rate dropped during martial law but that may be due to the psychological effects of knowing martial law has been declared rather than the heavy presence of AFP troops and PNP officers. Attacks continued to happen even with martial law in place. These attacks include NPA, ISIS suicide bombings, and armed ridos or clan wars.  The AFP should look in depth at how martial law was implemented and at it's true effectiveness or ineffectiveness.


4. Foreign Assistance

When the Marawi siege ended Duterte thanked the Chinese for sending the gun that killed Abu Sayyaf leader Isnilon Hapilon. It was all a lie. 

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-philippines-militants-killing/doubts-about-smoking-gun-as-duterte-lauds-china-role-in-rebel-killing-idUSKBN1CP19W
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte was eager to credit new ally Beijing in the death of militant leader Isnilon Hapilon, saying it was a Chinese rifle that fired the bullet that finished off Islamic State’s “emir” in Southeast Asia. 
The smoking gun that took out the region’s most feared insurgent on Monday was one of the 100 sniper rifles donated by China, Duterte said, although the ranger unit conducting the operation said the shot was fired from a heavier weapon mounted on an armored vehicle.  
“I would like to officially inform you, Ambassador Zhao, that the rifle that killed Hapilon was a sniper rifle made in China,” Duterte announced late on Thursday, to warm applause from the crowd.  
But the version of the final hours of the life of Hapilon and another rebel leader, Omarkhayam Maute, posted on the Facebook page of a member of the Army Scout Rangers, tells a different story.  
The blow-by-blow account on “Scout Ranger Books”, posted the day Hapilon was killed, tells of how the 8th Scout Ranger Company was engaging militants and was not aware the rebel commanders were among those they killed, until fleeing hostages told them.  
The soldiers operating at night used thermal imaging on an armored vehicle and the shot that killed Hapilon came from a gun mounted on top of it, according to the account. No mention was made of Chinese weapons or snipers.
A complete and total lie. The news about American involvement was also a lie. It started out by Duterte saying he was unaware the Americans were helping in Marawi.

http://davaotoday.com/main/politics/duterte-unaware-of-us-role-in-marawi-admits-philippine-army-is-pro-american/
President Rodrigo Duterte on Sunday said he is not aware of the role played by the US Special Forces in Marawi City. 
“I am not aware of that until they arrived,” Duterte said in an interview with the press inside the Camp Brig. General Edilberto Evangelista on Sunday afternoon. 
Duterte also added that he has not approached any country, not even from the members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations which he heads, to ask for help in fighting terrorism in Marawi. He said the government forces is capable of fighting. 
“Wala, wala. I have not done that. I have not made an appeal. I said I did not even know that the American government has been providing technical… So we better see to our own… I never approached any American to say that, “Tumulong kayo.” (No, no, I have not done that. I have not made an appeal… I never approached any American to say “help us”)” Duterte said.
What a bold faced lie.  A lie of omission. Duterte does not need to ask the Americans for assistance because they are always providing assistance. Weapons, training, intelligence, the whole she-bang. It is also inconceivable that the commander-in-chief would not know if a foreign military was assisting his own.  DND Secretary let the cat out of the bag a few months later.


It has always been the US helping the Philippines. Not long after the Marawi siege Operation Enduring Freedom morphed into Operation Pacific Eagle. This operation is a collaboration between the US military and the AFP.  The US provides weapons, training, and intelligence assistance. While the Philippines has received weapons from China and Russia and even Israel the USA remains the primary partner of the Philippines regarding national security.

This partnership will remain intact for the foreseeable future no matter what bad things Dutere says about America. The AFP should take advantage of the Americans by learning all they can and applying it properly.

5. Marawi and Mindanao

We all know that martial was declared over the whole of Mindanao because of the Marawi siege. Martial was kept in place so the AFP could wipe out the rest of the terrorist forces.  While the AFP has not let up in the war against terrorism some of these groups have continued to wreck havoc in the region. Most recently is the attack in North Cotabato allegedly but the BIFF which is aligned with ISIS.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1205167/afp-blames-biff-for-mindanao-blasts-that-wounded-23-people
The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) on Monday blamed the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) for the series of explosions that rocked central Mindanao on Sunday night, wounding 23 people, including nine soldiers.
But the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) splinter group denied it had a hand in the explosions, saying it does not attack civilians.
Why is the MILF apologising for the BIFF?  The point here is that despite martial law attacks have continued to happen. Under martial law suicide bombers became a reality for the first time. One of this bombers was a Filipino despite the fact that the public was repeatedly told that would never happen because Filipinos are not disposed to commit such an attack.

https://www.sunstar.com.ph/article/1813641
Lasuca was the first Filipino who was reported to have carried out a suicide bombing. He was responsible for the first blast on June 28 which also resulted in the killing of three soldiers.
Even though terrorism continued the PNP claimed that regular types of crime dropped substantially each year martial law was in effect.
Citing crime data, Corpus said that the region registered an eight percent reduction for 2017, 30.06 percent reduction in 2018 and 27.04 percent from January to October this year. 
The decrease covers the Eight Focus Crimes such as Murder, Homicide, Rape, Physical Injury, Robbery, Theft, carnapping and stealing of motorcycles and also on crimes covered by special laws and ordinances. 
https://news.mb.com.ph/2019/11/23/police-commanders-in-central-mindanao-favor-martial-law-extension/
The people claimed they felt safer and that they loved martial law.  "Martial law forever," said some Mindanaoans proving that Mindanao is such a wild place that martial law is necessary to tame it.

Marawi has not fared well at all since the end of the siege. After several false starts the rubble was cleared paving the way for rebuilding the city. However the rebuilding is going with no input from residents. Problems abounded with a lack of property permits so that demolition of buildings and compensation to owners was largely impossible.  The people of Marawi have rightly complained that they have been forgotten by the government. Eventually the city will be rebuilt but likely not by the target year of 2020.  

Mindanao has calmed down since the Marawi siege and the number of ISIS followers has decreased  but the island is basically right back where it was before martial law. It remains a land of lawless violence which foreign countries have warned their citizens not to visit. Islamic terror groups as well as clan warfare between private families with their large private armies continue to endanger the populace. It seems martial law has had little effect on Mindanao. Only a comprehensive study by the AFP would reveal the total effects martial law had on Mindanao.

So what can we learn from two and a half years of martial law in Mindanao? I think the biggest lesson is that the AFP is inconsistent in the way it has prosecuted the war on terrorism. They are eager for the fight but underestimate ISIS. They set deadlines and then they move the goalposts saying the previous deadline was impossible. They declare the terrorist groups to be irrelevant but each group is able to attract new members and wage campaign against the government. And this has been standard operating procedure for years for the AFP. In 50 years of fighting against communists and Muslims the AFP continues to make the same mistakes. Without a serious and thorough change in the way the AFP fights the war on terrorism will last another 50 years. It's not impossible that the AFP will change but it's not likely. Now after this fiasco with doctored photographs the AFP is not going to start 2020 off on a positive note.

Monday, December 30, 2019

The Nightcrawlers Documentary Review

Two documentaries about the Philippines' drug war have been released in 2019. The first one, On the President's Orders, caught the ire of the Palace with Panleo calling the film black propaganda before he even saw it. The second, The Nightcrawlers, appears to have slipped under Panelo's radar.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/films/the-nightcrawlers/#/
National Geographic, which is the studio releasing this documentary, describes the film thusly:
With unprecedented access, The Nightcrawlers is an unflinching exposé of Philippines President Duterte’s war on drugs, in which some claim over 20,000 people have been killed. RL, a former staff photographer for a prominent newspaper, leads the Manila Nightcrawlers, a small group of determined photojournalists on a mission to expose the true cost of the violent campaign. Through covering both sides of the conflict, The Nightcrawlers reveals a harrowing twist behind Duterte’s deadly crusade.
Just what they mean by "covering both sides  of the conflict" as well as the "harrowing twist" is not clear to me at all after having viewed the film.

Nightcrawler is the term for a photojournalist who works the night shift documenting crimes. In this movie there are two groups of nightcrawlers. The first is the group of the photojournalists. The second is a group of alleged assassins who call themselves "The Group." The film actually starts off on an island where members of The Group are preparing to go out on a mission.  We see them clean their weapons, sail to the mainland, and the camera follows their motorcycle as they ride into the city.

We then meet the real star of this picture, Raffy Lerma. He is racing to a scene to take pictures of another dead body. This time the victim is a 15 year old boy. Amazingly we even witness the moment he takes his world famous Pieta photograph.


With all the voice overs from Duterte about wanting to kill drug users and pushers and from various media reciting the body count one is left with the distinct impression that the man in this photo, Michael Siaron, is an EJK victim done in by the cops or The Group. The filmmaker never tells the audience that Michael was a drug pusher and that his killer was a man who worked for a drug syndicate named Nesty Santiago. Whether or not you buy the PNP's assertion of that the filmmaker should have included that information somewhere in the film.  Perhaps at the end where they include the following tidbits:

"Police collusion with extrajudicial killings was noted in Amnesty's 2017 report which cited senior police figures as the source."
As far as covering both sides of the conflict we never hear a single word from the police in their defence. We only hear from the journalists and the alleged assassins. At just past the thirty minute mark the film takes a surprising twist and leaves the Philippines altogether. We see Raffy Lerma as a guest on Democracy Now, a radio show out of NYC, and we see him at a bar speaking to the Foreign Correspondents Club in Bangkok. The last 10 minutes of the film is basically Raffy Lerma the Crusading Journalist. His pictures will stop the killings.

At 30:25 the film shows us an art installation by Carlo Gabuco. On the wall are photographs of the dead. In the centre of the room is a blue chair.  You sit in the chair and listen to a girl all about the death of her father.  It is only then you realise the chair you are sitting in has a bullet hole and is the chair in which he was killed.
Curated by Erwin Romulo, with photography by Carlo Gabuco, music by Juan Miguel Sobrepeña, sound system design by Mark Laccay, and lighting design by Lyle Sacris, the chilling exhibit is set in a dimly lit room at the fair’s venue. The entire left side of the wall displays hundreds of Gabuco’s photos of various killings and the bloody aftermath of the president’s war on drugs. To recreate the feeling of stepping into a crime scene, Sacris hung up a few dangling lights that rotated and flickered, while Sobrepeña provided an eerie background noise to accompany the heart-wrenching scene in each of the photos and Laccay designed the sound system, which played Christine's voice recording.

https://www.townandcountry.ph/out-about/arts-culture/art-fair-philippines-2018-everyday-impunity-a00184-20180302
Exploitation or art?  You decide! It is certainly not nightcrawling.

The best parts of this entire film are the brief times we spend with The Group.  Who are these people? How did the filmmaker get access to them? Why did they give this access? Why isn't the film all about them? At one point we even get a first person perspective as they go on a mission to kill. The screen turns green as the night vision comes on.  The target is spotted. And then....I won't spoil it for you but this footage raises so many ethical and practical questions. Did the filmmaker supply them with a camera? Does The Group have their own cameras and do thy regularly film their work? Is it morally proper or even lawful for a documentarian to get an assassin squad to film their activities so he can use it in his documentary?

It is rather callous and hard-hearted to be making a documentary about the victims of the drug war and to film their alleged assassins prepping like beauty queens getting ready for a pageant. Other words spring to mind like disingenuous, exploitative, cynical. It is rather unbelievable that these men actually are a group of assassins one of whom claims to be working as a tour guide during the day. Take the testimony of "Blix."

Starting at 23:09 we here the following from "Blix" who is a member of The Group.
In the beginning it was still good. We took down many wanted people but there was one time the police covered up for us. We hit the wrong guy. It was a mistake. We planted drugs and guns on the victim so our group wouldn't be blamed. It was the police who created our group. They co-ordinate our operations. 
He then shows a video on his phone and says:
These are members of my group. They've been arrested on TV but it's just for the cameras. These guys are all back with us now. They're free. They were all set free. Those police operations - don't believe them. The news - it's all lies. 
The video "Blix" shows us is from CNN.  Here is what see in the film.


Blurring out the face of PNP Chief Bato is a rather strange editorial choice. I gather the CNN logo was blurred so CNN does not come around asking for money to use their video. Here is the original.


"Blix's" story is easily verifiable. All one has to do is check the jail records to find out whether or not Manuel Murillo, Marco Morallos, and Alfredo Alejan were released. The group these men claimed to be part of is the CSG or Confederate Sentinels Group. That would mean "Blix" is also a part of the CSG and that the PNP created the CSG. If I had the resources I would certainly check out his story. Did the filmmaker do that? I certainly challenge any journalist or anyone with the proper access who has watched this film or read this review to verify what Blix has told us. The truth or falsity of his story makes or breaks the conceit of this film which is that the PNP is behind all the killings. At least all the killings The Group claims to have committed.

Overall this film is a real disappointment. I was expecting an hour or so of gritty Manila nighttime shots with photojournalists crawling from crime scene to crime scene documenting the dead. What I got was Raffy Lerma boasting that he can change the world with his photographs and a lot of other pointless fluff. There is even a bit about press freedom. Why? In a movie that is supposed to be "an unflinching exposé of Philippines President Duterte’s war on drugs" it is completely out of place and that juxtaposition is the problem with the documentary as a whole. This film lacks focus. In contrast On the President's Orders found a subject and stuck with it. The filmmaker, Alexander Mora, was in the country for months documenting and it is difficult to believe this is the best of his hundreds of hours of footage. Perhaps the blame lies on the producer Joanna Natasegara.

A lot more could be said but I will end with one last thing. The film is available to stream on the National Geographic website but only if you live in the USA.


While I torrented my copy from the usual place not everyone knows how to do that. What is the point of this film and its accompanying discussion guide if Filipinos cannot watch it? On the Take Action page Rappler is listed as a resource to get information about the Philippines' war on drugs but Rappler would be insignificant to anyone outside the country. The film is clearly intended to be a rallying call that inspires people to take action so it seems rather odd to not make the film available in the Philippines.

Friday, December 27, 2019

Retards in the Government 134

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


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1203899/ca-restores-murder-case-vs-ex-palawan-gov-in-gerry-ortega-slay
The Court of Appeals (CA) has revived the murder charge against former Palawan Governor Mario Joel Reyes over the 2011 killing of broadcaster-environmentalist Gerry Ortega. 
In its 17-page amended decision dated November 28, the appellate court also ordered a Palawan court to issue a warrant of arrest against Reyes. 
Reyes and his brother, former Coron town mayor Mario Reyes, were among the primary accused in the death of Ortega, who was shot and killed by a lone assailant while shopping in a used-clothing store in Puerto Princesa City in 2011. 
The former Palawan governor was released from jail in January 2018, after the CA ruled to stop of the trial due to lack of evidence. 
However, the latest CA decision, penned by Associate Justice Marie Christine Azcarraga-Jacob, set aside its January 2018 ruling, reinstating the case and directing the Palawan Regional Trial Court (RTC) to issue a warrant of arrest against Reyes. 
In issuing the decision, Azcarraga-Jacob argued that it was too early for the Court to decide whether or not there was enough evidence to pursue the trial. 
“Thus, the proper course of action is not to dismiss the case but to proceed to trial. The Court, at this particular stage of the proceedings, cannot arrogate upon itself the task of dwelling on factual and evidentiary matters,” the decision reads.
First the CA says there is not enough evidence to go to trial.  Now they say it is too early to decide if there is not enough evidence and it's best to go to trial!  The flip-flopping of justice in the Philippines.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1203795/probe-sought-on-secret-pact-between-cadiz-water-district-and-villar-group
A former Negros Occidental congressman is asking President Duterte and the Ombudsman to investigate what he calls a “very anomalous” and “secretive” contract entered into by the Cadiz City Water District (CCWD) and PrimeWater Infrastructure Corp. of the Villar group. 
“I am having my legal consultants look into the possibility of also filing cases against those involved, before the Ombudsman,” said former second district representative Manuel Puey on Thursday. 
“I will use whatever resources I have to uncover whatever anomaly exists,” Puey added. 
Puey, a resident of Cadiz City, said what he found very anomalous was that the agreement “was so secretive nobody knew anything about it.” 
On Wednesday, he demanded a meeting with the officers of PrimeWater and CCWD, and among those present were the water district’s general manager Jesus Pedro Zaldarriaga, chairman of the board Sergio “Acute” Tabanao, and director Angelo Vargas. 
Puey said he did not know the contents of the contract since it was not made public during the meeting. No bidding was also conducted, he said. 
He said the CCWD officials intimated that they entered into a service contract, but no details were provided. 
“The water district officials are accountable to the people and should disclose what was contained in the contract they signed with PrimeWater,” Puey said.
The Villar Group is owned by Manule Villar who is the husband of Senator Cynthia Villar.  The Villars are oligarchs.  Since Duterte is against oligarch it would only seem to reason that he would go after them but in this case it is a former Congressman who has vowed to investigate this anomalous contract.

Go admitted that the President is having difficulty in choosing the next PNP chief as all candidates are qualified. 
Duterte is not looking for the best one, but the most honest one, Go added. 
(All the candidates are qualified. The President is having a hard time choosing. He is looking for the almost perfect candidate, the most honest.)
They say a good man is hard to find.  In the Philippines an honest public servant is impossible to find!

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1204996/57-cebu-city-employees-tested-positive-for-illegal-drug-use
The number of Cebu City Hall employees found positive for illegal drug use has reached 57. 
Jonah John Rodriguez, head of the Cebu City Office of Substance Abuse Prevention (Cosap), said 56 employees tested positive for methamphetamine hydrochloride or shabu while one tested positive for marijuana. 
The random drug test was conducted by the Cosap since Nov. 11. 
Rodriguez said they have submitted the results of the drug test to a laboratory in Manila for confirmation, as well as to the City Legal Office. 
“These employees will be called to the city legal office, and it is up to the city legal office what to do with them,” he said.
That's 57 people who will soon be out of a job.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1205154/bucor-workers-asks-duterte-to-fire-chief-for-corruption
In an open letter, unidentified and “concerned BuCor officials and employees” have called on President Duterte to fire Gerald Bantag for committing “other forms of graft and corrupt practices in the highest order,” citing instances in which he allegedly abused his authority. 
“This will be your greatest Christmas gift to BuCor, Mr. President, Sir!” they said. 
In particular, the group said they felt offended by Bantag’s “sweeping generalization” that “95 percent” of the around 31,000 BuCor officials and employees were corrupt, “without any bases or facts to support it.” 
According to them, during staff meetings, Bantag “keeps on cursing BuCor officials and employees and displays unprofessional and unethical conduct.” 
“Let it be known that the BuCor officials and employees fully support the changes that DG Bantag is undertaking. But equally, we resist and condemn the wanton violations that he committed and is continuously committing in carrying out said changes,” they said. 
Asked for comment, Col. Gabriel Chaclag, BuCor spokesperson, said they “would look into the group’s claims” although he dismissed the open letter as being written by “disgruntled [BuCor] officers who were relieved from their posts.” 
“The mere fact that they did not identify themselves make their claims questionable,” he stressed.
The BuCor chief accuses BuCor officials and employees of being corrupt and an anonymous group of BuCor employees accuses the BuCor Chief of being corrupt. The circle of life?
https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1089462

Unidentified gunmen riding on a motorbike ambushed Tuesday Vice Mayor Akmad M. Ampatuan of Shariff Aguak, Maguindanao, police said. 
Technical Sgt. Omar Dirangaren, Shariff Aguak police desk officer, said Ampatuan, the father of Shariff Aguak Mayor Marop Ampatuan, was on board a red Toyota Innova(LFT-737) heading home from the town hall when the suspects opened fire around 1 p.m. along the national highway in Barangay Poblacion. 
Attempted assassination on a Vice Mayor by motorcycle assassins.

A police chief and his driver were killed during an ambush by armed men past 6 p.m. Monday Pagayawan town, Lanao del Sur, an official said. 
Lanao del Sur police director, Col. Madzgani Mukaram, identified the police officer as Executive Master Sgt. Amen Lucman Macalangan, the police chief of Binidayan town, while the driver is identified as Ramel Pangcatan. 
Murakam said their two companions on the vehicle--police non-uniform personnel Asliah Adiong and another police, Patrolman Nasser Arafat-- were unhurt. 
Mukaram said the victims were returning to Binidayan from a weekly oversight meeting at the provincial police headquarters in Marawi City when they were waylaid. 
Ignes said few days after Macalangan was assigned as officer-in-charge of the Binidayan town police, the latter had sought help from the military after he received threats that his police station would be harassed because of the smuggled cigarettes and illegal logs the police had seized.
Police Chief assassinated likely because he confiscated smuggled cigarettes and illegal logs. 
https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1089475
A rookie police officer and his friend died in a shooting incident during a drinking and videoke session in Victorias City, Negros Occidental on Christmas Eve. 
Police identified the fatalities as Patrolman Dionel Lutao, a member of the Regional Mobile Force Battalion - Western Visayas Reconnaissance Company; and James Karl Sernal, both 26. 
Lt. Col. Mary Rose Pico, chief of the Victorias City Police Station, said witnesses told investigators that during the group’s get-together in a friend’s residence at about 8:05 p.m. on Tuesday, Lutao’s firearm went off, hitting Sernal in the process. 
Lutao then went outside, was heard firing his gun three times, and was found sprawled on the ground bloodied. 
“There was no exchange of words, argument, fight or commotion,” Pico said in a radio interview. 
Sernal’s body was still undergoing autopsy and post-mortem examination, but an initial report indicated that he was hit in the mouth. 
“So far, based on our investigation, nobody can tell how it happened. Nobody has seen how the gun was fired that led to the situation,” Pico said.
This is a rather strange case but the fact is this cop should not have been at a videoke bar and drinking while in possession of his gun. What was he thinking!?


https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1089372
A personnel of the Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP) here died while another was wounded after they stabbed each other following the station’s Christmas party that ended around 2 a.m. on Monday. 
The fatality was identified as Isaac Cabana and the wounded, Cornelio Silva, who both have the rank of Fire Officer 3. 
Initial police investigation showed the two firefighters remained at the venue, just in front of the city fire station on San Juan Street, Barangay 8, after the celebration ended. 
Maj. Sherlock Gabana, chief of Police Station 2, said Cabana sustained a wound in the neck and was declared dead at a hospital. 
Silva is being treated for abdomen and back wounds, he added. 
Gabana said their other colleagues saw them “hugging” each other, and then found the two already injured.
Whatever happened alcohol was probably involved. I don't know for sure but I would imagine firefighters are not allowed to consume alcohol at the station. What if a call comes in and they have to break up the party to go fight a fire?
A total of 2,352 inmates convicted of heinous crimes and ordered by President Duterte to surrender have been released through the good conduct time allowance (GCTA), the Department of Justice (DOJ) said yesterday. 
The number of inmates released was 428 more than the original list of 1,914 names provided by the Bureau of Corrections (BuCor).  
“Of that number, the DOJ assisting the BuCor confirmed the release of 463 PDLs (persons deprived of liberty). BuCor, based on their own assessment released 364 (PDLs). So, in total, 827 have been actually released from the 2,352 who surrendered,” DOJ Assistant Secretary Neal Vincent Bainto said. 
However, Bainto said he could not confirm if the remaining 1,525 PDLs were unqualified to benefit from the GCTA.  
“Actually the process is still ongoing. But we think that probably a good number of the remaining surrenderers will be re-incarcerated,” he added. 
That is a lot of criminals released and then surrendered.  And out of this number only 825 have been re-released.  But that is not the whole story.  Rappler wrote a whole exposé on this travesty of justice. The BurCor was overwhelmed and many surrenderers have died in custody.  Read it here.

https://www.rappler.com/newsbreak/in-depth/247136-bilibid-returnees-die-duterte-administration-blunders-part-1
The original number on the return list was 1,914. As of December 13, there were 2,352 who returned to prison. Of them, 827 were set free – some just a week ago – because they turned out to be qualified for freedom after all. 
The implementation of Duterte's arrest order was doomed from the beginning. 
At the BuCor offices in Bilibid, documentation chief Ramoncito Roque and his staff scrambled to prepare a list of prisoners who should be returned to prison. They had to comb through over 22,000 names who were granted GCTA. 
Duterte gave them 15 days. 
Meanwhile, cops who had watched the broadcast waited. The President was unequivocal in saying that they could only make arrests 15 days later. But when the deadline came and cops began their hunt at midnight, the list they had been given led them mostly nowhere. 
Tagged by a squad of reporters, the cops dove into a maze of shanties, knocking and pleading for information. By sunrise, they found only one. Another's home had already been torn down years before. One was already living in Bulacan, according to residents who knew him. Another one was dead.
There is too much to quote from here.  Read it.

Thursday, December 26, 2019

Standing in Trucks 11

No matter where you go you see them. Pinoys standing or sitting in the beds of trucks or on top of trucks. 












It's very dangerous and foolish as this video from India shows.

Wednesday, December 25, 2019

MLM Scam Products: Juice and Coffee

Do you like coffee but wish it was more healthy for you? Do you want to be white without the hassle of toxic creams laden with mercury? Have I got the products for you!




Experience health and beauty altogether in just a drink pack with hug quality fruits and vegetables extracts mixed together in a delicious fruity twist. Helps whiten skin with a slimming effect for guilt free indulgence.
Yes now you too can be white just with a simple sip of Lipoglow! Lipoglow will slim your figure and turn your skin white just like your favourite movie stars. It's got all the whitening ingredients like glutathione and collagen!  Mmmm yum!  Who does not like drinking collagen? Spike your coffee with a little collagen and you got yourself a Special Beauty Blend Beverage.


Collagen is not the only special ingredient in this coffee mix.



Tongkat Ali, Gotu Kola, Stevia, Agaricus Mushroom, Saw Palmetto, plus 12 fruits and vegetable extracts!  Now that's a proper coffee. Better than a hot black cup of joe at 6 am to kickstart the day. But if you are looking for an espresso drink there is also Mangosteen Cappuccino Coffee.

https://www.pmscoffee.com/products/mangosteen
With mangosteen, spirulina, brown sugar, ganoderma, gravitol, and gotu kota you will be losing weight and improving your health in no time!

If none of these drink mixes catches your fancy there are plenty more at the PMS website.

https://www.pmscoffee.com
Who needs boring real coffee with all that caffeine when you can drink these miracle mixes which will improve your health? Be sure to check the kiosks in the mall. They might be well stocked with Green Coffee and slimming green teas and all the other miracle drinks like King's Herbal.