Friday, January 17, 2020

Retards in the Government 137

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




DFA Secretary Teddy Locsin acting like a fool in public.


A barangay councilman was gunned down outside the house of the mayor in Alburquerque town in Bohol last Thursday night. 
Police identify the fatality as Wilfredo Plaza, a councillor of Barangay East Poblacion, Alburquerque. 
Police Col. Jonathan Cabal, chief of the Bohol Provincial Police Office, said Plaza was supposed to visit Alburquerque Mayor Don Ritchie Buates when he was attacked past 7 p.m. 
“The attack happened outside the mayor’s house. It looked like the perpetrators waited for the victim,” said Cabal. 
Witnesses told police that the two assailants rode a motorcycle. The back rider got off when the victim arrived and repeatedly shot him with a .45 caliber pistol. 
The victim suffered gunshot wounds in the chest, stomach, right foot and lower back. He was declared dead at the Ace Medical Center – Bohol in Tagbilaran City.
Another village councillor shot dead by motorcycle assassins.
https://cnnphilippines.com/regional/2020/1/11/Baliguian-Vice-Mayor-Gani-Esmali-ambush.html
Baliguian Vice Mayor Gani Esmali and two of his companions were shot dead in an ambush in Zamboanga del Norte Saturday morning. 
Police said more or less five unknown gunmen attacked Esmali's vehicle upon reaching Sitio Barazon, Barangay Sta. Maria in Siocon town at 11:20 a.m.
Another local official shot dead by assassins.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1211692/village-councilor-in-quezon-nabbed-for-illegal-firearms
Police on Saturday arrested a village councilor for alleged illegal possession of firearms in Guinayangan town in Quezon province. 
Police reports said Hilario Laluon, 52, an incumbent councilor of Barangay (village) Tikay was arrested after policemen, armed with a search warrant, raided his house at around 7:30 a.m. 
Police seized a caliber 22 rifle, a caliber .45 pistol with magazine and six bullets, and assorted ammunition. Police said the guns are unlicensed.
Another local official arrested for illegal firearms.


https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1090576
A senior state auditor of the Commission on Audit in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (COA-BARMM) was killed in a drive-by shooting incident here Friday. 
Maj. Rustom Pastolero, Police Station 2 chief, identified the victim as Guiara Bagundang Akmad, 57, COA-BARMM’s supervising auditor assigned in the province of Maguindanao.  
Pastolero said Akmad was with her husband in the vehicle when shot by one of two men riding in tandem in a motorcycle at about noon Friday while they were exiting from the Citymall car park along Avelina Street, Barangay Rosary Heights 7 here.
This lady, who was a COA employee for the BARMM, was assassinated in a mall parking lot.
https://www.philstar.com/nation/2020/01/11/1983820/nearly-50-philippines-cops-overweight-obese-pnp
Almost half of the country’s 190,000-strong police force are overweight and obese, Philippine National Police (PNP) officer-in-charge Lt. Gen. Archie Gamboa said yesterday. 
He said only 102,600 police officers or 54 percent are at their ideal weight while nine percent or 17,100 are obese. The rest are overweight, he added. 
The overweight and obese police officers face “consequences,” including not being promoted if they fail to slim down, according to Gamboa. 
He said he aims to implement a rule that police officers cannot attend mandatory schooling courses, which are required for promotion, if they are overweight. 
Gamboa said this consequence is meant to compel police officers to lead a healthy lifestyle.
Why not just form PT squads?  Everyone can exercise together.


https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/280785/police-nab-city-government-worker-in-a-drug-bust-in-mandaue
An eco-enforcer of the Mandaue City Environment and Natural Resources Office (MCenro) and his alleged supplier of illegal drugs were nabbed by police in a buy-bust operation in Barangays Tingub and Cubacub, Mandaue City at dawn today, January 12, 2020. 
Arrested were Jennifer Seville, 40, his brother-in-law Julito Moca, 46, errand boy Archie Apor, 21, and their supplier of illegal drugs Francis Ranile, 39, according Police Major Hugo Rio Ipong, chief of the Canduman Police Station of the Mandaue City Police Office
In the Philippines Jennifer is a man's name.
https://www.sunstar.com.ph/article/1839691

A VILLAGE councilman was shot dead by six unidentified assailants on Saturday evening, January 11, 2020 at Purok Kasanag 1, Barangay 26, Bacolod City. 
The fatality was identified as kagawad Romeo Canlas, 33, of Barangay 2.  
Police Lieutenant Colonel Ariel Pico, spokesperson of Bacolod City Police Office (BCPO), said on Sunday, January 12, Canlas was having a drinking session along with his friends at about 9:25 p.m. Saturday at the compound of kagawad Rino Dellarna of Barangay 26 when six armed men stormed the area and fired at the victim several times. 
“His friends were unharmed. He was the only target of the suspects. The suspects ordered them to drop to the ground and killed the victim,” Pico said.
It's the same old story. Man is having a few drinks with his pals when assassins show up and gun him down. Who hasn't had this happen to them?


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1212867/palace-orders-probe-vs-pnp-for-alleged-overpriced-speed-guns
President Rodrigo Duterte has already removed the police force’s procurement power upon getting information that the purchase was overpriced. 
Duterte earlier disclosed that he called Interior Secretary Eduardo Año to be the procurement authority for the police force after he found out the PNP tried to buy radar speed guns for P950,000 per unit. 
The President said the radar speed guns only cost the Davao city government P10,000 per unit, way cheaper than the ones procured by the PNP. 
“He’s angry about it when he discovered it. He could not believe that the radar would cost that much. In Davao City, it cost them only P10,000,” Panelo said. 
In light of this, Duterte warned other government agencies to stop corruption. He also expressed desire to establish a bureau of supply to take care of the government’s procurements just like what the Marcos administration had before.
A bureau of supply might not be a bad idea. Have everything centralised. The PNP will never be a clean organisation. But honestly a P10,000 radar gun?  That is $200.  Sounds too cheap.


https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/281183/police-need-deeper-coordination-with-bjmp-to-solve-drug-problem
Police Colonel Jonathan Abella, chief of the MCPO told CDN Digital that one of the reasons why they struggle in cutting the ties between detained suppliers of illegal drugs and their distributors is the limited access they have when it comes to extending their investigation inside the BJMP. 
According to Abella, their intelligence monitoring is limited because of their failure to have the BJMP provide them with the names of alleged drug suppliers who are inside penal facilities and tagged as such by drug suspects that were apprehended during buy-bust operations. 
The bigger problem, however, Abella said,  lies in the verification of the information. 
Abella said that they wanted to know from the BJMP the identity of the visitors of the detained drug lords since they are usually the ones tasked to relay information about drug transactions outside.
It goes without saying that cooperation amongst all PHL law enforcement organisations is required to fight the drug war. So why do the PDEA, PNP, NBI, BJMP, and every other organisation refuse to do this?
https://www.panaynews.net/3-policemen-suspended-for-entering-nightclub/
The three police officers who entered a nightclub here last year and created a scene were slapped with a two-month suspension. 
Police Brigadier General Rene Pamuspusan, regional police director, confirmed having approved the suspension of Police Chief Master Sergeant Jose Dingal, Police Senior Master Sergeant Fernil Mark Mallorca and Police Staff Sergeant Ralph Mabuque. 
The three were assigned at the Regional Personnel Headquarters Support Unit of the Police Regional Office 6 (PRO-6) at the time they were found to have entered Club 88 Disco Pub and Restaurant on JM Basa Street, City Proper on June 25, 2019 and initially refused to pay for the P5,100 worth of food and drinks they ordered. 
Five months or on Jan. 9, 2019 before the three policemen entered Club 88 Disco Pub and Restaurant, then Philippine National Police director general Oscar Albayalde reminded all cops that they were prohibited from drinking in karaoke bars, nightclubs, pubs and other public places.
They did not want to pay their tab. P5,100 for three people is pretty expensive. That is 1,700 per person!  It's not clear if they entered in uniform or not.
https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/news/nation/722285/sandigan-suspends-minda-exec-for-bringing-hubby-to-work-seminar/story/
For allegedly bringing her husband to a safety seminar using government money, an official of the Mindanao Development Authority (MinDA) was slapped with a 90-day preventive suspension by the Sandiganbayan. 
State prosecutors are accusing Escano of giving her husband, Alan, undue advantage when she brought him to the Basic Occupational Safety and Health Course for Construction Site Officers held at the Ritz Hotel from March 16 to 20, 2015 instead of a certain Renato Buhat, Jr. 
Escano’s husband is not a MinDA employee, but the Ombudsman is alleging that Escano also used government funds to pay for her husband’s P6,000 registration fee as one of the delegates of the same safety and health course.
We all know that in the Philippines politics is a family business.


Sabio, 53, said he changed his mind about prosecuting the President for extrajudicial killings (EJKs) after he found that the political opposition had no moral ascendancy to accuse Duterte. 
He also admitted that his turnaround was motivated partly by the “pittance” he allegedly received as payment from opposition figures for his services. 
Sabio was accompanied to a lawyer’s office where he signed the statement by Duterte supporter and defeated senatorial candidate Lorenzo Gadon, who showed reporters excerpts of the document and photos of Sabio signing it. 
Sabio told the ICC prosecutor that he refused to be used as a tool by Duterte’s critics led by former Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV, with whom he had a falling-out over the discredited “Bikoy” videos, and detained Sen. Leila de Lima. 
“I would be given a pittance when they needed me for the political propaganda, and then later I would be told that there was no more budget due to financial constraints,”he said. 
“The bottomline is I was disillusioned and disenchanted with the actions of Senator Trillanes, Senator De Lima, Father [Albert] Alejo, and the rest of the LP-led opposition in that Bikoy scandal,” Sabio told the Inquirer in a text message. 
“They are using lies for their political agenda and I was almost dragged into that sedition case and charged with kidnapping because of them, so I realized they no longer had any moral upper hand and ascendancy against extrajudicial killings,” he added.
Again more backstabbing nonsense that obscures everything happening.  What is happening? What is the truth here? That the ICC complaint is political propaganda based on zero facts and Sabio had a change of conscience? Or that Sabio is angry that he is owed money by Trillanes? Does he really think, or know, that the Liberal Party is behind the Bikoy videos? Whatever the case his withdrawing from the case will not have any bearing on the case at all.


A former mayor of Alburquerque town was arrested on Wednesday yet for illegal possession of firearms and ammunition. 
Elpren Charles “Bobec” Tungol, 32,  yielded an M-14 rifle and ammunition during a raid on his house at a village called East Poblacion in Albuquerque by police. 
But an unlicensed caliber .45 pistol was found in Elpren’s possession. His father yielded no unlicensed firearm. 
Cabal said Elpren was tagged as suspect in the killing of Wilfrido Plaza, a village councilor and trusted aide of incumbent Alburquerque Mayor Don Ritchie Buates. 
Elpren posted bail but remained in jail for incomplete documents.
It's not clear if the Elpren has been charged with murder or if he merely a suspect.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1213932/village-watchman-student-nabbed-for-possessing-shabu
Through an anti-criminality operation conducted at about 12:30 a.m. Thursday, police arrested Quirino Magbanua, a village watchman of Brgy. 45, Pasay City; and Joseph Burgos, an 18-year-old student. 
Seized from the suspects were six small sachets containing suspected shabu, weighing about six grams and with a street value of about P40,800.
Another village watchman arrested for drugs.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/281757/no-trucks-yet-to-remove-septic-wastes-from-kalunasan-jail-facilities

It has been five months since Barangay Kalunasan was placed under a state of calamity due to the foul smell emanating from the septic tanks of the jail facilities located in the village. 
But up until Wednesday, January 15, the inductor trucks with suctions pumps, which were supposed to be used to collect the wastes from the Cebu Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Center (CPDRC) and Cebu City Jail, are yet to be purchased. 
The Cebu City Council has allotted P19.5 million to find solutions to the foul smell emanating from the two detention centers. 
In August 2019, Councilor Nestor Archival, chairman of the council’s Task Force Kalunasan, said a portion of the amount will be used to buy suction machines, septic trucks, and septic tanks to collect the human wastes from CPDRC and Cebu City Jail. 
BAC chairperson Lawyer June Maratas, who appeared before the council, said the process took time because they could not bypass the bidding procedures or else they would violate the rules of the Commission on Audit (COA). 
“The first bidding was a failure because no one bought bidding documents,” said Maratas. 
The “failure” meant that the BAC would need to rebid the two trucks. 
If the bidding is deemed as a failure again, the BAC may enter into negotiated procurement where the BAC seeks for distributors of the trucks and they will be able to negotiate the price. 
With the extended delay, the City Council decided to hire third-party haulers to collect the wastes from the two prisons. 
Lawyer John Jigo Dacua, head of the Department of Public Services (DPS), said they currently employ third party haulers to collect the wastes while the trucks are still not available. 
Dacua said they can extend the contract for two months, or until March 2020, as funds are still available for the haulers. 
On August 2019, the Council allotted P480,000 for immediate release to hire third-party haulers to collect the septic wastes. 
The Council agreed to extend the contract for the waste hauling for the next two months and asked the BAC to update them not he purchase of the inductor trucks. 
Archival said he hoped that the foul smell in Kalunasan would be resolved by March 2020.
A prime example of the red tape LGU's must go through to procure vehicles and other equipment. This situation raises a lot of other questions such as how filthy is that jail? In the meantime the people are forced to suffer breathing in the pestiferous miasma emanating from the jail.

The over 400 persons deprived of liberty (PDL) returnees who surrendered following President Rodrigo Duterte’s call because of the good conduct time allowance (GCTA) controversy will have to wait two more months to know if they are already entitled to release. 
Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra said Wednesday the Bureau of Corrections (BuCor) requested that they are given until March to process the remaining 400 plus PDL returnees due to lack of manpower. 
“Sabi nila, they do not want to make any mistake again,” Guevarra said at the Kapihan sa Manila Bay Forum.
"They do not want to make any mistake again." The whole GCTA issue was a debacle from start to finish. From people being released who should not to the President telling all who had been released to surrender, even those who qualified, with no legal basis. The government messed up big time and as always it is the people who suffer the consequences.

Thursday, January 16, 2020

What Good is a Filipino College Education? Part 2

In a previous look at the benefits of a Filipino college education I showed all the great jobs one can get with a diploma in the Philippines such as gas station attendant and Dunkin' Donuts delivery truck driver. Now it is time to look past those wonderful jobs. It's time to look outside the country because that sheepskin certifying you have a bona fide Filipino college education is a magic ticket out of this joint.



If you study hard and ace all the exams to earn a degree in any sort of hospitality course the door is open for you to work as a waiter in Dubai.  Serving rich Arabs in a hot desert country thousands of miles away from your family and friends, what's not to like? According to the this source the average  monthlysalary for a waiter in Dubai is approximately 1,500 AED which is equivalent to 20,700 Pesos. 

If you want to know what being a waiter in Dubai entails you can read a job description here. It sure isn't a walk in the park. But if you studied for a degree in hospitality then learning the ins-and-outs of a restaurant is not so far out of your league. Be thankful you didn't end up like Randy De Ocampo.
In his report, Dicang cited the case of one Randy de Ocampo who had requested POLO assistance about his situation. 
Ocampo complained that on June 30, 2012, he sent a copy of his passport via e-mail to a friend in Kuwait and after just three days, or on July 4, 2012, he received his commercial visa by courier under the sponsorship of Al-Wazan United Company for Trading and Contracting. On July 27, 2012, De Ocampo arrived in Kuwait on a one-month commercial visa. 
Dicang said De Ocampo did not report to his sponsor because he could not make up his mind about working with the company as a masseur under its branch Philippine Spa. 
He said he realized that this was not the kind of employment he wanted for himself, he being a forestry graduate from the University of the Philippines. Soon, we received a report that De Ocampo’s visa had expired,” Dicang said.
https://globalnation.inquirer.net/52930/filipinos-warned-against-working-in-kuwait-on-commercial-visas
What a crisis of conscience for Randy! Should he waste his degree in forestry to work at a salon in Kuwait? But it was too late as he was already in country before he decided he did not want to work as a masseur. How did he end up in the position of choosing to become a masseur in Kuwait anyway? Must be one heck of a story.

On the other hand you could get a job in the field you studied like Gulliver Banares.
Gulliver Banares, 35, took the 14th place prize and flew in the day before from Selangor, Malaysia where he works with BGMC Corp. Gulliver, who earned a Mechanical Engineering degree at Adamson, has been an OFW for six years and comes home twice a year for a maximum of 10 days each vacation. He and wife Esmeralda have two daughters, 16 and 11. It was perfect timing that Gulliver was in town for a home leave.
https://www.philstar.com/sports/2019/12/24/1979470/worth-all-hard-work
Gulliver has been an OFW for six years and only comes home to see his family 20 days each year.  That means in six years he has only seen his family 120 out of 2,190 days. It is true that a man has to do what he has to do to take care of his family but spending only 20 days a year with them is rather awful. That is hardly any time to spend with one's family. Dad is basically an absentee father. He better be careful he has not been made a cuckold.

Finally let's not forget the nurses. A nursing degree will open doors that would otherwise remain sealed shut for eternity.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1088631
"They need 30,000 nurses, hospital workers, medical workers. That's a big number," Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III in an interview Wednesday. 
He, however, clarified that the 30,000 job offers are not solely for Filipino health workers. 
"They want us Filipinos. In their order of preference, number one is the Philippines," the DOLE chief said.
30,000 foreign workers is bad for Germany but great for Filipinos who are the German's first round draft pick. This is no place to lament the fall of Germany and the rest of Europe. Why not take every advantage you can if someone is willing to give it to you? But how easy can it be to be a Filipino in Germany? Many Filipinos do not speak English as good as they claim. Nose bleeding, anyone? Navigating German accented English, not mention actually learning German, will be an extra task on top of all the regular nursing duties.

But I hear it's worth it. From what I am told most freshly graduated nurses work a year-long internship with no pay! That is slave labor. No wonder there is a shortage of nurses in the Philippines.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1072188
The Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) is planning to decrease the deployment of nurses to other countries, Secretary Silvestre Bello said on Wednesday. 
Bello said they are looking at the possibility of lessening the number of medical professionals, including nurses, being sent overseas. 
"All the while, I thought there is an oversupply of nurses. But I just learned that those graduating with nursing degrees and have passed the Board only train for two years and will go (abroad)," he added. 
Bello said the government should do something by increasing the salaries of nurses for them to stay in the country. 
"In order for them to not want to work abroad and just stay here, we should also consider increasing their salaries. And the President appears amenable to giving them that," he said.
Having been to several hospitals I can guarantee it's not only the pay that is pushing nurses to seek work abroad.  It is also the horrendously unsanitary working conditions.

If you are a college student remember just slug on through it. Don't give up. Get your sheepskin and get out of here!

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Electrical Pole Fires Persist

Here is a great article from Iloilo's Panay News.

https://www.panaynews.net/pole-fires-persist-bfp-iloilo-city-records-five-more-during-holiday-season/
Electricity pole fires persist in this southern city. During the holidays there were five such incidents from Dec. 23, 2019 to Jan. 2, 2020 and according to the Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP) the poles belonged to Panay Electric Co. (PECO) whose power distribution franchise expired on Jan. 19, 2019 yet. 
All of these electricity pole fires happened at night, according to the BFP. Fortunately there were no reported injuries or deaths.
Yeah fortunately! Just the possibility of serious injuries and deaths as the electrical lines burn and transformers maybe explode. Why do you think this is happening? Can you guess? I bet you can!
Two months ago the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) conducted an investigation on the series of pole fires here upon the prodding of Mayor Jerry Treñas who had expressed concern over the possible threat to public safety of “inadequately-maintained lines, power outages and hazardous electric posts.” 
The ERC eventually came out with its findings: PECO’s protective devices were not properly rated and designed, some of its poles were leaning and in unsafe positions, and that some electricity meters were clustered and installed in an Elevated Metering Center without securing prior ERC approval.
The "possible threat" to public safety? "Possible?" Sounds like we are in the realm of actuality now. And all because of inadequately maintained lines and hazardous electric posts as well as leaning poles, inadequately maintained lines, and clustered electricity meters. Like this from Bacolod?





Or how about like this from Iloilo?



Bacolod and Iloilo are the same when it comes to danger from the electrical grid and I suspect every other city and barangay in this nation is as well.

Let's continue the story. If you are not aware the story is that PECO lost it's right to provide power to Iloilo. This has actually led to murder! Here are my comments from a year ago when this occurred.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1070389/killing-of-anti-peco-bid-critic-councilors-bodyguards-arrested
Two bodyguards of an Iloilo City councilor were arrested at the Iloilo City Hall on Monday for the killing of the councilor’s estranged first cousin who had accused him of orchestrating a fake signature campaign against the city’s electric distributor. 
Mercedes had accused her cousin, the councilor, of being among those behind the gathering of fake signatures against Panay Electric Co. (Peco). 
The councilor, chair of the council’s committee on public utilities, was among the critics of Peco opposed to the renewal of its distribution franchise, which would expire on Jan. 19.
This is a potentially huge story with all the hallmarks of Philippine politics: corruption, family infighting, conspiracy, and murder. Someone wants PECO out so they can put their own company in and profit from raising electricity costs. Now a lady who was exposing this corruption of which her cousin was the alleged mastermind is dead. But no one cares. There is no P50 million reward and the lady is a nobody. Just another story to bury along with her body.
Now let's continue the story from the present.
PECO was then ordered to explain these which ERC considered as operational lapses. 
Franchise-less for almost a year now, PECO is operating merely by virtue of a provisional Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity (CPCN) issued by ERC. 
Congress refused to extend PECO’s franchise due to numerous consumer complaints arising from its ageing distribution system, including leaning electric poles, spaghetti-like hanging electricity lines, overbilling, and unprofessional handling of consumer complaints. 
Congress instead granted MORE Electric and Power Corp. (MORE Power) a 25-year power distribution franchise. There is, however, a two-year transition period to ensure uninterrupted service to consumers, thus the CPCN to PECO. 
According to Iloilo City fire marshal Christopher Regencia, of the 461 fire incidents recorded here in 2019, nearly half or 218 cases were pole fires. The rest were structural fires (121), rubbish fires (37), and vehicular fires (nine), among others. 
The reasons for these police fire incidents were dilapidated and ageing wooden poles and electrical wires and overloaded transformers of the 95 years old power utility PECO, according to the BFP. 
The tolerance of illegal connections or “jumper” was also a culprit to the fires caused by faulty electrical connections, it added. 
BFP clarified that only electrical cables could cause fires and not telephone or cable TV wires, contrary to PECO’s justification.
PECO is out because they are incompetent. Great. But guess what? When they leave those 95 year old power lines, electrical poles, and meter boxes will STILL be in place! So what is the point? Who cares if PECO is out or if they are penalised if the whole electrical system in Iloilo is not revamped in a major way? Does MORE Power have the money and the manpower to do that job?  Call me a skeptic but I seriously doubt it.

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Insurgency: Not Worth It

December is over which means the holiday season is finished which means the annual holiday truce between the AFP and NPA is now off. This might be the final holiday truce since the AFP is no longer inclined to recommend them.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1090200
"Until and unless they abandon armed struggle, we in the AFP are not inclined to recommend any national-level truce with these fork-tongued terrorists led by the likes of (Communist Party of the Philippines founder) Jose Maria Sison and his minions. They all lost contact with reality but enjoy the comforts and perks of a lavish life in the Netherlands," AFP spokesperson, Marine Brig. Gen. Edgard Arevalo, said in a statement.

Arevalo's statement came as the holiday truce between the government and the communist rebels, which started midnight of Dec. 23, 2019, ends before midnight Tuesday. 
"Never again!" the AFP spokesperson said when asked if there is a need to go on with a similar truce in the future. 
Arevalo noted that during the unilateral ceasefire, government forces had an Army trooper killed and six others were wounded in Labo, Camarines Norte.
Never again?  Really? Where have we heard that before?

2019

https://cnnphilippines.com/news/2019/12/11/AFP-holiday-truce-CPP-NPA-communist-rebels.html
“Because in the past, we are talking about historical records, every time that a ceasefire is being declared, they take advantage,” Arevalo told CNN Philippines’ The Source. 
“They start to recruit, refurbish, regroup, and research. We do not want them to be able to do that and take advantage of the season,” he added.
2018

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2018/12/05/1874452/afp-holiday-truce-npa-not-worth-it
“We are not inclined to recommend the said SOMO. We see in the past they have not been sincere in any suspension of military operations. They continue with their terroristic, criminal activities, extortion, harassment,” Arevalo said in a press briefing. 
He added: “Experience showed us that it’s not worth it.”
When did the AFP ever learn from experience? They continue to fight the NPA utilising the same tactics for the past 50 years. I do not know when the very first holiday truce was observed between the AFP and the NPA. 2012 is the earliest year I can find a truce on record.
The government and the Communist Party of the Philippines agreed to a 27-day holiday truce from Dec. 20, 2012, to Jan. 15, 2013, to help restart the peace process.
How many times will the peace process be restarted? Even the Office of the Presidential Adviser of the Peace Process (OPAPP) says the peace process is a non starter because of the CASER agreement.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1090521
The Philippines’ sovereignty would be put at a disadvantage if the government gives its nod to the communist movement’s “flawed” Comprehensive Agreement on Social Economic Reforms (CASER), Presidential Peace Adviser Carlito Galvez Jr. said on Friday.  
Galvez said there is no need for CASER, as it would only benefit the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) since the proposed deal is “irrelevant” and simply a “copycat of the programs” of the communist insurgents. 
“CASER is based on an obsolete framework and is no longer relevant since it is largely based on the pre-industrialization and pre-globalization era. It is a formula for the surrender of the national government’s integrity, as well as the state’s sovereignty,” he said in a press statement. 
“The CASER insists that the Philippine government surrenders its sovereignty and tramples on its own integrity by forcing upon the state outmoded and erroneous concepts that were conceived more than half a century ago,” Galvez added. 
Galvez made the remarks, as Communist Party of the Philippines founder Jose Maria Sison sought the passage of the proposed CASER as a precondition for the possible revival of talks between the national government and the CPP’s political wing, the National Democratic Front (NDF).
CASER is the Comprehensive Agreement on Social and Economic Reforms. Writing about this in 2018 I noted:
This document is 173 pages of broad and general calls for reform in industry, culture, agriculture, and other areas of the government and Philippine life. The one thing lacking is there are no methods of implementing these reforms. There is nothing exact. It's as vague as the term "social and economic reform." 
Also to be noted is that right in the introduction, written by Joma Sisson, is the claim that the Duterte administration is not sincere when it comes to real social and economic reforms. 
If Duterte does not think the CPP is sincere and if Sisson thinks Duterte is not sincere then what good are talks going to accomplish?
https://philippinefails.blogspot.com/2018/05/martial-law-backchannel-talks.html
These reforms are impossible to be implemented and if Joma Sison wants CASER to be implemented as a precondition for peace talks then peace talks are dead in the water. Why does the government  care about Joma anyway when he has been deemed irrelevant?

https://pia.gov.ph/news/articles/1031532
National Intelligence Coordinating Agency Regional Director Ariel Perlado emphasized the effectiveness of LPEs, adding that these make the founder of Communist Party Jose Maria Sison irrelevant. 
“In the local level we have already made interventions through the Regional Task Force,” he said.
If LPEs (localised peace engagements) are making progress in the war against the NPA then why involve Joma at all? 

http://tempo.com.ph/2019/12/08/joma-wont-be-arrested-if-he-returns-for-peace-talks/
Communist leader Jose Maria Sison will not be arrested if he agrees to resume the peace talks with the government in the country, Malacañang said yesterday. 
According to presidential spokesman Salvador Panelo, the government is prepared to suspend any pending arrest warrant against Sison and other local communist group officials who will take part in the peace negotiations.
Why would the government suspend his arrest warrant? Why even try to talk with the CPP? After 50 years the government should know by now that peace talks are worthless. Best to kill them all.  Better yet bribe them via E-CLIP.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1090287
"Returning to the fold of the law is still the better option for members of the New People’s Army (NPA) and Militia ng Bayan (MB) members rather than living in the mountains and fighting against more heavily equipped and better-trained government forces," Defense Undersecretary and Task Force Balik Loob (TFBL) chairperson Reynaldo Mapagu said in a statement. 
“If the NPA and MB members surface now, they are guaranteed to preserve their lives, and at the same time, can be reunited with their families,” Mapagu said. 
"They can also enroll in the E-CLIP and avail of its benefits, which are not only for them but for their family members as well,” Mapagu added. 
Benefits under the E-CLIP include cash assistance, education, livelihood training, housing, and employment assistance, as well as loan processing for business capital.
You know what I think? I think the AFP is lazy. Bribing terrorists to surrender is simply too easy. Much easier then fighting them in the jungles and much easier than building a legal case against their supporters. Remember last October when several people were arrested in Bacolod for providing material support and weapons to the NPA?  Six of the cases have been dismissed.

http://www.visayandailystar.com/2020/January/07/topstory3.htm
The judge, in his joint resolution, said government authorities in custody of the accused are directed to immediately release them as they have been languishing in detention since Oct. 31, 2019 unless they are held for some other lawful causes.  
Sayson said as early as Nov. 11, 2019 he issued an order giving the Bacolod City Prosecutor’s Office 10 days until Nov. 22 to submit the records of the applications for search warrants, affidavits of witnesses and the transcript of stenographic notes with searching questions and answers.  
The trial court prosecutor requested for a 30-day extension until December 18 which the court granted, Sayson said.  
The judge, on January 3, said 64 days later the prosecutor has failed to comply with the order of the court and confirmed non-compliance of the search warrant applicant.  
Thus he finds insufficient probable cause to issue a commitment order against all “inquested” accused for violation of RA 10591, the judge said. 
The government had 64 days and they could not even present a proper case against these people.  The judge dismissed the case without prejudice which means they can refile but why couldn't they present all the evidence in the timeframe of 64 days?  Complete incompetence. The prosecutors should be fired just like Lt. Col. Napoleon Pabon was sacked for releasing the doctored photograph of rebel surrenderees.


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1211458/army-officer-sacked-for-releasing-doctored-image-of-communist-rebels
An Army officer has been sacked for releasing a manipulated photo of alleged former communist rebels in Masbate town last December. 
Lt. Col. Napoleon Pabon, commanding officer of the 2nd Infantry Battalion of the 9th Infantry Division, was relieved of his post effective Jan. 7, Philippine Army spokesperson Lt. Col. Ramon Zagala said in a statement Friday. 
Pabon was said to have “admitted the mistake and took responsibility for the outcome of the photo manipulation.” 
Zagala said the Army is now reviewing its policies to institute necessary changes that will ensure that such mistakes will not happen again.
One might think the Army wants to make sure doctored photos are not released again. If you look at the fine print what it seems they really mean is to not release such obviously doctored photographs to the public.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1207338/ano-pnp-afp-to-be-more-cautious-in-releasing-photos-amid-manipulated-photo-incident
“The PNP and AFP commands have ordered its units to be more circumspect in releasing photos and information to the public and are already taking appropriate measures to ensure that such lapses will not happen again,” said Año in a statement. 
“Huwag nating bigyan ng dahilan ang mga kaaway ng estado na hanapan ng butas ang magandang programa natin para sa ating mga kababayan (Let’s not allow enemies of state to find lapses in the program for rebel returnees),” Año said.
Are the PNP and AFP interested in telling the truth to the public or are they covering up "lapses in the program for rebel returnees?" One solon wants to audit the E-CLIP program and find out just what is happening. After all millions are being spent to bribe NPA soldiers to surrender.

https://news.mb.com.ph/2019/12/29/gabriela-solon-wants-house-probe-on-governments-rebel-returnee-program/
“The government allocates millions of funds to E-CLIP each year and not a single audit or review has been made regarding its implementation,” she said in a statement, even as she scored the manipulated photo of alleged former rebels released by the Philippine Army. 
According to her, the E-CLIP, which has been allocated an additional P106.1 million as part of the DILG’s 2020 budget next year, has become “a fake rebel-and-firearms for-cash raket” by “corrupt” military officials and their cohorts from the local government units (LGUs). 
This year, the program has a funding of P260.4 million, she noted. 
“Each rebel returnee supposedly receives up to P165,000, including the maximum amount for firearms remuneration of P100,000 under the E-CLIP. But who determines if the rebel is fake or not? We fear that the program has become a milking cow for corrupt military men and partner LGUs as the total tally of rebel returnees is far higher than the estimated number of communist rebels,” she added. 
Brosas said the DILG and AFP should explain to Congress the supposed alleged irregularities in the implementation of E-CLIP. 
(They were telling us, there were 306 who surrendered this Holiday season on top of the hundreds who allegedly surrendered this year. Why is it that the number of those who surrendered is bigger than the actual number of rebels? The AFP and the DILG must explain to Congress this irregularity.) 
She recalled that exactly a year ago, Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana declared that there were around 8,000 rebels who surrendered to the government. 
“But the government keeps on saying that Communist rebels are down to just 4,000,” Brosas said.
Last year I pointed out this very fact that the number of surrenderees and alleged rebels do not add up. The solution I posed to this problem is that the NPA is combing the number of NPA supporters with actual NPA fighters to boost the figures. Whatever the real answer is it would do good to have the E-CLIP program audited. If the AFP has nothing to hide then they should welcome such a probe and not be calling those who wish to hold them accountable "enemies of the state."

Monday, January 13, 2020

The Attempted Assassination of Bill Clinton in Manila 1996

Annie Jacobsen's latest book about American clandestine services, "Surprise, Kill, Vanish: The Secret History of CIA Paramilitary Armies, Operators, and Assassins" is an interesting look at covert operations of the CIA around the world. Towards the end of the book she mentions a surprising story about the attempted assassination of Bill Clinton in Manila in 1996.
President Clinton with then Sen. Arroyo and President Ramos
It was November 24, 1996, and Lew Merletti accompanied President Clinton to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in the Philippines. Security was intense, with an estimated 26,000 police and soldiers assigned to protect visiting dignitaries. The U.S. State Department warned its citizens to be on alert for a possible terrorist attack. In Manila, President Clinton was scheduled to visit a local politician. The route chosen would take him across a bridge in central Manila. 
“As the presidential motorcade began to move,” recalled Merletti, he received a “crackly message in one earpiece.” Intelligence agents had picked up a message using the words “bridge” and “wedding,” which Merletti “interpreted to be terrorist code words for assassination.” Merletti ordered the motorcade to change course, something only he had the authority to do. “The motorcade agent Nelson Garabito did a great job rerouting the president under those difficult circumstances,” he says, and that agents “discovered a bomb on the bridge.” The assassination attempt was not made public. The Secret Service keeps all assassination attempts against a U.S. president classified Top Secret so as not to encourage copycat attacks. The details of the Manila bomb were made known to only a handful of members of the U.S. intelligence community.
Pg. 330-331
A much fuller account of this incident can be found in "The Death of Virtue: Clinton Vs Starr" by Ken Gormley
One incident that Merletti kept locked in his mental file and that was unknown to the rest of the world related to a disagreement he had with President Clinton in November 1996. In this episode, Merletti had overruled Clinton and, in doing so, saved the president’s life. Merletti had been traveling with the president to Manila in the Philippines, when a snap decision confronted him as head of the presidential protective detail. Clinton was scheduled to attend a late-afternoon appointment with a senior member of the Philippine government. As was common for the gregarious Clinton, he was running late. The motorcade route from the hotel, where Clinton was wrapping up his meeting, to the government official’s office would take approximately “fifteen minutes. President Clinton instructed Merletti, “You gotta get me there fast. I’m really late.” 
One of the jobs of the Secret Service was to “make the president’s schedule work.” Merletti understood that. As they climbed into their long, black car, however, Merletti received a crackly message in one earpiece: Intelligence operators in the field had picked up a radio transmission in which the unknown speakers used the words “bridge” and “wedding” in close proximity. The latter word, he knew, was a code word once used by terrorists to mean a hit, or an assassination. On the motorcade route that had been mapped out, the president’s car was scheduled to cross a bridge. 
Merletti urgently requested if intelligence could get “more information.” After a momentary buzz in his earpiece, the response came back: “Negative.” In the meantime, the president was still pushing Merletti, “Let’s go, let’s go. We’re late!” As head of the PPD, Merletti had to take a stand. His paramount job was to protect the chief executive, regardless of what the president wanted. Merletti climbed into the car and looked directly at Clinton: “Mr. President, I have bad news for you,” he said. “We’re going to be real late, because we’re taking a different route.” 
There followed a “strong discussion” between the president and Agent Merletti. It was “professional” in every way, Merletti recalled, but the conversation involved “strong language” on “each side. In the end, Merletti directed the motorcade to travel the direction he wanted, and the president sunk back in his seat, unhappy but overruled. 
As the presidential entourage wound forward along its altered route, a U.S. intelligence team was dispatched to the bridge. The structure was a white concrete span in a busy downtown area of Manila and was flanked by picturesque palm trees and neat pedestrian sidewalks. Underneath the bridge, explosives specialists uncovered a bomb powerful enough to blow up the entire presidential motorcade. 
This thwarted assassination attempt was never made public; it remained top secret except to select members of the U.S. intelligence community. The American government’s subsequent investigation of this plot to kill Clinton, however, revealed that it had been masterminded by a Saudi terrorist living in Afghanistan—a man named Osama bin Laden. Intelligence reports revealed that this bearded criminal’s nascent terrorist organization, known as al Qaeda, had engineered the effort to murder the American president. The Secret Service was already watching bin Laden—he had been involved in at least one earlier attempt to assassinate Clinton in the Philippines in 1994. The plot to kill Clinton in Manila had failed only because members of the PPD were trained to put the safety of the president first, regardless of conflicting instructions, even from the chief executive himself. In Merletti’s view, “If you’re not capable of making decisions like this, you don’t belong in that position.”
Pg. 491-492
Clinton arrived in Manila for the APEC summit a day before the attempted attack. How did his would be killers know the route his motorcade would take? Was there a mole? Was the bomb placed just shortly before Clinton's motorcade was due to cross the bridge? A boat stopping under a bridge so a man could hide a bomb would be noticeable. Neither account tells what bridge it is but from the description (white concrete, palm trees, pedestrian walk way) it might be the Jones Bridge. 


According to The Manila Standard there were two other bombs discovered, one at the airport and one at the APEC venue.

Manila Standard, November 23rd, 1996
But Philippine security sources said police had reported “srong indications” a leftist hit squad would launch terror attacks - including bombings and assassinations - to disrupt the summit, to be attended by US Presidney Bill Clinton, Chinese Presdeitn Jian Zemin, and other key leaders.  
An intelligence report obtained by Reuters meanwhile indicated explosives found at Ninoy Aquino International Airport on Wednesday night were not part of a drill as originally announced. 
The report, for President Ramos, said a bomb made up of three hand gernades with their safety pins already removed and wrapped in tape had been found in a black bag on a stairway of the arrival area. 
It said members of an airport security task force were still investigating the incident. 
Officials at the time inisisted the explosives has been placed there as part of a security drill. The same explanation had been given for a pipe bomb discovered a few hours earlier inside the gates of Subic Freeport where the summit is to take place. 
The top secret, high-level Philippines police report on the overall terrorism threat did not specifically mention Americans as targets.
It is not surprising that Philippine security officials would lie to the public about the bombs found at both NAIA and Subic Freeport. That the report focuses exclusively on "a leftist hit squad," the Alex Boncayao Brigade, and excludes Islamic terrorists shows that Philippine security officials were not up to speed on the threat posed by Islamic terrorism and in particular al Qaeda despite uncovering the Bojinka Plot a year prior in January 1995.  The Bojinka Plot was a large scale terrorist attack planned by al Qaeda to blow up 11 planes and assassinate the pope. Prior to this plot al Qaeda made plans to assassinate Bill Clinton during his visit to the Philippines in 1994 which begs the question of why security officials did not consider a second attempt on his life from this same terrorist organisation as very likely.
He left Manila for several days, but was met by Islamist emissaries upon his return to Metro Manila. They asked him to attack United States President Bill Clinton, who was due to arrive in the Philippines on November 12, 1994, as part of a five-day tour of Asia. Yousef thought of several ways to kill the president, including placing nuclear bombs on Clinton's motorcade route, firing a Stinger missile at Air Force One or the presidential limousine, launching theater ballistic missiles at Manila and or killing him with phosgene, a chemical weapon. He abandoned the idea, as it would be too difficult to kill the President. However, he incorporated his plan to kill the Pope into the Bojinka plot.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bojinka_plot
The "he" is Ramzi Yousef. Ramzi curently resides at ADX Supermax Prison in Florence, Colorado for his role in the 1993 and 2001 World Trade Centre attacks. How was al Qaeda able to place a bomb under a bridge in Manila with no one knowing?  Security for APEC was tight.
As part of the preparation for the summit, the Philippines strengthened its security force. At least 26,000 police and soldiers were deployed to ensure the security of the delegates and guests. President Ramos assured APEC participants of their security in his speech during the inauguration of Subic Bay International Airport. On 22 November 1996, two days before the Economic Leaders' Summit, the US State Department, through its spokesperson Nicholas Burns, warned American citizens in the Philippines to take security precautions following threats against American diplomats attending the summit.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/APEC_Philippines_1996
Despite all the security precautions taken one of the more interesting incidents of the 1996 APEC meeting was when Vice President Estrada welcomed President Clinton at the airport and was blocked by the Secret Service.

Manila Standard, November 25th, 1996
Security was so tight when US President Bill Clinton flew into Manila Saturday night for an Aisia-Pacific summit that his minders stopped VIce President Joseph Estrada when he went to welcome the US leader at the airport. 
“You cannot tell me what to do right here in my country,” Estrada snapped to the US security men. “I am the Vice President.” 
Estrada, who described the incident to reporters, was blocked when he tried to approach Clinton after the US leader flew into Manila Saturday night for the annual summit of the 18-memeber Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum. 
Estrada was allowed through after explaining who he was. 
Estrada headed the Philippine welcoming party for Clinton which also included House SPeaker Jose de Venecia and Sen. Gloria Mcapagal-Arroyo, a calssmate of Clinton years ago when she was studying in the United States. 
Summit security is tight due to fears that Philippine leftiss may try to mount an attack during the APEC conference. The Clinton motorcade made a last-minute  switch in its route from the airport after two men were reported acting suspiciously at a traffic signal control box on the original route.
The Bojinka Plot was discovered in January 1995 and by then Yousef was long gone from the Philippines. So who orchestrated this attempted assassination in 1996 at the behest of bin Laden? Who was left with ties to al Qaeda except the MILF and Abu Sayyaf? In fact just last year a bin Laden associate was arrested in Mindanao.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2019/08/02/1939912/bi-deport-jordanian-linked-bin-ladens-brother-law
The Bureau of Immigration (BI) is set to deport a Jordanian man, an alleged former henchman of the brother-in-law of Osama bin Laden, a few weeks after he was arrested in Zamboanga City.   
Mahmoud Afif Abdeljalil, 51, is now under custody of the government pending his deportation after the BI, military and police operatives arrested him last July 4, according to Immigration Commissioner Jaime Morente.  
Quoting authorities, the BI said that Abdeljalil had served as the point man of Saudi businessman Mohammed Jamal Khalifa, bin Laden’s brother-in-law, in managing several charity organizations in the south that funneled money to al-Qaeda and the Abu Sayyaf group.
The public can never expect the government to tell them the true extent of security threats to the nation until long after the fact which leaves one wondering what is the real security situation in this country? The government continues to reassure the public that everything is fine and safe for tourists and investors despite the presence of communist and Islamic terrorists throughout the country. If anything the lesson to learn from the attempted assassination of Bill Clinton in Manila in 1996 is that Philippine security officials are not always up to snuff about the threats facing the Philippines.