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Hot money swings to net inflow in Jan
By Kathleen A. Martin (The Philippine Star) | Updated February 15, 2015 - 12:00am

MANILA, Philippines - Foreign portfolio investments swung to a net inflow in January from an outflow in the same month last year as more investors poured money in the local bourse, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas reported yesterday.

A net hot money inflow of $591.62 million was recorded in January, a turnaround from the net outflow of $1.844 billion in the same month in 2014.

“(This is) due to higher investments in PSE (Philippine Stock Exchange)-listed shares arising from a top-up offering of a holding corporation’s shares (and) sale of a universal bank’s and holding firm’s shares,” the central bank said.

Gokongwei-led JG Summit Holdings last month sold 145.65 million common shares and raised P8.8 billion through a top-up placement to fund its investments. Aboitiz Equity Ventures, meanwhile, sold 5.086 million treasury shares worth P276.65 million in January for its working capital and cash reserves needs.

At the same time, the BSP said the inflows were due to the “upgraded growth outlook for the country by the International Monetary Fund.”

Gross inflows of hot money rose 72 percent to $2.195 billion in January from $1.277 billion last year, while gross outflows fell 49 percent to $1.604 billion from $3.121 billion.

The net outflow recorded in January last year was due to the investors pulling out of emerging markets as the US Federal Reserve started decreasing its massive asset-buying program.

The BSP said bulk or 82 percent of the portfolio investments in January were put into PSE-listed securities. These mainly benefitted property companies, banks, holding firms, utility firms, and food, beverage and tobacco companies.

Another 17.4 percent went into peso-denominated government securities, while the remaining 0.7 percent was put in peso time deposits.

The top investor countries during the month were the United Kingdom, the United States, Singapore, Switzerland, and Luxembourg. The United States remained the main destination of outflows, the BSP noted.

Last year, hot money ended in a net outflow of $310.21 million, a reversal of the $4.22-billion net inflow in 2013. This was blamed to heightened volatility in financial markets as the US central bank decreased its monthly purchases of Treasuries and mortgage bonds, which eventually ended in October.

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Hot money swings to net inflow in Jan | Business, News, The Philippine Star | philstar.com
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Barclays sees drop in Dec remittances
By Kathleen A. Martin (The Philippine Star) | Updated February 15, 2015 - 12:00am

MANILA, Philippines - Cash remittances into the Philippines likely eased further in December last year due to a high base in the same period in 2013, UK-based investment bank Barclays said in a report.

The bank, in its latest Emerging Markets Weekly report, estimated remittances to have inched up 1.9 percent in December from the same month in 2013, even slower than the two percent rate in November which was already the slowest in nearly six years.

“We expect remittances to recover sequentially from weakness in November, but a high base following 2013’s typhoon-related surge in remittances will likely weigh on year-on-year growth,” Barclays said.

Cash remittances in December 2013 climbed 10 percent to $2.173 billion, owed to the seasonal surge in inflows from Filipinos abroad and to families sending to their loved ones hit by Super Typhoon Yolanda.

Official December 2014 remittances data will be released by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas on Monday.

Latest available data showed money sent home by Filipinos living and working abroad amounted to $2.122 billion in November, bringing the 11-month tally to $21.911 billion.

Bulk of these remittances were sent from the United States, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, Singapore, Japan, Hong Kong and Canada.

The central bank has said the continuous deployment of skilled Filipino workers abroad sustained the increase in remittance flows during the period.

The BSP forecast cash remittances to have grown 5.5 percent in 2014 from the $22.968 billion recorded in 2013.

Remittances support domestic consumption, the largest driver of the Philippine economy. In 2013, remittances made up more than eight percent of the country’s gross domestic product.

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Barclays sees drop in Dec remittances | Business, News, The Philippine Star | philstar.com
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2014 exports climbed 9% to $62b
By Jennifer Ambanta | Feb. 10, 2015 at 11:40pm

Exports climbed 9 percent in 2014 to a record $61.8 billion from $56.7 billion in 2013, despite the 3.2-percent contraction recorded in December, data from the Philippine Statistics Authority show.

“Compared to other economies in the region, the Philippines’ full-year exports growth performance was relatively strong despite the challenging external environment. This is a good indication of the growing resiliency of our sectors given that economies in the Euro area, Japan and China remain sluggish, causing regional trade flows to soften,” said Economic Planning Secretary Arsenio Balisacan.

The PSA said merchandise exports dropped 3.2 percent in December to $4.8 billion from $5 billion a year ago. This followed a 21.7-percent growth in exports registered in November.

Overseas sales of electronics were the highest since 2010 and more garments were shipped than any year since 2011. Sales of electronics, which accounted for 42 percent of total exports last year, climbed 8.1 percent in 2014 to $25.9 billion from $23.9 billion in 2013.

“Philippine exports have massively outperformed the rest of Asia,” said Michael Wan, a Singapore-based economist at Credit Suisse Group AG. “We’re seeing benefits of increased foreign direct investment. Products are also quite diversified, from electronics to agriculture,” he said.

While Philippine exports totaled about $62 billion last year compared with Singapore’s $522 billion and Thailand’s $225 billion, the country is improving its skills and climbing up the value chain, Trade Secretary Gregory Domingo said.

Meanwhile, export earnings of manufactured goods in December fell to $4.18 billion from $4.23 billion in December 2013.

“This can be traced mainly to year-on-year declines in other manufactured products, wood manufactures and electronic equipment and parts. Nonetheless, outbound sales of electronic products, machinery and transport equipment, garments, miscellaneous manufactured articles and chemicals remained buoyant,” Balisacan said.

The sluggish outturns in coconut products and sugar pulled down revenues from total agro-based products by 24.9 percent to $291.8 million in December 2014 from $388.7 million a year ago.

“While outward sales of other agro-based products reached $81.7 million, higher by 10.2 percent compared to $74.2 million in December 2013, decline in coconut oil exports drove outward shipments from coconut products to drop from $145.1 million in December 2013 to $79.5 million in the same month of 2014,” said Balisacan.

Balisacan warned of a possible slight tempering of exports in 2015, given the weakness in China and Euro deflation.

“What could provide an upside support to exports is the continuing US recovery and possibly some respite from Japan, which may realize economic expansion towards end-2015,” he said.

Japan was the top destination of Philippine-made goods in December, accounting for 21.2 percent of the total. The United States was the second largest market with 14.1-percent share and China, third with 11.4 percent. With Bloomberg

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2014 exports climbed 9% to $62b - Manila Standard Today
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Ayala spending P185b in 2015
By Jenniffer B. Austria | Feb. 12, 2015 at 11:40pm

Ayala Corp., one of the country’s largest conglomerates, said Thursday it will deploy P185 billion worth of funds this year to expand property and telecommunication businesses and hike investments in power generation and infrastructure.

The conglomerate’s capital expenditures this year, however, were slightly lower than P190 billion programmed in 2014.

Ayala said in a disclosure to the stock exchange more than half of the group’s capital spending was allotted for property unit Ayala Land Inc., which would invest P100 billion in 2015.

Ayala Land said it would launch more residential, office, hotel and commercial center projects and acquire land for future development to achieve the target of P40-billion net income by 2020.

The group’s telecom business through Globe Telecom Inc. allocated P37 billion for capital expenditures in 2015, including the P8 billion unspent budget in the second half of 2014.

Ayala Corp. said Globe’s capital spending for the year would be used for data-related initiatives and LTE network infrastructure upgrades.

Ayala Corp., the parent company, will deploy P21 billion primarily to support investment programs in power generation and transport infrastructure.

The rest of the amount will be mobilized to fund the growth initiatives of other business units, including Manila Water Company Inc., Bank of the Philippine Islands and Integrated Micro-Electronics Inc.

“We started an aggressive growth strategy a few years back and we continue to undertake value enhancing opportunities amidst this sustained momentum in our economy. Each of our business units are seizing investment opportunities within their individual spaces under this positive environment,” Ayala Corp. chairman and chief executive Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala said.

“In particular, we continue to strengthen our positions in power and transport infrastructure --- two sectors that are presenting opportunities for investments with potential to become new growth platforms for Ayala,” Zobel de Ayala said.

Ayala Corp. booked a net income of P14.1 billion in the first nine months of 2014, up by 35 percent from a year ago, driven by the robust performance of real estate, telecom and water units.

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Ayala spending P185b in 2015 - Manila Standard Today
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$1-b Shell gas project on track
By Alena Mae S. Flores | Feb. 09, 2015 at 11:30pm

Shell Philippines Exploration B. V., the operator of the Malampaya natural gas field in northwest Palawan, said it is on track on completing the $1-billion Malampaya expansion project that will install a second platform by the middle of 2015.

“We are just completing the Malampaya phase three project. We are on track,” Spex managing director Sebastian Quinones said.

The consortium led by Spex (with 45 percent) is undertaking phase 3 of the Malampaya project, after completing phase 2, to sustain the level of gas production under existing contracts. Other members of the consortium are Chevron Malampaya LLC (with 45 percent) and PNOC Exploration Corp. (10 percent).

Two production wells were successfully installed in 2013, marking the completion of phase 2. Phase 3 involves the design, fabrication and installation of a new depletion compression platform, which is expected to be completed by the middle of the year.

“The depletion compression platform will be towed out to Palawan soon, so in that manner we are along with the plan and we do have our turn around,” Quinones said.

Malampaya’s first glas platform would be shut down on March 15 to April 13 for a scheduled maintenance repair.

The Malampaya deep-water gas-to-power project, completed in 2001 at cost of $4.5 billion, supplies natural gas to power three power plants in Batangas with a combined capacity of 2,700 MW, representing 30 percent of the country’s energy requirements.

Quinones said Spex, one of the country’s most active oil and gas players, was bullish about Malampaya’s operations this year.

“We will complete this year this project. In fact the Malampaya phase three is a $750 million [project], so we really make sure that this will happen,” he said.

“You have to invest in the future, otherwise you will not recover your expenses,” Quinones said.

Shell’s license over service contract 38, covering Malampaya, will expire in February 2024, the same period that the gas reserves are expected to be depleted. Around half of the reserves at the Malampaya gas field have been consumed.

“We have applied for the license extension [with the Energy Department. We are in discussions for the extension,” Quinones said earlier.

Quinones said there were currently seven production wells in the Camago-Malampaya reservoir.

“There are fields nearby, smaller ones. But to be able to extract that, obviously we need to put in more money. There’s also license extension and all those other things that will be required,” he said.

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$1-b Shell gas project on track - Manila Standard Today
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PH can keep rate for much of 2015
By Bloomberg | Feb. 13, 2015 at 11:45pm

The Philippine central bank can hold its benchmark interest rate for most of 2015 even as a lower inflation forecast gives policy makers more room to maneuver, Governor Amando Tetangco said.

“If things remain as they are, that is inflation expectations are well anchored, domestic demand continues to be resilient, oil prices remain low but not too volatile and Fed normalization is orderly, I think we can keep rates steady for the most part of 2015,” Tetangco said in an interview with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television from Manila on Friday.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas held its benchmark at 4 percent Thursday and cut inflation forecasts for this year and next. The central bank will watch for the possible effects of sustained low crude prices on global growth and any risk of a delayed increase in US interest rates because of cheap oil, Tetangco said.

“He’s very comfortable with the inflation outlook,” said Euben Paracuelles, a Singapore-based senior economist at Nomura Holdings Inc. “As long as it stays within target there’s no need to move either way. They could think about easing only if inflation falls below 2 percent for a sustained period,” he said, referring to the lower end of the central bank’s 2 percent to 4 percent goal for this year and next.

The peso rose to 44.285 per dollar at the close of trading. Philippine stocks climbed the most in more than a week, holding near a record. The yield on bonds due August 2024 fell for a second day, according to midday fixing prices at Philippine Dealing & Exchange Corp.

While the inflation outlook gives policy makers more room, firm demand, uncertainty over oil prices, and minimal deflationary risk are being considered, Tetangco said, when asked if there’s more scope to ease monetary policy.

“Real lending rates in the Philippines are the third lowest in the region,” he said. “We kept rates steady because we believe that this is consistent with a symmetric inflation targeting approach. We felt that we had room to wait for additional data to see if the lower end of our target range, for instance, will be breached for a persistent period.”

The Philippine economy expanded 6.9 percent in the three months through December from a year earlier, the fastest in five quarters. Consumer prices rose 2.4 percent in January from a year earlier, the slowest pace since August 2013.

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PH can keep rate for much of 2015 - Manila Standard Today
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Politics and National Security News:

Philippine Military ‘Behind’ President After Coup Plot is Revealed
Military Investigation Purports to Find no Groups of Soldiers Involved in Coup Plot

ByTrefor Moss
Feb. 13, 2015 12:19 a.m. ET


MANILA—The Philippine military said Friday it was “solidly behind the president,” after reports surfaced of a plot to overthrow President Benigno Aquino III through a coup d’état.

Military spokesman Lt. Col. Harold Cabunoc said a military investigation “had not found any unit or group of soldiers who engaged in this coup plot,” which came to light during Senate testimony on Thursday. “All commanders assure us that all their people are accounted for,” he said.

The apparent plot followed the deaths of 44 police commandos in a bungled counterterrorism raid in Mindanao in late January. The disastrous mission to kill or capture a most-wanted terrorist has stoked fierce criticism of Mr. Aquino in the Southeast Asian country, with many feeling that responsibility for the policemen’s deaths lies ultimately with the president as commander-in-chief.

Mr. Aquino has confirmed that he was briefed about the planned raid before it took place, but it remains unclear how much he knew about the tactical details of the operation.

Rumors of coup plots are relatively common in the Philippines, despite the country’s increasingly stable politics. The last serious coup attempt, which ultimately failed to unseat then-president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, was in 2006. Mr. Aquino’s mother, Corazon Aquino, faced down repeated coup attempts during her time as president from 1986 to 1992.

The botched raid also publicly humiliated the Philippine National Police and the Armed Forces of the Philippines, whose failure to coordinate on the day of the Jan. 25 operation has become one of the focal points of official inquiries into the causes of the disaster.

At the latest in a series of public Senate hearings into the police deaths, Philippine Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin disclosed Thursday that he had received reports of an ongoing coup plot. He said he was investigating, and assured the Senate that any attempt to oust Mr. Aquino by force would “entail no military support.”

Mr. Gazmin was responding to questions from Sen. Miriam Defensor Santiago, who said she had received intelligence that “leaders of certain…groups” were forming a plan to depose Mr. Aquino, and that the coup plot was being financed by a “very rich man…known to have funded a similar coup d’état in the past.”

Lt. Col. Cabunoc said the military was aware of text messages sent by unknown individuals, which appeared to refer to meetings between soldiers and the would-be coup-makers, and he said the military was trying to ascertain the origin of these messages.

“We are all solidly behind the president,” he said.

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Philippine Military ‘Behind’ President After Coup Plot is Revealed - WSJ
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Crossfire between Philippine military, rebels wounds bird-watching guide, scares 7 foreigners

Published February 13, 2015
Associated Press


MANILA, Philippines – Crossfire between the military and communist rebels has wounded a bird-watching guide and scared seven foreigners in a protected mountain area in the southern Philippines.

Col. Jesse Alvarez, an army commander in the area, said the military was not aware the bird-watchers were there when the 10-minute firefight ensued Friday.

Daniel Somera, supervisor of the Mount Kitanglad protected area in Bukidnon province, said one of four Filipino guides was wounded and brought to a hospital but the rest of the bird-watching group escaped unhurt. Three Britons, three Danes and one Australian were in the mountain area near where the firefight occurred.

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Crossfire between Philippine military, rebels wounds bird-watching guide, scares 7 foreigners | Fox News
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Military and Defense News


The Philippine Military Wants US Drones
The country mulls acquiring drones following the easing of US restrictions.

By Prashanth Parameswaran
February 20, 2015



The Philippines is eying U.S. drones following the recent policy shift by the Obama administration to ease restrictions on their export and sale, local media reported February 18.

According to ABS-CBN News, military spokesman Colonel Restituto Padilla said that the while Philippines did not want armed drones, it would be interested in drones that could be used for intelligence and surveillance operations.

Meanwhile, BusinessWorld, a leading Philippine business newspaper, reported that Harold M. Cabunoc, a spokesman for the Armed Forces of the Philippines, said that while the drones would indeed give the military “an edge in information gathering and in armed confrontations,” the country’s interest is primarily in their potential for humanitarian assistance and disaster relief (HADR).

National Defense Public Affairs Service Chief Arsenio R. Andalong also confirmed to BusinessWorld that the military’s primary interest in acquiring drones would be for HADR operations.

“In general, drones will certainly enhance any country’s defense posture. In our case, however, their potential contribution to HADR is probably more important,” Andolong said.

“Our planners would first have to assess the technology’s efficiency and the effectiveness vis-à-vis our capabilities,” he added.

Last week, The Diplomat reported that the Obama administration had established a policy for the export of commercial and military drones – including armed ones – following a lengthy review. The move opens up the possibility of Washington equipping its allies such as the Philippines, even though this would still be done under strict conditions and recipient nations need to agree to certain “end-use assurances.”

The use of U.S. drones in the Philippines is not without controversy. While the two allies inked an Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement last year to boost military ties, some voices continue to oppose strengthening links in this dimension. Some Philippine legislators have expressed alarm at the discovery and alleged use of U.S. drones in Philippine operations over the past few years, which they say undermine Philippine sovereignty.

There have also been some media reports suggesting that U.S. drones were involved in the lead-up to a controversial January 25 Philippine police operation to get Malaysian terrorist and bomb expert Zulkifli bin Hir – more popularly known as Marwan – who was on the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) most wanted list. As The Diplomat reported previously, though evidence suggests the operation ended up killing Marwan, it resulted in one of the largest single day losses for the Philippine police in the nation’s history and has threatened to undermine a historic peace deal between the government and Muslim rebels.

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The Philippine Military Wants US Drones | The Diplomat
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It will be more effective to enhance the cooperation between US-Philippine and let US operating their armed drones under Philippine Armed Forces supervision. I don't think Philippine Army using and operating sophisticated drones like Reaper and Predator themselves will be the most cost effective and the best solution out there.
 
It will be more effective to enhance the cooperation between US-Philippine and let US operating their armed drones under Philippine Armed Forces supervision. I don't think Philippine Army using and operating sophisticated drones like Reaper and Predator themselves will be the most cost effective and the best solution out there.

Well the only drones we operated were local made and were designed for surveillance; there are no facilities in the PH that can operate such more sophisticated drones. Besides that we still need manned planes to replace the OV-10s we have as there are no news on the intended replacement for it.

Sadly, the Mamasapano Massacre and the alleged US involvement may put the PH-US militar cooperation in jeopardy again.
 
Politics and National Security News:

Calls for resignation mount
SEARCH FOR TRUTH
By Ernesto M. Maceda
(The Philippine Star) | Updated February 21, 2015 - 12:00am


A group of teachers and students, led by National Artist for Literature Bienvenido Lumbera and University of the Philippines Professor Rolando Simbulan, has joined the call for the resignation of President Aquino due to his deliberate choice to break the chain of command, unilaterally violate the ceasefire agreement with the MILF (Moro Islamic Liberation Front) and betray public trust by secretly conniving with the United States (U.S.) that led to the Mamasapano incident, which claimed 44 PNP-SAF men, 18 MILF fighters and 7 innocent civilians.

Furthermore, this is not the first incident. Many tragedies have happened in the past four years, there were many botched operations.

“Aquino should resign from his position due to his participation in the attempt to cover up US involvement in the Mamasapano operation,” Lumbera said at the launch of the Save Our Nation: Aquino Resign (SONAR) Movement in Quezon City.

Cebu City Mayor Michael Rama on Thursday urged President Aquino to resign and hit the League of Cities – which is constituted of 104 cities headed by an administration ally (Quezon City Mayor Herbert Bautista) – for including Cebu City in its manifesto support for the beleaguered Chief Executive without his approval. The manifesto was aimed at countering calls for the President to step down. He said it is better for Aquino to resign instead of being ousted in a coup.

Rama also revealed his resentment that the national government has been ignoring Cebu City. He said, he had asked for assistance to construct the Cebu City Medical Center (CCMC) but none was given.

Bayan spokesman Teddy Casiño said many cause-oriented groups, civil society organizations, political and religious leaders, lawyers, members of the academe, and professionals have been meeting to launch another peaceful People Power Revolution, not a coup d’etat or an armed revolt. He said most people are demanding for truth and accountability on the Mamasapano incident. Many are also calling on President Aquino to step down.

Cariño said civil society groups and Church-backed organizations are planning to hold a protest on Feb. 25.

Mamasapano was a fatal result of US intervention mixed with Aquino’s incompetence and lack of leadership, he added.

“Clearly, the buck stops with the President,” Casiño said.


Duterte throws cap in
Speaking before 2,000 participants, mostly youth and students, of the First Federalism Forum in Northern Luzon, Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte said he may run for President “if only to save the Republic” as it is confronted with problems on corruption, criminality and the possible collapse of the peace talks in the Southern Philippines.

“I could make this sacrifice if only to save the country from being fractured,” Duterte said.

He batted for a Federal Parliamentary form of government, from Unitary Presidential, which will address the neglect of the countryside and the Bangsamoro problem if the peace talks with the MILF break down.

Duterte joins a long list of presidentiables which include Vice-President Jejomar Binay, Senator Mar Roxas, Senator Grace Poe, Mayor Joseph Estrada, Senator Chiz Escudero, Senator Alan Peter Cayetano and former Senator Ping Lacson.

The filing of certificate of candidacy is on Oct. 15, 2015. Parties will finalize their team ups by July, only four months from now.

So far, surveys have shown Vice President Binay and Grace Poe as front runners.


Only 16 returned
The MILF has returned only 16 firearms that were taken from the 44 SAF fallen commandos who died in the Mamasapano incident.

With the BIFF claiming to have captured ten firearms, that leaves 18 more to be accounted for. Also night vision goggles, radios, cellphones, wallets, bullet proof vests, uniforms, and boots still need to be returned.

While the military saw the MILF’s gesture positively, the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) was still hoping for the rest of the belongings of the slain SAF members be returned, according to AFP Chief of Staff General Gregorio Pio Catapang Jr.

Interior Secretary Mar Roxas should demand the return of the above 18 firearms and other equipment of the dead commandos.

A day after the MILF formally surrendered the guns, PNP officer-in-charge Deputy Director-General Leonardo Espina called on the MILF to also surrender its members who violated the international humanitarian law and were responsible for the deaths of his people as well as Basit Usman. It is unlikely the MILF will comply with this demand.

Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin said the return of the firearms and surrender of Usman would prove the MILF’s sincerity.


Tidbits
Masbate Governor Rizalina Seachon-Lañete, who was charged for plunder and graft over the pork barrel scam, has surrendered to the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG).

The Supreme Court (SC) ordered the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) not to impose income tax on casino income as they are subject only to 5 percent franchise tax.

The New People Army (NPA) raid at the Mati Police Station is very serious because it is the provincial capital of Davao Oriental.

Congresswomen Rosemary Arenas, Lani Mercado, and Mitos Magsaysay were seen at the birthday party of Congresswoman Gina de Venecia.

Raechel June Sumbilla, widow of SAF PO3 John Lloyd Sumbilla, told reporters that President Aquino and General Alan Purisima should admit their involvement in the botched Mamasapano operation and be meted out punishment.

Janet Carap, widow of PO2 Peterson Carap complained that President Aquino did not answer her questions as to “what did he do after learning about the incident, what did he do to save his people?”

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Calls for resignation mount | Opinion, News, The Philippine Star | philstar.com
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No PNoy exit plan
Marcos to Aquino: Don’t step down; step up

by Madel Sabater Namit & Hannah L. Torregoza
February 21, 2015 (updated)


Malacañang flatly denied yesterday making any preparation for an exit plan for President Aquino should calls for his resignation build up amid public discontent over the handling of the covert police operation that led to the deaths of 44 police commandos in Mamasapano, Maguindanao.

Meanwhile, if there is someone who wants Aquino to remain steadfast at this point, it is Senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. who thumbed down to calls for the President to resign.

“Don’t step down. Step up. Step up to your responsibility. Step up to the country and tell them what is happening and what your role was in the Mamasapano massacre,” Marcos said in a Radyo 5 interview.

The son of the late former President Ferdinand Marcos said the President’s statement regarding the so-called “Oplan Exodus” aimed at capturing high-profile Malaysian terrorist bombmaker Zulkifli Abdhir, alias “Marwan,” and Filipino terror suspect Basit Usman is essential in the Senate inquiry.

A total of 44 commandos of the Philippine National Police-Special Action Force (PNP-SAF) lost their lives in the operation that led to a clash with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) last January 25.

“I think the President only needs to answer these simple questions: What exactly is your role in Oplan Exodus? Were you the one in charge, or did you merely intercede? When did you know that we were already suffering from heavy casualties and what were your instructions after learning this?” Marcos said.

Marcos, who chairs the Senate Committee on Local Governments, said the President’s explanation is helpful also to the Senate in crafting a better Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL).

“It is precisely meant to prevent incidents similar to the Mamasapano massacre from happening again in the future,” Marcos said.

“I hope the President takes it upon himself to tell us all about this. If his explanation is credible, we can conclude our investigation. We already knew what happened and that will enable us to make the necessary corrections in the BBL,” Marcos said.

In Malacañang, Deputy Presidential Spokesperson Abigail Valte rejected reports the Palace is preparing an exit plan amid growing calls for Aquino to step down following the Mamasapano incident.

“The President will step down on June 30, 2016. I can tell you that. Any reports or stories of any other exit plan apart from that are fictitious,” Valte said, referring to the end of the President’s election term.

Valte said calls for a President to step down have never been successful. However, she said the Palace respects the right of the public to conduct protest actions.

“It’s part of the democratic space that we enjoy so they are free to make statements to issue calls for whatever action. Obviously, we disagree to their calls to action,” Valte said.

“The President is no stranger to calls for resignation and the course for more or less five years that he’s been in office, we’ve seen these sporadic calls from different groups and they always have not resulted in a situation that would please them, at least it has not resulted favorably for them,” she said.

Valte also said there is no need to conduct a loyalty check in the Armed Forces and the PNP amid reports that some active and retired generals are supporting the calls for the President to resign.

Respond, Mr. President

At the Senate, there are expectations for the President to face the public once again and address the questions being raised against him regarding his involvement in the covert operations that killed “Marwan” and, in the process, 44 SAF commandos, 18 Moro rebels and at least four civilians.

“He should make a statement addressed before the country. We are in crisis and the President must demonstrate leadership,” said Marcos in a text message.

If the President does so, it will be his third nationwide public address on the matter after revealing on January 28 that he knew of the ongoing operation to capture Marwan and that there had been “minimal coordination” with the MILF in executing it; and vowing justice for the SAF 44 while announcing the resignation of suspended PNP Chief Alan L.M. Purisima last February 7.

But since then, he has made himself scarce from public view. “Disappearing from public view is the opposite of leadership,” Marcos said.

Meanwhile, Sen. Grace Poe-Llamanzares, who chairs the Senate Committee on Public Order, said the President may put into writing his explanation on his involvement on the Mamasapano operation.

Poe said this may help the Senate panel, which is leading the investigation into the deadly clash, “put the pieces together.” (With a report from Genalyn D. Kabiling)

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No PNoy exit plan | Manila Bulletin | Latest Breaking News | News Philippines
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Politics and International Diplomacy News:

Aquino, Hollande to discuss terrorism
The French leader's trip to the Philippines from February 26 to 27, however, will focus on climate change

Agence France-Presse
Published 3:52 PM, Feb 22, 2015
Updated 6:47 PM, Feb 22, 2015


MANILA, Philippines – French President Francois Hollande will discuss international terrorism when he meets Philippine President Benigno Aquino III in the Philippines this week, a spokesman said Sunday, February 22.

The French leader's state visit from Thursday to Friday, February 26 to 27, will focus on climate change, but the recent attacks in Paris have also brought security to the forefront, said Aquino spokesman Herminio Coloma.

"The two leaders will also exchange views on global and regional issues like terrorism such as what happened involving Charlie Hebdo in Paris that claimed the lives of 20 people," he said in an interview.

A series of attacks by 3 Islamist gunmen between January 7 and 9, in and near Paris, began with shootings at the offices of the Charlie Hebdo satirical newspaper.

Coloma did not elaborate on how the two nations would take up the issue.

The largely Roman Catholic Philippines has been the longtime target of local Muslim extremist attacks, especially in the south where the Muslim minority is based.

The Abu Sayyaf, a loose band of a few hundred militants in the south founded with seed money from Al-Qaeda, has been blamed for some of the worst terror attacks in Philippine history.

Coloma said Hollande would use his visit to drum up support for action to curb global warming before the 21st UN Conference of the Parties on Climate Change in Paris in December.

The French leader will bring two Oscar-winning actors, Marion Cotillard and Jeremy Irons, to the Philippines as part of the campaign. Rappler.com

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Aquino, Hollande to discuss terrorism
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Politics and National Security News:

DFA: SAF plan and execution ‘100% Filipino’
Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Evan Garcia stresses, however, that ‘intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance’ are within the ambit of the US-Philippines cooperation.

Carmela Fonbuena


Published 1:56 PM, Feb 23, 2015

Updated 1:56 PM, Feb 23, 2015


MANILA, Philippines – The United States was not involved in the “plan and execution” of the January 25 anti-terrorist operation in Maguindanao that turned bloody, a representative of the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) told senators on Monday, February 23,

“In our own discussion with the United Sates authorities, we have ascertained from our own discussions that the plan and the execution of the operation were 100% Filipino,” said DFA Undersecretary for Policy Evan Garcia.

Garcia also categorically denied any involvement of US troops in combat operations in Mamasapano town, Maguindanao. “The only constitutionally restricted activity in our cooperation with the US under our existing agreements is that they may not – and have not in the case of Mamasapano either – engage in combat operations,” Garcia said.

A local group claimed that an American was among those who died in the combat area.

It remains unclear, however, if the US provided assistance on intelligence that helped the police Special Action Force (SAF) in finding top Jemaah Islamiyah terrorist Zulkifli bin Hir or "Marwan," one of the terrorists most wanted by the US Federal Bureau of Investigation.

It also remains unclear if the US deployed drones to monitor the operations on the ground. Residents of Mamasapano reported hearing drones flying the night before the operation. Mamasapano Mayor Datu Benzar Ampatuan also told senators about a white plane circling the area.

Garcia said “intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance” are within the ambit of the cooperation between the US and the Philippines.

Garcia detailed in the Senate hearing the level of cooperation between the US and the Philippines. This cooperation, he said, “significantly reduced” the size of the Abu Sayyaf Group in the Philippines.

PNP in particular has “benefitted,” he said, from “activities on training and intelligence exchange.”

On the operational details of the SAF operation in Mamasapano, Garcia however deferred to the security agencies.

“On the alleged American participation in Mamasapano, we respectfully defer to our colleagues for operational details,” Garcia said. – Rappler.com

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DFA: SAF plan and execution ‘100% Filipino’
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Business News:

JFC pushes for swift BOT Law amendments
Among the amendments the Joint Foreign Chambers is pushing for is the extension of the Swiss challenge

Rappler.com

Published 5:26 PM, Feb 21, 2015

Updated 10:49 AM, Feb 23, 2015


MANILA, Philippines – The Joint Foreign Chambers (JFC) pushed for the swift enactment of amendments to the build-operate-transfer (BOT) law to sustain investor confidence in the government's infrastructure program.
In a letter to Representative Ronald Cosalan, chairperson of the House Committee on Public Works and Highways, JFC said the amendments to the law would institutionalize the processes that have improved the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) program over the past 4 years.


This will further strengthen the country's PPP framework and prevent hindrances to the implementation of critical public projects, JFC added.


One of the amendments being pushed is a call to extend the maximum period of the Swiss challenge in an unsolicited bid to 6 months from the present two months.


"While the PPP Program encountered some difficulties in its initial stages, it has since begun to catch up, with high-impact projects being steadily rolled out, catching the attention of domestic and international investors," JFC said.


President Benigno Aquino III highlighted these initial difficulties in his 2013 State of The Nation Address (SONA), saying, “The studies on which the projects were based were outdated; and the bureaucracy lacked the sufficient knowledge to implement them."


The program has been recently picking up steam with the government announcing
18 major infrastructure projects worth P602.2 billion ($13.6 billion). These were set to roll out before June of this year.


It was also
highlighted during the first ASEAN-PPP Networking Forum held in December of 2014, where it was regarded as one of the most mature PPP programs in the region with established policy and process improvements and a developed pipeline of projects.


8 PPP projects have been awarded by the government so far amounting to P127 billion ($2.8 billion). Rappler.com


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JFC pushes for swift BOT Law amendments
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Politics and National Security News:

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Military strikes kill over a dozen BIFF members
By John Unson (philstar.com)
Updated February 24, 2015 - 9:28am


NORTH COTABATO, Philippines — More than a dozen bandits from the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters were reportedly killed in the military's bombardment over the weekend of peasants enclaves in Pikit the group took over last week, forcing thousands to evacuate to safer areas.

The police and military are preparing for possible retaliations by the BIFF for losses in week-long skirmishes with soldiers and militiamen in Pikit town in southeast of the province.

Seven of the BIFF fatalities were identified by evacuees as Mariga, Aliman, Samsudin, Muktar, Pendih, Sukarno and Musib, all adolescents, who were killed when 105 Howitzer projectiles landed and went off near them as soldiers tried to push them back into the Liguasan Delta, from where they launched their simultaneous intrusions in barangays at the boundary of Pikit and Pagalungan town in Maguindanao.

The BIFF's spokesman, Abu Misry Mama, was quick to deny their reported losses, even warning of more attacks in the province apparently to scare local folks into sheling out money, grain cereals and livestock in exchange for their protection.

The bandits had burned down no fewer than 20 houses in the barangays they occupied in what local officials said was part of a ploy to intimidate villagers into paying the group "protection money" on a regular basis.

Senior Supt. Danny Peralta, police director of North Cotabato, said they have intensified their security preparations against the BIFF after receiving feedback from community leaders that the outlaws are trying to regroup for more incursions on hapless farming communities within its reach.

Lt. Col. Audie Edralin, commanding officer of the Army's 7th Infantry Battalion based in the town proper of Pikit, said Muslim elders and clerics have urged him to continue with their community patrols in the villages cleared last Sunday from bandits to prevent them from coming back.

Edralin said the confidential informants, some of them barangay officials, have warned of plans by the extremist group to avenge the deaths of bandits killed in skirmishes with 7th IB combatants last weekend.

"And we're not taking chances. Our soldiers and the police are helping each other address these security issues. The local government of Pikit and the office of the provincial governor of North Cotabato remain on top of the situation," Edralin said.

The BIFF has been blamed for recent deadly bombings in North Cotabato, including the detonation of an improvised explosive device at the public market of Mlang town last December 31, which killed two and wounded more than 20 others.

The BIFF is known for enforcing a ruthless Taliban-style justice system in areas where it operates, in total disregard of the legitimate community pacification programs of barangay governments as provided for by the Local Government Code.

North Cotabato Gov. Emmylou Taliño-Mendoza on Monday said she has directed her constituent-mayors to impose tight security measures to stave off new BIFF attacks.

Mendoza's office and the local government unit of Pikit have started allowing the return of evacuees from barangays affected by last week's hostilities in the municipality.

Peralta said police intelligence agents have so far been validating the possibility that the BIFF could be behind the local criminal gangs engaged in motorcycle theft, highway robberies and drug trafficking that emerged in the province in recent months.

Peralta said about 60 percent of the 5, 698 total crime volume in the province in 2014 were index crimes, including motorcycle and cattle theft.

Most recorded cases of armed robbery and cattle theft in the province in 2014 occurred in areas where the BIFF operates.

Local officials in Maguindanao said the BIFF has more than 50 members the slain Malaysian terrorist Zulkifli bin Hir, also known as Marwan, and his ethnic Maguindanaon accomplice, Abdul Basit Usman, together trained in the handling of explosives and fabrication of improvised bombs in the past three years in Mamasapano town.

"They are good at fabricating explosives made only of materials that can be found in the hands of bandits and Moro rebels such as mortar rounds, anti-tank rockets and Ammonium Nitrate fertilizer which can become combustible powder if mixed with gasoline and sulfur," an official said.

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Military strikes kill over a dozen BIFF members | Nation, News, The Philippine Star | philstar.com
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We would have wiped them out had we have weapons that are not obtained from 'Murica as she only gives us obsolete weapons.
 
Politics and International Diplomacy News:

Philippines Expels China Experts Amid South China Sea Concerns
Manila ends Chinese involvement in running its power grid citing security fears.

By Prashanth Parameswaran
February 26, 2015


The Philippine government said earlier this week it would end Chinese technical involvement in the country’s power grid partly due to lingering security concerns.

On the night of February 23, Philippine media outlets had first reported that Philippine Energy Secretary Carlos Jericho Petilla had said that the government would not renew the work visas of 16 Chinese experts employed by the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) when they expire in July 2015.

The Chinese state-owned firm State Grid Corporation of China has had a 40% stake in the NGCP, which runs the national power grid of the Philippines. But Petilla said the government now wanted only Filipinos working there.

Petilla openly acknowledged that concerns over the presence of the Chinese experts stemmed partly from the ongoing South China Sea disputes between the Philippines and China. Relations between the two countries have soured over the last few years largely due to conflicting claims there, and Manila has filed a case against Beijing with the arbitral tribunal at The Hague.

“Of course, this is an offshoot of the West Philippine Sea dispute,” Petilla said according to ABS-CBN News, using the Philippines’ preferred term for the South China Sea.

He also admitted that some officials in Philippine government agencies and bodies like the National Security Council were uncomfortable with NGCP having Chinese experts involved.

“NSA is wary that it [NGCP] is being run by Chinese nationals. So ang solusyon [the solution] is with finality, turn over everything to Filipinos,” he said in a mixture of Tagalog and English.

Interestingly, Petilla also reportedly wondered aloud why others did not have similar fears because the Chinese firm also has similar partial ownership in other countries like Australia.

“If we are paranoid about it, I am not sure why Australia and the others are not,” he said.

However, Petilla emphasized that while there would be no more Chinese nationals running NGCP, there would be two of them remaining in their capacity as board of directors. The Chinese stake in the NGCP would still remain because of the distinction made between the management and technical side and ownership.

He also said he did not anticipate any opposition to the decision because key officials of several government agencies and the NGCP had already taken part in a high-level meeting last year and had agreed on the outcome.

The announcement came a day after Philippine senator Miriam Santiago had warned about foreign involvement in NGCP – albeit without referring specifically to China.

“The Philippine Constitution is replete with requirements of nationalism but such a vital and strategic industry such as the electric power industry is infected by a national security virus,” Santiago said in a statement on February 22.

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http://thediplomat.com/2015/02/philippines-expels-china-experts-amid-south-china-sea-concerns/
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The Philippines and Vietnam: Strategic Partners?
Hanoi and Manila are looking to elevate their relationship further in 2015.

Enjoying steady bilateral relations since diplomatic ties were established after the Vietnam War in 1976, the Philippines and Vietnam are now engaging in high-level dialogues to try to establish a strategic partnership.

In May of 2014, President Benigno S. Aquino III and Prime Minister Nguyen Tan expressed an aspiration toward establishing a strategic partnership between the two countries. In November, at the sidelines of the 2014 22nd APEC Leaders’ Meeting in Beijing, China, President Aquino and Vietnam’s President Truong Tan Sang agreed to convene a Joint Working Committee to start discussions on the roadmap towards this partnership.


The China Factor?


The idea of a strategic partnership became stronger during the oil rig row between Vietnam and China. In June 2014, China’s National Petroleum Corporation deployed a giant oil rig near the Paracel Islands, in the waters claimed by Vietnam as part of its exclusive economic zone (EEZ). This unilateral action by China led to a confrontation between Chinese and Vietnamese government vessels, as well as violent anti-China riots in Vietnam that forced thousands of Chinese to flee the country. Adding fuel to the clash was the arrest of six Vietnamese fishermen by Chinese naval ships in disputed waters. These standoffs led to a diplomatic rift between the two states.

The Philippines is the only claimant state in the SCS to have filed an arbitration case against China’s historic claims. In support of this move to promote a rules-based approach in solving maritime disputes, Vietnam submitted its position on this arbitration case to the international tribunal last December 2014. The changing geopolitical context has facilitated the convergence of interests of the Philippines and Vietnam, paving the way for establishing a strategic partnership.


Vietnam’s Current Hard and Soft Power Policy Options

In dealing with regional flashpoints, Vietnam has used both hard and soft power approaches. It has strengthened its military and non-military presence in the disputed waters. This is evident in the establishment of permanent military garrisons, installation of medical facilities and equipment in Cam Ranh Bay – which is the closest and largest port to the Spratlys to the South and is located within the range of the Paracels –and deployment of troops and civilians in land features it claims. Recently, it has purchased Kilo-class submarines from Russia to modernize its naval capabilities.

Vietnam recognizes that solely relying on military force is not enough to deter China. It has chosen to be diplomatically proactive, internationalizing the issue to gain the support of other countries. Elevating and strengthening bilateral relations to strategic partnerships is a move that Vietnam has also been exploring. In addition, it has actively participated in fora such as the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), the East Asia Summit (EAS), meetings of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) and the United Nations (UN) to raise awareness on concerns in the South China Sea.


Building the Philippines-Vietnam Strategic Partnership

The term strategic partnership is oftentimes a misunderstood concept as it is equated to a security-oriented agreement between two states, directed at certain parties or states. It is, in fact, an elevation of bilateral exchanges that creates room for bilateral strategic dialogue mechanisms that are conducted in the ministerial-level. It is comprehensive and includes economic, functional and socio-cultural cooperation.

With the Philippines’ and Vietnam’s increasingly converging interests, initial discussions on the strategic partnership started a month after the foreign ministers announced the forging of a stronger relationship between the two countries. Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Pham Binh Minh and Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto del Rosario co-chaired the Joint Commission on concluding a strategic partnership held last 29 to 30 January 2015. The two parties came up with a working draft on the joint statement for the strategic partnership on the basis of amity, equality, mutual respect and cooperation.

The beginning of 2015, thus, marks a promising future for the Philippines and Vietnam. The two countries’ bilateral relations will certainly grow in areas such as political, trade and investment, fisheries, marine and oceanic affairs, as well as defense and security, among others.


What is the Philippines looking for in a strategic partner?

When asked why the Philippines decided to make Vietnam a strategic partner, Secretary del Rosario stated that “just like the US and Japan, there is a special bond between the Philippines and Vietnam.” Before a strategic partnership is established, parties must have a mutual agreement based on and consistent with common values and goals. Vietnam is a potentially viable partner not only because of mutual economic benefits that can be gained, but also because Vietnam recognizes the importance of upholding ASEAN’s centrality and unity in an evolving regional architecture. The Philippines, however, is committed to values such as democracy, human rights, and good governance, all of which may not sit well with Vietnam.

On regional issues, Vietnam also promotes maritime cooperation, asserting a rules-based approach in preserving regional stability and security. The Philippines and Vietnam have a shared commitment to maintain peace in the region, ensuring that people across Southeast Asia will live in harmony and prosperity, through peaceful resolution of disputes. Most importantly, they are committed to continue both bilateral and multilateral cooperation towards the creation of an ASEAN Community. It is equally essential that strategic partners engage in collaborative activities – culturally, economically, and politically, as well as in sharing of information and expertise, turning weaknesses into strengths.


What is in store for the future strategic partnership?

Given the commonality of issues they face and commitments they share, both countries are strong advocates of security and stability in the region especially, when instruments or mechanisms relating to the promotion of maritime conflict-prevention are becoming ineffective in the face of China’s unilateral actions. Thus, there is an urgent need for ASEAN to finalize a legally-binding Code of Conduct in the South China Sea with China.

There will be more collaboration between the Philippines and Vietnam as they elevate their relations to strategic partnership. These include strengthened cooperation in the areas of agriculture, search and rescue operations, marine environment protection, and oil spill preparedness. Addressing regional issues will be a strong component of the deepening ties and, as such, there will be closer cooperation in military and maritime matters. The focus on political, defense and security cooperation, however, will certainly not be their only and primary objective. The overarching goal of a strategic partnership is to improve the overall relations between the two states and the living conditions of their populace.

The elevation of bilateral relations also means greater responsibility for both the Philippines and Vietnam. Both states must collaborate on the planning and implementation of the strategic partnership agreement, because there is convergence of interests in many areas. There is, however, a very important challenge before the ties between the two states are further elevated.

The Philippines’ basis for strategic partners is not merely convergent positions on strategic issues but also on shared values and principles, which means a strategic partnership cannot be agreed upon on the basis of expediency. Vietnam and the Philippines need to further thresh this issue out or the proposed strategic partnership will be shallow and cannot be implemented when the diplomatic winds change.
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Julio S. Amador III is the Deputy Director-General of the Foreign Service Institute. Jeremie P. Credo is a Foreign Affairs Research Specialist with the Center for International Relations and Strategic Studies of the Foreign Service Institute. This article was originally published as a CIRSS commentary by the Foreign Service Institute of the Philippines here.


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http://thediplomat.com/2015/02/the-philippines-and-vietnam-strategic-partners/
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The latter news is good news for China and a few Muricans as for the former it would give them more reason to saber-rattle and test their "armed forced" against us and for the latter, it provides them a Hollywood-style entertainment the likes Michael Bay could only dream of.
 
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Newly formed 780th Ground Base Air Defense Group of the Philippine Air Force

10422512_235390853298246_974803673987599029_n_jp[1].jpg


The air defense assets must be coming together with the delivery of the first 2 FA50 and the radar for IAI


images_q_tbn_ANd9_Gc_SHZqy_Dq_Me6_RKHAb_XAkbm_G0mmt_O8b_D[1].jpg
 
Business News:

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DTI sets expanded consumer protection law to include online shopping, e-commerce
by Bernie Magkilat
February 28, 2015


The Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) has sought to further tighten consumer protection as it expands jurisdiction to include online shopping and e-commerce transactions as well as clothe itself with police powers to padlock violating enterprises, which will be meted with fines of up to P10 million maximum from only P300,000 under its proposed amendment to the Consumer Act.

DTI Undersecretary Victorio Mario Dimagiba told reporters that the DTI proposed amendments entitled “An Act granting broader protection for consumers adding new provisions and amending certain provisions for the Purpose of Republic Act No. 7394, otherwise known as the Consumer Act of the Philippines” will be submitted to both Houses of Congress on Monday.

Under the proposed bill, the Bill has inserted the eight basic rights of consumers: right to basic needs, choose, representation, redress, consumer education, safety, healthy environment, and information.

It has also amended the terms of reference to expand its jurisdiction to using mass media trades to include Internet, mobile phones, and similar electronic devices that are used as means or methods to convey advertising messages to the public.

The DTI has also moved to ensure safety and quality of products as well as to provide redress against unsafe, injurious or dangerous consumer products by requiring manufacturers to issue product recall or notice to every person to whom such consumer product was delivered or sold without delay.

It has also sought to amend practices on weight and measures. Dimagiba said the DTI has already distributed 19 “Timbangan ng Bayan” to Marikina out of the 200 weighing scales for distribution. Packing and packaging must not only be in English but also in the Tagalog language.

Penalties to erring traders have been substantially raised to the current minimum of P500 to maximum of P300,000 to a minimum of P50,000 and maximum of P10 million based on 5 percent of gross sales of consumer product or services.

“We have to adjust the fines to factor in the cost of inflation and for our enforcement activities,” Dimagiba said noting that the old fines had been set when the law was crafted in 1992.

The DTI also sought to be clothed with police powers to padlock erring enterprises, “Any establishment caught in the act of selling, distributing, manufacturing, producing, display or importation of substandard and hazardous products shall authorize the implementing agencies to close and shut down the business premises.”

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DTI sets expanded consumer protection law to include online shopping, e-commerce | Manila Bulletin | Latest Breaking News | News Philippines
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Local Daikin sales soared 170% in 2014, bets on residential market
by Bernie Magkilat
February 28, 2015


Daikin, Japanese cooling systems provider, aims P2 billion sales turnover for fiscal year 2015 after a robust 170 percent increase in gross sales in 2014 as the company launches small capacity split-type air-conditioning unit targeting a bigger share of the 460,000 units in annual demand for window type air-conditioning units that dominate the residential market.

Ryuta Hayashibara, sales division manager of Daikin Air-conditioning Philippines Inc., told reporters during the launch of VRV IV-S, that the company is on track to hit P1.5 billion in gross sales this year, which fiscal year ends in March, for a huge 170 percent increase over 2013 fiscal year.

Of its P2 billion sales target, 30 percent would be coming from the residential business segment.

Hayashibara said the company will make available starting April this year D SMART, a small capacity split type room air-conditioner model of 0.5 HP and 0.8 HP equipped with Daikin’s Inverter technology and its new refrigerant R32. The 0.5 HP unit will cost P26,000 while the 0.8 HP at P28,000.

With these new units, Hayashibara said one can have the benefits of and advantages of a split type unit but with a lower initial cost. It has a cooling capacity for at least 10 square meter room.

“These new units may be small in capacity but still big in features and big in energy savings,” Hayashibara said noting that Daikin’s Inverter technology would translate to at least 30 percent in energy savings.

Based on experience, customers are able to recover the higher upfront cash within a year through energy savings.

Hayashibara is confident this new model is going to modernize room air-conditioning systems and provide more aesthetics to newly built condominiums in the country.

“We would like to get a bigger share of the huge demand for window type air-con,” he said.

He noted that Japan had long phased out the window type in the 60′s because it is not energy efficient, not environment friendly and noisy.

For its new VRV IV-S, the company seeks to provide high indoor capacity units, more connectable indoor and lightweight outdoor units. The new system is now available in 4,5,6,8 and 9 HP outdoor units and can connect up to 14 indoor units.

This new design of VRV IV-S system has been optimized, with the height for 4 HP and 5 HP reduced to only 990 mm. From the wall mounted up to the flour mounted type, the VRV system has 15 types and 81 models of indoor units.

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Local Daikin sales soared 170% in 2014, bets on residential market | Manila Bulletin | Latest Breaking News | News Philippines
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Exporters group thumbs down wage hike plea
By Louella D. Desiderio (The Philippine Star)
Updated March 1, 2015 - 12:00am


MANILA, Philippines - Exporters are opposing calls to implement wage hikes, arguing such would hinder job creation and economic growth.

The Philippine Exporters Confederation Inc. (Philexport), citing the letter of its president Sergio Ortiz-Luis Jr. to Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board chairman Alex Avila, said that another round of wage increase would undermine the viability particularly of small and medium enterprises (SMEs).

Ortiz-Luis said SMEs play a vital role in job generation and livelihood opportunities.

The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines has sought a P136 increase in the daily minimum wage of workers in the National Capital Region (NCR) and the P734 minimum wage hike proposed by the Association of Minimum Wage Earners and Advocates to be implemented in equal tranches of P146.80 over a period of five years.

The wage hike petitions were filed citing inflationary factors, the recent increases in the fares of the Metro Rail Transit and Light Rail Transit, and impending water and electricity rate increases.

“We at Philexport remain consistent in our position against barriers to trade competitiveness, especially against our SMEs which will be directly and adversely affected by such increases. We find these petitions ill-timed and irrelevant,” Ortiz-Luis said.

He cited a Philippine Institute for Development Studies report which showed that minimum wages are the biggest binding constraints to job creation and economic growth.

“Thus, this will again provide a blow on our twin problems of unemployment and poverty,” he said.

A wage increase, he added, would also jack up inflation, as manufacturers and service providers would pass on extra costs that could no longer be absorbed by consumers or the workers and other suppliers.

At present, the labor wage in NCR is one of the highest in Southeast Asia.

“This clearly makes NCR one of the most expensive regions to do business with,” Ortiz-Luis said.

Further, the Philexport concurred with the position of the Employers Confederation of the Philippines that the P734 increase payable in equal tranches over a period of five years “has absolutely no basis in law and does not conform to the prescribed standards and criteria for wage fixing.”

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Exporters group thumbs down wage hike plea | Business, News, The Philippine Star | philstar.com
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Acer exec visits Manila for first time, leaves impressed by locals
Amy R. Remo
Philippine Daily Inquirer
1:20 AM | Sunday, March 1st, 2015

A company official worth his salt visits the markets where his firm maintains a presence in order to help local teams strategize and expand the business.

Often, officials go on these trips to look into the problems of local teams and identify new game plans and policies to further raise revenues and market shares.

But for Oliver Ahrens, senior vice president of multinational hardware and electronics firm Acer Inc., his first trip to the Philippines last week marked a departure from his normal experience.

“Usually, I only come to a country when there is a need to. The Philippines is an exemption. The Philippines is, really, for us something like a poster boy for business,” Ahrens says during a briefing last week.

“If you ask me, the Philippines has, in Asia Pacific, the best go-to-market strategy, and the best new production introduction (NPI) process. Positioning products, and communicating these to the distribution channels—nobody is doing it as good as the Philippines. And this one of the reasons for our high market share here. For me, it is also a learning trip to understand a little bit more how [things are] done here,” he explains.

True enough, Acer Philippines Inc. expects to sustain its strong momentum this year, with revenues projected to grow by a double-digit pace anew, while its market share in key product segments could further rise to cement its foothold in the local market.

“The Philippines for us is a center of excellence where other markets can learn,” Ahrens says, adding that the country is considered to be one of the fastest growing, even if it is not the biggest, markets in the Asia Pacific.

According to Ahrens, the company is also now looking at the business models being employed in the Philippines, particularly for new product introductions, which can be replicated in some countries in the region where Acer’s market share appears to be lower.

For the whole Asia Pacific region, Acer’s market share ranged only from 8 to 11 percent.

“We want to bring up the market share in the Asia Pacific. If we achieve at least half of the market share in the Philippines, then we would be happy with that,” Ahrens says.

In the Philippines, Acer managed to grow revenues by 15 percent last year, driven largely by the personal computer (PC) segment, which accounted for about 20 percent of the total market share in the country, says Manuel Wong, Acer Philippines managing director.

In the notebook computer segment alone, Acer grabbed a 40-percent market share, reaffirming the company’s position as the No. 1 overall branded PC vendor in the country.

Acer’s presence in the smartphone and tablet category, however, remained marginal at 2 percent and 4 percent, respectively. But company officials are bullish of their prospects of being able to raise these market shares to about 4 percent for smart phones, and more than 5 percent for tablets.

To help raise sales and market shares, Acer will be launching new products in the country this year. While declining to disclose specific models, Ahrens says that Acer will bring in new 7-inch and 10-inch tablets in the country, as well as gaming tablets to cater to a growing market segment.

This year, the company’s traditional business segments are still expected to contribute 90 percent of the company’s revenues, according to Ahrens. But Acer will be bringing in two-in-one and new gaming products, and will further expand the offerings for the upper middle classes given the growing demand from this segment.

Asked if Acer still has plans to resume assembly operations in the Philippines, Ahrens says that the company is “open” to the idea, but that such a move “must make commercial sense” before the electronics firm commits to it.

Although the volumes are enough to justify a manufacturing facility here, the demand from the local market however, can be more efficiently supplied by its other facilities located elsewhere in the region.

Acer has production facilities in China, India, and Indonesia.

Acer first entered the Philippine market in 2003, managing the marketing, sales, and support services for a full range of personal computer systems from notebooks to peripherals.

Key products included Aspire and TravelMate mobile PCs, Aspire and Veriton desktop PC series; DLP projectors; LCD monitors; servers and storages; Acer smartphones; and the Iconia series of tablets and touch books.

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Acer exec visits Manila for first time, leaves impressed by locals | Inquirer Business
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Nation Development News:

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Phl now biggest grower of GM crops
By Rudy Fernandez (The Philippine Star) |
Updated March 1, 2015 - 12:00am


MANILA, Philippines - The Philippines is now the twelfth biggest grower of genetically modified (GM) crops.

This was achieved in 2014 when 415,000 farmers planted Bt (Basillus thuringionsis) corn in 831,000 hectares, enabling the country to maintain its rank as among the world’s “biotech mega-countries” or nations that produce GM crops in 50,000 hectares or more, according to the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Application (ISAAA).

ISAAA presented its latest annual report on the global status of commercialized biotech crops at the Philippine edition of its yearly media conference held on Feb. 27 at the Intercontinental Hotel in Makati City.

The forum was sponsored by ISAAA and the Philippine government-hosted Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agriculture (SEARCA), which is based in Los Baños, Laguna.

Speakers and resource persons were SEARCA Director Gil Saguiguit Jr., Agriculture Assistant Secretary Paz Benavidez II, ISAAA board of trustees chair Dr. Paul Tang, National Academy of Science and Technology (NAST) academician Dr. Eufemio Rasco Jr., ISAAA senior program officer Dr. Rhodora Aldemita, and Impasug-ong (Bukidnon) eggplant farmer Edgar Talasan.

In his report titled “The Global Status of Commercialized Biotech/GM Crops 2014” presented by Aldemita, ISAAA founder Dr. Clivo James said that more than 181 million hectares of biotech crops were planted by 18 million farmers in 28 countries, 20 of them developing ones, including China, India, Brazil, and Argentina.

The lead biotech crops planted globally are soybean, corn, cotton, canola, sugar beat, papaya and alfalfa.

In the Philippines, Bt corn has steadily increased in its land area since it was commercially produced in 2003. And since 2011, Bt corn has helped enable the Philippines to become self-sufficient in this crop. The country has also exported corn silage to South Korea since 2013 owing to its good quality.

The United States, which devotes 73.1 million hectares to biotech crops in 2014, continued to lead the biotech mega-countries. US has been producing GM crops such as maize, soybean, cotton, canola, sugar beat, papaya, squash, tomato, sweet pepper, poplar, alfalfa and - only last year - eggplant.

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Phl now biggest grower of GM crops | Headlines, News, The Philippine Star | philstar.com
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Politics and National Security News:

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Abu’s Sahiron wounded in Sulu fighting?
By Jaime Laude (The Philippine Star)
Updated March 1, 2015 - 12:00am


MANILA, Philippines - Abu Sayyaf leader Radulan Sahiron could have been among the bandits wounded in a clash in Barangay Buhanginan, Sulu last Friday.

“We are still verifying this. What is confirmed is that 25 of them were killed while 27 others were wounded,” a military source in Sulu said.

The US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has offered $5 million for information leading to the capture of Sahiron and another Abu Sayyaf leader, Isnilon Hapilon, for their crimes against Americans.

At least 25 Abu Sayyaf gunmen were killed and 27 others were wounded after five days of fighting with government troops in Sulu.

The military said two soldiers from Joint Task Group Sulu (JTGS) led by Col. Allan Arrojado were also killed and 26 others wounded in the gunbattles.

Capt. Maria Rowena Muyuela, spokesperson for the Western Mindanao Command, said troops from the 1st Scout Ranger Battalion under Lt. Col. Eugenio Boquio attacked the fleeing group of Sahiron in Sitio Baunoh Butong, Barangay Buhanginan in Patikul.

Muyuela said ground troops have launched mortar attacks while air support was provided by the Air Force.

She said the 40-millimeter mortar rounds fired by the Abu Sayyaf bandits hit the wounded soldiers.

She said the victims were airlifted to a military hospital in Barangay Busbus in Jolo.

Muyuela said pursuing troops reported that Abu Sayyaf bandits retreated toward Barangay Taglibi.

The military is also verifying reports that more bandits led by Furuji Indama arrived in Sulu yesterday to reinforce the group of Sahiron.

Armed Forces of the Philippines Public Affairs Office chief Lt. Col. Harold Cabunoc said the bandits are now low in ammunition.

“Reports from our sources in the villages in Patikul indicate that Abu Sayyaf is on the run... The elite Scout Rangers are relentlessly tracking them down,” Cabunoc said. –With Roel Pareño

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Abu’s Sahiron wounded in Sulu fighting? | Headlines, News, The Philippine Star | philstar.com
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PDAF may spell disaster for congressional bets in 2016
by Ben Rosario
March 1, 2015 (updated)


Part I

A quarter century after being part of the staple to get politicians elected to legislative offices, the Priority Development Assistance Fund, also known as the “pork barrel,” could spell catastrophe for the 2016 election bid of about 90 former and incumbent congressmen and senators in the country.

Similarly, the Disbursement Acceleration Program funded out of P144-billion largesse from the Aquino government may no longer bring the political dividends that those who benefitted from it enjoyed in the 2013 mid-term polls.

Three party-list congressmen who have been closely monitoring the PDAF-DAP controversies made these predictions. They stressed it will worsen for politicians concerned about their pork barrel if anti-corruption groups further stoke public anger over the unprecedented wastage of public funds.

The representatives are Lito Atienza (Buhay Partylist), Jonathan de la Cruz (Abakada Partylist), and Terry Ridon (Kabataan Partylist). They agreed that final rulings of the Supreme Court that declared PDAF and parts of the DAP unconstitutional have made the fate of involved legislators and 2016 administration bets worse.

However, the High Court ruling is not the final nail in the coffin. The coup de grace would be in the form of a Sandiganbayan conviction of incumbent and former solons prior to the May 2016 elections.

While waiting for anti-graft court rulings, investigation should continue on the pork barrel scam, mainly committed through the funding of non-existent or overpriced projects by bogus or temporary non-government organizations, particularly those allegedly formed by businesswoman Janet Lim Napoles.

Atienza, Dela Cruz, and Ridon find it odd that 18 months after the Commission on Audit released its special audit findings on PDAF anomalies involving bogus non-government organizations (NGO), only three senators and five former congressmen have been charged, with the ex-House members haled to court only two weeks ago.


NO ADMINISTRATION ALLIES

Sharing a common PDAF-DAP experience in getting their separate proposals for congressional probes on the twin issues flatly rejected by the House leadership, the three lawmakers entertain strong feelings that the filing of charges has been selective. They feel that government investigators are going easy on Aquino administration allies.

“Let’s call spade a spade. Eight or nine have been charged but none of them are present allies of the Aquino administration,” noted Ridon. “It seems allies of the President are being spared.”

So far, non-bailable plunder charges linked to the Napoles scam have already been filed in court against Senators Juan Ponce Enrile, Jinggoy Estrada, and Ramon “Bong” Revilla Jr., all opposition stalwarts.

Also charged, although only a few days ago, were former House members Rizalina Seachon Lanete, now Masbate governor; Samuel Dangwa of Benguet; Constantino Jaraula of Cagayan de Oro City; Edgar Valdez of APEC partylist; and Agusan del Sur’s Rodolfo Plaza, a staunch critic of the Aquino government.


100 LEGISLATORS

Of the 356 congressmen and senators who took slices of the P79.878-billion PDAF distributed from 2007 to 2009, only 100 of them had names mentioned in various adverse findings of the special audit conducted by a team led by COA Director Susan P. Garcia in 2013.

Many of the 100 legislators mentioned are incumbent elected and appointed officials allied with the Aquino government.

“Obviously, partisan lines are being followed here. We would like to see pillars of the (Aquino) administration also asked the same questions thrown at those who are now facing charges. A thorough investigation is needed before Malacañang allies could claim being cleared from this mess,” Atienza said.


NO ONE CLEARED YET

Dela Cruz said the public should not be hoodwinked into believing that legislators named in the COA report have been cleared because charges have not been filed against them before the Sandiganbayan.

Congressmen and senators continued to receive their annual PDAF share of P70 million and P200 million, respectively, until 2013 when the SC declared the allocation unconstitutional.


NO MORE PDAF?

With the High Court ruling and the strong public clamor, has Congress eliminated PDAF?

By name, it has, Atienza said.

In reality, legislators still have access to government funds that are supposed to be exclusively spent by the executive department.

In the case of House members, each still enjoy the privilege of “advising” at least five government departments how to spend their budget within a P70-million expenditure limit.


P 144-B DAP FUNDS

The recent final court ruling against the DAP system, reportedly a brainchild of Budget Secretary Florencio Abad, has also triggered strong calls for a special audit of the fund.

With government spending P144 billion in DAP funds in just three years starting 2011, House oppositionists believe that a special audit would open a can of worms for the Sandiganbayan to address.

“A COA special audit is long overdue. I filed a resolution to that effect last year and had hoped that COA would do it,” De la Cruz said.

Former COA Chairperson Grace Pulido Tan stepped down on Feb. 2 following mandatory retirement, without acting on the solon’s request.


DAP AS ‘SWEETENER’

Atienza lamented that the High Court struck down DAP as illegal three years after the fund was used as a sweetener for senators to issue a bitter ruling that ousted former SC Chief Justice Renato Corona in controversial impeachment proceedings.

The former Manila mayor claims that billions of pesos in DAP money were also used as baits in swaying congressional approval of the Reproductive Health law despite being slammed by the Catholic church as immoral.


AUDIT RESULTS BEFORE ELECTIONS

“The PDAF and DAP, both declared by the court as illegal appropriations, should become part of the election debates in 2016. The public should be made aware of the wastage of government funds to be able to decide clearly how they should vote in this very important national election,” Atienza said.

Ridon asked acting COA chief Heidi Mendoza to launch the DAP special audit before Malacañang names a permanent replacement for Pulido-Tan.

The solon said results of the audit should be released to the public in time for the 2016 elections.

(EDITOR’S NOTE: This is a three-part report on the pace of the investigation of the Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) or the “pork barrel” of the Senate and House of Representatives – 18 months after the Commission on Audit (COA) released the results of its audit. It’s been almost two years since the whistleblower submitted his affidavit on the P10-billion scam, and eight months since the cases were filed against three senators.

The Manila Bulletin is running this series to keep the public updated on the PDAF issues which have been overtaken by the Senate hearings on the alleged ill-gotten wealth of Vice President Jejomar C. Binay and the January 25 Mamasapano carnage.)

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PDAF may spell disaster for congressional bets in 2016 | Manila Bulletin | Latest Breaking News | News Philippines
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Well this may be old news but it is just two weeks ago and wasn't posted by other PH members including me...

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Military and Defense News


The Philippine Army Just Bought Falcon III Radios
February 15, 2015

Keeping true to its modernization plans, the Philippine Army has acquired new radios for its Light Armored Division.

This was announced by Harris Corporation as early as December 19 last year. The official press release opens with:

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Harris Corporation (NYSE:HRS), has been awarded a $18 million initial order to provide the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) with Harris Falcon III® tactical vehicular radios and intercom systems. The Philippine Army will acquire the radios for its tactical communications modernization program. The order was received during the first quarter of fiscal 2015.
____________________________________________________________________________

The $18 million order is being fulfilled by Harris RF, a subsidiary that sells to customers among national armed forces.

The Harris Corporation press release quoted Harris RF President of International Business Brendan O’Connell mentioning two interesting details about the Falcon III RF-7800V deal. It uses embedded encryption and the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) already have 13,000 Harris radios.

The AFP has been upgrading its Harris RF gear since 2008, when it paid an even bigger amount–$80 million–for a large batch of Falcon II radios. At the time, a Harris sales executive revealed the AFP remained loyal to Harris for the last 20 years.

But the new Falcon III RF-7800V marks a considerable boost for the Philippine Army’s mobile assets. According to product information from Harris RF, the RF-7800V has 21 features that make it ideal for vehicular use, including GPS, a chat application, and USB connectivity.

This makes the RF-7800V well-suited to the Light Armored Division. Despite its name, the Philippine Army doesn’t possess main battle tanks. Instead, its Light Armored Division is a mechanized unit equipped with armored cars and APCs. These include the V-150 Commando, the 4×4 SIMBA, M113 AIFV, and the Scorpion light tank.

Harris Corporation is a publicly listed telecommunications and IT provider. Its financials can be reviewed on Thomson Reuters.

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The Philippine Army Just Bought Falcon III Radios | 21st Century Asian Arms Race
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Philippines to get first two FA-50s early
Michael Cohen, Manila and James Hardy, London - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
03 March 2015


1423210_-_main.jpg

KAI will deliver two FA-50s to the PAF ahead of schedule, a Philippine official said on 3 March. Source: KAI
Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI) will deliver two FA-50 light-attack aircraft to the Philippine Air Force (PAF) ahead of schedule in December, Philippine Undersecretary of Defense Fernando Manalo said on 3 March.

"We are looking at the early delivery of two FA-50s," said Manalo, head of the Philippine Department of National Defense's (DND) modernisation and procurement division. "They will be combat and mission ready upon their arrival this December."

Manila signed a PHP18.9 billion contract to buy 12 FA-50s on 28 March 2014, under which KAI was to deliver all the aircraft by mid-2017.

Philippine President Aquino inspected an FA-50 at Gimhae Air Base in South Korea in December 2014, and at the time told reporters he expected the 12 aircraft to just be the start of increased defence co-operation between the two countries.

"We have been assured by KAI that by 2017 our procurement will be complete. Down the road, likely more will be needed, but I will leave that up to my successors," he said. Aquino's term ends on 30 June 2016.
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Philippines to get first two FA-50s early
Michael Cohen, Manila and James Hardy, London - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
03 March 2015


1423210_-_main.jpg

KAI will deliver two FA-50s to the PAF ahead of schedule, a Philippine official said on 3 March. Source: KAI
Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI) will deliver two FA-50 light-attack aircraft to the Philippine Air Force (PAF) ahead of schedule in December, Philippine Undersecretary of Defense Fernando Manalo said on 3 March.

"We are looking at the early delivery of two FA-50s," said Manalo, head of the Philippine Department of National Defense's (DND) modernisation and procurement division. "They will be combat and mission ready upon their arrival this December."

Manila signed a PHP18.9 billion contract to buy 12 FA-50s on 28 March 2014, under which KAI was to deliver all the aircraft by mid-2017.

Philippine President Aquino inspected an FA-50 at Gimhae Air Base in South Korea in December 2014, and at the time told reporters he expected the 12 aircraft to just be the start of increased defence co-operation between the two countries.

"We have been assured by KAI that by 2017 our procurement will be complete. Down the road, likely more will be needed, but I will leave that up to my successors," he said. Aquino's term ends on 30 June 2016.
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Maybe South Korea could help us developed our own 4.5th generation aircraft (like F-15E, F/A-18E, JAS 39) as the KAI KF-X is beyond our capability.
 

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