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Showing posts with label Current Issues. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Current Issues. Show all posts

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Random Thoughts

I have survived the April 1 CONFICKER virus threat! I’ve been extra watchful for suspicious messages from the internet the whole day yesterday, fortunately no such thing came. What an uneventful April Fools Day! But April Fools is not really part of our Filipino culture. What I can recall as the day for pranksters since I was a child is Dec 28, Ninos Inocentes.

It’s been quite some time since my last post. Since I woke up very early this morning and I had nothing better to do, I decided to write my random thoughts which I'm sharing with you.
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Yesterday, I was supposed to have transferred to a new job. Not really “new” if we talk of the nature and field of work, because it would still have been agrarian reform/rural development related. I would have joined a foreign-assisted project and I was excited in having the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) as one of the six regional project sites. I’ve been to two provinces so far – Basilan and Lanao Sur. I thought this would be my chance to see Sulu and Tawi-Tawi.

The transfer would have been for purely monetary consideration. My colleagues/ friends, however, convinced me to stay in our small NGO, so I reconsidered my decision. I still expect to learn something new. We are developing a program, which if we get a funding for, will give us the opportunity to work with the Higaonon tribes in Misamis and Bukidnon, as well as the Aetas of Botolan in Zambales. If our proposal gets approved, the project will start next year. What is almost certain is adding a new area to our present operations – Candoni, an upland area and one the poorest municipalities of Negros Occidental.

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Last March 31, it was exactly six years since I quit smoking. At three packs a day (and sometimes even more), I’ve saved 131,400 sticks of Hope menthol cigarettes. How much would it have cost me to allow such nicotine to enter my lungs?

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Have you been to the new terminal (NAIA 3)? I do since I always take Cebu Pacific in my domestic flights because of the cheaper rates. If you don’t have a "sundo" and you’re not willing to take the airport taxis because they can cost you a fortune, there are shuttle vans which charge only P20 that could take you to MRT or LRT stations. But if you don’t want to go through the hassle of carrying your heavy luggage up the railway stations, then there are metered taxis outside the terminal. You just have to walk a few hundred meters from the arrival area.

It was a bad day, however, last Saturday when I arrived from Cagayan de Oro. There was a long queue of taxis but the drivers were nowhere to be found. They were out meeting the passengers – “nango-ngontrata”, (na dapat bawal). It took a while before I got a ride, after complaining aloud and threatening to report the situation to “authorities” (may kumikita na naman, siguradong naglalagay ang mga taxi drivers, to whom and how much, I don’t know). I saw the hotline of the LTFRB (Land Transportation and Franchising Regulatory Board) written on the cab. I called the numbers but nobody was answering. The numbers were for a cellphone and not a landline. So I sent a text message reporting the incident and even sent the plate nos. of two cabs whose drivers refused to take me as passenger. I received a reply that said that the matter will be investigated and advised me to contact them again if I wish to pursue cases against the drivers. I didn’t. It would be a big hassle.

I would think that a “hotline” should be accessible at the shortest time possible time. E kung emergency and mabagal kang magtext like me, tapos na boxing before you can get your message across.

Pero mas grabe ang kapalpakan sa North Expressway according to Ka Tonying (Taverna of Umagang Kay Ganda). He said that there’s a billboard of GMA and PAGCOR chief Efren Genuino reminding motorists about safe driving and with the hotline “711” written. That was the wrong number though – dapat 117, “7-11” is the name of the convenience store!

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There’s a lot of high profile news these days, I’ll mention some and add my personal views, pasensya na if you have different views. You’re free to react anyway.
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The Abu Sayaf Group is still holding the three International Red Cross volunteers captive and right now, we don’t know what their actual situation is, but we’re hopeful that they are still alive. The situation is very difficult for the government. If something happens to the three kidnap victims, it will be blamed by the whole world. But, it can not and should not also give in to the ASG’s demand for a total pull-out of troops from Sulu because that would be putting the entire province at risk. I wish Sen Gordon, who heads the Red Cross here in the Philippines would refrain from publicly asking the military to heed the demands of the ASG for the sake of the 3 IRC volunteers. I think he should talk with GMA and the military privately, outside the glare of the media.

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The noose is getting tighter on the neck of Sen. Ping Lacson on the Dacer-Curvito murder case. Whether efforts to bring back Mancao and Dumlao to the country are politically motivated or not, Sen. Ping has to brace himself for his defense. I am quite satisfied with Ping’s performance as a senator. However, he has to face the ghosts of his past. Actually aside from this case, there’s the Kuratong Baleleng case, which has almost been forgotten.

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The “recantation” of the rape-victim “Nicole” is a big issue because “Nicole” has been used as the symbol of the opposition to the Visiting Forces Agreement. Her case is not just a case of the person “Nicole” against Daniel Smith, but a case of the Filipinos/Filipino women against the US and the VFA. It is obvious that many of those pursuing the case on “her behalf” have their own agenda, not necessarily Nicole’s personal interest. I am against rape and against any kind of oppression especially by foreigners against Filipinos. But I have confirmed from this incident that I still hold “old-fashioned” values. I do not believe in what some women activists say that any woman has the right to enjoy, to go to a girlie bar, drink and get thoroughly drunk alone, flirt with a stranger, and not expect to get indecent proposals and much more, to get raped. I’m not saying that those who do, have it coming if they get raped and have no right to complain. Rape is a crime and shouldn’t go unpunished. But I still believe in the “old-outmoded” belief that an ounce of prevention is better than a pound of cure, o “kung ayaw mong masunog, huwag kang magdarang sa apoy”. Wouldn't it be better if you help build your daughter's character so that she’ll not find going to a bar, drinking and flirting as a normal form of enjoyment. And to my son (if I had one) and nephew, to be careful with consensual sex - do it at the right place, right time, and with the right person. Those are just my personal views.

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There are groups endorsing Among Ed (Fr. Panlilio, governor of Pampanga) to run for President. I’m not excited about this. I don’t think he’s the one who can rally and unite the people to a common vision for the country. He was not able to do it in Pampanga (he is at odds with the entire Provincial Board, and has the support of only one mayor out of ___ (don’t know the number). Being morally upright is not the only skill needed for good governance.

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Lastly my best wishes to our April birthday celebrants, not one of whom is a member of our email group and has not opened our blog – Mila Echano-Rosales (April 1), Mona de Jesus-Luzarraga (April 6), Emily Herrero-Cruz (April 15), Lina Angeles-Nieva and Dorset Dwyer (April 18).

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Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Servants of the People

I am posting the Editorial of the Sunday, December 21 issue of the Philippine Daily Inquirer as a tribute to Ate Marynat and Rey, who's also a former government auditor.

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OVERLOOKED in all the political bluster over the seemingly endless lineup of officials caught with their fingers in the cookie jar of the state are the silent heroes who made such exposés possible. We don’t mean the politicians milking the never-ending scandals for all they’re worth, politically. We refer to the civil servants, the loyal public servants, who by doing their jobs without fear or favor, provide living testimony that there remain people in our government who really live by the principles of duty, honor and country.

The people at the top may know the rules so well that they can bend them. They may know the ins and outs of government so completely that they can mutate otherwise decent policies into an instrument for clever acts of graft and corruption. They may be able to influence their subordinates into participating in their crimes, and partaking of the fruits of their criminal behavior. But they can never fully cover up what they did wrong; sooner or later, how and when they broke the rules will be revealed.

The selective memory of officials like Jocelyn “Joc-joc” Bolante, and their deceit when it comes to their official acts, have been exposed time and again, by the diligent work of government auditors who may not be able to prevent crimes, but who ferret out incriminating documents and, at times, even preserve them so that they can be used as evidence to prove official wrongdoing. That is why whether through claims of executive privilege, or the outright destruction or falsification of records, so much official energy is used up to hide and keep hidden the paper trail. Because that paper trail, sooner or later, will lead to the crooks—and their allies and godfathers in government.

Officials, high and low, often forget the principle of command responsibility as understood and advocated by President Diosdado Macapagal. During his term, he proposed that heads of departments should consider themselves responsible for acts of omission of the officials under them, even if they had no personal fault or participation in those acts.

He gave the example of department secretaries who he felt should resign because of major shortcomings in their departments, even if those shortcomings were unknown to them. In his case, he believed that even if personally honest, presidents should hold themselves responsible for graft and corruption in their administrations.

But, of course, both in his time and since, advocating command responsibility is one thing; and demonstrating it to and demanding it of subordinates is another. Filipinos of an older generation will recall the sensational Stonehill case, in which the American tobacco magnate Harry Stonehill’s “donations” to a dizzying number of officials were exposed. The Macapagal administration barely survived the political fallout from the exposé.

Macapagal ended up deporting Stonehill to prevent his testifying before Congress, while his administration dragged in both the living (his Vice President Emmanuel Pelaez) and the dead (Manila Mayor Arsenio Lacson and even his widow) in what came to be known as squid tactics to becloud the evidence and the issues.

It can even be said that the blueprint for the Garcis and Joc-jocs of today surviving public investigations was drawn up in the 1960s. Then, as now, however, official wrongdoing may never be punished. However, because of our civil servants who take their responsibilities seriously, there could be a paper trail of evidence that can at least reassure decent-minded citizens that no crime can go unexposed for long.

The defect, then, doesn’t lie in our civil servants, or at least in the auditors charged with keeping tabs on the paper trail, but rather, on a justice system which can be regularly confronted with mountains of evidence, but which never seems capable of sending more than a tiny fraction of wrongdoers to jail.

But to the auditors, we believe, our nation owes its gratitude. Well done, good and faithful servants of the Filipino people.

Read More...... Read more!

Monday, October 20, 2008

Current News and Quotes from the Newsmakers

On the financial crisis:

..... "In the long run, the American people can have confidence that our economy will bounce back…. ……America is the best place in the world to start and run a business, the most attractive destination for investors around the globe, and home to the most talented, enterprising and creative workers in the World.” - George W. Bush

…. That’s in the long-run, but as John Maynard Keynes said, “in the long-run, we’re all dead.”

(Just wondering..... why is there no organized response to the crisis from those who have been affected, those who lost their savings, investments, or jobs? There are no protests, no rallies and demonstrations in the Wall Street, bakit nga ba Danny?)

Meanwhile, President Arroyo crowed to the media that the World Bank was going to set up a $10B bail-out fund for Asia. She sounded as if this came about because of her suggestion when she made the announcement.

But the next day, the World Bank issued a denial. The Asian Development Bank likewise said that it had no idea of such a plan. Nakuryente si GMA. But the Palace won’t admit it. Malacanang explained that Pres. Arroyo got the information from Finance Secretary Teves, who is in the US attending a conference. There could have been another meeting where there were changes in plans but the President was not informed. Later that day, Malacanang said that it was the International Monetary Fund, and not the World Bank. Former Senator, now NEDA Director General Ralph Recto, further said, “They are Caucasians and they look alike. It’s not easy to distinguish them.” (that's why Teves was not able to distinguish the WB from the IMF)

But the IMF representative in the Philippines would not confirm this and said that Sec. Teves would be able to clarify this when he arrives tomorrow (Oct 20). Then Malacanang came up with the name of a certain Michael Klein as being the one who actually made the proposal, Philippine officials merely endorsed it and reported it to the President. (E bakit nag-announce na agad si PGMA? Siyempre para siya ang bida. Kaso, palpak pala.)


Hard times? Look good anyway (from PDI as reported by Alcuin Papa)

Diskwento: Panalo ang Manggawang Pilipino Caravan of the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) gives free haircuts, massages, manicure and pedicures to workers and their families.


Another probable case of corruption:
There seems to be no end to corruption under PGMA's administration.

105,000 Euros (P6.9 Million) were found by Russian customs authorities in the possession of the wife of newly retired Police Gen. Eliseo de la Paz. Why were they carrying such a huge sum? Why was Gen. de la Paz still sent on travel when his retirement day would fall within the duration of the conference?

“The source of money should be clarified. If it is public money, who authorized it? If it is private money, where did it come from?” - Sen. Miriam D. Santiago

“It is a contingency fund.” – Sec Ronaldo Puno

"There is no such thing as a contingency fund for travel.” – Sen. Panfilo Lacson (There's really none, isn't it Ate Marynat?)

“Napolcom is considering issuing a regulation capping travel emergency funds.” –
..... "If he can liquidate it properly, then there won't be a problem"........ -Napolcom Vice Chair Eduardo Escueta. (But if there is no legal basis for the contingency fund, then, it wouldn't simply be an issue of proper liquidation.)


"The investigation of de la Paz would determine why he was carrying huge sums of money instead of travellers checks." - New PNP Director Verzosa. (Aren't you missing the point Gen. Verzosa? And why was your wife part of the delegation?)


On the lamppost scandal (purchased in Cebu for the ASEAN Conference and was alleged to be overpriced) - Ombudsman Merceditas Guttierez said that "the prosecution is now in doubt that it can prove that the lamppost deals were scandalous????


Heckler in the Cabinet


Quotable quotes from Justice Sec. Raul Gonzalez:

To critics questioning the grant of executive clemency to convict Claudio Teehankee, Jr:
"Plead your case to Jesus Christ."

To the Hultmans: "If they can't accept the decision (of PGMA), they can jump into the lake, very wide naman ang North Sea."..... He also said that they are "hypocrites" for saying that they were never informed about the petition for pardon.

On why high profile prisoners need special quarters (with all the amenities although at their own expense).... "It is a difficult situation to mix them up with the other inmates. You see, inmates tend to kill each other."

And remember his other quotable quotes:

To Susan Roces, when she accused GMA of stealing the presidency not once, but twice... "She's just a griping widow too beautiful to be put in jail."

And to Cory Aquino when she asked for the resignation of PGMA: "She should first take care of her daughter (Kris)".

Latest on the Reproductive Health Bill

Latest survey of the Social Weather Station revealed that majority of the Filipinos are in favor of the passage of the bill.

Other pending bills that deserve to be passed:

HB 4894 filed by Rep. Narciso Santiago III: provides tax incentives to employers who would be promoting breastfeeding (for expenses for equipment such as breast pumps, provision of consultation services, and for providing office space for the exclusive use of mothers who breastfeed or store milk for future use. (What is funny/puzzling is that Cong. Santiago - he's the son of Sen. Miriam Santiago - is a party list representative, and the party he is representing is Agrarian and Rural Concerns (ARC). He is not a farmer and has never been involved in agriculture or agrarian issues, whether in the past and even now that he is supposed to be representing the farmer sector. He is not even one among the many congressmen who filed bills on the extension of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program!)

HB 4910 filed by Rep. Edgar Chatto: This would grant tax incentives up to 10% of their gross income if they render free legal services for the underprivileged.


And finally, for the last item, a different kind of news:

Staying Alive for use in CPR - cardio pulmonary resuscitation - At 103 beats per minute, the old disco song has almost the perfect rhythm to help jump-start a stopped heart, based on the study of Dr. David Matlock of the American Heart Association.

Read More...... Read more!

Understanding the Financial Crisis from a Layman's Point of View

These two articles were contributed by Ed.

The financial crisis explained via a nice story…Enjoy. Lots of hugggssss…….. Ed Canela

If anyone has difficulty understanding the current world financial situation, the following should help....

Once upon a time in a village in India, a man announced to the villagers that he would buy monkeys for $10 each. The villagers seeing there were many monkeys around, went out to the forest and started catching them.

The man bought thousands of monkeys at $10 each, but, as the supply started to diminish, the villagers stopped their efforts.

The man further announced that he would now buy at $20 each. This renewed the efforts of the villagers and they started catching monkeys again.


Soon the supply diminished even further and people started going back to their farms. The offer rate increased to $25 per monkey and the supply of monkeys became so little that it was an effort to even see a monkey, let alone catch one!

The man now announced that he would buy monkeys at $50 each! However, since he had to go to the city on some business, his assistant would now act as buyer, on his behalf.


In the absence of the man, the assistant told the villagers: "Look at all these monkeys in the big cage that the man has collected. I will sell them to you at $35 each and when he returns from the city, you can sell them back to him for $50 each."

The villagers squeezed together their savings and bought all the monkeys.

Then they never saw the man or his assistant again, only monkeys everywhere!

Welcome to the WALL STREET.

Twenty-One Economic Models Explained with Cows

SOCIALISM

You have 2 cows.
You give one to your neighbour.

COMMUNISM

You have 2 cows.
The State takes both and gives you some milk.

FASCISM

You have 2 cows.
The State takes both and sells you some milk.

NAZISM

You have 2 cows.
The State takes both and shoots you.

BUREAUCRATISM

You have 2 cows.
The State takes both, shoots one, milks the other, and then throws the milk away....

TRADITIONAL CAPITALISM

You have two cows.
You sell one and buy a bull.
Your herd multiplies, and the economy grows.
You sell them and retire on the income.

SURREALISM

You have two giraffes.
The government requires you to take harmonica lessons.

AN AMERICAN CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You sell one, and force the other to produce the milk of four cows.
Later, you hire a consultant to analyse why the cow has dropped dead.


ENRON VENTURE CAPITALISM

You have two cows.
You sell three of them to your publicly listed company, using letters of credit opened by your brother-in-law at the bank, then execute a debt/equity swap with an associated general offer so that you get all four cows back, with a tax
exemption for five cows. The milk rights of the six cows are transferred via an intermediary to a Cayman Island Company secretly owned by the majority shareholder who sells the rights to all seven cows back to your listed company. The annual report says the company owns eight cows, with an option on one more. You sell one cow to buy a new president of the United States , leaving you with nine cows. No balance sheet provided with the release. The public then buys your bull.

A FRENCH CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You go on strike, organise a riot, and block the roads, because you want three cows.


A JAPANESE CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You redesign them so they are one-tenth the size of an ordinary cow and produce twenty times the milk. You then create a clever cow cartoon image called 'Cowkimon' and market it worldwide.

A GERMAN CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You re-engineer them so they live for 100 years, eat once a month, and milk themselves.

AN ITALIAN CORPORATION

You have two cows, but you don't know where they are.
You decide to have lunch.


A RUSSIAN CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You count them and learn you have five cows.
You count them again and learn you have 42 cows.
You count them again and learn you have 2 cows.
You stop counting cows and open another bottle of vodka.

A SWISS CORPORATION

You have 5000 cows. None of them belong to you.
You charge the owners for storing them.

A CHINESE CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You have 300 people milking them.
You claim that you have full employment, and high bovine productivity.
You arrest the newsman who reported the real situation.

AN INDIAN CORPORATION

You have two cows.
You worship them.

A BRITISH CORPORATION

You have two cows.
Both are mad.


AN IRAQI CORPORATION

Everyone thinks you have lots of cows. You tell them that you have none.
No-one believes you, so they bomb the sh#t out of you and invade your country.
You still have no cows, but at least now you are part of a Democracy...

AN AUSTRALIAN CORPORATION

You have two cows.
Business seems pretty good. You close the office and go for a few beers to celebrate.

A NEW ZEALAND CORPORATION

You have two cows..
The one on the left looks very attractive..

Read More...... Read more!

Friday, August 8, 2008

GRP-MILF MoA on ANCESTRAL DOMAIN

GRP-MILF MoA on ANCESTRAL DOMAIN
(Full Text)
IN THE NAME OF GOD
THE BENEFICENT, THE MERCIFUL

MEMORANDUM OF AGREEMENT ON THE ANCESTRAL DOMAIN ASPECT OF THE GRP-MILF TRIPOLI AGREEMENT ON PEACE OF 2001

The Government of the Republic of the Philippines (GRP) and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) herein referred to as the “Parties” to this Agreement,

TERMS OF REFERENCE

The Agreement for General Cessation of Hostilities dated July 18, 1997 Between the GRP and the MILF, and its Implementing Administrative and Operational Guidelines;

The General Framework of Agreement of Intent Between the GRP and the MILF dated August 27, 1998;

The Agreement on the General Framework for the Resumption of Peace Talks Between the GRP and the MILF dated March 24, 2001;

The Tripoli Agreement on Peace Between the GRP and the MILF dated June 22, 2001;

The Tripoli Agreement Between the GRP and the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) dated December 23, 1976 and the Final Agreement on the Implementation of the 1976 Tripoli Agreement Between the GRP and the MNLF dated September 2, 1996;

Republic Act No. 6734, as amended by R.A. 9054, otherwise known as “An Act to Strengthen and Expand the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM)”;

ILO Convention No. 169, in correlation to the UN Declaration on the Rights of the Indigenous Peoples, and Republic Act No. 8371 otherwise known as the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act of 1997, the UN Charter, the UN Universal Declaration on Human Rights, International Humanitarian Law (IHL), and internationally recognized human rights instruments; and

Compact rights entrenchment emanating from the regime of dar-ul-mua’hada (or territory under compact) and dar-ul-sulh (or territory under peace agreement) that partakes the nature of a treaty device. For the purpose of this Agreement, a “treaty” is defined as any solemn agreement in writing that sets out understandings, obligations, and benefits for both parties which provides for a framework that elaborates the principles declared in the Agreement.

HAVE AGREED AND ACKNOWLEDGED AS FOLLOWS:

CONCEPTS AND PRINCIPLES

It is the birthright of all Moros and all Indigenous peoples of Mindanao to identify themselves and be accepted as “Bangsamoros”. The Bangsamoro people refers to those who are natives or original inhabitants of Mindanao and its adjacent islands including Palawan and the Sulu archipelago at the time of conquest or colonization and their descendants whether mixed or of full native blood. Spouses and their descendants are classified as Bangsamoro. The freedom of choice of the Indigenous people shall be respected.

It is essential to lay the foundation of the Bangsamoro homeland in order to address the Bangsamoro people’s humanitarian and economic needs as well as their political aspirations. Such territorial jurisdictions and geographic areas being the natural wealth and patrimony represent the social, cultural and political identity and pride of all the Bangsamoro people. Ownership of the homeland is vested exclusively in them by virtue of their prior rights of occupation that had inhered in them as sizeable bodies of people, delimited by their ancestors since time immemorial, and being the first politically organized dominant occupants.

Both Parties acknowledge that ancestral domain does not form part of the public domain but encompasses ancestral, communal, and customary lands, maritime, fluvial and alluvial domains as well as all natural resources therein that have inured or vested ancestral rights on the basis of native title. Ancestral domain and ancestral land refer to those held under claim of ownership, occupied or possessed, by themselves or through the ancestors of the Bangsamoro people, communally or individually since time immemorial continuously to the present, except when prevented by war, civil disturbance, force majeure, or other forms of possible usurpation or displacement by force, deceit, stealth, or as a consequence of government project or any other voluntary dealings entered into by the government and private individuals, corporate entities or institutions.

Both Parties acknowledge that the right to self-governance of the Bangsamoro people is rooted on ancestral territoriality exercised originally under the suzerain authority of their sultanates and the Pat a Pangampong ku Ranaw. The Moro sultanates were states or karajaan/kadatuan resembling a body politic endowed with all the elements of nation-state in the modern sense. As a domestic community distinct from the rest of the national communities, they have a definite historic homeland. They are the “First Nation” with defined territory and with a system of government having entered into treaties of amity and commerce with foreign nations. The Parties concede that the ultimate objective of entrenching the Bangsamoro homeland as a territorial space is to secure their identity and posterity, to protect their property rights and resources as well as to establish a system of governance suitable and acceptable to them as a distinct dominant people.

Both Parties affirm their commitment to mutually respect the right to one’s identity and the parity of esteem of everyone in the political community. The protection of civil rights and religious liberties of individuals underlie the basis of peace and justice of their totality of relationships.

Both Parties agree that the Bangsamoro Juridical Entity (BJE) shall have the authority and jurisdiction over the Ancestral Domain and Ancestral lands, including both alienable and non-alienable lands encompassed within their homeland and ancestral territory, as well as the delineation of ancestral domain/lands of the Bangsamoro people located therein.

Vested property rights upon the entrenchment of the BJE shall be recognized and respected subject to paragraph 9 of the strand on Resources.

TERRITORY

The Bangsamoro homeland and historic territory refer to the land mass as well as the maritime, terrestrial, fluvial and alluvial domains, and the aerial domain, the atmospheric space above it, embracing the Mindanao-Sulu-Palawan geographic region. However, delimitations are contained in the agreed Schedules (Categories).

Toward this end, the Parties enter into the following stipulations:

The GRP and MILF as the Parties to this Agreement commit themselves to the full and mutual implementation of this framework agreement on territory with the aim of resolving outstanding issues that emanate from the consensus points on Ancestral Domain.

The Parties confirm their understanding that the mutual goal of reaching an agreement on Bangsamoro territory specific to mapping the outlying borders and the boundaries affecting local government units will lead to consolidation of the agreed texts on the Ancestral Domain Strands.
The Parties affirm that the core of the BJE shall constitute the present geographic area of the ARMM, including the municipalities of Baloi, Munai, Nunungan, Pantar, Tagoloan and Tangkal in the province of Lanao del Norte that voted for inclusion in the ARMM during the 2001 plebiscite.

Without derogating from the requirements of prior agreements, the Government stipulates to conduct and deliver, using all possible legal measures, within twelve (12) months following the signing of the MOA-AD, a plebiscite covering the areas as enumerated in the list and depicted in the map as Category A attached herein (the “Annex”). The Annex constitutes an integral part of this framework agreement. Toward this end, the Parties shall endeavour to complete the negotiations and resolve all outstanding issues on the Comprehensive Compact within fifteen (15) months from the signing of the MOA-AD.

The areas covered by Category B are reflected on a map and list attached herein as agreed to by the Parties. Category B (the “Special Intervention Areas”) refers to conflict affected areas outside the BJE which shall be the subject of special socio-economic and cultural affirmative action implemented by the Central Government pending the conduct of a plebiscite not earlier than twenty-five (25) years from the signing of the Comprehensive Compact to determine the question of their accession to the BJE. The areas reflected are subject to further negotiations by the Parties. The Annex constitutes an integral part of this framework agreement.

Internal Waters:

The BJE shall have jurisdiction over the management, conservation, development, protection, utilization and disposition of all natural resources, living and non-living, within its internal waters extending fifteen (15) kilometers from the coastline of the BJE area.

Territorial Waters:

(1) The territorial waters of the BJE shall stretch beyond the BJE internal waters up to the Republic of the Philippines (RP) baselines south east and south west of mainland Mindanao. Beyond the fifteen (15) kilometers internal waters, the Central Government and the BJE shall exercise joint jurisdiction, authority and management over areas and all natural resources, living and non-living contained therein. The details of such management of the Territorial Waters shall be provided in an agreement to be entered into by the Parties.

(2) The boundaries of the territorial waters shall stretch beyond the 15-km. BJE internal waters up to the Central Government’s baselines under existing laws. In the southern and eastern part of the BJE, it shall be demarcated by a line drawn from the Maguling Point, Palimbang, Province of Sultan Kudarat up to the straight baselines of the Philippines. On the northwestern part, it shall be demarcated by a line drawn from Little Sta. Cruz Island, Zamboanga City, up to Naris Point, Bataraza, Palawan. On the western part of Palawan, it shall be demarcated by a line drawn from the boundary of Bataraza and Rizal up to the straight baselines of the Philippines.
The final demarcation shall be determined by a joint technical body composed of duly-designated representatives of both Parties, in coordination with the appropriate Central Government agency in accordance with the above guidelines.

Sharing of Minerals on Territorial Waters:

Consistent with paragraphs 5 and 6 of the provisions on Resources, all potential sources of energy, petroleum in situ, hydrocarbon, natural gas and other minerals, including deposits or fields found within the territorial waters, shall be shared between the Central Government and the BJE in favor of the latter through production sharing agreement or economic cooperation agreement.

Activities Allowed on Territorial Waters:

(1) The Parties shall have authority to carry out the following activities within the territorial waters:

(a) Exploration and utilization of the natural resources, whether living or non-living, within the territorial waters;
(b) Establishment and use of artificial islands, installations and structures;
(c) Marine scientific research;
(d) Protection and the preservation of the marine environment;
(e) Conservation of living resources;
(f) Regulation of shipping and fishing activities;
(g) Enforcement of police and safety measures, including interdiction of the entry and use of the waters by criminal elements and hot pursuit of suspected criminal elements;
(h) Regulation and control of contraband and illegal entry of prohibited materials and substances, including smuggling; and
(i) Such other measures as the Parties may otherwise mutually agree.

(2) Activities relating to exploration and utilization of non-living resources, as well as paragraphs (c) and (d) of the Authorized Activities will be carried out on a joint basis agreed by the Parties which may be in the form of production sharing agreements or joint development pacts.

Establishment of a Joint Commission:

(1) The Parties shall establish a Joint Commission, which shall elaborate the modalities for the implementation and the carrying out of the Authorized Activities and the measures adopted in cases of allegation of breach, and carry out any other functions which may be assigned to it by the Parties for the purpose of implementing the joint management of resources.

(2) The Joint Commission shall consist of one representative from each Party, who are assisted by advisers as may be needed. The conclusions of the Joint Commission shall be adopted by consensus and shall only be recommendatory in nature. Only when the conclusions of the Joint Commission are adopted by the Parties do they become binding on the Parties.
Demarcation and Status of Territorial Waters:

The demarcation and status of the BJE territorial waters shall be finally determined together with the demarcation and final status of Category B territory of the BJE.

From and after entrenchment of compact rights over the Bangsamoro homeland and the territorial jurisdictions for associative governance shall likewise embrace those under proclamation for agricultural and human settlements intended for the Bangsamoro people, all alienable and disposable lands, pasture lands, timberlands together with all existing civil and military reservations, parks, old growth or natural forests declared as forest reserves, watersheds, mangroves, fishponds, wetlands, marshes, inland bodies of water; and all bays, straits and channels found within the BJE.

All territorial and geographic areas in Mindanao and its adjacent islands including Palawan, and the Sulu archipelago that have been declared recognized, and/or delineated as ancestral domain and ancestral land of the Bangsamoro people as their geographic areas, inclusive of settlements and reservations, may be formed or constituted into political subdivisions of the Bangsamoro territorial jurisdictions subject to the principles of equality of peoples and mutual respect and to the protection of civil, political, economic, and cultural rights in their respective jurisdictions.
For purposes of territorial delimitation, the Parties have agreed to the joint determination of geographic areas encompassed within the territorial borders of the Bangsamoro homeland and territory based on the technical maps and data submitted by both sides as provided above.

RESOURCES

The BJE is empowered with authority and responsibility for the land use, development, conservation and disposition of the natural resources within the homeland. Upon entrenchment of the BJE, the land tenure and use of such resources and wealth must reinforce their economic self-sufficiency. Among the purposes or measures to make progress more rapid are:
Entry into joint development, utilization, and exploitation of natural resources designed as commons or shared resources, which is tied up to the full setting of appropriate institution, particularly affecting strategic minerals;

Stimulation of local economy by a range of mechanism, in particular the need to address unemployment and improvement of living conditions for the population in the BJE;
Intensification of measures needed to uproot the cause of poverty in the BJE through responsible harnessing and development of its natural resources; and

Undertaking program review of public services, industrial or trade-related and agrarian-related issues in situations of different sectors of the society in the BJE, which acquire communal character deriving from the special nature of their industry.

The Bangsamoro People through their appropriate juridical entity shall, among others, exercise power or authority over the natural resources within its territorial jurisdiction:

To explore, exploit, use or utilize and develop their ancestral domain and ancestral lands within their territorial jurisdiction, inclusive of their right of occupation, possession, conservation, and exploitation of all natural resources found therein;

To conserve and protect the human and natural environment for their sustainable and beneficial enjoyment and their posterity;

To utilize, develop, and exploit its natural resources found in their ancestral domain or enter into a joint development, utilization, and exploitation of natural resources, specifically on strategic minerals, designed as commons or shared resources, which is tied up to the final setting of appropriate institution;

To revoke or grant forest concessions, timber license, contracts or agreements in the utilization and exploitation of natural resources designated as commons or shared resources, mechanisms for economic cooperation with respect to strategic minerals, falling within the territorial jurisdiction of the BJE;

To enact agrarian laws and programs suitable to the special circumstances of the Bangsamoro people prevailing in their ancestral lands within the established territorial boundaries of the Bangsamoro homeland and ancestral territory within the competence of the BJE; and

To use such natural resources and wealth to reinforce their economic self-sufficiency.
The BJE, and the Central Government agree on wealth-sharing based on a mutually agreed percentage ratio in favor of the BJE through an economic cooperation agreement or arrangement over the income and revenues that are derived from the exploration, exploitation, use and development of any resources for the benefit of the Bangsamoro people.

The BJE is free to enter into any economic cooperation and trade relations with foreign countries: provided, however, that such relationships and understandings do not include aggression against the Government of the Republic of the Philippines; provided, further that it shall remain the duty and obligation of the Central Government to take charge of external defense. Without prejudice to the right of the Bangsamoro juridical entity to enter into agreement and environmental cooperation with any friendly country affecting its jurisdiction, it shall include:

The option to establish and open Bangsamoro trade missions in foreign countries with which it has economic cooperation agreements; and

The elements bearing in mind the mutual benefits derived from Philippine archipelagic status and security.

And, in furtherance thereto, the Central Government shall take necessary steps to ensure the BJE’s participation in international meetings and events, e.g. ASEAN meetings and other specialized agencies of the United Nations. This shall entitle the BJE’s participation in Philippine official missions and delegations that are engaged in the negotiation of border agreements or protocols for environmental protection, equitable sharing of incomes and revenues, in the areas of sea, seabed and inland seas or bodies of water adjacent to or between islands forming part of the ancestral domain, in addition to those of fishing rights.

Jurisdiction and control over, and the right of exploring for, exploiting, producing and obtaining all potential sources of energy, petroleum, in situ, fossil fuel, mineral oil and natural gas, whether onshore or offshore, is vested in the BJE as the party having control within its territorial jurisdiction, provided that in times of national emergency, when public interest so requires, the Central Government may, during the emergency, for a fixed period and under reasonable terms as may be agreed by both Parties, temporarily assume or direct the operations of such strategic resources.

The BJE take or profit split from total production shall be shared with the Central Government on a percentage ratio of 75:25 in favor of the BJE. All royalties, bonuses, taxes, charges, custom duties or imposts on natural resources and mineral resources shall be shared by the Parties on a percentage ratio of 75:25 in favor of the BJE.

The legitimate grievances of the Bangsamoro people arising from any unjust dispossession of their territorial and proprietary rights, customary land tenures, or their marginalization shall be acknowledged. Whenever restoration is no longer possible, the GRP shall take effective measures or adequate reparation collectively beneficial to the Bangsamoro people, in such quality, quantity and status to be determined mutually by both Parties.

All proclamations, issuances, policies, rules and guidelines declaring old growth or natural forests and all watersheds within the BJE as forest reserves shall continue to remain in force until otherwise modified, revised or superseded by subsequent policies, rules and regulations issued by the competent authority under the BJE.

Forest concessions, timber licenses, contracts or agreements, mining concessions, Mineral Production and Sharing Agreements (MPSA), Industrial Forest Management Agreements (IFMA), and other land tenure instruments of any kind or nature whatsoever granted by the Philippine Government including those issued by the present ARMM shall continue to operate from the date of formal entrenchment of the BJE unless otherwise expired, reviewed, modified and/or cancelled by the latter.

The Parties recognize an immediate need to establish a five-member BJE economic-expert mission (the “Mission”) bearing in mind that the functioning of the economy and the operation of institutions involve financial and other resource management as well as parallel or complementary means, by which the Bangsamoro Development Agency (BDA) will manage and administer resources acquired for the above purposes, especially in coordinating strategies and programs for cooperation in all fields.

The Mission acts as a link in the conduct of BJE’s associative parallel relationships and shall cooperate fully with all organizations involved in implementation of the peace settlement. It shall launch a plan and joint international appeal for the reparation and development of the conflict affected areas in Mindanao. Persons appointed thereto must be familiar with the specific economic, political and legal characteristics in the Mindanao-Sulu-Palawan region and must possess recognized competence, integrity, and high moral standing.

Cognizant that the Mission will benefit from international expertise, both the Central Government and the BJE hereby join the Third Party facilitator in inviting international funding institutions or equivalent entities for reconstruction and development to appoint two members and to designate one as the Chairman. The BJE shall designate one member as Co-Chairman. The remaining two members shall each be designated by the Central Government and the BJE.

GOVERNANCE

The recognition and peaceful resolution of the conflict must involve consultations with the Bangsamoro people free of any imposition in order to provide chances of success and open new formulas that permanently respond to the aspirations of the Bangsamoro people.

The ultimate objective of entrenching the Bangsamoro homeland as a territorial space is to secure their identity and posterity, to protect their property rights and resources as well as to establish a system of governance suitable and acceptable to them as a distinct dominant people.

The Parties respect the freedom of choice of the indigenous peoples.

The Parties agree to invite a multinational third - party to observe and monitor the actual implementation of the comprehensive compact which will embody the details for the effective enforcement of this Agreement. The participation of the third – party shall not in any way affect the status of the relationship between the Central Government and the BJE.

The relationship between the Central Government and the BJE shall be associative characterized by shared authority and responsibility with a structure of governance based on executive, legislative, judicial and administrative institutions with defined powers and functions in the Comprehensive Compact. A period of transition shall be established in a Comprehensive Compact specifying the relationship between the Central Government and the BJE.

In the context of implementing prior and incremental agreements between the GRP and MILF, it is the joint understanding of the Parties that the term “entrenchment” means, for the purposes of giving effect to this transitory provision, the creation of a process of institution building to exercise shared authority over territory and defined functions of associative character.

The modalities for the governance intended to settle the outstanding negotiated political issues are deferred after the signing of the MOA-AD.

The establishment of institutions for governance in a Comprehensive Compact, together with its modalities during the transition period, shall be fully entrenched and established in the basic law of the BJE. The Parties shall faithfully comply with their commitment to the associative arrangements upon entry into force of the Comprehensive Compact.

The Parties agree that the mechanisms and modalities for the actual implementation of this MOA-AD shall be spelt out in the Comprehensive Compact to mutually take such steps to enable it to occur effectively.

Any provisions of the MOA-AD requiring amendments to the existing legal framework shall come into force upon signing of a Comprehensive Compact and upon effecting the necessary changes to the legal framework with due regard to non derogation of prior agreements and within the stipulated timeframe to be contained in the Comprehensive Compact.

The Parties agree that the BJE shall be empowered to build, develop and maintain its own institutions, inclusive of, civil service, electoral, financial and banking, education, legislation, legal, economic, and police and internal security force, judicial system and correctional institutions, necessary for developing a progressive Bangsamoro society, the details of which shall be discussed in the negotiation of the Comprehensive Compact.

The Parties further agree to undertake activities which will enhance the capacity of the government institutions during the transition through technical assistance, information-sharing and human resource development.

Matters concerning the details of the agreed consensus points on Governance not covered under this Agreement shall be deferred to, and discussed during, the negotiations of the Comprehensive Compact.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned, being the representatives of the Parties hereby affix their signatures.

Done this 5th day of August, 2008 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

FOR THE GRP:

(SGD) RODOLFO C. GARCIA
Chairman
GRP Peace Negotiating Panel

FOR THE MILF:

(SGD) MOHAGHER IQBAL
Chairman
MILF Peace Negotiating Panel


WITNESSED BY:
(SGD) DATUK OTHMAN BIN ABD RAZAK
Special Adviser to the Prime Minister


IN THE PRESENCE OF:
(SGD) ALBERTO G. ROMULO
Secretary of Foreign Affairs
Republic of the Philippines

(SGD) DATO’ SERI UTAMA DR. RAIS
BIN YATIM
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Malaysia

Initialed by:

Sec. Rodolfo Garcia
Mohagher Iqbal

Sec. Hermogenes Esperon


Witnessed by:
Datuk Othman bin Abd Razak
Dated 27 July 2008

http://bongmontesa.wordpress.com/2008/08/04/the-troed-grp-milf-moa-on-ancestral-domain-full-text/

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Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Reproductive Health Issue

More Power, Congresswoman Janette Garin of Iloilo

I admire Congresswoman Garin for having the courage to openly defend the Reproductive Health Bill which has long been pending in Congress. (As early as 1992, a bill on reproductive health was already filed, but none has succeeded). This is in spite of the threats from the Church, not to give communion to the proponents of this bill, whom they regard as anti-life, abortionists, etc. (a pastoral letter was issued by the Bishop of Ozamis City on this); or to campaign against the candidacies of these solons in 2010 (Bishop Yniguez).

There is a strong Church lobby to prevent passage of the Reproductive Health Bill. In fact, this was the only issue the bishops raised in their meeting with PGMA after the Second Rural Congress. They did not raise the EVAT issue even if media earlier reported that the bishops were joining the call for its lifting. And it was because of this issue that PGMA and her economic advisers decided to hold a dialogue with them.

I watched Congresswoman Garin in Strictly Politics hosted by Pia Hontiveros-Pagkalinawan at ANC last night as she explained the bill. Garin is a physician by profession so she can very well speak from her experiences, where she has seen up close women at risk because of early pregnancies (age 13, 14, 15), or too frequent pregnancies without any birth spacing. She clarified that the bill is not advocating the practice of abortion (but the Church keeps on insisting that it is!). She said that the bill is centered on educating the public on reproductive health and for allowing couples to choose between natural and artificial family planning methods.

Our own congresswoman Liwayway Vinzons-Chato was also a guest but she was on the opposite side. She was against the bill, because first she believes it identifies the wrong problem. She says it is not rising population which is the cause of poverty in the country. In fact, we still lack doctors, skilled carpenters, etc., according to Chato. The problem is corruption - taxes are not properly utilized to address the problems of the poor. In the case of the population issue, it is education, and not reproductive health that would address the problem, Chato further said.

I also agree that education would address the population problem, but this is a long term solution. First, we have to provide access to education to the poor. But this is precisely the problem in the short run. Because of rapid population increase, the government can not catch up with the need for more classrooms, textbooks, teachers, etc. Even if elementary and secondary education are free, there are still out-of-pocket expenses that parents incur. But due to rising poverty , a sad reality that can be observed is the rising number of out-of-school youth and child laborers. (Our NGO has added Alternative Learning System as one of the components of our program to address this issue). So, what do Congresswoman Chato and the Church propose to do in the short-run?

I think I also heard Chato or the other woman guest say that sex is for procreation not for pleasure. (Pano yan classmates, mayo na garong pwedeng mag-aki sa mga babae, pero lalaki pwede pa, si Dolphy ngani!) Congressman Joey Salceda of Albay said that there are yet no rallies demanding to put a stop to sex, because it (sex) is pleasurably sinful!

By the way, the Reproductive Health Bill's principal author is a Bicolano, Rep Edcel Lagman of Albay. I'm sure he's not also pro-abortion.

I have limited knowledge of Congresswoman Garin but I've watched her on TV actively pushing for another bill, the Cheaper Medicines Act. It was also reported that although she was supposed to be part of PGMA's junket to the USA, she did not push through with the trip, choosing to stay with her constituents who suffered from the wrath of Typhoon Frank.

Saludo kay Congresswoman. I hope this makes you feel good. There are Catholics who are supportive of your stand!







NO. HB 00017

FULL TITLE : AN ACT PROVIDING FOR A NATIONAL POLICY ON REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH, RESPONSIBLE PARENTHOOD AND POPULATION DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES

SHORT TITLE : "Reproductive Health,Responsible Parenthood and Population Development Act of 2007"

ABSTRACT : "Reproductive Health,Responsible Parenthood and Population Development Act of 2007". The measure seeks to provide the enabling environment for couples and individuals to enjoy the right to decide freely and responsibly on the number and spacing of their children and to have the information, education and access to safe, effective, affordable and acceptable methods of family planning of their choice.

BY CONGRESSMAN/WOMAN LAGMAN, EDCEL C.
DATE FILED ON 2007-07-02
CO-AUTHORS:
SILVERIO, LORNA C.(008 1RS)
ABANTE, BIENVENIDO JR. M.(016 1RS)
PRIETO-TEODORO, MONICA LOUISE(020 1RS)
DIASNES, CARLO OLIVER D.(023 1RS)
ESCUDERO, SALVADOR III H.(029 1RS)
TALINO-MENDOZA, EMMYLOU J.(029 1RS)
DY, FAUSTINO III G.(029 1RS)
DOMOGAN, MAURICIO G.(029 1RS)
MAGSAYSAY, MA. MILAGROS H.(029 1RS)
GONZALEZ, RAUL JR. T.(029 1RS)
ANGARA, JUAN EDGARDO M.(029 1RS)
UY, REYNALDO S.(029 1RS)
DE GUZMAN, DEL R.(029 1RS)
CHUNGALAO, SOLOMON R.(029 1RS)
PADILLA, CARLOS M.(029 1RS)
ALFELOR, FELIX JR. R.(029 1RS)
BULUT, ELIAS JR. C.(029 1RS)
DEFENSOR, MATIAS JR. V.(029 1RS)
DIAZ, ANTONIO M.(029 1RS)
LACSON, JOSE CARLOS V.(029 1RS)
SOLIS, JOSE G.(029 1RS)
VILLAROSA, AMELITA C.(029 1RS)
MANGUDADATU, DATU PAX S.(029 1RS)
DANGWA, SAMUEL M.(029 1RS)
SOON-RUIZ, NERISSA CORAZON(029 1RS)
SUAREZ, DANILO E.(029 1RS)
VILLAFUERTE, LUIS R.(029 1RS)
BAUTISTA, FRANKLIN P.(029 1RS)
BINAY, MAR-LEN ABIGAIL S.(029 1RS)
CHAVEZ, LEONILA V.(029 1RS)
DATUMANONG, SIMEON A.(029 1RS)
ECLEO, GLENDA B.(029 1RS)
ENVERGA, WILFRIDO MARK M.(029 1RS)
GARAY, FLORENCIO C.(029 1RS)
GARIN, JANETTE L.(029 1RS)
HATAMAN, MUJIV S.(029 1RS)
HONTIVEROS-BARAQUEL, ANA THERESIA "RISA"(029 1RS)
MAMBA, MANUEL N.(029 1RS)
PINOL, BERNARDO JR. F.(029 1RS)
VARGAS, FLORENCIO L.(029 1RS)
ZUBIRI, JOSE MA. III F.(029 1RS)
AQUINO, JOSE II S.(029 1RS)
BARZAGA, ELPIDIO JR. F.(029 1RS)
JOSON, EDUARDO NONATO N.(038 1RS)
DUAVIT, MICHAEL JOHN R.(052 1RS)
PICHAY, PHILIP A.(052 1RS)
UY, EDWIN C.(052 1RS)
UMALI, CZARINA D.(071 1RS)
REFERRAL ON 2007-07-24 TO THE COMMITTEE ON HEALTH
SECONDARILY REFERRED TO THE COMMITTEE(S) ON POPULATION AND FAMILY RELATIONS
SIGNIFICANCE: NATIONAL
SUBJECT:POPULATION;HEALTH CARE SERVICES


DATE READ:&nbsp2007-07-24


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