New photos of Philippine president Benigno "Noynoy" Aquino III shows him thinner and stressed out. It just what? a month after his inauguration?
Is Aquino ready for more troubles ahead? The past dispensation has left us with an empty coffer and numerous anti-people deals that need individual review. And there are thousands out there.
I know Noy does not want some make-up put in his face but for the sake of the nation, he should probably hearken to the words of his stylist, Liz Uy.
Noy should recognize that he is now the new face of the Filipino People.
Heard from some Malacanang veterans that the palace really does that to its new occupants. Compare Mrs. Arroyo's photos in 2001 with that of her photo in 2004. Or Madame Cory Aquino's refreshing look prior to February 1986 to that of her photo in 1992.
Come to think of it....ignore my words. He looks like every single one of us. Every single one is stressed out. Everyone is suffering from high prices of commodities and the high cost of living.
Some looks younger than others simply because someone takes extra care of them. I have my wife to massage my tired muscles and soothe my tired mind.
Maybe, Noynoy needs a massage from who else but Shalani Soledad? A nasty rumour went round and about, indicating a split between the two. Yesterday, however, Soledad went to Times street and gave some cookies to Noy. Sweet.
Maybe Shalani should ask her boyfriend to go with her to some private place, away from the palace, and just spend at least one night together. Let Shalani do some "mother-ly" thing, like massaging Noy's tired muscles and apply some magic to his aching neck. Or, maybe some rocking will do? You know what I mean. :-)
By the way, when I arrived back here, I witnessed a miracle. I never saw that during the nine long years of Mrs. Arroyo's reign.
Noynoy's entourage went pass EDSA and motorists tried their best to give way to it. There were no wangwangs. The entourage just simply slipped past every single one as silently as possible.
That shows you the tremendous respect people have accorded to the new president. I just hope that men behind his administration would enjoy the same respect.
Saturday, July 31, 2010
Lacierda and the Philippine media
Edwin Lacierda, I was told, committed another faux pas yesterday. He broke the story about Memorandum Circular No. 2 to a popular TV network first before the Malacanang Press Corps.
That is not a neophyte blunder anymore. That is a willful act. What Lacierda fails to recognize is simply the effects of such acts to the assigned reporters in Malacanang.
Imagine the humiliation some reporters got from their desk editors when they failed to get the first stab at that story. It was not a minor story. It was a major one because it involved the lives and careers of government officials.
Mia (Gonzales), the incumbent MPC president, should do something about this.
Another official who got the media ire was new MMDA chairman Francis Tolentino. Tolentino's spokesperson, a certain Yves, reportedly gave GMA 7 reporter Lala Roque the wrong cellphone number of Tolentino.
Remember that it was Tolentino who gave ABS-CBN 2 thru DZMM that story of a cache of money reportedly being given by bus companies to MMDA officials as tongpats.
Why are these officials so fearful of media?
Media should be a strong ally of the new administration. This early, however, media is now being relegated and sidelined.
Media is the strongest feedback mechanism that government has.
I think this new administration should think that they are operating not as a campaign machinery anymore nor Aquino's propagandists. They are now government's official news agency. They should think like that, otherwise, after 100 days, they'll surely encounter a rougher road than what they expect.
That is not a neophyte blunder anymore. That is a willful act. What Lacierda fails to recognize is simply the effects of such acts to the assigned reporters in Malacanang.
Imagine the humiliation some reporters got from their desk editors when they failed to get the first stab at that story. It was not a minor story. It was a major one because it involved the lives and careers of government officials.
Mia (Gonzales), the incumbent MPC president, should do something about this.
Another official who got the media ire was new MMDA chairman Francis Tolentino. Tolentino's spokesperson, a certain Yves, reportedly gave GMA 7 reporter Lala Roque the wrong cellphone number of Tolentino.
Remember that it was Tolentino who gave ABS-CBN 2 thru DZMM that story of a cache of money reportedly being given by bus companies to MMDA officials as tongpats.
Why are these officials so fearful of media?
Media should be a strong ally of the new administration. This early, however, media is now being relegated and sidelined.
Media is the strongest feedback mechanism that government has.
I think this new administration should think that they are operating not as a campaign machinery anymore nor Aquino's propagandists. They are now government's official news agency. They should think like that, otherwise, after 100 days, they'll surely encounter a rougher road than what they expect.
Friday, July 30, 2010
Why I want to fly with Seair
Boracay, to me, is an island paradise. When the island's pioneers started building small huts and invited their friends to join in and bask under the warm, inviting rays of Boracay's sun, I was one of those fortunate to join the crowd. Ten years ago, Boracay is like an innocent virgin floating about, with its pure, powdery sand and warm waters. Now, I was told, Boracay has been bastardized and left for dead. Its waters right now is kinda filthy, its sand bereft of its immaculate whiteness and full of trash.
That's why some travellers are going to Batanes, a sparkling green jewel up North or to Romblon, a promising tourist destination in the Visayas. It's great that Seair goes there. It makes everyone happy.
The Philippines is a great tourist destination. Look around and you'll find that we're fortunate to live in a beautiful country. We have great mountains, great and clear rivers and streams and most of all, beaches that rival those in Thailand or Malaysia. Our coastlines are the finest in the world.
Sea air or South East Asian Airlines recognizes that. Fact is, if you browse their website, you're surely be amazed at how the airline company respects the beauty of this small island republic. Their website is like a promotional site for the Philippines.
I've travelled to many countries before and no one rivals ours. That probably explains why many Filipinos jockey for positions every single election is because of their desire to get a slice of this wonderful beauty before them.
Anyway, as a blogger, it is best for me to expand my horizons. It has been a long time since I went to Boracay. I want to write about it. I want to know if commercialism has already taken over the island.
I can do it on my own, along with my family. However, best if I travel with Seair. Other airlines have a track record of giving their clients some bumpy rides and bum services. Not with Seair, I hope. It is still best to travel without any hitches. I want to go to Bora or to any other place without any worry. I don't want to worry about my luggage being sent to Europe or my things lost or worrying about rude flight attendants.
I just want a seamless, worry-free travel with Seair. And with Microtels practically all over, it's a great way to write about one's country without so much worry.
Microtels, I was told, have the best beds in the country today. Imagine, for a reasonable price, you'll get to sleep in a nice and very comfortable bed. And just think, waking up in the morning with the chirping of the birds and the warm rays of the sun greeting you in your room. Just think.
Of course, having a Google page rank that hover between 4 and 5, more people would definitely read and know more about Seair than say, a blogger writing without any page rank. I want to share my experience with my Facebook friends who now number close to 1,800 and to those who visit my other sites. My sites enjoy higher Technorati and Alexa page ranks and to me, writing about the beautiful places here would surely be my patriotic duty, the best ever.
I want to help the Department of Tourism led by Secretary Bertie Lim by writing pieces about the Philippines. Surely, with the help of Seair, this will be realized soon.
If not, then, it's okey. I can always fly alone.
That's why some travellers are going to Batanes, a sparkling green jewel up North or to Romblon, a promising tourist destination in the Visayas. It's great that Seair goes there. It makes everyone happy.
The Philippines is a great tourist destination. Look around and you'll find that we're fortunate to live in a beautiful country. We have great mountains, great and clear rivers and streams and most of all, beaches that rival those in Thailand or Malaysia. Our coastlines are the finest in the world.
Sea air or South East Asian Airlines recognizes that. Fact is, if you browse their website, you're surely be amazed at how the airline company respects the beauty of this small island republic. Their website is like a promotional site for the Philippines.
I've travelled to many countries before and no one rivals ours. That probably explains why many Filipinos jockey for positions every single election is because of their desire to get a slice of this wonderful beauty before them.
Anyway, as a blogger, it is best for me to expand my horizons. It has been a long time since I went to Boracay. I want to write about it. I want to know if commercialism has already taken over the island.
I can do it on my own, along with my family. However, best if I travel with Seair. Other airlines have a track record of giving their clients some bumpy rides and bum services. Not with Seair, I hope. It is still best to travel without any hitches. I want to go to Bora or to any other place without any worry. I don't want to worry about my luggage being sent to Europe or my things lost or worrying about rude flight attendants.
I just want a seamless, worry-free travel with Seair. And with Microtels practically all over, it's a great way to write about one's country without so much worry.
Microtels, I was told, have the best beds in the country today. Imagine, for a reasonable price, you'll get to sleep in a nice and very comfortable bed. And just think, waking up in the morning with the chirping of the birds and the warm rays of the sun greeting you in your room. Just think.
Of course, having a Google page rank that hover between 4 and 5, more people would definitely read and know more about Seair than say, a blogger writing without any page rank. I want to share my experience with my Facebook friends who now number close to 1,800 and to those who visit my other sites. My sites enjoy higher Technorati and Alexa page ranks and to me, writing about the beautiful places here would surely be my patriotic duty, the best ever.
I want to help the Department of Tourism led by Secretary Bertie Lim by writing pieces about the Philippines. Surely, with the help of Seair, this will be realized soon.
If not, then, it's okey. I can always fly alone.
Araullo's take on Noynoy Aquino's State of the Nation address
Dr. Carol Pagaduan-Araullo's "Streetwise" column today entitled "Smoke and mirrors" over at the BusinessWorld Online edition gives us an alternate view on what the Aquino administration is doing. I agree with Araullo that the first State of the Nation address of President Noynoy Aquino is bereft of substance.
It does, however, present a slice of reality that appeals to the elite. Of course, presenting a meatier, or a more substantial analysis of Philippine reality would be counter-productive. Why? Because it would bore the already boorish crowd and would not necessarily inspire most. The SONA has two-fold purposes: one, to give a brief blueprint and two, to inspire the entire citizenry to put their resources behind government. In both fronts, the SONA comes out in standard template.
The SONA, for me, wants to lull the Filipino People again into a state of inaction. The message is clear---sit back, relax and we take care of things.
However, a caveat---people are slowly being urged to participate in government by giving feedback. Now, it remains to be seen how extensive this participation is, or on what level will the People involve themselves. Noynoy gave us a brief glimpse--a private-public sector initiative which has been a feature of most administrations in the past, but never really went off the ground. This time, it should be the centerpiece of an administration claiming to be a participative government.
It does, however, present a slice of reality that appeals to the elite. Of course, presenting a meatier, or a more substantial analysis of Philippine reality would be counter-productive. Why? Because it would bore the already boorish crowd and would not necessarily inspire most. The SONA has two-fold purposes: one, to give a brief blueprint and two, to inspire the entire citizenry to put their resources behind government. In both fronts, the SONA comes out in standard template.
The SONA, for me, wants to lull the Filipino People again into a state of inaction. The message is clear---sit back, relax and we take care of things.
However, a caveat---people are slowly being urged to participate in government by giving feedback. Now, it remains to be seen how extensive this participation is, or on what level will the People involve themselves. Noynoy gave us a brief glimpse--a private-public sector initiative which has been a feature of most administrations in the past, but never really went off the ground. This time, it should be the centerpiece of an administration claiming to be a participative government.
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Best Barista Course in ASHA
You want to be the best in the Barista arts? Then this is for you...
Asian School of Hospitality Arts, one of the first hotel schools in the Philippines, announces the opening of its Certificate of Barista course beginning August 2, 2010.
This 3-month intensive course aims to train students on the rudiments of bartending, and other job-related responsibilities which an aspiring barista needs in order to cope with the standards of 5-star hotels, restaurants and bars.
The Barista course fuses theory and practice, with most of the time spent in learning the true arts of bartending and perfecting beverage concoctions. Students enjoy the advantage of learning the arts and science of bartending in a real coffee shop/bar setting. You get to be a real-life barista while completing your certificate program. Learning is easy and fun since ASHA offers a ladderized and modular-based Barista course. Students learn based on their own pace.
After undergoing training and barista education, some of the best students are immediately immersed into the hotel and restaurant industry as apprentice. They enjoy an apprentice salary while studying in ASHA. The school also offers immediate job placement after graduation.
ASHA is a strong partner of The Coffee Beanery (TCB) along West Avenue, Quezon City. ASHA is a strong advocate of spreading Asian Values, World Class-Education.
It is also affiliated with Seven Suites Hotel Observatory, Classic Cuisine (C2), The Orange Place (TOP) and C3 Events Place.
ASHA opens its Certificate of Barista at TCP West Avenue, Quezon City. Classes start August 10, 2010. For inquiries, please call +6325066474, 5067007 or 09175907425. Check their website at http://www.asha.edu.ph.
ASHA: 15 Million Jobs Available for Pinoys in Hotel and Restaurant Industry
More than 15 million jobs await Filipinos who want to work in top-rate hotels and restaurants in the United States, Europe and other countries in Asia, with about 158,000 hospitality and leisure jobs needed in the United States alone.
Labor requirements rose after hotel occupancy levels grew by 3.4% this year, a positive sign that the industry has now recovered from the global recession.
In a report released by the Asian School of Hospitality Arts (ASHA), the premier hotel school in the Philippines, the hospitality industry is expected to grow 11% this year, a strong indication that the industry has now recovered from the global recession.
With this growth, more five-star hotels and restaurants would need additional hotel, food and beverage managers, baristas and hospitality staff. These are supervisorial and skilled positions which Filipinos are qualified to fill in.
ASHA Directress Angie Blanco says Filipinos are most-sought after when it comes to these positions. Top five-star hotels hire more from the Philippines because Filipinos are highly qualified, trust-worthy and hard-working. Filipinos are more qualified because most are HRM (Hotel and Restaurant Management) graduates.
“ We have thousands of Filipinos in the hospitality and leisure industries which can benefit from the recovery of the industry after a slump in 2009. Entry levels in these positions are high. We are in the best position to exploit the hospitality job markets because of our high competency especially as hotel and restaurant managers, baristas and hotel staff, “ says Blanco.
Hospitality-related jobs command competitive pay rates. For hotel managers, the average daily wage is US$ 50 per hour or about 2,300 php (P46=1US$) per hour. In the United States, baristas earn US$ 10 per hour or about US$100 a day. This translates to almost 100,000 pesos per month. Filipino chefs, meanwhile, are being paid more than 150,000 pesos a month.
Blanco reports that hotel occupancy in the United States alone grew by about 1.7% this year after occupancy rates rose in the first quarter of 2010. The growth increased revenues by 57.1%. This is a positive development, says Blanco, since more hotels will require additional hotel and hospitality staff to attend to the needs of guests.
Based on the ASHA report, hotel occupancy rates in the Asia-Pacific rose from 15.3% to 63.1%, the average daily rate increased by 8.6% to US$125.52, and revenue per available room jumped 25.2% to US$79.24. This, says Blanco, is based on the STR Global report.
Shanghai China experienced the largest occupancy increase, rising from 55% to 71.7%, followed by Beijing (65.3%), Hongkong (78.3%) and Osaka Japan (77.3%). Malaysia posted a positive 40.4% to US$ 71.65.
In the Philippines, improvements in the tourism industry generated close to 3 million additional jobs, according to the data released by the National Statistical Coordination Board (NSCB). As of May 2010, a total of 48,048 jobs were generated in Central Philippines, Metro Manila and Tagaytay alone. The hospitality outlook in the Philippines remains bright, says Blanco, as private investors continue to have a bullish attitude in the country.
Blanco says that domestic tourism alone hiked 2009 air traffic by about 25%. OAG, a reputable body monitoring the global air industry, shows that seat capacity increased by 9% or an additional 1.2 million to a total of 15.3 million seats in Asia-Pacific alone. Worldwide, seat capacity increased by 6% and added 20.5 million seats to a total 335.5 million.
Amongst the hotel chains, luxury properties and upscale hotels remain at a very positive growth. Performance of luxury hotels are strongest, while mid-scale properties with food and beverage should lag all property types with only 3.3% growth.
Lodging demands in the first quarter of 2010 increased by 5.3% over the first quarter of 2009. Blanco says if this trend continues, expect the hospitality and leisure-related job market to further improve in the next few years. In fact, Blanco adds, 2011 will see a 7.8% growth in the industry.
“The employment of hotel management staff is expected to grow just as fast as the average managerial position for all sectors through 2014. More opportunities are predicted to be available because many experienced managers will be leaving the industry to pursue other interests or through retirement. The better and higher education that is obtained, the more plentiful the opportunities will be” adds Blanco.
ASHA is a strong partner of The Coffee Beanery (TCB) along West Avenue, Quezon City. ASHA is a strong advocate of spreading Asian Values, World Class-Education.
It is also affiliated with Seven Suites Hotel Observatory, Classic Cuisine (C2), The Orange Place (TOP) and C3 Events Place.
ASHA opens its Certificate of Barista at TCP West Avenue, Quezon City. Classes start August 10, 2010. For inquiries, please call +6325066474, 5067007 or 09175907425. Check their website at http://www.asha.edu.ph.
Rice imports flood RP: legalized sabotage
President Noynoy Aquino's first State of the Nation address is frank, brutal and gives us just a slice of Philippine reality. I describe it as a story of how a group of Filipinos managed to systematically use existing laws to enrich themselves while in office. I call this "legalized thievery".
Consider how former Agriculture secretary and now Bohol Congressman Arthur Yap justified the excessive importation of rice from Vietnam. Like what his former boss said, Yap told the public that he looked at the horizon and found nothing irregular. For Yap, we are not swimming in rice. Where is the rice?
Like Pontius Pilate, Yap practically washed his hands off the scandal. He was just following orders. There was a study that says we need to import rice. So, that's what he did.
Karen Davila then revealed warehouses full of rice, most of them rotting and most were imported as far back as 2008.
I remember that year. It was the time when government said, there is a shortage of rice stocks and they need to import rice. Billions of pesos were spent to get these rice stocks from our neighbours and what did the government do about these millions of rice sacks? They hauled them to warehouses and left to rot.
What is the rationale behind this? Why did the NFA hid those sacks of rice? Simple. They want to force the market to raise the prices of rice. If they flooded the market back then with rice, then, prices of the staple food would have been lower than what it is now.
What government did was plain and simple economic sabotage. They did what local flour suppliers did---they tried to be the biggest rice mafia by simply controlling importation.
Now, if President Noynoy's revelation is correct, then, what government should do right now is simply try to "purify" these rice stocks and, distribute it to the markets. This will effectively lower the price of the staple product. The more rice stocks enter the market, the lower prices will become.
The new administration now has the power to influence market prices for the benefit of the public.
By the way, let us encourage Senator Loren Legarda to continue her campaign to investigate this scandal and come up with a report on how government should do to correct this criminal act.
Consider how former Agriculture secretary and now Bohol Congressman Arthur Yap justified the excessive importation of rice from Vietnam. Like what his former boss said, Yap told the public that he looked at the horizon and found nothing irregular. For Yap, we are not swimming in rice. Where is the rice?
Like Pontius Pilate, Yap practically washed his hands off the scandal. He was just following orders. There was a study that says we need to import rice. So, that's what he did.
Karen Davila then revealed warehouses full of rice, most of them rotting and most were imported as far back as 2008.
I remember that year. It was the time when government said, there is a shortage of rice stocks and they need to import rice. Billions of pesos were spent to get these rice stocks from our neighbours and what did the government do about these millions of rice sacks? They hauled them to warehouses and left to rot.
What is the rationale behind this? Why did the NFA hid those sacks of rice? Simple. They want to force the market to raise the prices of rice. If they flooded the market back then with rice, then, prices of the staple food would have been lower than what it is now.
What government did was plain and simple economic sabotage. They did what local flour suppliers did---they tried to be the biggest rice mafia by simply controlling importation.
Now, if President Noynoy's revelation is correct, then, what government should do right now is simply try to "purify" these rice stocks and, distribute it to the markets. This will effectively lower the price of the staple product. The more rice stocks enter the market, the lower prices will become.
The new administration now has the power to influence market prices for the benefit of the public.
By the way, let us encourage Senator Loren Legarda to continue her campaign to investigate this scandal and come up with a report on how government should do to correct this criminal act.
CUSTOMS IS STILL HOLDING EMPTY FISH NET
Slowly, we are feeling that government is honestly doing something to address our concerns. DPWH secretary Rogelio Singson has just written off 19 alleged midnight deals. Kudos to Singson. While we wait with bated breath, Customs chief Angelito Alvarez's promise to present one smuggler every single week. It is now Thursday and still no big fish presented.
Oh, well. Mr. President, yung bata mo, papatay-patay. Are we going to wait for him forever to produce? President Noynoy, you promised to boot Alvarez' butt off if he fails to produce. It is now what, three weeks and still Alvarez reneged on his promise to rid the Customs department of big-time smugglers and greedy officials.
Alvarez claims to have 20 years experience transacting with Customs. It is entirely unbelievable for him to say that he still does not know who among hundreds of officials there are involved in shady deals.
Alvarez should be fired, pronto. He's not fit to be a fisherman, even a whaler.
Oh, well. Mr. President, yung bata mo, papatay-patay. Are we going to wait for him forever to produce? President Noynoy, you promised to boot Alvarez' butt off if he fails to produce. It is now what, three weeks and still Alvarez reneged on his promise to rid the Customs department of big-time smugglers and greedy officials.
Alvarez claims to have 20 years experience transacting with Customs. It is entirely unbelievable for him to say that he still does not know who among hundreds of officials there are involved in shady deals.
Alvarez should be fired, pronto. He's not fit to be a fisherman, even a whaler.
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Col. Ariel Querubin is now a free man!
Former Marine Colonel Ariel Querubin is now a free man. His freedom shows that justice is really working at this time and age. This shows also that his struggle for more than four years is not for naught.
Querubin's struggle is a Just One.
Let his name be enshrined in the People's Hall of Heroes. Let his name forever be invoked by those who want justice.
To those who aspire for a better Philippines, be advised---you will never be alone. The People are behind you.
Sir, we salute you!
Querubin's struggle is a Just One.
Let his name be enshrined in the People's Hall of Heroes. Let his name forever be invoked by those who want justice.
To those who aspire for a better Philippines, be advised---you will never be alone. The People are behind you.
Sir, we salute you!
Dreams and Nightmares
" We can now dream"
These are the immortal and headline-hugging words of President Noynoy Aquino when he gave his first State of the Nation Address (SONA).
We can now dream of a better future, perhaps or we can now dream of a bright one for our families.
Let us, however, go back to reality, okey, and not be misled by promises. As what ABS-CBN did, they compiled all of Aquino's promises and as of latest count, it's now in the hundreds. Only half of the Filipino population believes that Aquino would actually fulfill all those eye-candy promises.
It is easy to day dream, of a world full of healthy foods, of a living more comfortable than this or of a dream to have one's own home to go to at the end of the day.
Some of us would definitely be able to dream BIG because they have monies. Most, however, would just dream, and hope that their dreams would not necessarily turn into nightmares, afterwards.
These initial three years of this new administration would just be devoted to the democratization of institutions. The next three would be only the beginning of true reforms, long lasting ones.
The next administration would reap the benefits of democratization, and not this one. The damages wrought to our institutions of governance have been extreme, serious and destabilizing that democratizing them would require gargantuan efforts on the part of the new dispensation.
This can only be achieved faster and better if this government coalesce itself with well-meaning groups, such as the Left and the Right. A coalition government would be better so that much needed reforms would move faster and more efficient.
Control of the government should be shifted from big interest groups to civil society and non governmental institutions. A more participative government is the order of the day.
These are the immortal and headline-hugging words of President Noynoy Aquino when he gave his first State of the Nation Address (SONA).
We can now dream of a better future, perhaps or we can now dream of a bright one for our families.
Let us, however, go back to reality, okey, and not be misled by promises. As what ABS-CBN did, they compiled all of Aquino's promises and as of latest count, it's now in the hundreds. Only half of the Filipino population believes that Aquino would actually fulfill all those eye-candy promises.
It is easy to day dream, of a world full of healthy foods, of a living more comfortable than this or of a dream to have one's own home to go to at the end of the day.
Some of us would definitely be able to dream BIG because they have monies. Most, however, would just dream, and hope that their dreams would not necessarily turn into nightmares, afterwards.
These initial three years of this new administration would just be devoted to the democratization of institutions. The next three would be only the beginning of true reforms, long lasting ones.
The next administration would reap the benefits of democratization, and not this one. The damages wrought to our institutions of governance have been extreme, serious and destabilizing that democratizing them would require gargantuan efforts on the part of the new dispensation.
This can only be achieved faster and better if this government coalesce itself with well-meaning groups, such as the Left and the Right. A coalition government would be better so that much needed reforms would move faster and more efficient.
Control of the government should be shifted from big interest groups to civil society and non governmental institutions. A more participative government is the order of the day.
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
State of the Nation Address (SONA) of President Benigno Simeon Aquino III
It was not as shocking as what I expected, yet the first State of the Nation Address of President Benigno Simeon Aquino III made me cry. Those tears I shed were not tears of sadness, but of anger. Those were not tears of self-pity, but of silent rage.
Silent rage because until now, those responsible for the systematic rape of the Motherland continues on their extravagant lifestyle. They continue to live their lives without any charges against them. They feed their families with their loot, they pay the tuition fees of their children from the very monies we earn every single day with our blood and sweat, and they were able to buy properties left and right from the very monies we so gave the government when it should have benefitted our families.
President Noynoy Aquino's State of the Nation address just showed a fraction of Philippine reality. It just showed how officials of the former dispensation abused their power and authority and their wanton disregard to the law and the morality of those laws.
With all these so-called expose, the question and the challenge for President Noynoy Aquino is simply how will he correct these injustices and these mistakes?
He said that these officials will be made accountable through the Truth Commission. Will this Truth Commission be just a body to exonerate these people from their past sins? Will this be a PR stunt meant to cleanse the tarnished reputation of these former government officials?
Yet, come to think of it, these things were acts of high-profile thievery.
How about the centuries-old thievery done by big time landlords? How about those who abused and committed acts of injustice to our farmers?
How about those who illegally occupied our communal waters and made them their own? How about those who pillaged our forests and carved our mountains for ore?
How about those who continually oppress us with their high oil prices? What will Aquino do to these big time oil cartels?
How about real estate companies who collude with unscrupulous officials of the Land Registration Authority (LRA) and illegally occupy lands not their own?
Aquino trained his gun right smack at former government officials. He forgot about their accomplices in the private sector, who also benefitted also from the largesse that the former dispensation gave to its loyal subjects.
Meralco has committed grave sins against the Filipino People for their exorbitant rate charges. Maynilad and Manila Water continually oppress us with their commodified water. How about those who control our food stocks and influence the market by hiding their stocks?
There are still many unresolved problems out there that President Noynoy Aquino forgot to say, purposely or unpurposely, but, this remains a challenge to both his administration and to us, the Filipino People.
Let us sharpen our bolos, sharpen them to razor edge. If this administration fails to charge these people and allow them to enjoy their loot, then, we, the Filipino People, should do something about it.
I call upon the New Patriots of the New Generation---slay these demons that oppressed the Motherland and put their heads on stakes, so that the world would know that we, as a people, respect ourselves and our future successors and we do not allow such brutes to oppress us and steal our monies.
One by one, these people will surely fall by the edge of our bolos.
Let the Sparrows fly again and do their duties to the Motherland. For, never again will we rage in silence.
Silent rage because until now, those responsible for the systematic rape of the Motherland continues on their extravagant lifestyle. They continue to live their lives without any charges against them. They feed their families with their loot, they pay the tuition fees of their children from the very monies we earn every single day with our blood and sweat, and they were able to buy properties left and right from the very monies we so gave the government when it should have benefitted our families.
President Noynoy Aquino's State of the Nation address just showed a fraction of Philippine reality. It just showed how officials of the former dispensation abused their power and authority and their wanton disregard to the law and the morality of those laws.
With all these so-called expose, the question and the challenge for President Noynoy Aquino is simply how will he correct these injustices and these mistakes?
He said that these officials will be made accountable through the Truth Commission. Will this Truth Commission be just a body to exonerate these people from their past sins? Will this be a PR stunt meant to cleanse the tarnished reputation of these former government officials?
Yet, come to think of it, these things were acts of high-profile thievery.
How about the centuries-old thievery done by big time landlords? How about those who abused and committed acts of injustice to our farmers?
How about those who illegally occupied our communal waters and made them their own? How about those who pillaged our forests and carved our mountains for ore?
How about those who continually oppress us with their high oil prices? What will Aquino do to these big time oil cartels?
How about real estate companies who collude with unscrupulous officials of the Land Registration Authority (LRA) and illegally occupy lands not their own?
Aquino trained his gun right smack at former government officials. He forgot about their accomplices in the private sector, who also benefitted also from the largesse that the former dispensation gave to its loyal subjects.
Meralco has committed grave sins against the Filipino People for their exorbitant rate charges. Maynilad and Manila Water continually oppress us with their commodified water. How about those who control our food stocks and influence the market by hiding their stocks?
There are still many unresolved problems out there that President Noynoy Aquino forgot to say, purposely or unpurposely, but, this remains a challenge to both his administration and to us, the Filipino People.
Let us sharpen our bolos, sharpen them to razor edge. If this administration fails to charge these people and allow them to enjoy their loot, then, we, the Filipino People, should do something about it.
I call upon the New Patriots of the New Generation---slay these demons that oppressed the Motherland and put their heads on stakes, so that the world would know that we, as a people, respect ourselves and our future successors and we do not allow such brutes to oppress us and steal our monies.
One by one, these people will surely fall by the edge of our bolos.
Let the Sparrows fly again and do their duties to the Motherland. For, never again will we rage in silence.
State of the Nation Address (SONA) of President Noynoy Aquino III
Isa lamang ako sa milyong Pilipinong nakinig at naluha nang ikwento ni Pangulong Benigno "Noynoy" Aquino ang lagay ng ating Inang Bayan.
Hindi ko naiwasang naluha dahil kalunos-lunos na ang naging lagay ng ating Inang Bayan matapos ang siyam na taong pahirap ng dating rehimeng Arroyo.
Isa lamang ang mensahe para sa akin ng unang SONA ni Pangulong Aquino---ang kasakiman ng mga dating namuno sa ating bayan. Kasakimang dulot ng labis-labis at walang habas na pag-alispusta sa kapangyarihan.
Isipin na lamang na bilyong pisong halaga ng bigas ang nalustay habang 4 na milyong Pamilyang Pilipino ang nanatiling gutom at walang makain sa araw-araw. Ilang milyong kaban ng bigas na inangkat
Ilang milyong piso naman ang ipinabigay sa mga board members of MWSS bilang labis-labis na bayad mula sa kaban ng bayan. Ito ang mga pangalan ng mga nangisawsaw sa pinaghirapang pera ng taumbayan.
Gabriel S. Claudio,CHAIRMAN
Diosdado Jose M. Allado, VICE CHAIRMAN
DIRECTORS
Dir. Aurora R. Arnaez
Dir. Lorenzo S. Sulaik
Dir. Alfred C. Reyes
Dir. Ferdinand P. Mahusay
Tandaan natin ang mga pangalang ito, sampu ng kanilang mga pamilya---ang mga ito ay nakinabang ng lubos sa ating mga pinaghirapang buwis at kung makikita natin sila sa daan, papanagutin natin sila sa kanilang mga kasalanang laban sa bayan.
Kung mayroon pa silang hiya sa kanilang katawan, nawa'y magbitiw na sila sa kanilang mga tungkulin. O kung hindi, nararapat nang maki-alam ng mga Bayaning Pinoy upang isa-isa silang mawala sa serbisyong bayan.
Ilang bilyong piso rin ang sinayang ng mga dating opisyales ng Napocor na nagbenta ng palugi sa Meralco sa kasagsagan ng eleksyon noong panahon ni Arroyo.
Ito ang mga kadahilanan kung bakit mahal ang presyo ng bigas, mahal ang presyo ng tubig at mahal ang presyo ng kuryente.
Kasakiman na ang nararapat na kaparusahan ay walang hanggang kamatayan sa mga nagtaksil sa taumbayan.
Hindi ko naiwasang naluha dahil kalunos-lunos na ang naging lagay ng ating Inang Bayan matapos ang siyam na taong pahirap ng dating rehimeng Arroyo.
Isa lamang ang mensahe para sa akin ng unang SONA ni Pangulong Aquino---ang kasakiman ng mga dating namuno sa ating bayan. Kasakimang dulot ng labis-labis at walang habas na pag-alispusta sa kapangyarihan.
Isipin na lamang na bilyong pisong halaga ng bigas ang nalustay habang 4 na milyong Pamilyang Pilipino ang nanatiling gutom at walang makain sa araw-araw. Ilang milyong kaban ng bigas na inangkat
Ilang milyong piso naman ang ipinabigay sa mga board members of MWSS bilang labis-labis na bayad mula sa kaban ng bayan. Ito ang mga pangalan ng mga nangisawsaw sa pinaghirapang pera ng taumbayan.
Gabriel S. Claudio,CHAIRMAN
Diosdado Jose M. Allado, VICE CHAIRMAN
DIRECTORS
Dir. Aurora R. Arnaez
Dir. Lorenzo S. Sulaik
Dir. Alfred C. Reyes
Dir. Ferdinand P. Mahusay
Tandaan natin ang mga pangalang ito, sampu ng kanilang mga pamilya---ang mga ito ay nakinabang ng lubos sa ating mga pinaghirapang buwis at kung makikita natin sila sa daan, papanagutin natin sila sa kanilang mga kasalanang laban sa bayan.
Kung mayroon pa silang hiya sa kanilang katawan, nawa'y magbitiw na sila sa kanilang mga tungkulin. O kung hindi, nararapat nang maki-alam ng mga Bayaning Pinoy upang isa-isa silang mawala sa serbisyong bayan.
Ilang bilyong piso rin ang sinayang ng mga dating opisyales ng Napocor na nagbenta ng palugi sa Meralco sa kasagsagan ng eleksyon noong panahon ni Arroyo.
Ito ang mga kadahilanan kung bakit mahal ang presyo ng bigas, mahal ang presyo ng tubig at mahal ang presyo ng kuryente.
Kasakiman na ang nararapat na kaparusahan ay walang hanggang kamatayan sa mga nagtaksil sa taumbayan.
Monday, July 26, 2010
Rey Marfil---ASEC for Media Relations
I was glad to know that Rey Marfil, a good friend, is now Assistant Secretary for Media Relations. Marfil is one of the best and the most endearing of all journalists from the old school. He knows what journalists need and that is, a good story.
At the height of the EDSA dos, Marfil and I was Senate beat reporters. We covered the Mary Ong expose for which I was tagged as the "handler" of the controversial whistle blower. Unknown to Rey, Senator Ping Lacson is one of my kumpadres and the reason why I was there was simply to assist a lady in distress.
Since he was (and still is) bubbly and a jovial guy, he wrote in his Abante column that I had a liaison with Mary which is definitely not true. Of course, I forgave him after that, seeing that the column was not that malicious.
Marfil and I had many memorable events together, covering as many controversial events as possible. When I decided to try my luck in the corporate world, Marfil and many of my friends were left behind. I did that with a heavy heart. I need to at least save some money for the future.
Now, I want to go back to where I really belong--journalism. I just hope that some of my friends read this. I am going back to journalism.
At the height of the EDSA dos, Marfil and I was Senate beat reporters. We covered the Mary Ong expose for which I was tagged as the "handler" of the controversial whistle blower. Unknown to Rey, Senator Ping Lacson is one of my kumpadres and the reason why I was there was simply to assist a lady in distress.
Since he was (and still is) bubbly and a jovial guy, he wrote in his Abante column that I had a liaison with Mary which is definitely not true. Of course, I forgave him after that, seeing that the column was not that malicious.
Marfil and I had many memorable events together, covering as many controversial events as possible. When I decided to try my luck in the corporate world, Marfil and many of my friends were left behind. I did that with a heavy heart. I need to at least save some money for the future.
Now, I want to go back to where I really belong--journalism. I just hope that some of my friends read this. I am going back to journalism.
Saturday, July 24, 2010
What would shock us Mr President
What would shock us, Mr. President?
We’ll be shocked when we see you, and your Cabinet members, asking for our forgiveness on behalf of your kind and kindred.
We will be extremely shocked if we see you and your Cabinet members, eating noodles every single day in Malacanang, like us.
When we see you, Mr. President and your cabinet receiving only your salaries and not accepting those big billion peso bribes from those devils that lurk inside those Spanish walls.
Those devils will appear before you as members of God's choir, with their aquiline noses pointed high up and their alabaster skins glowing with Glutathione injections. They are the new men in barongs, with their folders tugged in their sweaty armpits, and with their yellow ribbons plastered in those starched suits.
They will promise to alleviate our thirst with their new, more improved dam technology. They will astound you with their ideas on how to make our dams full of water. You will be mesmerized by how they tell their stories of success, of how other countries do it and how we lag behind.
Some will promise you continuous supply of electricity to power our electric fans and dusty television sets. Forget about nuclear power, they will try to say. The new “in” is coal fired plants.
Forget about 3gs, we now live in 5. Don’t ever consider solar power, they will say. The sun sets every single day, how then will it power homes at night?
When we see you and your Cabinet listening, even trying to grasp our language, or what we mean when we say "pagbabago" as something different from "change" or what we really meant when we tell you we are "pagod na sa mga pangako" as something alien from " we are tired from promises".
These past few years, we have developed our own language, different from the ones you hear your Cabinet secretaries speak or what you speak.
You want to shock us?
File those cases against these devils. Haul them all to jail. Let some rot, as an example. Most of those who stole our monies make them pay by their lives. Line them up. Shoot every single one. Make them your target practice every single week. Those rounds you spent in firing ranges, make every one worth its value.
Haul their families, parade them in the Luneta. It does not pay to be a big-time thief. Shame them for us, Mr. President, for we bear their sins every single day.
For every penny they stole, you ask us to repay them back. You intend to raise taxes that are the reason why you want to tell us that all those monies are gone.
Is that social justice?
Let these thieves cough up what they stole, every single centavo, Mr. President. That is social justice.
Let their families be shamed, not us. Every single day, we live in humiliating circumstances, caused not by us, but by these men who steal what are for us.
Why do you ask us to bear the sins of these thieves? Their sins reach the highest heavens, and God will give us our revenge. Yet, you, God’s anointed, should do your duty—make them pay us back while they are still breathing here. God will deal with them in the afterlife.
If these thieves cannot bring back what they stole, let generations of their families pay for it. Is it justice for you to allow us to live miserably while these scums live in their palatial houses, filled with gold and silver, while, we, the People eke out an existence, like malnourished dogs ready for slaughter?
We live in our slums and walk like ghosts every single day, while these thieves in barong go to their country houses and feast like sloths with our monies? Is that justice?
We are barely able to buy food while these scums waste 5,000 pesos every single day with a round of golf?
Mr. President, eighty eight percent of us, believe in you. We feel your sincerity. We feel you. It is therefore time that you feel us. Time for you to go to our mattresses and feel our daily pain, our feverish anguish while we see our children suffering from hunger and we cannot do anything about it.
Get us out of our senses so that we will again, be shocked. That all of these things are not normal. That this abnormality we see in our lives every single day is not life. That this is not life, but hell. That we are constantly living a hellish life makes the afterlife, our heaven.
Nothing shocks us anymore, Mr. President
President Noynoy Aquino wants to "shock the nation" with his expose. An expose for a State of the Nation address? The president’s men think it’s iconoclastic. They think it’s the first.
He gave us a sampler---most of the trillion peso budget allocated for 2010--is now gone. Former Gloria Arroyo already spent most of the money before she left Malacanang.
Ah, that's why she was all smiles during the inauguration. It's like saying, ha! I had you and you did not catch me. And you never will.
Arroyo was doing the walk of shame with her little mole glistening under the heat of the early morning sun that day. Millions felt relieved when she made that walk, good riddance, and on to our lives.
No one, however, catch her while she was in her car. Probably, she was laughing all the way to Pampanga. And that's why she went to Hongkong to make sure everything is still "intact" and ready for her grandchildren to enjoy.
What about millions of curses thrown her way? Those are just words without any effect. And how would those words harm her thick skin? Devils cast spells. How would a spell affect a devil?
Ah, justice. It's as elusive as that pesky little fly.
Ah, justice. It's like that fly swap that catches that pesky little fly and squash it with its stomach all out.
Aquino promises to shock us. What is so shocking about news of wanton stealing and unabated thievery? This has been going on since about nine years ago.
What would actually be shocking is if you, Mr. President and your Cabinet do not do anything to at least alleviate the condition we are in. Come to think of it--that is not that shocking anymore.
We have been fooled many times before, of promises of salvation from those who masqueraded as our saviors, only to unveil their true selves as our very own blood-thirty villains.
What is so shocking about farmers not being able to eat three times a day? Or 4 million Filipino families going on forced hunger every single day? Or experienced workers not getting jobs or young graduates languishing in their homes, four long years of college wasted and is wasting away?
What is so shocking about our young ones going to Japan, Malaysia and some other nasty and brutish places to earn a measly green buck? Or thousands of our Filipinas being brutally raped and enslaved, lured into a trap by modern slave traders?
And what will shock us? Is knowing that all of Arroyo's men stole monies from the public coffers and kept most of the furniture in their offices intact when they left last June 30? Or, is it more shocking that they actually kept those furnitures and not those paintings hanging in their walls?
Mr. President, nothing will ever shock us. Everyday, we, your bosses, live in such brutish conditions that shocks the senses of many, but, for us, that's everyday living. It is as normal as the sun rises in the east and retires in the West.
Yes, most places here are fast catching up with modernization. And yes, even global brands have penetrated even the remotest parts of these parts.
We are being urbanized, and forced to deal with fast rising slums. For some, that's a sign of growth.
For most of us, that is just a convenient piece of cloth which we see before a play starts.
Behind those pretty small malls and pleasing eye candies, hide the most despicable truths. Farms are being transformed into convenient small villages and rice fields turned into SM hypermarkets for an empty citizenry. Jags and Levis are creeping in fast, when we have'nt even replaced our 5 year old China-made jeans. For our monies are being spent for higher priced food stuffs, exorbitant electricity rates and commodified water. We settle for fake Giordanos and Abercrombies made from an obscure and small China factory and smuggled wholesale here.
As fast as the wild grasses grow in our water depleted fields come those tractors with their ton of asphalt. Every single one of us already heard the promises of politicos, that they will cement even our mountains with their
While the illusion of mall growth bedazzle us and make us believe that we are progressing, we toil our fields with our tired carabaos. While our young spend their days texting, telecommunications executives happily whistle their way to the bank. We sit here, still dazed on how our thousand pesos just literally disappear as fast as the wind blows.
We are, but consumers, consuming every single morsel of promise, every single bright neon light and every single new thing, a new drink, a new dress, a new cellphone, a new Philippines. These things we are being fed are sense-satisying and we explode with frenzied longing, only to expurgate everything in one single trip to the comforts of our toilet empty rooms.
We fast drive our way into the twenty first century, still oblivious how are we going to reach our destination with our higher priced diesel. Our power plants are now being managed by private hands, and soon, our dams will bear the ritzy names of Nuvali dam or Avida. Sooner still, we will drink water from our streams, branded like softdrinks. And very soon, even the wind will be made into a commodity and sold to us. You just need a Babes Singson for that to happen.
Are we going to be shocked when we learn that our trees are getting cut like grass every single day and our mountains carved out to pave for low cost housing and trash thrown to hastily dug garbage pits?
Does this still shock you? Three thousand Pinoys leave these lands for better lives in some foreign land. Those are just the documented ones. How about those smuggled like stuffed bears or those who hide and pretend to be VIP’s, who walk in those private walkways and onto waiting airplanes? What awaits those Pinoy souls? No one seems to know and no one seems to care. How will we monitor our fellow Pinoys when every single embassy has political appointees whose interests go beyond care? How will three diplomats take care of a thousand Pinoys?
Is still shocking to see Pinoy kids being kidnapped for their kidneys and their hearts? How about the Department of Health justifying transplants and so-called legal organ smugglings?
Is news of suicides and street vagrants asking for a swift death still shocks our senses? Of parents killing their babies and their kids and taking their own lives just because they can’t feed them, still shocking?
How about this---some Pinoys making malls their most preferred suicide place? That is an improvement. Before, it used to be billboards.
It would probably still shock us if we hear that rice is not the Pinoy’s staple food anymore, but Chinese noodles? Or, that siomai has totally replaced galunggong as the most sought-after viand?
Mr. President, nothing will ever shock us anymore. We have lived all these past nine years with only our courage and our guts left.
And even if you say that you’re trying to be different despite what we now see as just a continuation of the same, probably, that will shock us out of our wits.
Come to think of it again, we remember those tired, old revolutionaries say, the more things change, the more it remains the same.
Friday, July 23, 2010
People's Expose 1st Electronic Edition is now on PDF--Get it first!
Is Big Business now slowly entrenching itself inside the government bureaucracy? It seems like it.
Jose Almendras, former Ayala Group executive now heads the Energy department. And we all know that the Ayalas are now poised to enter into the energy generation sector very soon, the first with Angat.
Rogelio Singson again made another faux pas, with his attempt to sit as chair of the Toll Regulatory Board (TRB), a government agency which transacts with his former bosses over at MetroPacific Investments Corporation, the one behind Maynilad Water.
For more of this big business intrusions in government bureaucracy, read the first online newsletter of New Philippine Revolution. Get it by emailing me for a copy at mangubat.patricio@gmail.com. You can also get it at http://pinoyobserver.wordpress.com/.
Thanks for supporting me in this campaign to expose the truth.
Jose Almendras, former Ayala Group executive now heads the Energy department. And we all know that the Ayalas are now poised to enter into the energy generation sector very soon, the first with Angat.
Rogelio Singson again made another faux pas, with his attempt to sit as chair of the Toll Regulatory Board (TRB), a government agency which transacts with his former bosses over at MetroPacific Investments Corporation, the one behind Maynilad Water.
For more of this big business intrusions in government bureaucracy, read the first online newsletter of New Philippine Revolution. Get it by emailing me for a copy at mangubat.patricio@gmail.com. You can also get it at http://pinoyobserver.wordpress.com/.
Thanks for supporting me in this campaign to expose the truth.
Metro Manila' Water Crisis Connected to ANGAT hydroelectric power plant bidding
Is it entirely possible that a compromise has already been made between the Powers-That-Be and the big conglomerates bidding for the 246 megawatt Angat hydroelectric power plant? And that the compromise entails the Lopez-Ayala-Pangilinan group managing and controlling even the Angat water reservoir and dam?
Yesterday, the real reason behind the so-called "water crisis" unveiled itself.
MWSS Macra Cruz, deputy administrator, says that they will ask Malacanang to hand them the administration of Angat dam instead of the Napocor.
Curiously, Cruz says that both Maynilad (owned by MetroPacific Investments Corporation of PLDT man Manny Pangilinan) and Manila Water (owned by the Ayala Group of Companies) have submitted a proposal to the Aquino administration to jointly manage and control the Angat dam.
The proposal outlines how Maynilad and Manila Water would jointly take custody of Angat Dam with MWSS as its "partner".
The Group is bold on its proposal---the government is unable to solve a water crisis, hence, it necessitates the intervention of Big Business.
So, that's it---blame Napocor for the water mess, so that custody and administration of Angat Dam shifts from the energy to the DPWH department. And why is that? Because Rogelio Singson, a former water executive from Maynilad, now heads the DPWH, which has the MWSS under it.
How would things get better when during Singson's stint with Maynilad, he was unable to lower water leaks and pilferages lower than 56%?
Imagine, last June 1, the Maynilad said it has effectively reduced water leaks and pilferages by 56%. Now, it says that it cannot service its water concession areas due to lack of water coming from Angat.
Its former chief executive, Rogelio Singson, who now heads the DPWH, says that it was Napocor's fault. Singson accuses Napocor of releasing 3-months worth of water during Typhoon Ondoy. Now, water levels in Angat are on its historic lows.
Curiously though, when affected residents of Manila burst one of Maynilad's pipes open, thousands of liters worth of water sprang forth, adding to the suspicion that Maynilad is just creating an artificial water shortage.
If this is true, what's the objective?
The objective is as clear as day---create the necessary conditions to justify the privatization of MWSS and hence, privatization of Angat dam. And it is all too clear--whoever controls the dam, controls both water and electricity.
When Singson, a former executive of Maynilad Water (of MetroPac) accused Napocor (controlled by Jose Almendras, former executive of Manila Water) of causing the crisis, it was actually a play of sorts. Napocor of course, would later deny, but their denial was too lame.
In fact, Napocor validated Singson's accusation by saying that it indeed released water from the Angat dam. And why the validation?
It came so that charges of mismanagement of the dam are validated and that the cause of the water shortage would be attributed to human error or mismanagement instead of just blaming God for the mess.
What Singson and the MetroPac-Ayala wanted the public to believe is, "this would not have happened if Napocor was doing its job."
This is the message. And the solution? Privatize the management of the dams and turn them over to us, Maynilad-Manila Water. We are more efficient than government.
Let's skirt the EPIRA law, then, and leave these dams to us. That is the win-win solution. Even if we, MetroPac-Ayala fails to get the bidding because we don't have enough money like San Miguel Corporation, we can still control the situation since we will be the administrators of the dam anyway with MWSS. And with MWSS under the administration of one of our former executives, then...
Singson was laying the predicate for the justification of a take-over of Napocor operations of the dam so that his former company, Maynilad and its partner, Manila Water would effectively take joint management of Angat dam.
What the Lopez-Ayala-MetroPac wants is for the new government to hand over Angat dam to them without costing them a cent.
And why is the MetroPac-Ayala-Lopez group wants Angat dam? This is a juicy concession if they lose the bid for Angat's power plants.
Under the EPIRA law, the Angat dam will remain under government custody. It will only be the Angat's hydroelectric power plants that are to be auctioned off.
What this group wants is for them to control the dam that produces electricity. You control the dam, you control the amount of electricity it produces and of course, the electricity rates. Fact is, whoever controls the dam, controls two precious commodities in this country: water and electricity. The sheer size of the service area is what makes the Angat dam bidding so juicy for big business.
And it seems that a concession has already been made.
Think about it--why were two water executives, from the Metro Pacific Investments Corporation and the Ayala Group, the group bidding for the Angat Hydroelectric power plants, placed in the public works and the energy department?
Rogelio Singson is a Maynilad guy of MetroPac and Jose Almendras of the Energy department is a Manila Water executive. Meanwhile, PSALM head Atty. Luz Caminero is a former associate of Justice Fidel Purisima, a relative of Finance secretary Cesar Purisima.
Is it entirely possible that this is in preparation for the privatization of MWSS and the National Water Resources Board--two key agencies responsible for the management of water resources? It seems likely since Singson initially wanted to occupy the MWSS board. And for what? To dilute its value preparatory for a bidding and eventual takeover of the Lopez-MetroPac-Ayala Group?
This is entirely problematic and outright shame if the new government relents on this dastardly plan by the Group.
First, the Lopez-MetroPac-Ayala Group is bidding for the Angat hydroelectric power plants. Among the three, it is the Lopezes who have interests in the power sector.
The Group is very close to the men behind the Aquino administration, particularly with the Hyatt 10 and the Mar Roxas group.
Now, what is totally problematic about the Angat hydroelectric power plant bidding is the involvement of very close Aquino associates.
You have San Miguel's Danding Cojuangco, the uncle and election supporter of Noynoy Aquino. He has since spent close to US$ 2 billion acquiring other power plants. Sources say he is determined to get Angat.
You have Trans-Asia Oil and Energy Development Corporation of Philma Group. Ramon del Rosario Jr. heads the Philma Group. The Del Rosario family is very close to the Aquino family. It already has several power plants.
You have the Aboitizes, already involved in the energy sector. The Aboitizes are direct enemies of the Lopezes. Remember the failed takeover of Meralco? The Aboitiz family is taking part in this bidding alongside its Norwegian partner. The Aboitiz spent close to US$ 1billion already, when it bought the Magat and Ambuklao-Binga power plants.
MetroPac and the Ayala Group have merged to at least put a stronger force against their competitors. First Gen, the power company owned by the Lopezes, initially wanted to bid independently of its partner, Metro Pac, but already spent US$130 million acquiring the Pantabangan and Agusan power plants.
A new entrant, K-Power, is a Korean power company. It just bidded US$ 440.88 million for Angat, the only bidder so far without any other business interest in the local energy sector.
Okey, you have SMC, Aboitiz and K-Power at one side, the Phinma Group in the other and the MetroPac-Ayala-Lopez gang in another. The MetroPac and Ayala is using an Ayala Unit, the Michigan Power Incorporated as its main front.
Danding enjoys blood ties with the new administration and would definitely want nothing but a fair bidding. The del Rosarios expect the same thing, along with K-Power.
This is the first foray in the energy sector of Ayala and it wants nothing but victory. The group depends on the backing of men behind Noynoy Aquino, especially the Hyatt 10 and Lopezes who gave Noynoy all-out support last elections.
Sources in the energy sector believes that Danding would win this fight.
Is it true that a concession has already been made with Danding having his power plants and the Ayala-Pangilinan-Lopez group getting their dams? Is it the reason why Singson and Almendras were appointed?
If this happens, this will be the FIRST SCANDAL that will surely hit this new administration.
Yesterday, the real reason behind the so-called "water crisis" unveiled itself.
MWSS Macra Cruz, deputy administrator, says that they will ask Malacanang to hand them the administration of Angat dam instead of the Napocor.
Curiously, Cruz says that both Maynilad (owned by MetroPacific Investments Corporation of PLDT man Manny Pangilinan) and Manila Water (owned by the Ayala Group of Companies) have submitted a proposal to the Aquino administration to jointly manage and control the Angat dam.
The proposal outlines how Maynilad and Manila Water would jointly take custody of Angat Dam with MWSS as its "partner".
The Group is bold on its proposal---the government is unable to solve a water crisis, hence, it necessitates the intervention of Big Business.
So, that's it---blame Napocor for the water mess, so that custody and administration of Angat Dam shifts from the energy to the DPWH department. And why is that? Because Rogelio Singson, a former water executive from Maynilad, now heads the DPWH, which has the MWSS under it.
How would things get better when during Singson's stint with Maynilad, he was unable to lower water leaks and pilferages lower than 56%?
Imagine, last June 1, the Maynilad said it has effectively reduced water leaks and pilferages by 56%. Now, it says that it cannot service its water concession areas due to lack of water coming from Angat.
Its former chief executive, Rogelio Singson, who now heads the DPWH, says that it was Napocor's fault. Singson accuses Napocor of releasing 3-months worth of water during Typhoon Ondoy. Now, water levels in Angat are on its historic lows.
Curiously though, when affected residents of Manila burst one of Maynilad's pipes open, thousands of liters worth of water sprang forth, adding to the suspicion that Maynilad is just creating an artificial water shortage.
If this is true, what's the objective?
The objective is as clear as day---create the necessary conditions to justify the privatization of MWSS and hence, privatization of Angat dam. And it is all too clear--whoever controls the dam, controls both water and electricity.
When Singson, a former executive of Maynilad Water (of MetroPac) accused Napocor (controlled by Jose Almendras, former executive of Manila Water) of causing the crisis, it was actually a play of sorts. Napocor of course, would later deny, but their denial was too lame.
In fact, Napocor validated Singson's accusation by saying that it indeed released water from the Angat dam. And why the validation?
It came so that charges of mismanagement of the dam are validated and that the cause of the water shortage would be attributed to human error or mismanagement instead of just blaming God for the mess.
What Singson and the MetroPac-Ayala wanted the public to believe is, "this would not have happened if Napocor was doing its job."
This is the message. And the solution? Privatize the management of the dams and turn them over to us, Maynilad-Manila Water. We are more efficient than government.
Let's skirt the EPIRA law, then, and leave these dams to us. That is the win-win solution. Even if we, MetroPac-Ayala fails to get the bidding because we don't have enough money like San Miguel Corporation, we can still control the situation since we will be the administrators of the dam anyway with MWSS. And with MWSS under the administration of one of our former executives, then...
Singson was laying the predicate for the justification of a take-over of Napocor operations of the dam so that his former company, Maynilad and its partner, Manila Water would effectively take joint management of Angat dam.
What the Lopez-Ayala-MetroPac wants is for the new government to hand over Angat dam to them without costing them a cent.
And why is the MetroPac-Ayala-Lopez group wants Angat dam? This is a juicy concession if they lose the bid for Angat's power plants.
Under the EPIRA law, the Angat dam will remain under government custody. It will only be the Angat's hydroelectric power plants that are to be auctioned off.
What this group wants is for them to control the dam that produces electricity. You control the dam, you control the amount of electricity it produces and of course, the electricity rates. Fact is, whoever controls the dam, controls two precious commodities in this country: water and electricity. The sheer size of the service area is what makes the Angat dam bidding so juicy for big business.
And it seems that a concession has already been made.
Think about it--why were two water executives, from the Metro Pacific Investments Corporation and the Ayala Group, the group bidding for the Angat Hydroelectric power plants, placed in the public works and the energy department?
Rogelio Singson is a Maynilad guy of MetroPac and Jose Almendras of the Energy department is a Manila Water executive. Meanwhile, PSALM head Atty. Luz Caminero is a former associate of Justice Fidel Purisima, a relative of Finance secretary Cesar Purisima.
Is it entirely possible that this is in preparation for the privatization of MWSS and the National Water Resources Board--two key agencies responsible for the management of water resources? It seems likely since Singson initially wanted to occupy the MWSS board. And for what? To dilute its value preparatory for a bidding and eventual takeover of the Lopez-MetroPac-Ayala Group?
This is entirely problematic and outright shame if the new government relents on this dastardly plan by the Group.
First, the Lopez-MetroPac-Ayala Group is bidding for the Angat hydroelectric power plants. Among the three, it is the Lopezes who have interests in the power sector.
The Group is very close to the men behind the Aquino administration, particularly with the Hyatt 10 and the Mar Roxas group.
Now, what is totally problematic about the Angat hydroelectric power plant bidding is the involvement of very close Aquino associates.
You have San Miguel's Danding Cojuangco, the uncle and election supporter of Noynoy Aquino. He has since spent close to US$ 2 billion acquiring other power plants. Sources say he is determined to get Angat.
You have Trans-Asia Oil and Energy Development Corporation of Philma Group. Ramon del Rosario Jr. heads the Philma Group. The Del Rosario family is very close to the Aquino family. It already has several power plants.
You have the Aboitizes, already involved in the energy sector. The Aboitizes are direct enemies of the Lopezes. Remember the failed takeover of Meralco? The Aboitiz family is taking part in this bidding alongside its Norwegian partner. The Aboitiz spent close to US$ 1billion already, when it bought the Magat and Ambuklao-Binga power plants.
MetroPac and the Ayala Group have merged to at least put a stronger force against their competitors. First Gen, the power company owned by the Lopezes, initially wanted to bid independently of its partner, Metro Pac, but already spent US$130 million acquiring the Pantabangan and Agusan power plants.
A new entrant, K-Power, is a Korean power company. It just bidded US$ 440.88 million for Angat, the only bidder so far without any other business interest in the local energy sector.
Okey, you have SMC, Aboitiz and K-Power at one side, the Phinma Group in the other and the MetroPac-Ayala-Lopez gang in another. The MetroPac and Ayala is using an Ayala Unit, the Michigan Power Incorporated as its main front.
Danding enjoys blood ties with the new administration and would definitely want nothing but a fair bidding. The del Rosarios expect the same thing, along with K-Power.
This is the first foray in the energy sector of Ayala and it wants nothing but victory. The group depends on the backing of men behind Noynoy Aquino, especially the Hyatt 10 and Lopezes who gave Noynoy all-out support last elections.
Sources in the energy sector believes that Danding would win this fight.
Is it true that a concession has already been made with Danding having his power plants and the Ayala-Pangilinan-Lopez group getting their dams? Is it the reason why Singson and Almendras were appointed?
If this happens, this will be the FIRST SCANDAL that will surely hit this new administration.
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