From InterAksyon (Oct 29): In blow to US, Malaysia to buy navy vessels from China
Malaysia will sign a contract to purchase Littoral Mission Ships from China when Prime Minister Najib Razak visits Beijing next week, according to a Facebook posting by the country's Ministry of Defense.
The text of a speech to be delivered by Malaysian defense minister Hishammuddin Hussein was posted on Facebook on Tuesday, but was later removed after Reuters asked a defense ministry spokesman for comment.
The purchase of the patrol vessels, if it proceeds, would be Malaysia's first significant defense deal with China and comes amid rising tensions in the South China Sea and as the United States and China compete for influence in the region.
China's foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said on Friday he was "unclear on the specifics of the situation". But responding to a Reuters question at the daily ministry briefing he noted China and Malaysia "continue to cooperate and communicate regularly across all spheres".
Malaysia's ties with the United States became strained after the Department of Justice filed lawsuits linked to a money-laundering investigation at state fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), which Najib founded and had overseen as chairman of its advisory council.
Najib is traveling to China on Sunday for a week-long visit.
"On November 5, 2016, the Defense Ministry will sign a contract for the procurement of Littoral Mission Ships (LMS) with SASTIND (the State Administration for Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense), which is an important part of the schedule during the Prime Minister's official visit to China," the Facebook post quotes Hishammuddin saying.
However, a video recording of the speech at the Malaysian defense ministry by Hishammuddin does not mention this contract.
A defense ministry spokesman declined to comment and the prime minister's office did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Littoral Mission Ships are fast patrol vessels that can be equipped with a helicopter flight deck and carry missiles. They are primarily used for coastal security, maritime patrol and surveillance, but can also be deployed for disaster relief and search and rescue operations.
China claims most of the South China Sea as its territory. But Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam also have rival claims to parts of the waterway, which commands strategic sea lanes which carry some $5 trillion worth of trade a year.
Peak in ties
Ties between Malaysia and China reached a new peak in December when China came to Najib's rescue with a $2.3 billion deal to buy assets of scandal-hit state fund 1MDB, helping ease Najib's concern over the firm's mounting debt.
Najib is traveling with dozens of government leaders and business people to China. In a statement on Wednesday, he said Malaysia was committed to strengthening friendship with China and pushing ties to "new highs."
The push to strengthen China ties come after July lawsuits filed by the US Justice Department implicating Najib in a money-laundering scandal.
The lawsuits allege over $3.5 billion was misappropriated from 1MDB, some of which ended up with a 'Malaysian Official 1,' identified later by US and Malaysian authorities as Najib.
Najib has denied any wrongdoing and said Malaysia will cooperate in the international investigations.
Malaysia could buy up to 10 of the littoral mission ships at a cost of approximately 300 million ringgit ($71.43 million) each, said Lam Choong Wah, senior fellow at REFSA, a Malaysia research institute. He is also the author of a book on Malaysian military capability.
"The truth is we could have bought these from a number of countries. But China is the only country that has provided political support for Malaysia during the 1MDB scandal. This is payback for that political support."
Najib's visit follows that of President Rodrigo Duterte, who announced the country's "separation" from the United States and signed a raft of memoranda of understanding for Chinese investment in the country.
Last week, Malaysia announced a 2 billion ringgit ($476.19 million) cut to its 2017 defense budget from last year's levels.
A project to develop an amphibious corps was among those jettisoned, said Euan Graham, director of the international security program at the Lowy Institute, a Sydney-based think-tank.
"It was the US marines who were liaising with the Malaysians on that," Graham said.
"So a US-backed initiative has effectively died now," Graham said. "At the same time, a new bridge has been opened to China. If you put those together, whether it's been by Malaysia's design or not, it does send a combined signal of pulling back from the US and outreach to China."
($1 = 4.2000 ringgit)
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/133796/in-blow-to-us-malaysia-to-buy-navy-vessels-from-china
Friday, October 28, 2016
Philippines receives second and final C-130T airlifter from US
From IHS Jane's 360 (Oct 28): Philippines receives second and final C-130T airlifter from US
The second and final Lockheed Martin C-130T Hercules to be donated to the Philippines by the US was handed over on 24 October. Source: US DoD
The Philippines has received into service its second and final surplus Lockheed Martin C-130T Hercules transport aircraft from the United States, it was announced on 25 October.
The former US Navy aircraft, tail number 5040, was formally received by the Philippine Air Force (PAF) during a ceremony at Colonel Jesus Villamor Air Base, Pasay City, the day before. This aircraft will now join 5011, which was handed over to the PAF in April 2015, at the 220th Airlift Wing located at Brigadier General Benito N Ebuen Air Base, where it will be operated by the 222nd Airlift Squadron.
The acquisition under the US Excess Defense Article (EDA) programme of the C-130Ts is part of a wider modernisation by the PAF of its airlift capabilities to better enable it to deploy troops and to support humanitarian assistance and disaster response (HADR) operations. The two aircraft were acquired by Manila for about USD55 million, of which the US government paid USD20 million in Foreign Military Financing (FMF).
With this final C-130T now in place, the PAF now has a total of five C-130 aircraft composed of two C-130T, two C-130H, and one C-130B. Other fixed-wing airlift platforms fielded by the PAF comprise one Fokker F27 Friendship and one F28 Fellowship; and three Airbus Defence and Space C295s.
[Subscription required for access to full article]
http://www.janes.com/article/65002/philippines-receives-second-and-final-c-130t-airlifter-from-us
The second and final Lockheed Martin C-130T Hercules to be donated to the Philippines by the US was handed over on 24 October. Source: US DoD
The Philippines has received into service its second and final surplus Lockheed Martin C-130T Hercules transport aircraft from the United States, it was announced on 25 October.
The former US Navy aircraft, tail number 5040, was formally received by the Philippine Air Force (PAF) during a ceremony at Colonel Jesus Villamor Air Base, Pasay City, the day before. This aircraft will now join 5011, which was handed over to the PAF in April 2015, at the 220th Airlift Wing located at Brigadier General Benito N Ebuen Air Base, where it will be operated by the 222nd Airlift Squadron.
The acquisition under the US Excess Defense Article (EDA) programme of the C-130Ts is part of a wider modernisation by the PAF of its airlift capabilities to better enable it to deploy troops and to support humanitarian assistance and disaster response (HADR) operations. The two aircraft were acquired by Manila for about USD55 million, of which the US government paid USD20 million in Foreign Military Financing (FMF).
With this final C-130T now in place, the PAF now has a total of five C-130 aircraft composed of two C-130T, two C-130H, and one C-130B. Other fixed-wing airlift platforms fielded by the PAF comprise one Fokker F27 Friendship and one F28 Fellowship; and three Airbus Defence and Space C295s.
[Subscription required for access to full article]
http://www.janes.com/article/65002/philippines-receives-second-and-final-c-130t-airlifter-from-us
Chinese coast guards ‘not seen in Scarborough Shoal’
From the Manila Bulletin (Oct 28): Chinese coast guards ‘not seen in Scarborough Shoal’
Palace says Filipino fishermen are ‘observed’ fishing freely in disputed reef
There are no longer any China Coast Guard (CCG) vessels in the disputed Scarborough Shoal and Filipino fishermen are now able to freely access the area, Malacañang said Friday, October 28.
“Regarding fishing in Scarborough Shoal, for the past three days it has been observed that there are no longer any Chinese Coast Guard vessels and that Filipino fishing boats are no longer being intercepted and that they are now able to fish in the area without being intercepted,” Presidential spokesperson Ernesto Abella said in a Palace press briefing.
Abella, however did not disclose how such observation was made and by whom.
This development comes one week after President Rodrigo Duterte’s state visit to China.
Upon his return from China, Duterte announced that Filipino fishermen may be able to return to the Chinese-held shoal after he discussed the territorial rift with Chinese leaders.
On the other hand, Kabayan Party-list Rep. Harry Roque, who was part of the president’s delegation to China, claimed that Manila and Beijing have reached a “modus vivendi” to allow Filipino fishermen to return to the Shoal.
When asked if there was already an agreement reached on the issue during the president’s China trip, Abella clarified: “There’s nothing official regarding that matter. But all we know is based on results, fishermen can now go into those waters.”
President Duterte, in a speech before victims of super typhoon Lawin in Isabela Sunday, said he insisted the Philippines’ ownership of the Scarborough Shoal—locally known as Panatag Shoal or Bajo de Masinloc—to the Chinese.
Duterte said he told Chinese President Xi Jinping during their meeting that he cannot surrender anything in the country’s claims in the West Philippine Sea, citing the July 12 ruling of the Permanent Court of Arbitration.
And while the Chinese leader also insisted his country’s historical rights in the South China Sea, Duterte said they have agreed to resolve the case peacefully, although it will take time.
http://news.mb.com.ph/2016/10/28/chinese-coast-guards-not-seen-in-scarborough-shoal/
Palace says Filipino fishermen are ‘observed’ fishing freely in disputed reef
There are no longer any China Coast Guard (CCG) vessels in the disputed Scarborough Shoal and Filipino fishermen are now able to freely access the area, Malacañang said Friday, October 28.
“Regarding fishing in Scarborough Shoal, for the past three days it has been observed that there are no longer any Chinese Coast Guard vessels and that Filipino fishing boats are no longer being intercepted and that they are now able to fish in the area without being intercepted,” Presidential spokesperson Ernesto Abella said in a Palace press briefing.
Abella, however did not disclose how such observation was made and by whom.
This development comes one week after President Rodrigo Duterte’s state visit to China.
Upon his return from China, Duterte announced that Filipino fishermen may be able to return to the Chinese-held shoal after he discussed the territorial rift with Chinese leaders.
On the other hand, Kabayan Party-list Rep. Harry Roque, who was part of the president’s delegation to China, claimed that Manila and Beijing have reached a “modus vivendi” to allow Filipino fishermen to return to the Shoal.
When asked if there was already an agreement reached on the issue during the president’s China trip, Abella clarified: “There’s nothing official regarding that matter. But all we know is based on results, fishermen can now go into those waters.”
President Duterte, in a speech before victims of super typhoon Lawin in Isabela Sunday, said he insisted the Philippines’ ownership of the Scarborough Shoal—locally known as Panatag Shoal or Bajo de Masinloc—to the Chinese.
Duterte said he told Chinese President Xi Jinping during their meeting that he cannot surrender anything in the country’s claims in the West Philippine Sea, citing the July 12 ruling of the Permanent Court of Arbitration.
And while the Chinese leader also insisted his country’s historical rights in the South China Sea, Duterte said they have agreed to resolve the case peacefully, although it will take time.
http://news.mb.com.ph/2016/10/28/chinese-coast-guards-not-seen-in-scarborough-shoal/
CPP sees Duterte's move to veer away from US influence as 'mostly positive'
From GMA News (Oct 28): CPP sees Duterte's move to veer away from US influence as 'mostly positive'
The Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) said President Rodrigo Duterte's decision to shift his foreign policy away from the United States and closer to China was "mostly positive."
In a statement posted on its website on Friday, the CPP said the move "asserts the country's national sovereignty and independence from US dictates and impositions and thus opens potentials for substantial socio-economic changes and progress."
It also noted that ending the presence of US military in the Philippines "is the basic condition for transforming Philippine economy and society."
The CPP said it welcomes Duterte's declaration "of leaving the circle of US power," as well as his pronouncement that he wants all foreign troops out of the Philippines in two years.
The President must also "immediately follow through with steps to concretize this declaration," said the CPP, a political party founded on Marxism-Leninism-Maoism theories. It leads the New People's Army that wages armed struggle in rural areas.
The CPP said these steps include asking the US "to dismantle all its military bases and facilities" inside the camps of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, and to "cancel all joint military exercises."
Duterte must also "abrogate" the agreements the Philippines has with the US, including the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) and the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA), it added.
"He must also demand the US, as well as Japan and other countries, to stop its military patrols in the South China Sea to lower tensions which preempt and undermine bilateral and multilateral talks by countries with overlapping claims.
As to the matter of future humanitarian assistance, he can ask the US government to deliver these via civilian organizations (such as the Red Cross) or course this to the Philippine government," it also said.
On China
Meanwhile, the CPP also noted China's interest "in wrestling the Philippines from US sphere of influence," and said Duterte may use this to "draw Chinese and international support for programs supporting the people's livelihood."
"To help transform the Philippines into a solid bastion of anti-US imperialism, China can allow room for the development of the local economy in terms of its manufacturing capacity, rural production and expanding domestic market," it said.
'Unity vs. US imperialism'
Meanwhile, the CPP also urged Duterte to "promote the unity of the Filipino people behind the cause of anti-US imperialism."
It added that the move will include "a review of school books" to include "brutalities" of colonialism of the Americans "and continuing history of neo-colonialism."
http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/586818/news/nation/cpp-sees-duterte-s-move-to-veer-away-from-us-influence-as-mostly-positive
The Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) said President Rodrigo Duterte's decision to shift his foreign policy away from the United States and closer to China was "mostly positive."
In a statement posted on its website on Friday, the CPP said the move "asserts the country's national sovereignty and independence from US dictates and impositions and thus opens potentials for substantial socio-economic changes and progress."
It also noted that ending the presence of US military in the Philippines "is the basic condition for transforming Philippine economy and society."
The CPP said it welcomes Duterte's declaration "of leaving the circle of US power," as well as his pronouncement that he wants all foreign troops out of the Philippines in two years.
The President must also "immediately follow through with steps to concretize this declaration," said the CPP, a political party founded on Marxism-Leninism-Maoism theories. It leads the New People's Army that wages armed struggle in rural areas.
The CPP said these steps include asking the US "to dismantle all its military bases and facilities" inside the camps of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, and to "cancel all joint military exercises."
Duterte must also "abrogate" the agreements the Philippines has with the US, including the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) and the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA), it added.
"He must also demand the US, as well as Japan and other countries, to stop its military patrols in the South China Sea to lower tensions which preempt and undermine bilateral and multilateral talks by countries with overlapping claims.
As to the matter of future humanitarian assistance, he can ask the US government to deliver these via civilian organizations (such as the Red Cross) or course this to the Philippine government," it also said.
On China
Meanwhile, the CPP also noted China's interest "in wrestling the Philippines from US sphere of influence," and said Duterte may use this to "draw Chinese and international support for programs supporting the people's livelihood."
"To help transform the Philippines into a solid bastion of anti-US imperialism, China can allow room for the development of the local economy in terms of its manufacturing capacity, rural production and expanding domestic market," it said.
'Unity vs. US imperialism'
Meanwhile, the CPP also urged Duterte to "promote the unity of the Filipino people behind the cause of anti-US imperialism."
It added that the move will include "a review of school books" to include "brutalities" of colonialism of the Americans "and continuing history of neo-colonialism."
http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/586818/news/nation/cpp-sees-duterte-s-move-to-veer-away-from-us-influence-as-mostly-positive
Bulatlat: Witness says military ordered digging of alleged mass graves twice
From the pro-Communist Party of the Philippines online propaganda publication Bulatlat (Oct 28): Witness says military ordered digging of alleged mass graves twice
“Skeletal remains were supposedly dug up in 2006 in Inopacan, Leyte and before that was another digging made in 2000.”
BULATLAT FILE PHOTO. (Standing) NDFP consultants accused in connection with the alleged mass graves in Inopacan, Leyte.
A relative of alleged victims in the Leyte multiple murder case admitted in court that the military ordered him, along with others, to dig for the remains of his father and two brothers in alleged mass graves in two different places in separate incidents for two different cases.
Domingo Eras, whose father Domingo Sr. and brothers Gregorio and Leonardo were missing, said he went to the alleged mass grave in barangay Monterico, Baybay, Leyte on June 28, 2000 upon orders from the military.
Six years later, Eras, then a member of the Citizens Armed Force Geographical Unit (Cafgu), said he, along with six other Cafgu members, was ordered to go to an alleged mass grave in sitio Sapang Daco, barangay Kausilihan, Inopacan, Leyte.
In a hearing today, Oct. 28, before the Manila Regional Trial Court Branch 32, defense lawyer Ernesto Francisco said Eras’s father and two brothers were among those allegedly found in the Baybay mass grave in June 2000. Francisco pointed out that the information in the Inopacan mass grave also includes Eras’s father as one of those supposedly dug up in August 2006.
During the cross examination, Francisco asked Eras if he was able to identify the skeletal remains of his relatives supposedly exhumed in Baybay. Eras replied in Waray, “I’m not sure, sir.”
Asked further how the Army’s 43rd Infantry Battalion was able to identify the victims, which became the basis for filing the case, Eras said he did not know.
When asked if he knew that the Baybay case was dismissed by a local court on Jan. 25, 2005 due to lack of probable cause, Eras, one of the complainants, said he did not know.
Vicente Ladlad, one of the more than 70 accused in the Inopacan case, said Eras’s testimony proves that the charges are manufactured. Ladlad, a peace consultant of the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP), told Bulatlat shorty after the hearing that the military’s script was badly written.
“The fact that he was ordered by the military [to dig the graves] is very telling,” Ladlad said, noting that the prosecution did not mention this fact. It was Eras himself who said he was a Cafgu and presented identification cards issued by the Philippine Army during a hearing yesterday.
Prosecution lawyers objected several times to the questions hurled by Francisco, particularly about the complaints filed in the Baybay case. Prosecutor Winnie Edad said their witness is “uneducated and not competent” to answer questions pertaining to legal cases.
Prosecutor Rosulo Vivero, who filed the two separate information in Baybay and Inopacan, also opposed Francisco’s line of questioning about the two alleged mass graves.
Addressing the prosecution, Judge Thelma Bunyi-Medina said, “Why would it not affect the credibility of (your) witness? Skeletal remains were supposedly dug up in 2006 in Inopacan, Leyte and there was another digging made in 2000. Those are related matters.”
Ladlad found incredulous that the two alleged mass graves were found near the farm then hut of Floro Tinaid. Eras said Tinaid lived in barangay Kaulisihan, Baybay, Leyte from 1980 to 1985. Eras said Tinaid left the place because he was scared of New People’s Army (NPA) guerrillas who allegedly frequented the place. Eras said Tinaid then moved to barangay Monterico, Inopacan.
Other NDFP consultants Benito Tiamzon, Wilma Austria Tiamzon, Rafael Baylosis, Randall Echanis and Adelberto Silva are co-accused in the Inopacan mass grave case. They have been released on bail to be able to participate in the formal peace talks between the Government of the Philippines and the NDFP.
Rachel F. Pastores of the Public Interest Law Center (PILC) told Bulatlat that the NDFP’s legal counsels have asked the GRP panel to suspend the proceedings on the case to enable the NDFP consultants to focus on the peace talks. Pastores said the GRP has agreed but the court has yet to grant the petition.
http://bulatlat.com/main/2016/10/28/witness-says-military-ordered-digging-alleged-mass-graves-twice/
“Skeletal remains were supposedly dug up in 2006 in Inopacan, Leyte and before that was another digging made in 2000.”
A relative of alleged victims in the Leyte multiple murder case admitted in court that the military ordered him, along with others, to dig for the remains of his father and two brothers in alleged mass graves in two different places in separate incidents for two different cases.
Domingo Eras, whose father Domingo Sr. and brothers Gregorio and Leonardo were missing, said he went to the alleged mass grave in barangay Monterico, Baybay, Leyte on June 28, 2000 upon orders from the military.
Six years later, Eras, then a member of the Citizens Armed Force Geographical Unit (Cafgu), said he, along with six other Cafgu members, was ordered to go to an alleged mass grave in sitio Sapang Daco, barangay Kausilihan, Inopacan, Leyte.
In a hearing today, Oct. 28, before the Manila Regional Trial Court Branch 32, defense lawyer Ernesto Francisco said Eras’s father and two brothers were among those allegedly found in the Baybay mass grave in June 2000. Francisco pointed out that the information in the Inopacan mass grave also includes Eras’s father as one of those supposedly dug up in August 2006.
During the cross examination, Francisco asked Eras if he was able to identify the skeletal remains of his relatives supposedly exhumed in Baybay. Eras replied in Waray, “I’m not sure, sir.”
Asked further how the Army’s 43rd Infantry Battalion was able to identify the victims, which became the basis for filing the case, Eras said he did not know.
When asked if he knew that the Baybay case was dismissed by a local court on Jan. 25, 2005 due to lack of probable cause, Eras, one of the complainants, said he did not know.
Vicente Ladlad, one of the more than 70 accused in the Inopacan case, said Eras’s testimony proves that the charges are manufactured. Ladlad, a peace consultant of the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP), told Bulatlat shorty after the hearing that the military’s script was badly written.
“The fact that he was ordered by the military [to dig the graves] is very telling,” Ladlad said, noting that the prosecution did not mention this fact. It was Eras himself who said he was a Cafgu and presented identification cards issued by the Philippine Army during a hearing yesterday.
Prosecution lawyers objected several times to the questions hurled by Francisco, particularly about the complaints filed in the Baybay case. Prosecutor Winnie Edad said their witness is “uneducated and not competent” to answer questions pertaining to legal cases.
Prosecutor Rosulo Vivero, who filed the two separate information in Baybay and Inopacan, also opposed Francisco’s line of questioning about the two alleged mass graves.
Addressing the prosecution, Judge Thelma Bunyi-Medina said, “Why would it not affect the credibility of (your) witness? Skeletal remains were supposedly dug up in 2006 in Inopacan, Leyte and there was another digging made in 2000. Those are related matters.”
Ladlad found incredulous that the two alleged mass graves were found near the farm then hut of Floro Tinaid. Eras said Tinaid lived in barangay Kaulisihan, Baybay, Leyte from 1980 to 1985. Eras said Tinaid left the place because he was scared of New People’s Army (NPA) guerrillas who allegedly frequented the place. Eras said Tinaid then moved to barangay Monterico, Inopacan.
Other NDFP consultants Benito Tiamzon, Wilma Austria Tiamzon, Rafael Baylosis, Randall Echanis and Adelberto Silva are co-accused in the Inopacan mass grave case. They have been released on bail to be able to participate in the formal peace talks between the Government of the Philippines and the NDFP.
Rachel F. Pastores of the Public Interest Law Center (PILC) told Bulatlat that the NDFP’s legal counsels have asked the GRP panel to suspend the proceedings on the case to enable the NDFP consultants to focus on the peace talks. Pastores said the GRP has agreed but the court has yet to grant the petition.
http://bulatlat.com/main/2016/10/28/witness-says-military-ordered-digging-alleged-mass-graves-twice/
Abu Sayyaf Makes Millions from Piracy
From the Maritime Executive (Oct 28): Abu Sayyaf Makes Millions from Piracy
The AP reported Friday that Philippine terrorist group Abu Sayyaf earned over $7 million in ransom payments in the first six months of the year alone – most of it in return for the freedom of kidnapped tugboat crewmembers.
So far this year, Abu Sayyaf has hijacked at least five tugs and one trawler and made off with a total of 33 seafarers. In addition, the group beheaded two Canadian hostages who were abducted from a resort in 2015.
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has ordered the military to "destroy" the group, but a secret government report viewed by the AP's reporters showed that the all-out campaign has cut only slightly into Abu Sayyaf's ranks, reducing its manpower by no more than five percent. At the same time, Abu Sayyaf has sustained a vigorous campaign of bombings and kidnappings.
The new report mirrors the history of previous attempts to oust the rebels from the Sulu Archipelago. In 2002, the Philippine military, aided by hundreds of American troops, swept through the group's stronghold on Basilan – but analysts suggest that Abu Sayyaf was able to reconstitute itself as soon as troop levels were drawn down.
Large-scale military deployments with thousands of personnel followed again in 2006. Within a year's time the Philippine military said it had reduced the group's strength on Basilan to 200 fighters, but the latest report puts Abu Sayyaf's total head count at 480. The ISIS-aligned terrorist group is now in its twenty-fifth year in operation.
Analysts say that the difficulty in fighting Abu Sayyaf may be in its ability to fade into the jungle, wait out a counterinsurgency effort and rebuild its force by hiring local residents. Philippine media report that the group's wages for new recruits start at about $300 per month, a respectable sum in the impoverished region.
http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/abu-sayyaf-makes-millions-from-piracy
The AP reported Friday that Philippine terrorist group Abu Sayyaf earned over $7 million in ransom payments in the first six months of the year alone – most of it in return for the freedom of kidnapped tugboat crewmembers.
So far this year, Abu Sayyaf has hijacked at least five tugs and one trawler and made off with a total of 33 seafarers. In addition, the group beheaded two Canadian hostages who were abducted from a resort in 2015.
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has ordered the military to "destroy" the group, but a secret government report viewed by the AP's reporters showed that the all-out campaign has cut only slightly into Abu Sayyaf's ranks, reducing its manpower by no more than five percent. At the same time, Abu Sayyaf has sustained a vigorous campaign of bombings and kidnappings.
The new report mirrors the history of previous attempts to oust the rebels from the Sulu Archipelago. In 2002, the Philippine military, aided by hundreds of American troops, swept through the group's stronghold on Basilan – but analysts suggest that Abu Sayyaf was able to reconstitute itself as soon as troop levels were drawn down.
Large-scale military deployments with thousands of personnel followed again in 2006. Within a year's time the Philippine military said it had reduced the group's strength on Basilan to 200 fighters, but the latest report puts Abu Sayyaf's total head count at 480. The ISIS-aligned terrorist group is now in its twenty-fifth year in operation.
Analysts say that the difficulty in fighting Abu Sayyaf may be in its ability to fade into the jungle, wait out a counterinsurgency effort and rebuild its force by hiring local residents. Philippine media report that the group's wages for new recruits start at about $300 per month, a respectable sum in the impoverished region.
http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/abu-sayyaf-makes-millions-from-piracy
Mindanao researchers explain Filipino influx into Sabah
From Free Malaysia Today (Oct 28): Mindanao researchers explain Filipino influx into Sabah
The phrase "forced to flee" is too narrow to describe the migrants to Sabah from Mindanao.
Two Filipino researchers told a conference in Kota Kinabalu, that the influx of migrants from Mindanao to Sabah was also encouraged by certain local politicians (Sabah) who hoped to be Sultan of Sulu.
The influx was also a response to the fall of the Muslim-led Usno and Berjaya Governments in Sabah, said Myfel Joseph Paluga and Andrea Malaya Ragragio from the Department of Social Science, University of the Philippines, Mindanao.
Speaking at the 10th International Malaysian Studies Conference, they said the migrants were supposedly war refugees.
“However, with arms and ammunition from Libya, they continued to head for Sabah,” the two were quoted as saying in the Daily Express.
“The aim was to change the demography, electoral patterns, and influence the democratic governance,” said the researchers.
They said the wave of evacuations (or bakwit in the local language) were considered a deliberate response to the series of reported “militarisation” of their villages in the southern Philippines.
Briefly, they said, the phrase “forced to flee” was too narrow to describe the migrants from Mindanao.
The researchers cited several examples: Bosnian Muslims did not flee. They were expelled from their homes on ethnic and religious grounds.
Again, countless numbers in Myanmar, Iraq and Ethiopia also did not flee. “They were forcibly moved by their governments for political and ethnic reasons,” said the researchers.
In Mindanao, there are cases where the displaced often left in small numbers to be less conspicuous, or where the displacement happened in a slow process over decades and so do not appear “suddenly and in large numbers”, they said.
There are also cases where people felt “obliged to leave” because of impending conflict or other disturbances.
“How critical is the coercive element (as in migration), as in being uprooted, to merit help?” asked the researchers in their paper presented at the conference.
The paper said there were proposals on expanding the definitions in Sabah to include those who migrate because of extreme poverty or for other economic reasons.
“The element of coercion is not clear in cases of economic migration,” the researchers cautioned.
They called for development programmes, generated by national and international agencies, as the most appropriate means of addressing economic migration.
http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/nation/2016/10/28/mindanao-researchers-explain-filipino-influx-into-sabah/
The phrase "forced to flee" is too narrow to describe the migrants to Sabah from Mindanao.
Two Filipino researchers told a conference in Kota Kinabalu, that the influx of migrants from Mindanao to Sabah was also encouraged by certain local politicians (Sabah) who hoped to be Sultan of Sulu.
The influx was also a response to the fall of the Muslim-led Usno and Berjaya Governments in Sabah, said Myfel Joseph Paluga and Andrea Malaya Ragragio from the Department of Social Science, University of the Philippines, Mindanao.
Speaking at the 10th International Malaysian Studies Conference, they said the migrants were supposedly war refugees.
“However, with arms and ammunition from Libya, they continued to head for Sabah,” the two were quoted as saying in the Daily Express.
“The aim was to change the demography, electoral patterns, and influence the democratic governance,” said the researchers.
They said the wave of evacuations (or bakwit in the local language) were considered a deliberate response to the series of reported “militarisation” of their villages in the southern Philippines.
Briefly, they said, the phrase “forced to flee” was too narrow to describe the migrants from Mindanao.
The researchers cited several examples: Bosnian Muslims did not flee. They were expelled from their homes on ethnic and religious grounds.
Again, countless numbers in Myanmar, Iraq and Ethiopia also did not flee. “They were forcibly moved by their governments for political and ethnic reasons,” said the researchers.
In Mindanao, there are cases where the displaced often left in small numbers to be less conspicuous, or where the displacement happened in a slow process over decades and so do not appear “suddenly and in large numbers”, they said.
There are also cases where people felt “obliged to leave” because of impending conflict or other disturbances.
“How critical is the coercive element (as in migration), as in being uprooted, to merit help?” asked the researchers in their paper presented at the conference.
The paper said there were proposals on expanding the definitions in Sabah to include those who migrate because of extreme poverty or for other economic reasons.
“The element of coercion is not clear in cases of economic migration,” the researchers cautioned.
They called for development programmes, generated by national and international agencies, as the most appropriate means of addressing economic migration.
http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/nation/2016/10/28/mindanao-researchers-explain-filipino-influx-into-sabah/
Facing Pressure at Home, Islamic State Focuses on SE Asia
From Voice of America (Oct 28): Facing Pressure at Home, Islamic State Focuses on SE Asia
As the Islamic State terror group faces territorial losses in the Middle East, there are signs that the group is increasing its cooperation with local militant groups in Southeast Asia.
A new report from researchers at the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC), warns that supporters of the terrorist group are networking in Southeast Asia and law enforcement agencies appear unprepared for the new threat.
“Over the last two years, ISIS has provided a new basis for cooperation among extremists in the region,” said IPAC director Sidney Jones, using an acronym to describe the Islamic State, which is also known as IS, ISIL, and Daesh.
Focus on Philippine extremist groups
Four extremist groups are increasingly focusing on the southern Philippines’ Mindanao region, with fighters, instructors or funding at times from Indonesia or Malaysia. In turn, the groups have provided refuge, training sites, combat experience or arms.
“That cooperation could take on new importance as ISIS losses in the Middle East increase the incentive to undertake violence elsewhere,” Jones said.
Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, since taking office in June, launched negotiations to end long-running violence in the southern Philippines, offering “multiple options” to groups in terms of proposals to end the violence.
Ehud Ya’ari, an Israel-based military analyst and political commentator, sees a growing threat for Southeast Asia as military defeats for ISIS in the Middle East lead to hundreds of fighters returning to Asia.
“Once ISIS is defeated in the Levant ... some of them, many of them, I don’t know, are coming to the islands,” Ya’ari said at a regional security seminar at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University.
“They see the islands of Indonesia, Philippines, etcetera, as a promising new base and they dedicate a growing amount of investment in the literature and propaganda to this region,” he added.
Elina Noor, director of the Malaysia-based Institute of Strategic and International Studies, said the southern Philippines will be a “regional hub” for the extremist operations.
But the IPAC report said while ISIS-driven unity among the groups may be only temporary, “it could leave behind a hard core of Mindanao-based jihadists who are more ideological than their predecessors and look to like-minded associates in the region for support.”
'No Single Profile' for IS supporters
Analysts, including Noor, see a threat from the numbers of people from Asia traveling to the Middle East to join the Islamic State.
Malaysian authorities have reported a rising trend in terrorism-related arrests since 2013, citing some “80-plus” arrests in Malaysia in 2015, and 90 detentions as of August 2016.
Noor says the crackdown points to a broad profile of those supporting militant groups. “There is no single profile," she said. "They come from different age groups, they come from different professional and non-professional backgrounds.”
Arrests included an Islamic religious teacher, senior government officials, military and security forces personnel, as well as teens and children as young as 14, including girls.
A primary reason many travel to the Middle East is a motivation to "redress injustices in Syria and Iraq,” as well as in other countries. But, she added, there is a rising tone of a more conservative view of Islam in Southeast Asia among the groups.
“What many are now seeking is a puritanical brand of Islam. So that’s the ambition," she said. "And who are Southeast Asian [militants] turning to for that direction — West Asia, the Middle East.”
To tackle the issue of extremism, Noor says governments need to counter an ideology "rooted in political grievances, not religious ones, often rooted in a failure of good governance."
She also calls for the “de-politicization” of religion in which governments need to step back from "manipulating religion for political purposes."
Riad Kahwaji, head of the United Arab Emirates’-based Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis, warns against the “import” of the sectarian divisions within Islam that have deeply divided communities in the Middle East, at a terrible cost to human life.
“The states here [in Southeast Asia] should work hard to prevent any division between the Islamic sects — the Sunnis and the Shias," Kahwaji said. "They should work much harder to prevent any spill over from the troubles in the Middle East into Southeast Asian countries.”
Analysts say the internet and social media have led to self-radicalization among some individuals capable of carrying out so-called lone wolf attacks. Australia’s has faced a spate of such attacks and threats, with the national terrorism threat currently set at “probable.”
More than 100 Australian nationals are reportedly fighting alongside or supporting the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.
Colin Rubenstein, executive director of the Australia-Israel and Jewish Affairs Council, says the concerns for Southeast Asian countries will come after military action against Islamic State in Syria and Iraq concludes.
“There’s no suggestion they will disappear [after the fighting ends]. As we’ve seen, it will globalize and in terms of [militants] coming back to their [home] countries; obviously that process unfortunately can include Australia,” Rubenstein said. “So eternal vigilance and staying ahead of the curve — that’s what the authorities are well aware they need to do.”
http://www.voanews.com/a/facing-pressure-at-home-islamic-state-focuses-on-southeast-asia-/3569896.html
As the Islamic State terror group faces territorial losses in the Middle East, there are signs that the group is increasing its cooperation with local militant groups in Southeast Asia.
A new report from researchers at the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC), warns that supporters of the terrorist group are networking in Southeast Asia and law enforcement agencies appear unprepared for the new threat.
“Over the last two years, ISIS has provided a new basis for cooperation among extremists in the region,” said IPAC director Sidney Jones, using an acronym to describe the Islamic State, which is also known as IS, ISIL, and Daesh.
Focus on Philippine extremist groups
Four extremist groups are increasingly focusing on the southern Philippines’ Mindanao region, with fighters, instructors or funding at times from Indonesia or Malaysia. In turn, the groups have provided refuge, training sites, combat experience or arms.
“That cooperation could take on new importance as ISIS losses in the Middle East increase the incentive to undertake violence elsewhere,” Jones said.
Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, since taking office in June, launched negotiations to end long-running violence in the southern Philippines, offering “multiple options” to groups in terms of proposals to end the violence.
Ehud Ya’ari, an Israel-based military analyst and political commentator, sees a growing threat for Southeast Asia as military defeats for ISIS in the Middle East lead to hundreds of fighters returning to Asia.
“Once ISIS is defeated in the Levant ... some of them, many of them, I don’t know, are coming to the islands,” Ya’ari said at a regional security seminar at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University.
“They see the islands of Indonesia, Philippines, etcetera, as a promising new base and they dedicate a growing amount of investment in the literature and propaganda to this region,” he added.
Elina Noor, director of the Malaysia-based Institute of Strategic and International Studies, said the southern Philippines will be a “regional hub” for the extremist operations.
But the IPAC report said while ISIS-driven unity among the groups may be only temporary, “it could leave behind a hard core of Mindanao-based jihadists who are more ideological than their predecessors and look to like-minded associates in the region for support.”
'No Single Profile' for IS supporters
Analysts, including Noor, see a threat from the numbers of people from Asia traveling to the Middle East to join the Islamic State.
Malaysian authorities have reported a rising trend in terrorism-related arrests since 2013, citing some “80-plus” arrests in Malaysia in 2015, and 90 detentions as of August 2016.
Noor says the crackdown points to a broad profile of those supporting militant groups. “There is no single profile," she said. "They come from different age groups, they come from different professional and non-professional backgrounds.”
Arrests included an Islamic religious teacher, senior government officials, military and security forces personnel, as well as teens and children as young as 14, including girls.
A primary reason many travel to the Middle East is a motivation to "redress injustices in Syria and Iraq,” as well as in other countries. But, she added, there is a rising tone of a more conservative view of Islam in Southeast Asia among the groups.
“What many are now seeking is a puritanical brand of Islam. So that’s the ambition," she said. "And who are Southeast Asian [militants] turning to for that direction — West Asia, the Middle East.”
To tackle the issue of extremism, Noor says governments need to counter an ideology "rooted in political grievances, not religious ones, often rooted in a failure of good governance."
She also calls for the “de-politicization” of religion in which governments need to step back from "manipulating religion for political purposes."
Riad Kahwaji, head of the United Arab Emirates’-based Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis, warns against the “import” of the sectarian divisions within Islam that have deeply divided communities in the Middle East, at a terrible cost to human life.
“The states here [in Southeast Asia] should work hard to prevent any division between the Islamic sects — the Sunnis and the Shias," Kahwaji said. "They should work much harder to prevent any spill over from the troubles in the Middle East into Southeast Asian countries.”
Analysts say the internet and social media have led to self-radicalization among some individuals capable of carrying out so-called lone wolf attacks. Australia’s has faced a spate of such attacks and threats, with the national terrorism threat currently set at “probable.”
More than 100 Australian nationals are reportedly fighting alongside or supporting the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.
Colin Rubenstein, executive director of the Australia-Israel and Jewish Affairs Council, says the concerns for Southeast Asian countries will come after military action against Islamic State in Syria and Iraq concludes.
“There’s no suggestion they will disappear [after the fighting ends]. As we’ve seen, it will globalize and in terms of [militants] coming back to their [home] countries; obviously that process unfortunately can include Australia,” Rubenstein said. “So eternal vigilance and staying ahead of the curve — that’s what the authorities are well aware they need to do.”
http://www.voanews.com/a/facing-pressure-at-home-islamic-state-focuses-on-southeast-asia-/3569896.html
PHL secures 16.5-B yen loan from Japan to boost maritime safety capability
From the Philippine Information Agency (Oct 28): PHL secures 16.5-B yen loan from Japan to boost maritime safety capability
The Philippines and Japan have formalized several agreements that would help the former improve its maritime safety capability, including a deal for a P16.5 billion yen concessional loan covered by Tokyo’s Official Development Assistance (ODA) for the acquisition of two large-scale patrol vessels for the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG).
The agreement for the 16.5-billion yen loan signed by Philippine Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez and Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) presidentShinichi Kitaoka during President Rodrigo Duterte’s official visit to Japan is part of Tokyo’s continuing assistance to the PCG’s Maritime Safety Capability Improvement Project (MSCIP).
President Duterte and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe witnessed the signing of the Loan Agreement, as well as the Exchange of Notes on the pact between the Department of Foreign Affairs and Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The JICA loan, equivalent to P6.8 billion, has an interest rate of between 0.01 percent and 0.10 percent with a maturity period of 40 years, inclusive of a 10-year grace period, according to the Department of Finance (DOF).
The acquisition of two 94-meter large-scale patrol ships under Phase Two of the MSCIP is on top of the ongoing ODA from Japan for the first phase of the project, which involves the procurement of 10 40-meter PCG patrol vessels.
One of the 10 patrol vessels was delivered to the Philippines last Aug. 16, while the second one is expected to be handed over by December this year at the Japan Marine United Shipyard in Yokohama.
The targeted completion of the delivery of all the 10 vessels is on August 2018.
Besides the loan agreement, Japan also announced the provision of additional vessels for the PCG through a 600 million yen grant (about P280 million) for the procurement of high-speed boats and other equipment to boost the Philippines’ anti-terrorism and security activities.
This includes the acquisition of one 20-meter high-speed vessel and 14 units of 11-meter high speed boats.
Earlier, in his state visit to China, President Duterte witnessed the signing of two key agreements that would allow the Philippines to tap Beijing’s financing facilities and technical expertise to help fund its infrastructure and rural development projects.
In rites held at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Dominguez and Mr. Sun Ping, Vice President of the Export-Import Bank of China (China EXIM) signed the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on Financing Cooperation, which signifies the intent of the Bank to provide funding for Philippine projects in infrastructure, agriculture and energy, among other priority sectors, through concessional loans and other preferential financing facilities.
The specific projects covered by the MOU that would be open for financing through China EXIM, which is solely owned by the Chinese government, would still be agreed upon by the two countries and would undergo the usual approval processes.
The MOU states that projects in infrastructure, energy, transportation, engineering and manufacturing would be considered by the two governments as priorities.
A separate MOU signed by Dominguez and Chinese Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng provides Manila with financing support from Beijing in conducting feasibility studies for the Philippine government’s major projects in infrastructure, agriculture and rural development, among other priority areas.
Under the agreement, China would provide support for the feasibility studies “through the dispatch of technical experts and consultants” for period of three years.
The two agreements were among the 13 agreements signed by the Philippines and China during President’s Duterte’s state visit.
http://news.pia.gov.ph/article/view/1141477639648/phl-secures-16-5-b-yen-loan-from-japan-to-boost-maritime-safety-capability
The Philippines and Japan have formalized several agreements that would help the former improve its maritime safety capability, including a deal for a P16.5 billion yen concessional loan covered by Tokyo’s Official Development Assistance (ODA) for the acquisition of two large-scale patrol vessels for the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG).
The agreement for the 16.5-billion yen loan signed by Philippine Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez and Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) presidentShinichi Kitaoka during President Rodrigo Duterte’s official visit to Japan is part of Tokyo’s continuing assistance to the PCG’s Maritime Safety Capability Improvement Project (MSCIP).
President Duterte and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe witnessed the signing of the Loan Agreement, as well as the Exchange of Notes on the pact between the Department of Foreign Affairs and Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The JICA loan, equivalent to P6.8 billion, has an interest rate of between 0.01 percent and 0.10 percent with a maturity period of 40 years, inclusive of a 10-year grace period, according to the Department of Finance (DOF).
The acquisition of two 94-meter large-scale patrol ships under Phase Two of the MSCIP is on top of the ongoing ODA from Japan for the first phase of the project, which involves the procurement of 10 40-meter PCG patrol vessels.
One of the 10 patrol vessels was delivered to the Philippines last Aug. 16, while the second one is expected to be handed over by December this year at the Japan Marine United Shipyard in Yokohama.
The targeted completion of the delivery of all the 10 vessels is on August 2018.
Besides the loan agreement, Japan also announced the provision of additional vessels for the PCG through a 600 million yen grant (about P280 million) for the procurement of high-speed boats and other equipment to boost the Philippines’ anti-terrorism and security activities.
This includes the acquisition of one 20-meter high-speed vessel and 14 units of 11-meter high speed boats.
Earlier, in his state visit to China, President Duterte witnessed the signing of two key agreements that would allow the Philippines to tap Beijing’s financing facilities and technical expertise to help fund its infrastructure and rural development projects.
In rites held at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Dominguez and Mr. Sun Ping, Vice President of the Export-Import Bank of China (China EXIM) signed the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on Financing Cooperation, which signifies the intent of the Bank to provide funding for Philippine projects in infrastructure, agriculture and energy, among other priority sectors, through concessional loans and other preferential financing facilities.
The specific projects covered by the MOU that would be open for financing through China EXIM, which is solely owned by the Chinese government, would still be agreed upon by the two countries and would undergo the usual approval processes.
The MOU states that projects in infrastructure, energy, transportation, engineering and manufacturing would be considered by the two governments as priorities.
A separate MOU signed by Dominguez and Chinese Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng provides Manila with financing support from Beijing in conducting feasibility studies for the Philippine government’s major projects in infrastructure, agriculture and rural development, among other priority areas.
Under the agreement, China would provide support for the feasibility studies “through the dispatch of technical experts and consultants” for period of three years.
The two agreements were among the 13 agreements signed by the Philippines and China during President’s Duterte’s state visit.
http://news.pia.gov.ph/article/view/1141477639648/phl-secures-16-5-b-yen-loan-from-japan-to-boost-maritime-safety-capability
AFP chief formally inaugurates newly-renovated CGTBH in Jolo
From the Philippine News Agency (Oct 27): AFP chief formally inaugurates newly-renovated CGTBH in Jolo
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?&sid=6&pfn=935159&arch=1&go=Go&search_arch=Keyword&andor=and&mdte_arch=10&ddte_arch=27&ydte_arch=2016
Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) chief-of-staff Gen.
Ricardo Visaya formally inaugurated the newly-renovated and modernized 65-bed
capacity Hospital ng Kampo Heneral Teodulfo Bautista or Camp General Teodulfo
Bautista Station Hospital (CGTBH) in Jolo, Sulu on Wednesday.
He was joined by the local government executives of Sulu,
other ranking AFP leaders, field commanders in Western Mindanao, and
representatives of San Miguel Foundation, Incorporated led by Atty. Peter
Suchianco.
Undersecretary Emmanuel Bautista, former AFP chief-of-staff,
and a son of Brig. Gen. Teodulfo Bautista on whom the camp was named after, was
the guest of honor.
President Rodrigo Duterte earlier promised support for the
construction of a medical facility that shall cater to soldiers committed to
the fight against terrorists groups in Western Mindanao .
Brig. Gen. Mariano A. Mejia, the Surgeon General of the AFP
and concurrent Commanding General of the AFP Medical
Center expressed his
elation for the realization of this project.
“The fulfillment of this once dream of having a hospital in
Sulu did not come easy. It faced financial challenges, among others. This is
why we are grateful to the AFP leadership, to the Commander-in-Chief, and to
San Miguel Foundation, Incorporated for their gracious donation of ambulances,
equipment, and other hospital implements,” Mejia said.
The CGTBSH begun as a trauma center back in 2007. It aims to
provide immediate management of combat casualties among AFP uniformed personnel
engaged in combat operations in the said part of Mindanao .
With its metamorphosis into a hospital, it can now
accommodate injured or sick military personnel, their dependents and even
civilians.
The hospital’s capabilities include immediate resuscitative
care and advance trauma management, in-patient and out-patient services,
ancillary services such as pharmacy, radiology, laboratory, and primary
psychosocial and mental health, post-surgical and medical hospitalization and
treatment, and also dental health care services.
“As the chief-of-staff, I exhort field commanders to care
for and show their concern for the men—our most valuable asset. This is the
moving force that rallied us to this endeavor where even government and
non-government corporations weighed in," Visaya said.
“Camp
Teodulfo Station
Hospital is a testimony
to the enduring partnership between the military, local government, and public
and private corporations. That we can put together and contribute to the common
good. Not only for the protectors, your soldiers, but also the ones they are
protecting, the people,” he concluded.
Meanwhile Bautista, the Executive Director of the Cabinet
Cluster on Security, Justice, and Peace expressed the elation of his family. “
If only my father was alive, he would have been very happy
for the operation of this hospital. Our gratitude goes to all of you who made
this project possible. Indeed, the death of Brigadier General Teodulfo Bautista
and his men on that fateful day is an act of supreme sacrifice for our people.
And this hospital embodies the same spirit—of treating our soldiers and our
people from the wounds of conflict,” he added.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?&sid=6&pfn=935159&arch=1&go=Go&search_arch=Keyword&andor=and&mdte_arch=10&ddte_arch=27&ydte_arch=2016
AFP unit to assist motorists along SLEX, NLEX during 'Undas'
From the Philippine News Agency (Oct 28): AFP unit to assist motorists along SLEX, NLEX during 'Undas'
The Joint Task Force-National Capital Region (JTF-NCR), a unit of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, will assist motorists passing through the South Luzon and North Luzon Expressways as influx of travelers to the provinces is expected for All Saints Day and All Souls Day.
"The JTF-NCR will likewise provide assistance to motorists in major roads particularly South Luzon Express Way and North Luzon Express Way," Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) chief-of-staff Gen. Ricardo Visaya said.
Operatives of JTF-NCR will also back up their police counterparts in securing Metro Manila's largest and most visited cemeteries.
"Its current peace and development activities will be strengthened to assist citizens especially in the most-visited cemeteries in Metro Manila," Visaya added.
Visaya earlier ordered all military units to intensify intelligence gathering to halt possible threats during the "Undas" holidays, as he urged the public to be vigilant at all times.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=935393
The Joint Task Force-National Capital Region (JTF-NCR), a unit of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, will assist motorists passing through the South Luzon and North Luzon Expressways as influx of travelers to the provinces is expected for All Saints Day and All Souls Day.
"The JTF-NCR will likewise provide assistance to motorists in major roads particularly South Luzon Express Way and North Luzon Express Way," Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) chief-of-staff Gen. Ricardo Visaya said.
Operatives of JTF-NCR will also back up their police counterparts in securing Metro Manila's largest and most visited cemeteries.
"Its current peace and development activities will be strengthened to assist citizens especially in the most-visited cemeteries in Metro Manila," Visaya added.
Visaya earlier ordered all military units to intensify intelligence gathering to halt possible threats during the "Undas" holidays, as he urged the public to be vigilant at all times.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=935393
Lawmaker seeks rank promotion for soldier athletes winning int’l medals
From the Philippine News Agency (Oct 28): Lawmaker seeks rank promotion for soldier athletes winning int’l medals
A lawmaker at the House of Representatives wants Filipino soldier-athletes to have a greater chance of moving up the ranks for bagging medals in international competitions.
1Pacman Partylist Rep. Michael Romero has filed House Bill No. 4220, or the “Special Recognition for Philippine Athletes with Military Services Act”, in recognition of soldier-athletes who face two “war fronts” in bringing honor and glory to the country.
"They believe becoming a soldier-athlete brings twice the honor than what just being an athlete does,” said Romero, noting that soldier athletes are trained to hone their skills as sports competitors while undergoing rigorous military skills training.
Romero said soldier-athletes should also be rewarded twice for medals won--one through cash incentives already authorized under the law and another by promoting them in rank for their sports achievement.
Romero cited the case of A1F Hidilyn Diaz who snared a silver medal in weightlifting during the recently held Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Diaz is a member of the Philippine Air Force Special Service.
Under the proposed measure, a Filipino athlete, who is currently an active member of the Armed Forces of the Philippines will be given special recognition of promotion to three ranks higher if he or she wins a gold medal in an international sports competition duly recognized by government.
A silver medal will elevate the soldier-athlete to two ranks higher, while a bronze will be equivalent to a rank above his or her current grade.
Romero urged the House leadership to include HB 4220 in the list of legislative priorities of the chamber, saying that this will increase the country’s chances of getting in the medal column in the 2020 Olympics in Japan and in other international sports competitions.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=935584
A lawmaker at the House of Representatives wants Filipino soldier-athletes to have a greater chance of moving up the ranks for bagging medals in international competitions.
1Pacman Partylist Rep. Michael Romero has filed House Bill No. 4220, or the “Special Recognition for Philippine Athletes with Military Services Act”, in recognition of soldier-athletes who face two “war fronts” in bringing honor and glory to the country.
"They believe becoming a soldier-athlete brings twice the honor than what just being an athlete does,” said Romero, noting that soldier athletes are trained to hone their skills as sports competitors while undergoing rigorous military skills training.
Romero said soldier-athletes should also be rewarded twice for medals won--one through cash incentives already authorized under the law and another by promoting them in rank for their sports achievement.
Romero cited the case of A1F Hidilyn Diaz who snared a silver medal in weightlifting during the recently held Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Diaz is a member of the Philippine Air Force Special Service.
Under the proposed measure, a Filipino athlete, who is currently an active member of the Armed Forces of the Philippines will be given special recognition of promotion to three ranks higher if he or she wins a gold medal in an international sports competition duly recognized by government.
A silver medal will elevate the soldier-athlete to two ranks higher, while a bronze will be equivalent to a rank above his or her current grade.
Romero urged the House leadership to include HB 4220 in the list of legislative priorities of the chamber, saying that this will increase the country’s chances of getting in the medal column in the 2020 Olympics in Japan and in other international sports competitions.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=935584
Creation of new BTC, IP council to ensure inclusive peace process
From the Philippine News Agency (Oct 28): Creation of new BTC, IP council to ensure inclusive peace process
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=935488
The creation of a reconstituted Bangsamoro Transition
Commission (BTC) and an advisory council for Indigenous People (IP), which
would ensure a more inclusive and transparent peace process, is now underway.
In a statement, Office of the Presidential Adviser on the
Peace Process (OPAPP) Secretary Jesus Dureza said there is a need to involve
other stakeholders in the peace process.
Ethnic groups and tribal leaders will form part of an
advisory council that will serve as "voices of national minorities"
in the peace negotiations with the communist rebels and the creation of a
Bangsamoro enabling law.
Dureza said recommendations of ethnic minorities would be
valuable in the implementation of signed peace agreements.
“[T]he IPs compose a very important sector in our work. I
have already taken that with the President and he approved,” Dureza said.
“[T]his will be the first that we will be having what we
will call the IP advisory council that will advise the panels -- panel that is
handling the BTC, panels handling the CPP-NPA-NDF -they have inputs on what
would happen,” he disclosed.
There, Dureza expalined IPs will have an opportunity to
express their intention to join be included in the law so we will be creating an
IP advisory council that will advise the PAPP and provide inputs to all the
panels.
He also noted that an executive order on the reconstitution
of a "more inclusive and more transparent" BTC is now awaiting the
signature of the president.
“We are now re-crafting, reconstituting the Bangsamoro
commission that will craft a new bill that hopefully Congress will also approve
to replace the BBL (Bangsamoro Basic Law),” he said.
He said instead of 15 members in the BTC that will work
again on a new, proposed bill in Congress, the MILF agreed to make it inclusive
from 15 to 21.
"We have additional members from the MNLF, concerned
stakeholders, IPs and more," he said.
The commission will be tasked to draft a new enabling law
for the implementation of all signed Bangsamoro agreements including the 1996
Final Peace Agreement with the MNLF and the 2014 Comprehensive Agreement on the
Bangsamoro (CAB) with the MILF.
"These are people, stakeholders. They are not members
of the CPP-NPA-NDF; they are not members of the Moro National Liberation Front;
they are not members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front; but they are a part
of the negotiations. They have a bigger table and they should have inputs in
our work today,” Dureza said.
There is danger in continuing a "track of exclusivity
and closed door negotiations" if such reforms are not pushed through, he
added.
"We therefore have to gauge the public already so we
are very transparent in our media, communications work, organizing several
tables," he said.
The government has ongoing peace talks with the CPP-NPA-NDF
(Communist Party of the Philippines/New People's Army/National Democratic
Front) and the Bangsamoro.
The BTC was first convened in 2014 through Executive Order
No. 120 which gives the body the mandate to: to draft the proposed Bangsamoro
Basic Law with provisions consistent with the 2012 Framework Agreement on the
Bangsamoro; and to recommend to Congress or the people proposed amendments to
the 1987 Philippine Constitution whenever necessary.
Speaking on the envisioned new enabling law of the 2014 CAB
in a press conference last July, Dureza maintained that its passage remained up
to Congress.
The enabling law can be the pilot for the proposed
federalism being espoused by the president, he said.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=935488
PHL, US forces conclude mine search, underwater search-and-retrieval training in Palawan
From the Philippine News Agency (Oct 28): PHL, US forces conclude mine search, underwater search-and-retrieval training in Palawan
Philippine Navy (PN) special operations operatives and their US counterparts recently concluded another exercise called the "Humanitarian Mine Action Assistance Training" which was held last Oct. 17 to 26 in Palawan.
This was confirmed by Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) public affairs office chief Col. Edgard Arevalo Thursday.
The nine-day training activity took place at the Western Command's Tide Pool Pier at Naval Station Apolinario Jalandoon, in Puerto Princesa, Palawan.
"It was a small unit subject matter expert engagement that has long been prior scheduled and participated in by only eight PN Special Operations personnel and four US counterparts," Arevalo said.
The AFP official added training aims to give PN personnel proficiency in the use of "side scan sonar".
"(During the training) we (also learn to use the equipment) for mine search and also (for) humanitarian underwater search-and-retrieval operations.
Western Command head Vice Admiral Ronald Joseph Mercado said other training exercises that took place include dive planning, emergency dive procedures, sonar operation and practicals on sonar operation.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=935389
Philippine Navy (PN) special operations operatives and their US counterparts recently concluded another exercise called the "Humanitarian Mine Action Assistance Training" which was held last Oct. 17 to 26 in Palawan.
This was confirmed by Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) public affairs office chief Col. Edgard Arevalo Thursday.
The nine-day training activity took place at the Western Command's Tide Pool Pier at Naval Station Apolinario Jalandoon, in Puerto Princesa, Palawan.
"It was a small unit subject matter expert engagement that has long been prior scheduled and participated in by only eight PN Special Operations personnel and four US counterparts," Arevalo said.
The AFP official added training aims to give PN personnel proficiency in the use of "side scan sonar".
"(During the training) we (also learn to use the equipment) for mine search and also (for) humanitarian underwater search-and-retrieval operations.
Western Command head Vice Admiral Ronald Joseph Mercado said other training exercises that took place include dive planning, emergency dive procedures, sonar operation and practicals on sonar operation.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=935389
AFP to keep tight watch on areas of convergence this 'Undas'
From the Philippine News Agency (Oct 28): AFP to keep tight watch on areas of convergence this 'Undas'
To forestall possible attempts by criminal and terrorist groups to wreck the "Undas" commemorations on Nov. 1 and 2, Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) chief-of-staff Gen. Ricardo Visaya has ordered all military units to keep a tight watch on all places of convergence, including bus terminals, air and sea ports and the cemeteries.
Visaya said that the AFP will support its police counterparts in securing the "Undas" holidays to the best of its abilities.
“Vigilance and profiling of threat groups will be an edge of our security forces. Criminal and terrorist groups may take advantage of the gathering of people in bus terminals, air and sea ports. We will keep an eye on other places of convergence like cemeteries especially during this long weekend,” he added.
Visaya also instructed the military units to actively coordinate with their Philippine National Police (PNP) counterparts through the Joint Peace and Security Coordinating Council (JPSCC) in preparation for and in thwarting all possible threats that may arise during the holidays.
The JPSCC is a mechanism for joint operations with the PNP to address various security concerns.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=935591
To forestall possible attempts by criminal and terrorist groups to wreck the "Undas" commemorations on Nov. 1 and 2, Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) chief-of-staff Gen. Ricardo Visaya has ordered all military units to keep a tight watch on all places of convergence, including bus terminals, air and sea ports and the cemeteries.
Visaya said that the AFP will support its police counterparts in securing the "Undas" holidays to the best of its abilities.
“Vigilance and profiling of threat groups will be an edge of our security forces. Criminal and terrorist groups may take advantage of the gathering of people in bus terminals, air and sea ports. We will keep an eye on other places of convergence like cemeteries especially during this long weekend,” he added.
Visaya also instructed the military units to actively coordinate with their Philippine National Police (PNP) counterparts through the Joint Peace and Security Coordinating Council (JPSCC) in preparation for and in thwarting all possible threats that may arise during the holidays.
The JPSCC is a mechanism for joint operations with the PNP to address various security concerns.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=935591
U.S. Supports delivery of critical relief supplies to communities affected by Typhoon Lawin
From the Philippine News Agency (Oct 28): U.S. Supports delivery of critical relief supplies to communities affected by Typhoon Lawin
The United States government is supporting the delivery of relief supplies to Typhoon "Lawin"-affected communities in northern Luzon, through an ongoing three-year, USD 2-million partnership between the United States Agency for International Development’s (USAID) Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance, the Government of the Philippines, and the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP).
Under the partnership, which began in 2013, USAID and WFP support the Government of the Philippines, through the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), to bolster disaster readiness and enhance access to vital relief materials during disasters
As part of the response to Typhoon "Lawin," WFP drew on USAID funding to transport 745 metric tons (745,000 kilograms) of relief items to northern Luzon, including 75,000 family food packs, blankets, generators, solar lamps, and safe drinking water in-country.
Since 2011, USAID support, through WFP, has helped disaster-prone areas in the Philippines by working with national and local government entities, academic institutions, and non-governmental organizations to better prepare for and respond to disasters.
For more information on U.S. government programs in the Philippines, please visit www.facebook.com/manila.usembassy.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=935564
The United States government is supporting the delivery of relief supplies to Typhoon "Lawin"-affected communities in northern Luzon, through an ongoing three-year, USD 2-million partnership between the United States Agency for International Development’s (USAID) Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance, the Government of the Philippines, and the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP).
Under the partnership, which began in 2013, USAID and WFP support the Government of the Philippines, through the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), to bolster disaster readiness and enhance access to vital relief materials during disasters
As part of the response to Typhoon "Lawin," WFP drew on USAID funding to transport 745 metric tons (745,000 kilograms) of relief items to northern Luzon, including 75,000 family food packs, blankets, generators, solar lamps, and safe drinking water in-country.
Since 2011, USAID support, through WFP, has helped disaster-prone areas in the Philippines by working with national and local government entities, academic institutions, and non-governmental organizations to better prepare for and respond to disasters.
For more information on U.S. government programs in the Philippines, please visit www.facebook.com/manila.usembassy.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=935564
Opinion: Checking Manila’s Anti-American Pivot
Opinion piece from David Feith in the Wall Street Jounal (Oct 27): Checking Manila’s Anti-American Pivot
Another week, another foreign trip, another Rodrigo Duterte crisis: Fresh from visiting Beijing and announcing an ominous but vague “separation” from the United States, the Philippine president this week visited Tokyo and got specific: U.S. troops should be out of the Philippines within two years. A U.S. ally is now attacking a pillar of America’s military posture in the Western Pacific.
Before almost any Americans had heard of Mr. Duterte, in 2014, his predecessor signed a deal to cement cooperation with the U.S. against China’s drive to dominate the South China Sea, Asia’s central waterway. The agreement invited the U.S. to rotate troops and materiel through Philippine bases while boosting train-and-equip programs for Philippine troops.
“Well, forget it,” Mr. Duterte says of the deal now. “I don’t want to see any military man of any other nation except the Filipino,” he declared Tuesday, characteristically overlooking the Chinese forces illegally occupying Philippine territory at Scarborough Shoal and the Spratly Islands.
Here’s an Asian pivot worthy of the name: Rarely has any country reoriented its foreign policy so dramatically and so quickly. Manila’s friends in the U.S. are confused and questioning: Is the alliance lost? Is Mr. Duterte’s gambit an indictment of Washington’s own underwhelming pivot to Asia? The answers carry lessons for the next U.S. president.
It’s true that the celebrated U.S. pivot, intended to deter China and reassure friends like the Philippines, has mostly amounted to better U.S. attendance at confabs like the East Asia Summit; important but limited openings to new partners Vietnam and India; and modest new U.S. military deployments to Singapore, Australia and (yes) the Philippines. The U.S. has undercut these gains by slashing defense budgets, embracing strategic retrenchment, letting Iraq and Syria burn, and so far failing to complete the trans-Pacific trade deal marketed as the pivot’s key element.
It’s also true that the U.S. failed to stop Beijing’s seizure of Scarborough Shoal from the Philippines in 2012, its most aggressive maritime move. When Chinese fishermen and armed coast-guard ships evicted Philippine boats from the area, U.S. diplomats brokered a deal for both sides to withdraw—then stood by as Manila honored the deal and Beijing didn’t. This hurt trust in the U.S. and whetted Beijing’s appetite. As Ely Ratner, now a White House official, wrote in 2013: “Chinese officials and pundits began speaking of a ‘Scarborough Model’ for exerting regional influence.”
China soon built militarized artificial islands off the Philippine coast, with no effective pushback from Washington. “America would never die for us,” Mr. Duterte charged last year, two months before announcing his presidential bid. “If America cared, it would have sent its aircraft carriers and missile frigates the moment China started reclaiming land in contested territory, but no such thing happened.”
Yet would a stronger U.S. pivot have kept Mr. Duterte onside? Unlikely.
The 71-year-old was fiercely anti-American long before the fall of Scarborough Shoal. Until this year he was mayor of Davao, in the restive southern province of Mindanao, where he opposed U.S. forces invited by national leaders to fight al Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf terrorists. He barred U.S. drones from Davao, boasted of his “hatred” for the U.S. after a local hotel bombing he blames on the FBI, and refused the job of Philippine defense secretary in 2006 rather than work with Uncle Sam.
A former student and admirer of Jose Maria Sison, exiled founder of the Communist Party of the Philippines, Mr. Duterte considers the U.S. a former colonial overlord trying to keep his country under foot. He resents U.S. criticism of the extrajudicial killings involved in his signature crackdown on drugs—it’s why he called Barack Obama a “son of a whore”—and at their first meeting he reportedly confronted Mr. Obama with a photograph of Filipinos slain by U.S. forces a century ago.
So the U.S. is dealing with a proud ideological foe. Whether he’ll cause irreparable harm to a 65-year-old alliance, though, remains uncertain.
Voters elected Mr. Duterte mostly to fight crime and raise incomes, not to spurn the U.S. for China. The Philippines is the world’s most pro-American country, according to Pew: 92% of Filipinos last year viewed the U.S. favorably; only 82% of Americans view their own country favorably.
This is thanks to cultural and linguistic ties dating to the colonial era, the large and successful Filipino community in the U.S., and America’s standing as the Philippines’ second-largest trade partner behind Japan—all in addition to its liberation of the islands in World War II and its more recent contributions of military and humanitarian aid. China by contrast is viewed with suspicion, identified as it is with unpopular business elites and bullying in the South China Sea.
Hence the mounting pushback against Mr. Duterte—not only from political rivals but from the likes of former President Fidel Ramos, a respected elder statesman and former Duterte ally with close ties to the military, and Antonio Carpio, a Supreme Court justice who warned that undermining Philippine sovereignty at Scarborough Shoal would be an impeachable offense.
The U.S. can help as its Philippine friends try to check Mr. Duterte. For one, it can show that China isn’t the only country with strategic dollars to spend. As much as the Philippine military values U.S. training and equipment, U.S. aid fell from 2010 to 2015. The U.S. started to fix that last year with its Maritime Security Initiative, but Congress can do far more.
Mr. Obama and his successor meanwhile must show that the presidential transition won’t distract from U.S. commitments in Asia. The impression of U.S. strategic drift might not have created Mr. Duterte, but it gives him room to run. He’ll have less if the next U.S. president enters office pledging significant increases in defense spending. Adversaries in Beijing and Moscow know to read U.S. budget tables, and so do leaders in Manila weighing how hard to fight for a U.S. alliance on the ropes.
[Mr. Feith is a Journal editorial writer based in Hong Kong]
http://www.wsj.com/articles/checking-manilas-anti-american-pivot-1477588649
Another week, another foreign trip, another Rodrigo Duterte crisis: Fresh from visiting Beijing and announcing an ominous but vague “separation” from the United States, the Philippine president this week visited Tokyo and got specific: U.S. troops should be out of the Philippines within two years. A U.S. ally is now attacking a pillar of America’s military posture in the Western Pacific.
Before almost any Americans had heard of Mr. Duterte, in 2014, his predecessor signed a deal to cement cooperation with the U.S. against China’s drive to dominate the South China Sea, Asia’s central waterway. The agreement invited the U.S. to rotate troops and materiel through Philippine bases while boosting train-and-equip programs for Philippine troops.
“Well, forget it,” Mr. Duterte says of the deal now. “I don’t want to see any military man of any other nation except the Filipino,” he declared Tuesday, characteristically overlooking the Chinese forces illegally occupying Philippine territory at Scarborough Shoal and the Spratly Islands.
It’s true that the celebrated U.S. pivot, intended to deter China and reassure friends like the Philippines, has mostly amounted to better U.S. attendance at confabs like the East Asia Summit; important but limited openings to new partners Vietnam and India; and modest new U.S. military deployments to Singapore, Australia and (yes) the Philippines. The U.S. has undercut these gains by slashing defense budgets, embracing strategic retrenchment, letting Iraq and Syria burn, and so far failing to complete the trans-Pacific trade deal marketed as the pivot’s key element.
It’s also true that the U.S. failed to stop Beijing’s seizure of Scarborough Shoal from the Philippines in 2012, its most aggressive maritime move. When Chinese fishermen and armed coast-guard ships evicted Philippine boats from the area, U.S. diplomats brokered a deal for both sides to withdraw—then stood by as Manila honored the deal and Beijing didn’t. This hurt trust in the U.S. and whetted Beijing’s appetite. As Ely Ratner, now a White House official, wrote in 2013: “Chinese officials and pundits began speaking of a ‘Scarborough Model’ for exerting regional influence.”
China soon built militarized artificial islands off the Philippine coast, with no effective pushback from Washington. “America would never die for us,” Mr. Duterte charged last year, two months before announcing his presidential bid. “If America cared, it would have sent its aircraft carriers and missile frigates the moment China started reclaiming land in contested territory, but no such thing happened.”
Yet would a stronger U.S. pivot have kept Mr. Duterte onside? Unlikely.
The 71-year-old was fiercely anti-American long before the fall of Scarborough Shoal. Until this year he was mayor of Davao, in the restive southern province of Mindanao, where he opposed U.S. forces invited by national leaders to fight al Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf terrorists. He barred U.S. drones from Davao, boasted of his “hatred” for the U.S. after a local hotel bombing he blames on the FBI, and refused the job of Philippine defense secretary in 2006 rather than work with Uncle Sam.
So the U.S. is dealing with a proud ideological foe. Whether he’ll cause irreparable harm to a 65-year-old alliance, though, remains uncertain.
Voters elected Mr. Duterte mostly to fight crime and raise incomes, not to spurn the U.S. for China. The Philippines is the world’s most pro-American country, according to Pew: 92% of Filipinos last year viewed the U.S. favorably; only 82% of Americans view their own country favorably.
This is thanks to cultural and linguistic ties dating to the colonial era, the large and successful Filipino community in the U.S., and America’s standing as the Philippines’ second-largest trade partner behind Japan—all in addition to its liberation of the islands in World War II and its more recent contributions of military and humanitarian aid. China by contrast is viewed with suspicion, identified as it is with unpopular business elites and bullying in the South China Sea.
Hence the mounting pushback against Mr. Duterte—not only from political rivals but from the likes of former President Fidel Ramos, a respected elder statesman and former Duterte ally with close ties to the military, and Antonio Carpio, a Supreme Court justice who warned that undermining Philippine sovereignty at Scarborough Shoal would be an impeachable offense.
The U.S. can help as its Philippine friends try to check Mr. Duterte. For one, it can show that China isn’t the only country with strategic dollars to spend. As much as the Philippine military values U.S. training and equipment, U.S. aid fell from 2010 to 2015. The U.S. started to fix that last year with its Maritime Security Initiative, but Congress can do far more.
Mr. Obama and his successor meanwhile must show that the presidential transition won’t distract from U.S. commitments in Asia. The impression of U.S. strategic drift might not have created Mr. Duterte, but it gives him room to run. He’ll have less if the next U.S. president enters office pledging significant increases in defense spending. Adversaries in Beijing and Moscow know to read U.S. budget tables, and so do leaders in Manila weighing how hard to fight for a U.S. alliance on the ropes.
[Mr. Feith is a Journal editorial writer based in Hong Kong]
http://www.wsj.com/articles/checking-manilas-anti-american-pivot-1477588649
US: Duterte’s stance ‘rhetoric at this point’
From BusinessWorld (Oct 28): US: Duterte’s stance ‘rhetoric at this point’
THE WHITE HOUSE on Wednesday, Washington time, said it was regarding Philippine President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s latest remarks as “rhetoric at this point,” for lack of a formal communication from Manila “indicating a policy change” in line with Mr. Duterte’s rhetoric. Mr. Duterte said in Tokyo on Wednesday that he wanted, “maybe in the next two years, my country freed of the presence of foreign military troops.” “I want them out and if I have to revise or abrogate agreements, existing agreements, this will be the last maneuver war games between the United States and the Philippine military,” he also said.
These remarks continued from what Mr. Duterte said a day earlier that Washington should forget about its Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement with Manila.
‘COUNTERPRODUCTIVE’
The US State Department soon after responded that it was “not going to react and respond” to his “every bit of rhetoric.” But asked by reporters about Mr. Duterte’s remarks in Tokyo, White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said on Wednesday: “Well, there’s a diplomatic process where, through a formal channel, the Philippines could formally notify the United States of their intent to, like I said, alter the terms of the alliance between our two countries.”
“We’ve received no formal notification along those lines,” he added. “So that’s why the news that’s been made out of the Philippines I would classify as rhetoric at this point.”
But Mr. Earnest also stepped up his response regarding Mr. Duterte, saying: “Well, I think what is true is that the string of counterproductive rhetoric... has injected some unnecessary uncertainty in the relationship between the United States and the Philippines..” Asked if US President Barack H. Obama, Jr. would be open to meeting with Mr. Duterte at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Economic Leaders’ Meeting in Peru in November, Mr. Earnest said: “At this point, I don’t have details about the [US] President’s schedule when he’s attending the APEC Summit.” “I also don’t know at this point whether or not President Duterte has committed to attending the APEC conference. But as we make some progress in putting the President’s schedule together for that trip, we’ll keep you posted on this,” he added. Mr. Earnest was then asked: “So the White House would be open to scheduling such a meeting?”
His reply, posted as part of the press briefing transcript on the White House Web site, went thus: “It’s not one I’m prepared to rule out at this point. But we’ve ruled out previous meetings with President Duterte on short notice. (Laughter.)”
US ‘CAN DO MORE’ FOR PHL
Meanwhile, a Chinese studies expert said in Manila the US needs to boost its support in terms of military aid to the Philippines.”I think US could have done more and can do more to enhance Philippines-US relations, including on the security/defense aspect,” Lucio B. Pitlo III, a lecturer at the Chinese Studies Program of the Ateneo de Manila University, replied via e-mail when sought for comment.
He noted that US backing had failed to deter China in the past from building artificial islands in the disputed West Philippine Sea.
“While joint Philippines-US military exercises improved readiness and preparedness of Philippine troops in combat and non-combat missions (e.g. search and rescue, disaster relief and humanitarian assistance), this security alliance did little to improve the material/hardware aspect of the Armed Forces of the Philippines.”
Mr. Pitlo cited as an example the US transfer of “de-weaponized vintage World War II era cutters” despite the Philippines being “a long-standing security partner in a critical regional theater.”
Such weak support has caused the Philippines to be “heavily reliant on US for its external defense more than two decades after terminating US bases in the country,” he explained.
Mr. Pitlo said the foreign policy direction of autonomy in terms of internal and external security matters is a welcome development.
“As an independent and sovereign state, the Philippines cannot outsource its external defense to another country so any security alliance or partnership it will forge with any state should be geared towards developing the country’s own national defense capability and not to engender external dependence,” he said.
The Philippines has an existing Mutual Defense Treaty with the US since 1951 and a Visiting Forces Agreement since 1999, which allows American troops on Philippine soil and under which falls EDCA.
“Asia-Pacific, including the critical East Asia, will be the engine of global growth and development in the decades to come and the Philippines is a frontline state on this with one of the world’s fastest growing economies and increasing security needs. If US wants to pivot back or rebalance back to this region, it needs to do more comprehensively and it may start at giving more weight and substance to long-standing security alliance and economic partnerships with its long-standing regional friend, the Philippines,” Mr. Pitlo said.
He also warned of the danger in the Philippines dealing closely with major power competitions in the geopolitical scene.
“The Philippines should stay away from major power competition. We should be friends to all and enemies to none like what our other friends and neighbors in Southeast Asia are doing. It is a difficult balancing act that we must do. If we are perceived to be too close to one power, we lose out on the potential opportunities of engaging the other,” he said.
“The Philippines should avoid polar opposites and should contribute in channeling such major power competition away from the military domain into more productive endeavors like competition for infrastructure funding, enhanced trade and investments,” he added.
The country “should know its national interests and not be swayed by major powers in their strategic power struggles,” Mr. Pitlo also said. “To this end, the effort to carve an independent foreign policy is salutary.”
http://www.bworldonline.com/content.php?section=Nation&title=us-duterte&8217s-stance-&145rhetoric-at-this-point&8217&id=135559
THE WHITE HOUSE on Wednesday, Washington time, said it was regarding Philippine President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s latest remarks as “rhetoric at this point,” for lack of a formal communication from Manila “indicating a policy change” in line with Mr. Duterte’s rhetoric. Mr. Duterte said in Tokyo on Wednesday that he wanted, “maybe in the next two years, my country freed of the presence of foreign military troops.” “I want them out and if I have to revise or abrogate agreements, existing agreements, this will be the last maneuver war games between the United States and the Philippine military,” he also said.
These remarks continued from what Mr. Duterte said a day earlier that Washington should forget about its Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement with Manila.
‘COUNTERPRODUCTIVE’
The US State Department soon after responded that it was “not going to react and respond” to his “every bit of rhetoric.” But asked by reporters about Mr. Duterte’s remarks in Tokyo, White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said on Wednesday: “Well, there’s a diplomatic process where, through a formal channel, the Philippines could formally notify the United States of their intent to, like I said, alter the terms of the alliance between our two countries.”
“We’ve received no formal notification along those lines,” he added. “So that’s why the news that’s been made out of the Philippines I would classify as rhetoric at this point.”
But Mr. Earnest also stepped up his response regarding Mr. Duterte, saying: “Well, I think what is true is that the string of counterproductive rhetoric... has injected some unnecessary uncertainty in the relationship between the United States and the Philippines..” Asked if US President Barack H. Obama, Jr. would be open to meeting with Mr. Duterte at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Economic Leaders’ Meeting in Peru in November, Mr. Earnest said: “At this point, I don’t have details about the [US] President’s schedule when he’s attending the APEC Summit.” “I also don’t know at this point whether or not President Duterte has committed to attending the APEC conference. But as we make some progress in putting the President’s schedule together for that trip, we’ll keep you posted on this,” he added. Mr. Earnest was then asked: “So the White House would be open to scheduling such a meeting?”
His reply, posted as part of the press briefing transcript on the White House Web site, went thus: “It’s not one I’m prepared to rule out at this point. But we’ve ruled out previous meetings with President Duterte on short notice. (Laughter.)”
US ‘CAN DO MORE’ FOR PHL
Meanwhile, a Chinese studies expert said in Manila the US needs to boost its support in terms of military aid to the Philippines.”I think US could have done more and can do more to enhance Philippines-US relations, including on the security/defense aspect,” Lucio B. Pitlo III, a lecturer at the Chinese Studies Program of the Ateneo de Manila University, replied via e-mail when sought for comment.
He noted that US backing had failed to deter China in the past from building artificial islands in the disputed West Philippine Sea.
“While joint Philippines-US military exercises improved readiness and preparedness of Philippine troops in combat and non-combat missions (e.g. search and rescue, disaster relief and humanitarian assistance), this security alliance did little to improve the material/hardware aspect of the Armed Forces of the Philippines.”
Mr. Pitlo cited as an example the US transfer of “de-weaponized vintage World War II era cutters” despite the Philippines being “a long-standing security partner in a critical regional theater.”
Such weak support has caused the Philippines to be “heavily reliant on US for its external defense more than two decades after terminating US bases in the country,” he explained.
Mr. Pitlo said the foreign policy direction of autonomy in terms of internal and external security matters is a welcome development.
“As an independent and sovereign state, the Philippines cannot outsource its external defense to another country so any security alliance or partnership it will forge with any state should be geared towards developing the country’s own national defense capability and not to engender external dependence,” he said.
The Philippines has an existing Mutual Defense Treaty with the US since 1951 and a Visiting Forces Agreement since 1999, which allows American troops on Philippine soil and under which falls EDCA.
“Asia-Pacific, including the critical East Asia, will be the engine of global growth and development in the decades to come and the Philippines is a frontline state on this with one of the world’s fastest growing economies and increasing security needs. If US wants to pivot back or rebalance back to this region, it needs to do more comprehensively and it may start at giving more weight and substance to long-standing security alliance and economic partnerships with its long-standing regional friend, the Philippines,” Mr. Pitlo said.
He also warned of the danger in the Philippines dealing closely with major power competitions in the geopolitical scene.
“The Philippines should stay away from major power competition. We should be friends to all and enemies to none like what our other friends and neighbors in Southeast Asia are doing. It is a difficult balancing act that we must do. If we are perceived to be too close to one power, we lose out on the potential opportunities of engaging the other,” he said.
“The Philippines should avoid polar opposites and should contribute in channeling such major power competition away from the military domain into more productive endeavors like competition for infrastructure funding, enhanced trade and investments,” he added.
The country “should know its national interests and not be swayed by major powers in their strategic power struggles,” Mr. Pitlo also said. “To this end, the effort to carve an independent foreign policy is salutary.”
http://www.bworldonline.com/content.php?section=Nation&title=us-duterte&8217s-stance-&145rhetoric-at-this-point&8217&id=135559
2 more military drills held between US, PH forces
From Malaya Business Insight (Oct 28): 2 more military drills held between US, PH forces
LAST month’s Amphibious Landing Exercise or Phiblex between American and Filipino troops was supposed to be the last under the administration of President Duterte.
Turns out that was not the case.
The two armed forces concluded in Palawan last Wednesday a naval drill and another Army special operations training is due to be held next month also in Palawan.
Vice Adm. Ronald Joseph Mercado, commander of the military’s Western Command based in Puerto Princesa City, said the recently-conducted training, dubbed Humanitarian Mine Action Assistance Training, stared last Oct. 17.
Mercado said the 10-day training involved US Navy Explosive and Ordnance Disposal and Philippine Navy Special Operations Unit personnel.
“It was just a US EOD and PH NAVSOU (Philippine Navy Special Operations Unit) EOD training that included dive planning, emergency dive procedures, sonar operation and practicals on sonar operation. The PN has a side scan sonar, hence part of training,” said Mercado.
He said the activity was among the exercises approved by the Mutual Defense Board-Security Engagement Board of the two armed forces.
“It is part of MDB-SEB activities titled Humanitarian Mine Action Assistance Training which was conducted 17 -26 Oct 2016,” said Mercado.
American and Filipino forces hold a number of annual military exercises under the Mutual Defense Treaty and Visiting Forces Agreement, the most prominent among them being the large-scale Balikatan, Phiblex, and Cooperation Afloat and Readiness Training.
Before the start of the eight-day Phiblex last Oct. 4, Duterte said the exercise will be the last with the US during his term.
US and Philippine Army special forces soldiers are due to hold another military exercise, also in Palawan, starting middle of November, according to Army spokesman Col. Benjamin Hao.
Dubbed as the Exercise Balance Piston 16-4, the one-month exercise will be held at the Maritime Training Facility in Puerto Princesa City and at a military camp in Rizal town.
Hao said “more than a dozen” US Special Operations forces will take part in the exercise along with a company-sized troop from the Philippine Army Special Forces. A company is composed of around 120 officers and men.
Hao said the bilateral exercise is meant to improve “the war fighting capabilities and interoperability of both the Philippine Army’s Special Operations Command and the US Special Operations Forces.”
The activities under Exercise Balance Piston 16-4 include subject matter expert exchange training on human rights, tactical combat casualty care, and marksmanship, said Hao.
“Since it is an annual training activity, the Philippine Army continues its preparations unless another order is issued by the higher headquarters,” said Hao.
AFP public affairs office chief Col. Edgard Arevalo said the recently-concluded exercise in Palawan involved a small number of troops.
“It was a small unit subject matter expert engagement that has long been prior scheduled,” said Arevalo.
He said the training was participated in by eight Filipino troops and four US counterparts.
http://www.malaya.com.ph/business-news/news/2-more-military-drills-held-between-us-ph-forces
LAST month’s Amphibious Landing Exercise or Phiblex between American and Filipino troops was supposed to be the last under the administration of President Duterte.
Turns out that was not the case.
The two armed forces concluded in Palawan last Wednesday a naval drill and another Army special operations training is due to be held next month also in Palawan.
Vice Adm. Ronald Joseph Mercado, commander of the military’s Western Command based in Puerto Princesa City, said the recently-conducted training, dubbed Humanitarian Mine Action Assistance Training, stared last Oct. 17.
Mercado said the 10-day training involved US Navy Explosive and Ordnance Disposal and Philippine Navy Special Operations Unit personnel.
“It was just a US EOD and PH NAVSOU (Philippine Navy Special Operations Unit) EOD training that included dive planning, emergency dive procedures, sonar operation and practicals on sonar operation. The PN has a side scan sonar, hence part of training,” said Mercado.
He said the activity was among the exercises approved by the Mutual Defense Board-Security Engagement Board of the two armed forces.
“It is part of MDB-SEB activities titled Humanitarian Mine Action Assistance Training which was conducted 17 -26 Oct 2016,” said Mercado.
American and Filipino forces hold a number of annual military exercises under the Mutual Defense Treaty and Visiting Forces Agreement, the most prominent among them being the large-scale Balikatan, Phiblex, and Cooperation Afloat and Readiness Training.
Before the start of the eight-day Phiblex last Oct. 4, Duterte said the exercise will be the last with the US during his term.
US and Philippine Army special forces soldiers are due to hold another military exercise, also in Palawan, starting middle of November, according to Army spokesman Col. Benjamin Hao.
Dubbed as the Exercise Balance Piston 16-4, the one-month exercise will be held at the Maritime Training Facility in Puerto Princesa City and at a military camp in Rizal town.
Hao said “more than a dozen” US Special Operations forces will take part in the exercise along with a company-sized troop from the Philippine Army Special Forces. A company is composed of around 120 officers and men.
Hao said the bilateral exercise is meant to improve “the war fighting capabilities and interoperability of both the Philippine Army’s Special Operations Command and the US Special Operations Forces.”
The activities under Exercise Balance Piston 16-4 include subject matter expert exchange training on human rights, tactical combat casualty care, and marksmanship, said Hao.
“Since it is an annual training activity, the Philippine Army continues its preparations unless another order is issued by the higher headquarters,” said Hao.
AFP public affairs office chief Col. Edgard Arevalo said the recently-concluded exercise in Palawan involved a small number of troops.
“It was a small unit subject matter expert engagement that has long been prior scheduled,” said Arevalo.
He said the training was participated in by eight Filipino troops and four US counterparts.
http://www.malaya.com.ph/business-news/news/2-more-military-drills-held-between-us-ph-forces
MILF: League of Bangsamoro Organizations to hold Bangsamoro Leaders Summit
Posted to the Moro Islamic Liberation Front Website (Oct 28): League of Bangsamoro Organizations to hold Bangsamoro Leaders Summit
The League of Bangsamoro Organizations (LBO), a non-profit union of Bangsamoro Organizations established by more than sixty (60) organizations based in Cotabato City and other neighboring provinces of Maguindanao, North Cotabato and Sultan Kudarat will hold the 2nd Bangsamoro Leaders Peace Summit at Shariff Kabunsuan Cultural Center, ORG compound Cotabato City, this Sunday, October 30, 2016.
The upcoming Bangsamoro Leader’s Peace Summit is the second annual event facilitated and hosted by the LBO that seeks to gather Bangsamoro leaders of different affiliations and sectors to discourse contemporary concerns and issues affecting the Bangsamoro people re: social, economic and political aspect where participating leaders shall adopt appropriate resolution.
LBO Secretary General Mr. Hashim B. Mantikayan said that several civil society organizations, traditional and political leaders, women and youth sectors, the sultanates and other progressive organizations will be in attendance.
This includes Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao Regional Governor Mujiv Hataman, the chair of two prominent Moro Fronts, Al Haj Murad Ebrahim of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), and Datu Muslimin G. Sema of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) who will deliver their respective messages.
He added that event organizers are expecting about 1, 000 public figures from different parts of the country to attend the activity including Sultan Kudarat Governor Pax Mangudadatu, Department of Agriculture (DA) Asec. Atty Ranibai Dilangalen, Grand Mufti Abu Huraira Udasan and some high level government officials in the region.
Mr. Mantikayan told this writer that Cotabato City Mayor Atty. Cynthia Guiani Sayadi will deliver the opening remarks.
“The primordial objective of this annual event is for Bangsamoro Leaders to come up with a unified stand on critical issues confronting the Bangsamoro people, and the current peace roadmap of Duterte’s administration in particular.” said Mantikayan.
The Southern Philippines decades-old Bangsamoro struggle and clamor for Right to Self-Determination (RSD) is considered as one of the longest struggles in the world.
The peace summit could support the Bangsamoro clamor for genuine and lasting peace in the region and would somehow hasten the resolution of the seemingly endless conflict in Central Mindanao.
Mr. Mantikayan pointed out that the upcoming event is part of their peaceful efforts to support the Bangsamoro quest for peace and right to self-determination. A resolution that maybe adopted shall be forwarded to President Rodrigo Roa Duterte.
Last year, the 1st Bangsamoro Leaders Peace Summit was also conducted by LBO participated by civil society organizations, prominent political and traditional leaders, youth and women sectors and other stakeholders.
http://www.luwaran.com/index.php/news/22-davao-region/935-league-of-bangsamoro-organizations-to-hold-bangsamoro-leaders-summit
The League of Bangsamoro Organizations (LBO), a non-profit union of Bangsamoro Organizations established by more than sixty (60) organizations based in Cotabato City and other neighboring provinces of Maguindanao, North Cotabato and Sultan Kudarat will hold the 2nd Bangsamoro Leaders Peace Summit at Shariff Kabunsuan Cultural Center, ORG compound Cotabato City, this Sunday, October 30, 2016.
LBO Secretary General Mr. Hashim B. Mantikayan said that several civil society organizations, traditional and political leaders, women and youth sectors, the sultanates and other progressive organizations will be in attendance.
This includes Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao Regional Governor Mujiv Hataman, the chair of two prominent Moro Fronts, Al Haj Murad Ebrahim of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), and Datu Muslimin G. Sema of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) who will deliver their respective messages.
He added that event organizers are expecting about 1, 000 public figures from different parts of the country to attend the activity including Sultan Kudarat Governor Pax Mangudadatu, Department of Agriculture (DA) Asec. Atty Ranibai Dilangalen, Grand Mufti Abu Huraira Udasan and some high level government officials in the region.
Mr. Mantikayan told this writer that Cotabato City Mayor Atty. Cynthia Guiani Sayadi will deliver the opening remarks.
“The primordial objective of this annual event is for Bangsamoro Leaders to come up with a unified stand on critical issues confronting the Bangsamoro people, and the current peace roadmap of Duterte’s administration in particular.” said Mantikayan.
The Southern Philippines decades-old Bangsamoro struggle and clamor for Right to Self-Determination (RSD) is considered as one of the longest struggles in the world.
The peace summit could support the Bangsamoro clamor for genuine and lasting peace in the region and would somehow hasten the resolution of the seemingly endless conflict in Central Mindanao.
Mr. Mantikayan pointed out that the upcoming event is part of their peaceful efforts to support the Bangsamoro quest for peace and right to self-determination. A resolution that maybe adopted shall be forwarded to President Rodrigo Roa Duterte.
Last year, the 1st Bangsamoro Leaders Peace Summit was also conducted by LBO participated by civil society organizations, prominent political and traditional leaders, youth and women sectors and other stakeholders.
http://www.luwaran.com/index.php/news/22-davao-region/935-league-of-bangsamoro-organizations-to-hold-bangsamoro-leaders-summit
MILF: FBCSO conducts Orientation on Prospects of Federalism
Posted to the Moro Islamic Liberation Front Website (Oct 28): FBCSO conducts Orientation on Prospects of Federalism
The Federation of Bangsamoro Civil Society Organization (FBCSO) with the Kalilintad Peacebuilding Institute Inc. (KPI) conducted one-day orientation on Prospects of Federalism and the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) last October 25, 2016 at Datu Ibrahim Paglas Memorial College, Datu Paglas, Maguindanao.
“The Federation of Bangsamoro Civil Society Organization is an alliance of Bangsamoro organizations composed of 125 civil society organizations and people’s organizations throughout the country. Generally, it aims to advocate peace and development in our communities. Our federation accepts organizations wishing to be a member”, Moidjoddin Talusob, FBCSO General Secretary said in his rationale of the orientation.
“We need to unite for a common goal. Let us make our federation a strong agent of peace and work on development advocacy programs in our communities”, Talusob added.
“We want the passage of BBL before shifting into Federal Form of Government. We appeal to Congress not to set aside the BBL by prioritizing charter change through Constitutional Assembly (Con-Ass)”, said Abdullah Salik,Jr., FBCSO President.
“Our legitimate struggle does not end here. It is a continuous process in seeking justice for our people”, added Salik.
Prof. Esmael A. Abdula, Executive Director of Kalilintad Peacebuilding Institute Inc.(KPI) and BLMI Steering Committee, also FBCSO Consultant gave updates on MILF-GPH Peace Process.
“The MILF and the GPH have appointed their respective Peace Implementing Panels to facilitate the implementation of Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB),” he said.
“Peace negotiation is one of the diplomatic means of achieving the Bangsamoro’s right to self-determination. The International community recognize the MILF as Non-State Armed Actor that represents the Bangsamoro people”, Abdula stressed.
“The CAB is a political document signed by the Government of the Philippines and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front. It is the fruit of our struggle for freedom and right to self-determination”, Abdula also emphasized.
Abdula pointed out that the BBL must be passed first by congress before they work on constitutional change.
Some key resource speakers were Nasser Pulindao, FBCSO Vice-President, Alih Anso, FBCSO Board of Trustee member, and Zukarno P. Hadjinor, Associate Dean of Datu Ibrahim Paglas Memorial College, Abdulaziz B. Talib Administrative Staff of Eastern Kutawato Islamic Institute, also KPI-BOD and Abusama Abad, Junior High School Department Head of Datu Ibrahim Paglas Memorial College, who is also KPI-BOD
FBCSO is conducting series of orientation and dialogue with civil society organizations and people’s organizations throughout Mindanao relative to peace and development programs.
About one hundred officers and representatives of different organizations from the academe, farmers’ cooperative, women sector, youth sector, religious sector and local political leaders who attended the orientation.
http://www.luwaran.com/index.php/news/20-central-mindanao/934-fbcso-conducts-orientation-on-prospects-of-federalism
The Federation of Bangsamoro Civil Society Organization (FBCSO) with the Kalilintad Peacebuilding Institute Inc. (KPI) conducted one-day orientation on Prospects of Federalism and the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) last October 25, 2016 at Datu Ibrahim Paglas Memorial College, Datu Paglas, Maguindanao.
“We need to unite for a common goal. Let us make our federation a strong agent of peace and work on development advocacy programs in our communities”, Talusob added.
“We want the passage of BBL before shifting into Federal Form of Government. We appeal to Congress not to set aside the BBL by prioritizing charter change through Constitutional Assembly (Con-Ass)”, said Abdullah Salik,Jr., FBCSO President.
“Our legitimate struggle does not end here. It is a continuous process in seeking justice for our people”, added Salik.
Prof. Esmael A. Abdula, Executive Director of Kalilintad Peacebuilding Institute Inc.(KPI) and BLMI Steering Committee, also FBCSO Consultant gave updates on MILF-GPH Peace Process.
“The MILF and the GPH have appointed their respective Peace Implementing Panels to facilitate the implementation of Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB),” he said.
“Peace negotiation is one of the diplomatic means of achieving the Bangsamoro’s right to self-determination. The International community recognize the MILF as Non-State Armed Actor that represents the Bangsamoro people”, Abdula stressed.
“The CAB is a political document signed by the Government of the Philippines and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front. It is the fruit of our struggle for freedom and right to self-determination”, Abdula also emphasized.
Abdula pointed out that the BBL must be passed first by congress before they work on constitutional change.
Some key resource speakers were Nasser Pulindao, FBCSO Vice-President, Alih Anso, FBCSO Board of Trustee member, and Zukarno P. Hadjinor, Associate Dean of Datu Ibrahim Paglas Memorial College, Abdulaziz B. Talib Administrative Staff of Eastern Kutawato Islamic Institute, also KPI-BOD and Abusama Abad, Junior High School Department Head of Datu Ibrahim Paglas Memorial College, who is also KPI-BOD
FBCSO is conducting series of orientation and dialogue with civil society organizations and people’s organizations throughout Mindanao relative to peace and development programs.
About one hundred officers and representatives of different organizations from the academe, farmers’ cooperative, women sector, youth sector, religious sector and local political leaders who attended the orientation.
http://www.luwaran.com/index.php/news/20-central-mindanao/934-fbcso-conducts-orientation-on-prospects-of-federalism
CPP: Duterte’s policy to leave US sphere of influence and shift to China is mostly positive
Propaganda statement posted to the Communist Party of the Philippines Website (Oct 26): Duterte’s policy to leave US sphere of influence and shift to China is mostly positive
Communist Party of the Philippines
GRP President Rodrigo Duterte declared last week that he will leave the military and economic ambit of the United State and forge closer ties with China. Such a declaration is consistent with his promotion of an independent foreign policy.
This policy declaration is mostly positive because it asserts the country’s national sovereignty and independence from US dictates and impositions and thus opens potentials for substantial socio-economic changes and progress. Such a declaration boosts the Filipino people’s overriding struggle for national freedom from US imperialism.
For more than a century now, the US has prevented national industrialization and land reform thus promoting Philippine economic backwardness and keeping the country dependent on US loans and investments and imported commodities. The ruling classes of big landlords and big bourgeois compradors, bureaucrat capitalists and military officials are generally beholden to the US.
Ending US military presence is the basic condition for transforming Philippine economy and society. US military forces inside and around the country serve as outposts of US imperialism to ensure (through coercion or threat of coercion) that policies imposed by the US and the IMF-WB policies are carried out by the client-state. Duterte must end this foreign military presence.
His declaration of leaving the circle of US power is, thus, mostly positive as this will create the basic conditions for the positive transformation of Philippine society. He must immediately follow-through with steps to concretize this declaration.
The revolutionary forces welcome his declaration to end all foreign military presence within the next two years. Immediately, he must ask the US to dismantle all its military bases and facilities inside Camp Aguinaldo, Camp Navarro in Zamboanga and other AFP camps and cancel all joint military exercises which primarily serve the forward deployment schemes of the US. He must end permanent “rotational presence” of US troops.
One of the consummate patriotic act that Duterte can do is to abrogate the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA), the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) and Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT).
He must also demand the US, as well as Japan and other countries, to stop its military patrols in the South China Sea to lower tensions which preempt and undermine bilateral and multilateral talks by countries with overlapping claims. As to the matter of future humanitarian assistance, he can ask the US government to deliver these via civilian organizations (such as the Red Cross) or course this to the Philippine government.
For long, the US imperialists have molded Filipino consciousness to conform to US interests and tastes. The dominant pro-US mentality of the Filipinos is being used by the US and its agents to undermine his declaration for an independent foreign policy and decision to leave US imperialist ambit.
Duterte must promote the unity of the Filipino people behind the cause of anti-US imperialism. He must work with the patriotic forces in an education, information and cultural drive with an aim of promoting nationalism. Such a campaign must isolate and oppose the economic, military and politico-cultural agents of the US and undertake concrete steps to effect the removal of US military troops and facilities and put an end to US political and military intervention.
The national democratic forces must aim to mobilize the Filipino youth in great numbers in a renaissance of patriotism and service to the people.
There must be a review of school books especially those on history to show the brutalities of US colonialism and continuing history of neo-colonialism and extol the heroism of Filipino resistance fighters.
US imperialism remains to be the dominant force within the ruling reactionary state. It has the traditional loyalty of the majority of the ruling classes, especially among the big landlords.
Above all, it has the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) which serves as the strongest pillar of US rule in the country. It is the generals and ex-generals within and outside the Duterte regime who are vigorously pulling-back the assertions for an independent foreign policy. They must be resolutely opposed and overthrown.
In the economic field, the Duterte regime must reverse the neoliberal policies imposed by the US on the Philippines which had long promoted backwardness and dependence.
It must put an end to the policies of trade and investment liberalization, deregulation of state controls and labor and environmental standards, privatization of public utilities and services (from water to education and health) and denationalization of ownership which give foreign capitalists control of key sectors of the economy such as power generation and distribution.
He must end the automatic allocation of as much as 30% of government funds to service interest and principal payments of anomalous loans.
To maintain the loyalty of the landlord class, the US imperialists have long stood against genuine land reform. Millions of hectares of land continue to remain under the economically backward landlord class. Tens of millions of peasants suffer under the yoke of feudal and semifeudal oppression.
It would serve well the Duterte regime to heed the demand of the peasantry to breakup the haciendas and the power of the landlord class and undertake genuine land reform. Land must be distributed to the peasant tillers of land.
Genuine land reform is the most important democratic demand of the Filipino people as it addresses the problem of the biggest sector in Philippine society. By liberating millions of peasants from feudal and semifeudal oppression, land reform will serve as the biggest impetus to economic progress.
Genuine land reform must be carried out with national industrialization. Steel and other basic industries must be developed in a well integrated economy. There must be heavy, light and medium industries; there must be regional or interregional industries to produce commodities for consumption and for local food processing as well as national industries for heavy manufacturing.
National industrialization will raise the country’s capacity to produce for its needs and generate productive employment for the people. Genuine land reform and national industrialization are the two feet upon which the economy will be able to stand on its own.
In his visit to China, Duterte was reported to have secured as much as $24 billion in investments and loan pledges. The amount of planned investments ($15 billion) represents a 400% jump from last year’s investments from China. It is indicative of how much interested it is in wresting the Philippines from US sphere of influence and transforming the country in accordance with the China blueprint for a Factory Asia.
In themselves, the planned investments do not indicate any plan to build an integrated industrial economy, much less, support genuine land reform. In fact, the planned infrastructure and manufacturing facilities and power projects remain consistent with the prevailing import-dependent and export-oriented economic system.
At this point, the large infusion of foreign capital poses only clear benefit for the local big bourgeois compradors–the class of local big capitalists who serve as partners of foreign monopoly capitalist in the exploitation of local labor power for semi-processing production as well as in large commercial operations for distribution of imported commodities.
China is a burgeoning imperialist power with definite geopolitical aims. At this time of US strategic decline, China seeks the neutralization of the Philippines as a military stronghold and strategic base of the US from which it can launch encirclement operations against China. These aims are congruent with the Filipino people’s aspiration for national freedom and to promote an independent foreign policy.
Duterte’s declaration to end US hegemony in the Philippines would be even more positive if he can draw Chinese and international support for programs supporting the people’s livelihood (education, public health, food subsidies) and attenuate the impact of prevailing neoliberal policies that favor foreign monopoly capitalist investors.
Even more importantly, he can support the democratic aspirations of the Filipino people for genuine land reform and genuine national industrialization to build a socio-economic system that can stand on its own, non-dependent on foreign aid, investments and loans and can self-sustain and serve primarily the interests of the broad masses of peasants and workers.
To help transform the Philippines into a solid bastion of anti-US imperialism, China can allow room for the development of the local economy in terms of its manufacturing capacity, rural production and expanding domestic market.
China is always seeking areas of investments with lowest wages. But with overriding aims of helping end US hegemony over the Philippines, it can accede to the Filipino people’s demand for higher wages and such basic workers’ rights to job security, to unionize and strike; and support the clamor for genuine land reform and promotion of the people’s welfare (free education, universal health care, lower prices etc).
China can choose to lift off its weight from the country to provide space and opportunities to boost efforts of local capitalists to engage in production and promote national industrialization.
The Duterte regime has declared its determination to break free from US sphere of influence. It must establish the country that is not dependent on any power. Furthermore, it can forge and strengthen a patriotic united front by supporting the people’s basic demands for genuine land reform and national industrialization.
The prevailing conditions amid the historic shifts initiated by the anti-US Duterte regime provide the national democratic forces with favorable conditions to advance vigorously. They must take advantage of favorable political conditions to rouse the Filipino people in their millions and advance vigorously their patriotic and democratic mass struggles.
They must direct their militant struggle against the pro-US forces especially in the military and in the economic agencies of the regime who have strongly opposed Duterte’s patriotic declarations.
The revolutionary forces are open to more firmly establishing a patriotic alliance with the Duterte regime through peace negotiations to forge agreements. The New People’s Army (NPA) is the Filipino people’s strongest bulwark of patriotism. Under the leadership of the CPP, it must continue to strengthen itself through active recruitment, training and arming thousands of new Red fighters in preparation for giving battle to the forces opposed to the cause of national liberation.
http://www.cpp.ph/dutertes-policy-leave-us-sphere-influence-shift-china-mostly-positive/
For more than a century now, the US has prevented national industrialization and land reform thus promoting Philippine economic backwardness and keeping the country dependent on US loans and investments and imported commodities. The ruling classes of big landlords and big bourgeois compradors, bureaucrat capitalists and military officials are generally beholden to the US.
Ending US military presence is the basic condition for transforming Philippine economy and society. US military forces inside and around the country serve as outposts of US imperialism to ensure (through coercion or threat of coercion) that policies imposed by the US and the IMF-WB policies are carried out by the client-state. Duterte must end this foreign military presence.
His declaration of leaving the circle of US power is, thus, mostly positive as this will create the basic conditions for the positive transformation of Philippine society. He must immediately follow-through with steps to concretize this declaration.
The revolutionary forces welcome his declaration to end all foreign military presence within the next two years. Immediately, he must ask the US to dismantle all its military bases and facilities inside Camp Aguinaldo, Camp Navarro in Zamboanga and other AFP camps and cancel all joint military exercises which primarily serve the forward deployment schemes of the US. He must end permanent “rotational presence” of US troops.
One of the consummate patriotic act that Duterte can do is to abrogate the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA), the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) and Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT).
He must also demand the US, as well as Japan and other countries, to stop its military patrols in the South China Sea to lower tensions which preempt and undermine bilateral and multilateral talks by countries with overlapping claims. As to the matter of future humanitarian assistance, he can ask the US government to deliver these via civilian organizations (such as the Red Cross) or course this to the Philippine government.
For long, the US imperialists have molded Filipino consciousness to conform to US interests and tastes. The dominant pro-US mentality of the Filipinos is being used by the US and its agents to undermine his declaration for an independent foreign policy and decision to leave US imperialist ambit.
Duterte must promote the unity of the Filipino people behind the cause of anti-US imperialism. He must work with the patriotic forces in an education, information and cultural drive with an aim of promoting nationalism. Such a campaign must isolate and oppose the economic, military and politico-cultural agents of the US and undertake concrete steps to effect the removal of US military troops and facilities and put an end to US political and military intervention.
The national democratic forces must aim to mobilize the Filipino youth in great numbers in a renaissance of patriotism and service to the people.
There must be a review of school books especially those on history to show the brutalities of US colonialism and continuing history of neo-colonialism and extol the heroism of Filipino resistance fighters.
US imperialism remains to be the dominant force within the ruling reactionary state. It has the traditional loyalty of the majority of the ruling classes, especially among the big landlords.
Above all, it has the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) which serves as the strongest pillar of US rule in the country. It is the generals and ex-generals within and outside the Duterte regime who are vigorously pulling-back the assertions for an independent foreign policy. They must be resolutely opposed and overthrown.
In the economic field, the Duterte regime must reverse the neoliberal policies imposed by the US on the Philippines which had long promoted backwardness and dependence.
It must put an end to the policies of trade and investment liberalization, deregulation of state controls and labor and environmental standards, privatization of public utilities and services (from water to education and health) and denationalization of ownership which give foreign capitalists control of key sectors of the economy such as power generation and distribution.
He must end the automatic allocation of as much as 30% of government funds to service interest and principal payments of anomalous loans.
To maintain the loyalty of the landlord class, the US imperialists have long stood against genuine land reform. Millions of hectares of land continue to remain under the economically backward landlord class. Tens of millions of peasants suffer under the yoke of feudal and semifeudal oppression.
It would serve well the Duterte regime to heed the demand of the peasantry to breakup the haciendas and the power of the landlord class and undertake genuine land reform. Land must be distributed to the peasant tillers of land.
Genuine land reform is the most important democratic demand of the Filipino people as it addresses the problem of the biggest sector in Philippine society. By liberating millions of peasants from feudal and semifeudal oppression, land reform will serve as the biggest impetus to economic progress.
Genuine land reform must be carried out with national industrialization. Steel and other basic industries must be developed in a well integrated economy. There must be heavy, light and medium industries; there must be regional or interregional industries to produce commodities for consumption and for local food processing as well as national industries for heavy manufacturing.
National industrialization will raise the country’s capacity to produce for its needs and generate productive employment for the people. Genuine land reform and national industrialization are the two feet upon which the economy will be able to stand on its own.
In his visit to China, Duterte was reported to have secured as much as $24 billion in investments and loan pledges. The amount of planned investments ($15 billion) represents a 400% jump from last year’s investments from China. It is indicative of how much interested it is in wresting the Philippines from US sphere of influence and transforming the country in accordance with the China blueprint for a Factory Asia.
In themselves, the planned investments do not indicate any plan to build an integrated industrial economy, much less, support genuine land reform. In fact, the planned infrastructure and manufacturing facilities and power projects remain consistent with the prevailing import-dependent and export-oriented economic system.
At this point, the large infusion of foreign capital poses only clear benefit for the local big bourgeois compradors–the class of local big capitalists who serve as partners of foreign monopoly capitalist in the exploitation of local labor power for semi-processing production as well as in large commercial operations for distribution of imported commodities.
China is a burgeoning imperialist power with definite geopolitical aims. At this time of US strategic decline, China seeks the neutralization of the Philippines as a military stronghold and strategic base of the US from which it can launch encirclement operations against China. These aims are congruent with the Filipino people’s aspiration for national freedom and to promote an independent foreign policy.
Duterte’s declaration to end US hegemony in the Philippines would be even more positive if he can draw Chinese and international support for programs supporting the people’s livelihood (education, public health, food subsidies) and attenuate the impact of prevailing neoliberal policies that favor foreign monopoly capitalist investors.
Even more importantly, he can support the democratic aspirations of the Filipino people for genuine land reform and genuine national industrialization to build a socio-economic system that can stand on its own, non-dependent on foreign aid, investments and loans and can self-sustain and serve primarily the interests of the broad masses of peasants and workers.
To help transform the Philippines into a solid bastion of anti-US imperialism, China can allow room for the development of the local economy in terms of its manufacturing capacity, rural production and expanding domestic market.
China is always seeking areas of investments with lowest wages. But with overriding aims of helping end US hegemony over the Philippines, it can accede to the Filipino people’s demand for higher wages and such basic workers’ rights to job security, to unionize and strike; and support the clamor for genuine land reform and promotion of the people’s welfare (free education, universal health care, lower prices etc).
China can choose to lift off its weight from the country to provide space and opportunities to boost efforts of local capitalists to engage in production and promote national industrialization.
The Duterte regime has declared its determination to break free from US sphere of influence. It must establish the country that is not dependent on any power. Furthermore, it can forge and strengthen a patriotic united front by supporting the people’s basic demands for genuine land reform and national industrialization.
The prevailing conditions amid the historic shifts initiated by the anti-US Duterte regime provide the national democratic forces with favorable conditions to advance vigorously. They must take advantage of favorable political conditions to rouse the Filipino people in their millions and advance vigorously their patriotic and democratic mass struggles.
They must direct their militant struggle against the pro-US forces especially in the military and in the economic agencies of the regime who have strongly opposed Duterte’s patriotic declarations.
The revolutionary forces are open to more firmly establishing a patriotic alliance with the Duterte regime through peace negotiations to forge agreements. The New People’s Army (NPA) is the Filipino people’s strongest bulwark of patriotism. Under the leadership of the CPP, it must continue to strengthen itself through active recruitment, training and arming thousands of new Red fighters in preparation for giving battle to the forces opposed to the cause of national liberation.
http://www.cpp.ph/dutertes-policy-leave-us-sphere-influence-shift-china-mostly-positive/
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