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Surigao lawmaker hits 4 witnesses’ testimony  

A CONGRESSMAN from Surigao del Norte, who was charged with graft for the overpricing of medicine and medical supplies, has urged the Sandiganbayan government lawyers’ request to take the deposition of four witnesses against him and 10 co-accused.

Citing technicalities in the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure, Rep. Francisco Matugas asked the court not to allow government lawyers to take the depositions of lawyer Rene Medina, provincial board member Victor Bernal, former Vice Gov. Rodolfo Navarro and businesswoman Mary Ann Yparraguirre, the possible witnesses against him.

Matugas argued the law only allows conditional examination of potential witnesses but only under specific circumstances like serious sickness or infirmity; or if the witness is leaving the country with no definite date of return.

The motion to take oral deposition may not be legally granted as the same is no longer allowed by the Revised Rules on Criminal Procedure, Matugas and former provincial administrator Carlos Egay noted their joint motion.

Egay and another co-defendant, businessman Ernesto Bravo of Martin Pharmaceutical Laboratory Inc., also signed the motion.

“There is no procedural ground available to grant prosecution’s motion for oral depositions of its witnesses or even their conditional examinations. For sure, distance and financial constraints are not valid reasons since the Republic of the Philippines is assumed to have the facilities for making [its witnesses] available during scheduled hearings,” Bravo said in his pleading.

Matugas had earlier asked the court to drop him from the case because he had no participation in the bidding and awarding of the contracts and claimed that his indictment was the result of pressure and influence exerted by his political opponents in his province.

But Prosecutor Julieta Zinnia Niduaza said the four possible witnesses could not personally appear in court because they all live in Surigao del Norte and could not afford to come to Manila for the hearing.

-manilastandardtoday

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PGMA's "Pamaskong Handog" program, project set  

Manila (12 December) -- To provide the poor with more affordable food and services, especially at a time when prices are high, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo will be distributing "Pamaskong Handog" packages this Christmas season to the poorest provinces in the country, the Office of Cabinet Secretary Ricardo L. Saludo said yesterday.

Starting Dec. 13, the President and some of the Cabinet members shall be going to the provinces to give away Christmas packages consisting of rice and other food items and distribute coupons in exchange for some goods at Tindahan Natin outlets.

Also part of the President's "Pamaskong Handog" are rural electrification projects in unenergized barangays and water provision for waterless barangays, among others.

The areas initially identified during today's National Anti-Poverty Commission (NAPC)-Cabinet Group meeting are: Masbate, Camarines Norte, Mountain Province, Zamboanga del Norte, Zamboanga Sibugay, Agusan del Sur, Surigao del Norte, Surigao del Sur, Dinagat Island, Sarangani, Lanao del Norte, Maguindanao, Kalinga, Abra, Marinduque, Romblon, Mindoro Occidental, Mindoro Oriental, Sultan Kudarat, Samar, Biliran, Antique, Palawan, Lanao del Sur, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi, Bukidnon, Misamis Occidental, and Davao del Norte.

The activities shall be done in coordination with the local government units. (OPS)

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19,064 Surigaonons receive Philhealth ID cards  

Surigao City -- A total of 19,064 Family Health cards from Philhealth have been distributed free to the municipalities of the second district of the province of Surigao del Norte recently.

District II Representative, Cong. Guillermo Romarate personally hand out the cards calling each municipality and their respective Local Chief Executives.

Rodrigo Ariar, Philhealth-Surigao Field Office Branch Manager, who assisted the distribution process, said the activity was sponsored by Cong. Romarate through his priority development assistance fund (PDAF).

Ariar also said that a total of P7.8 Million pesos were allotted to the said activity. The Philhealth cards issued were effective for the whole year 2007 up to Dec. 31, 2008.

The municipalities/city who received the Philhealth ID cards were Surigao City with 7,054 cards, Bacuag with 806 enrollees, 950 cards for Claver, 1,248 cards for Gigaquit, Mainit received 1,285 cards, Malimono with 1,794 cards, Placer with 1,640 cards and Tagana-an with 1,777 cards.

Local chief executives who attended the distribution of ID cards lauded the efforts made by Cong. Romarate and the Arroyo Administration, saying "With their Philhealth cards, beneficiaries will be able to avail of the health care services from accredited RHUs in their areas and from any accredited hospitals", Ariar concluded. (Fryan E. Abkilan, PIA-Surigao del Norte)
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GMA to launch Christmas program for poor  

President Arroyo will launch tomorrow a Christmas program for the poor that involves giving out free rice and other goods as well as scholarships.

Mrs. Arroyo presided over the National Anti-Poverty Commission (NAPC)-Cabinet meeting yesterday at the Palace where details of the Pamaskong Handog (Christmas Gift) program were announced. The program will cover the top 10 depressed areas in the country.

“This (program) is a total package, not just subsidies, training, education livelihood and medical and dental programs,” Deputy Presidential Spokesperson Lorelei Fajardo told reporters after the meeting.

She said the giving out of goods would end around the first week of January but the other programs would stay for an undisclosed period of time.

The program, which Mrs. Arroyo will launch in Cebu and Masbate, targets some 384,000 families in the top 10 depressed provinces and more than 200,000 families in Metro Manila, she said.

The beneficiary-provinces are Zamboanga del Norte, Masbate, Maguindanao, Agusan del Sur, Surigao del Norte, Mountain Province, Lanao del Norte, Camarines Norte, Sarangani and Zamboanga Sibugay, officials said.

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Ranario's family thanks PGMA for saving her life  

The family of overseas Filipino worker (OFW) Marilou Ranario, who went to Malacanang on Tuesday, expressed their gratitude to President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo for saving her life.

Members of the Ranario family said they were very happy with the efforts of the President.

President Arroyo met with members of Marilou's family -- her father Rosario, mother Encarnacion, son Raffy John, daughter Roselle, and a sister.

She pledged, through the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA), to give scholarship assistance to Marilou's children, while the Department or Labor and Employment (DoLE) promised to help Marilou's father get employment.

The Emir of Kuwait, Sheik Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah on Sunday commuted Ranario's death sentence to life imprisonment after President Arroyo went to Kuwait and personally appealed for Ranario's life.

The Emir also vowed to "further reduce the penalty" upon the completion of the tanazuls or "letters of forgiveness" from the victim's six heirs, four of whom have signed their own tanazul.

Marilou, an elementary school teacher from Surigao del Norte, was convicted of murder in the rage killing of her 46-year-old lady employer almost two years ago.
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Palace to give gifts to poor  

POOR families in 10 of the country’s poorest provinces and in selected areas in Metro Manila stand to receive free rice and other goodies from the government as part of its gift to the less fortunate this Christmas season, Deputy Press Secretary Lorelei Fajardo said yesterday.

Fajardo said the government will also give additional packages for the poor in terms of job training scholarships, as well as cheaper medicines and affordable household items in regular programs already in place.

While the “Pamaskong Handog” (Christmas Gift) package would only be a one-shot affair, Fajardo said other government anti-poverty programs will continue even after the Christmas season.

The areas covered by the Pamaskong Handog program include Masbate, Camarines Norte, Zamboanga Sibugay, Agusan del Sur, Surigao del Norte, Surigao del Sur, Misamis Occidental, Lano del Norte, Maguindanao, Kalinga and Abra, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi, Marinduque, Romblon, Mindoro, Saranggani, Antique, Palawan, Davao Oriental and Bukidnon.

“The Pamaskong Handog of our President will start on Dec. 13, and our target areas are the top poorest provinces, including [select areas in] Metro Manila,” she said. The program will be implemented until Jan. 7, as discussed in a meeting of the National Anti-Poverty Commission in Malacañang yesterday.

She said the package will include 2 kilos of rice per family, as well as some goodies, including noodles or some other grocery items, with a value not less than P100 per beneficiary.

President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo will be in Samar and Cebu tomorrow for the kick-off of the Pamaskong Handog program, according to Fajardo.

She said the program will target at least 600,000 families all over the country.

She said the program also includes the distribution of certificates for scholarship training under the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority’s “Mekaniko Ako” (I Am a Mechanic) and “Masahista” (I am a Masseur) programs.

In addition, she said the government will distribute from among the beneficiaries at least 4,000 certificates for “Tindahan Natin” that provides poor consumers with affordable household items, and put up additional “Botika Ng Bayan” outlets to allow the poor access to affordable medicine.

“There would also be medical and dental missions for select areas,” Fajardo said. “Some of these programs would continue after the Christmas season, like the Tesda training programs.”

She said the President has also instructed the concerned agencies to continue with the program to provide electricity and potable water for the poorest barangays in the country that does not enjoy such basic necessities.

-manilastandardtoday

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The sun shines brighter in Surigao  

There’s always something new to visit and look forward to in Surigao, the surfing capital of the Philippines. The unspoiled teardrop-shaped island, 800 kilometers southeast of Manila, is the Shangri-La of adventure and nature lovers.

The mid-morning Asian Spirit flight to Surigao from Manila onboard the nifty looking 80-seater aircraft was fast and smooth. We landed in Surigao City with the sun shining even brighter as it did in Manila. Our host was the governor of Surigao del Norte, Robert Ace Barbers and his efficient tourism staff, along with Mayor Alfonso Casurra and Siargao Mayor Ping Escosura.

Surigao City is the capital of the province of Surigao del Norte, the gateway to northern Mindanao. It is a crowded, busy and developing city, with interesting “island barangays” that effortlessly show the way to the well-known Suriganon hospitality

There is a group of islands within easy day-tour reach of the city. One can start off with Basul Island close to the Maharlika National Road, just a brief boat ride from the Maharlika Pier. A vacationista can also opt to discover Hikdop Island, 45 minutes away from the city by pump boat. The island has unspoilt beaches and it also serves as a jump-off point to Nonoc Island where one can find the longest wooden bridge in the country. This extraordinary 391-meter footbridge called the Cantiasay-San Pedro Foot Bridge serves as a connection to the neighboring island of Sibale.

Siargao and Pansukian are almost always associated with surfing. For nonsurfers like this writer, the question is: is there more to Surigao than just surfing? While the international surfing community adored Siargao for its amazing beaches ideal for surfing, the place had much more to offer.

Siargao’s proximity to the Philippine Deep, and the naturally huge swells of the Pacific that comes to its shores, are what makes Siargao a haven for aqua sports enthusiasts. Tourism has seeped its way into the area (thanks mostly to surfing), but from the looks of it, modish restaurants, and spas are still a long way coming. The developments on the island are mostly of the small-town variety and have not made a dent on Siargao’s natural charm and rustic appeal.

Mangrove swamps, caves, coral reefs and lagoons can truly be fascinating. And the island also impressed our group with stretches of rice fields, exotic flora and fauna and interesting marine resources.

The cottages at the Traveller’s Beach Resort in General Luna come with neat Spartan amenities. More luxurious accommodations can be had at the neighboring Pansukian Beach Resort, hailed by an international design magazine as one of the best resorts in Asia. Each of the resort’s 10 cottages showcases the best in modern-Asian design. The standard cottages are roomy, with big comfortable beds and spacious bathrooms. The bigger rooms have a relaxing veranda that frames an exhilarating view of the postcard-pretty islands nearby.

Our group also took much interest on the twin islands Mamon and La Janoza. Also fascinating is Bucas Grande, a beautiful lagoon about an hour by motorized banca from the Pansukian jetty and which can only be accessed by kayak through the Sohoton Cave. Here, one may find limestone rocks covered with foliage that spring from shimmering clear blue green waters as well as stingless jellyfish similar to those that can be found in the Palau Islands. An underground lagoon, where the sun’s rays shimmer through domed walls of leaves, would leave even the most jaded beach bum breathless.

Still another favorite is Dacu Island, half an hour from Pansukian where one encounters more of the same fine white sand beaches and an artist’s beach house. If visitors want more activities on the island, the resort staff can arrange special trips for deep-sea fishing, shell collecting and snorkeling. Scuba diving facilities are now available since dive sites around the island are slowly being discovered.

Fresh seafood can be found everywhere. We had grilled squid, fish kinilaw and the fattest of crabs—all prepared by the island folks, who are in essence, the reasons why the sun shines brighter and the general atmosphere is warmer in Surigao.

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Kuwaiti Emir saves Filipina from gallows  

Kuwait’s Emir H H Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmad Al Sabah yesterday decided to reduce the death penalty of convicted Filipina maid Marilou Ranario following his meeting with Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and other Philippine government officials.

“Normally, I don't interefere in the judicial process. We have a separate judicial system. But since you (Mrs. Arroyo) are here to personally appeal for her, I will not sign the decree of execution. That is within my power,” Press Secretary Ignacio Bunye quoted the Emir as saying.

“I will reduce the penalty to life and when the other parties sign the letter of forgiveness, I will further reduce the penalty,” the Emir added.

Arroyo, for her part, thanked the Emir for his compassion. Philippine Vice-President Noli de Castro previously met the victim’s family and sought their forgiveness in the hope of paying “blood money” to spare Ranario’s life, but the overture was rejected.

On September 28, 2005, Kuwait’s Court of First Instance sentenced Ranario to death for killing her female employer, Najat Mahmoud Faraj Mobarak, on January 11, 2005, due to maltreatment and a salary dispute.

Ranario declared in open court that she killed the victim. According to Ranario, her employer maltreated her by humiliating and insulting her in the presence of friends. She claimed that her delusional belief that her employer had evil plans for her led to the commission of the crime.

Last month, Kuwait’s Court of Cassation upheld Ranario's conviction and death sentence. Under the Kuwaiti law, only the Emir has the authority to reduce the sentence of a convicted person.

Ranario, a native of Surigao del Norte, carries a bachelor’s degree in elementary education but decided to leave for Kuwait in December 2003 to work as a domestic worker.

-thepeninsulaqatar

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Frontline Leadership: 5 local execs show how  

MANILA, Philippines -- The president of Ateneo de Manila University, Fr. Bienvenido Nebres, SJ, ended his remarks at a book launch on a thought-provoking note on national leadership.

“I look forward to the future when the next President of the Philippines does not come from the Senate but from [the ranks of] mayors or governors,” Nebres said, eliciting cheers from the other guests at Wednesday’s dinner program for “Frontline Leadership,” a book project of the Ateneo School of Government that was backed by the German foundation Konrad Adenauer Stiftung.

“I do hope that a next generation of leaders will emerge and see local leadership as the wave of the future,” he said.

“Frontline Leadership” features the stories of five local chief executives as examples of “how things get done” at the grass roots, away from Manila-centric politics. It offers hope for reform and renewal in Philippine government, not in the lofty national agencies, but in the low-key efforts and rolled-up sleeves of town and city leaders.

Written by several authors, the book recounts the performances of four former local officials -- including an unnamed female governor in the Visayas -- and one incumbent.

Those named are Naga Mayor and Ramon Magsaysay awardee Jesse Robredo, former San Fernando, La Union Mayor Mary Jane Ortega, former Bulacan Gov. Josie de la Cruz, and former Surigao del Norte Gov. Robert Lyndon Barbers.

Each subject has a chapter discussing their rise in politics, their accomplishments and toughest challenges, and even the criticisms leveled at them. Ortega and Barbers, for example, had earned brickbats for their “dynastic” family background, De la Cruz for her perceived penchant for foreign travels, and Robredo for his “stinginess” as a gift-giver at weddings, baptisms, fiestas, etc.

No halos

The book does not put a halo over the heads of the featured leaders, but rather showcases the concrete results of their efforts and their varying administrative styles.

“These are stories of resourceful officials who have endeavored to soar ahead even when they hovered over a sea of troubles in politics and personal life,” its blurb reads.

Dr. Angelita Gregorio-Medel, project director, added in an interview: “They make compromises, but within limits that allow them to remain true to their beliefs and principles, their non-negotiables.”

Robredo, now on his sixth term as mayor, is credited with “transforming [his] once quiet, nondescript small city into the bustling urban center that sets Naga City apart from the rest of Bicolandia.”

Naga’s economy has grown so steadily under his watch that its average household income has risen 42 percent more than the national average and 126 percent higher than the Bicol average, the book notes.

The city’s fiscal prudence and bureaucratic efficiency have enabled it to surpass “longtime rival” Legazpi City in terms of investments: It now has about 5,000 business establishments, compared to the more than 2,000 in Legazpi.

Naga’s telephone per household ratio of 1:1 is now even higher than Metro Manila’s current ratio of 1:3.

Highs and lows

The Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry has also cited Naga as the country’s Most Business-Friendly City for 2002, 2003 and 2005, elevating it to the Hall of Fame.

During Ortega’s three terms as mayor, San Fernando City (SFC) was adjudged No. 1 in the Asian Institute of Management’s list of “Competitive [Small] Cities.”

The book says in part: “Adult literacy is high. There is a large selection of higher learning institutions. Infant mortality is low and incidence of theft is low.

“Tourism [has] invigorated economic activity, with the Botanical Garden, Bacsil Bridge and the like as main tourist spots. SFC is noted for its excellent communication facilities.”

According to the city government website, SFC had achieved, as early as 2003, a 95-percent employment rate, 88-percent household access to piped water and 91.8-percent household access to electricity.

For Bulacan, the book particularly notes “a source of pride” for then Governor De la Cruz in the field of peace and order.

During her watch, the province was said to have achieved one of the country’s lowest crime rates at 7.08 incidents per population of 100,000.

In 2005, the city government’s anti-illegal gambling drive led to 165 arrests and the filing of 95 cases. That same year 1,178 drug pushers and users were arrested and some P1.7 million worth of drugs was confiscated.

‘Hitler’

The chapter on Barbers dwells candidly on his disciplinary, three-strikes-you’re-out approach.

“When he assumed office, Barbers immediately earned the moniker ‘Hitler’ or ‘estrikto,’” the book reads. “His first term was particularly stormy … a kind of love-hate affair with the heads of the line agencies as well as the rank-and-file in the various units.”

It soon became clear, especially among his closest staff, that certain behaviors were “unacceptable” to Barbers, who had early on declared that he would run the capitol with a “corporate attitude” and not with the laxity and indulgence of a traditional politician.

It was also observed how it was “difficult” for the US-educated Barbers “to adjust to the so-called Filipino time, used as he was to being on the dot.”

In his office he kept a “strike board,” a kind of scoreboard or checklist to keep track of his staff’s “tardiness, absences and mistakes.”

4 rules

In line with that chart was his “Four Rules of the Provincial Governor’s Office.”

Rule 1 read: “Do not give the Governor problems without solutions.”

Rule 2: “All instructions from the Governor should be followed unless it will damage the personality and image of the concerned staff.”

Rule 3 was about Barbers’ three-strikes policy on tardiness, absences and mistakes: “One is enough. Two is too much. Three cannot be -- you’re out.”

Rule 4, the “General Rule,” governs all others: “The Governor is always right. If the Governor is wrong, please refer to [the previous line].”

Those who disobeyed the rules were “sent on ’exile’ to hardship postings, like the provincial jail or one of the islands. In most cases, they learn,” the book quotes Barbers as saying.

The then governor also claimed: “I refuse invitations to crown local [beauty pageant] queens. I don’t like it when women are promoted like commodities, especially when people are looking forward to one thing -- the bikini swimsuit portion.”

‘Micro-manager’

The fifth subject of the book, the anonymous local executive from the Visayas, is described as someone who has retired from politics, for health reasons.

(This former governor was not named because the protocol to obtain her approval of the final text was not completed, according to Ateneo’s academic program manager, Dr. Dennis Gonzalez.)

The book takes particular interest in the ways by which she discharged her duties. It notes, for instance, that she handed out checks to her town or barangay leaders only during public functions -- like fiestas -- to ensure many “witnesses.”

She was apparently so meticulous as a “micro-manager” that she corrected the grammar and syntax of her staff’s paperwork, and even had a say on the color of the tablecloth used in functions.

Known for her “hands-on” mindset, she seldom relied on field reports to be updated on the status of public works projects. She herself visited the work sites and covered “85 percent” of a town doing so.

And returning from each trip, she astonished her staff with her “prodigious memory” of the people she had met. Without benefit of notes, she could recall the names of the pregnant women, or that of a constituent whose mother had fallen ill, or the color of a grandmother’s dress on a particular day.

Circles of consensus

In his remarks, Nebres observed that when the Ateneo School of Government was set up 10 years ago, “we especially decided that we would focus on local government, because we believe reform in the Philippines is best achieved through local governments.”

When mayors begin to take charge of public schools rather than work through the Department of Education, for instance, “things begin to move,” he said.

“I always get into arguments as to why [we didn’t] also look into national government,” Nebres said. To this query he would often say: ’If you have [worked around the Philippines], you would realize how fragmented the country is because of language and geography.’”

Added Nebres: “Circles of consensus are very difficult to achieve on the national level. You are more likely to achieve circles of consensus and circles of trust -- which are essential to governance -- on the local level. And these are very essential if you are going to get things done.

“The mayors and governors [featured in the book] got things done, even if sometimes not everybody was happy with it. But I hope in the end people recognize it and say that, OK, there was a price to be paid, but everybody was better off.”

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Family of doomed OFW clings to hope  

SHE LEFT THE COUNTRY BECAUSE SHE WANTED TO help the family,” Susan Ranario, sister-in-law of overseas Filipino worker (OFW) Marilou Ranario, had said in October. “But now, she’s the one who desperately needs help.”

Ranario’s job abroad would have given the family a glimmer of hope after they were evicted from a piece of land that her father used to till in Tubod, Surigao del Norte.

But the prospect of a stable income that had lured the 34-year-old woman to leave behind her two children—Raffy John, 13, and Russell, 11—in 2003 suddenly turned into a nightmare when the Kuwaiti Supreme Court sentenced her to die on Nov. 27 for killing her employer in January 2005.

Ranario’s case has given a gloomy face to the millions of OFWs who leave every year for jobs abroad.

The nongovernment group Migrante International finds it ironic that the OFWs, who help prop up the country’s economy by bringing in about $12 billion in remittances each year, are dying from all forms of abuses and receive meager help from the government.
“They’re more of a victim than a criminal,” Migrante said. It revealed that 35 other OFWs all over the world were on death row.

Ranario’s father Rosario, 64, now says that working abroad wasn’t worth it at all. His family is now in a much tighter fix than before, he said.

Tubod, a small farming town of slightly over 10,000 in Surigao del Norte, does not promise much in terms of livelihood, prompting Ranario and some other residents to seek work abroad.

The Ranarios were forced to vacate their old house after their ownership claim over the property was questioned in court. Rosario and his wife Encarnacion have moved into the house of their son and daughter-in-law in another part of Barangay San Isidro.

Rosario tills a borrowed farmlot and plants rice and other crops.

“After she (Marilou) left, we’ve always put the two children on top of our priorities,” he said. “But after what happened, her case has assumed utmost urgency; and she has become the priority.”

Ranario had been able to send money for her children only twice since she left for Kuwait in December 2003. A sister, who has a teacher’s diploma, had also given some money twice.

Even the $100-scholarship assistance from the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (Owwa) was never enough for the children’s school expenses.

Raffy John is topping his class in Grade 6 and wants to tell his mother about it. His sister wrote that she envied her classmates because they have their mothers with them. “I only have Nanay and Tatay,” she wrote, referring to her grandparents.

“They need a mother. We are too old to take care of them,” Rosario said.

The family had appealed to President Macapagal-Arroyo for help. When they learned what had happened to their mother, the children wrote a letter to her.

Rosario said that two months before her daughter’s employer was killed, she had called up to say that she wanted to go home to the Philippines. But her employer, she had said, would not give her back her passport.

“I told her, ‘It’s up to you to decide,’” he said.

The next time he heard from her, she was already in trouble.

Hassan Jumdain, Owwa regional director, noted the increasing number of OFWs from Caraga, which covers five provinces, six cities, 66 towns and 1,316 barangays. As of September, they already numbered 31,331, he said.

-inquirer.net

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Exodus of RP geologists hampers mapping project  

MANILA, Philippines -- Like many professional Filipinos, geologists working for the Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB) under the Department of Environment and Natural Resources have been joining the exodus for greener pastures.

This has put a crimp on the government mapping of the country to identify areas prone to landslides and flash floods, an MGB official said yesterday.

Antonio Apostol, MGB geohazard mapping project leader, admitted the geologists’ departure would adversely affect the government’s geohazard mapping project scheduled to end in 2010.

Apostol said 70 of the MGB’s 120 geologists had resigned over the past several months to take higher paying jobs in mining companies here and abroad.

“There are only 40 to 50 geologists left in the MGB to continue the geohazard mapping project of the DENR,’’ he said.

An MGB geologist’s monthly salary ranges from P8,000 to P10,000.

With a smaller crew to do the work, Apostol estimated the MGB would be able to map out only 150 municipalities, instead of the ideal 250 municipalities, a year from 2008 to 2010.

With the full complement of 120 geologists, the MGB was able to surpass government geohazard mapping targets, he said.

The geohazard mapping project aims to cover a total of 1,660 municipalities and cities nationwide in the next three years. So far, 918 municipalities have been mapped out.

This year alone, as of October, the MGB had completed mapping out 198 municipalities in Leyte, Biliran, Quezon, Surigao del Sur, Surigao del Norte, Aurora and Camarines Norte, as well as parts of Isabela, Cagayan, Mindoro, Davao del Norte, Davao del Sur and Compostela Valley.

Apostol said the DENR geohazard mapping team was speeding up the identification of relocation sites in communities vulnerable to landslides and floods, and the production of geohazard maps, posters, videos, pamphlets and other materials for local government units.

Most of the provinces prone to landslides and floods are located in Luzon and the Cordilleras, MGB officials had earlier said.

Benguet, Mt. Province, Nueva Vizcaya, Kalinga Apayao, Southern Leyte, Abra, Marinduque, Cebu, Catanduanes and Ifugao were the most highly susceptible to landslides, the MGB said in July.

On the other hand, Pampanga, Nueva Ecija, Pangasinan, Tarlac, Maguindanao, Bulacan, North Cotabato, Oriental Mindoro, Ilocos Norte and Metro Manila were the most flood-prone provinces, they said.

Environment Secretary Lito Atienza had earlier said he would seek a higher budget for the DENR for 2008 and use the increase to hire more geologists.

-inquirer.net

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