No images? Click here ‘10-PERCENT’ CAP Authorities have allowed churches to accommodate up to 10 percent of their capacity, but Baclaran Church in Parañaque City, also known as National Shrine of Our Mother of Perpetual Help, draws a sparse crowd of worshippers observing physical distancing on Wednesday. Before the pandemic, the church would be packed, especially on Wednesdays for the Perpetual Help novena. —RICHARD A. REYES NewsFace shields, valved masks: How useful?WASHINGTON—People wearing plastic face shields or masks with valves can spray droplets over a wide area when they sneeze or cough, making the devices ineffective at preventing the spread of coronavirus. Researchers at Florida Atlantic University concluded that despite the comfort that both types of protection offer, high-quality cloth or medical masks of plain design are more preferable. —STORY BY AFP Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net RegionsThreats to Visayas activists won’t stopILOILO CITY—Activists in the Visayas continue to get death threats following the recent killing of human rights worker Zara Alvarez in Bacolod City. Those in Negros say they keep receiving text messages from unknown senders marking them as the next targets. In Iloilo City, posters linking a priest and human rights lawyers to communist rebels have also appeared in several areas. —STORY BY NESTOR P. BURGOS JR. Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net/Nestor Burgos Jr NewsEssay, past grades in place of exam Ateneo de Manila University is doing away with its college entrance examination this year due to logistical concerns arising from the pandemic. The Jesuit-run school will instead choose enrollees for school year 2021-2022 based on the applicants’ past academic performance, the recommendations of their teachers, and their submitted personal essay, among others. —STORY BY KRIXIA SUBINGSUBING Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net/Krixia Subingsubing Newsletter / Join usHas this been forwarded by a friend? Subscribe now to the Philippine Daily Inquirer Newsletter and get your latest news and important updates on COVID-19 and the enhanced community quarantine. Banner storyNBI presses raps vs 20 tagged in ‘Pastillas’ scam By Jodee A. Agoncillo The National Bureau of Investigation has asked the Office of the Ombudsman to suspend and prosecute 19 immigration officers it found to have been running a clandestine escort service known as the “pastillas” racket that catered mostly to Chinese nationals planning to work in the country illegally. NBI Special Action Unit chief Emeterio Dongallo Jr. on Wednesday said the preventive suspension would “preclude” the airport officers of the Bureau of Immigration (BI) from influencing any subsequent investigation. Chinese national Liya Wu, owner of Empire International Travel and Tours in Binondo, Manila, was also held legally liable for the corruption of public officials by conniving with some of the BI officers in sending the “undesirable aliens” to the country, Dongallo said. “We are one with the campaign of the government to get rid of corruption and make those erring personnel accountable before the court of law,” the bureau said in a statement. After a five-month probe, the NBI said in a letter to the Ombudsman on Tuesday that it found that the 19 immigration officers had violated the antigraft law, or Republic Act No. 3019. Rescued Taiwanese Under the pastillas scheme, which was disclosed by a whistleblower during a Senate investigation led by Sen. Risa Hontiveros early this year, Chinese nationals traveling as tourists but who intended to work for Philippine overseas gaming operators (Pogos) pay a P10,000 “service fee” for their smooth entry into the country. Immigration officer Allison “Alex” Chiong, the whistleblower, told the Senate that of the total amount, P2,000 would be divided among officers of the BI’s Travel Control and Enforcement Unit (TCEU), duty immigration supervisor and terminal heads. The remainder was to be given to tour operators and syndicates who will transport the Chinese from the airport to the Pogo facilities. The scheme acquired the pastillas label because the bribe money was rolled in a white piece of paper and looked like the Filipino milk candy. Illegal Pogo Acting NBI Director Eric Distor said it was Ignacio who recruited the woman to work in the Philippines even though she only had a tourist visa. The NBI said that the 23-year-old woman was abused physically, mentally and “forced to work like a slave” until she was rescued by the NBI-Special Task Force on Feb. 3, 2020. Still in PH “Based on the evidence gathered, supported by photos and video recordings submitted by the whistleblower, subjects in this case indeed committed criminal transgressions and should be held liable thereof,” Distor said. Hontiveros commended the NBI “for taking decisive action against those who have betrayed the country and contributed to the victimization of many Filipino women and children.” The senator was looking into the operation of prostitution rings that catered to Pogo workers that victimized both Filipino and foreign women, including young girls, when the pastillas scheme was exposed. P10B in grease money “In our committee hearings, the evidence presented pointed to how systemic and far-reaching the ‘pastillas scheme’ was. There were people in the higher levels of the BI who were supposedly on the take and benefiting from this illegal enterprise,” she said. The senator said the filing of cases would help authorities prevent the arrival of undocumented Chinese travelers, many of whom ended up working for Pogos. Other respondents Also criminally liable are Immigration Officers II Abdulhafez dela Tonga Hadjibasher, duty immigration supervisor since November 2019; Gabriel Ernest Estacio assigned at the arrival and departure areas of Naia 1; Chevy Reyes Naniong, member of the TCEU Naia AOD since 2013; Jeffrey Dale Ignacio and Manuel Sarmiento III, both of the AOD. The others are Immigration Officers I Ralph Ryan Garcia, Phol Villanueva, Danilo Deudor, Mark Dolete Macababad; Hamza Pacasum and Cherry Pie Payabyab Ricolcol; and Security Guard 2 Fidel Mendoza, designated as POD chief of staff. —WITH REPORTS FROM JOVIC YEE AND MARLON RAMOS Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net EditorialRewarding the oppressorThe Philippines, which from a calculated standpoint could gain the most from the success of the US pushback against China as some of the Chinese military installations are in seized Philippine territory, is not joining the move to sanction the Chinese companies. On the contrary, the Duterte administration had earlier welcomed state-owned construction giant China Communications Construction Company (CCCC) into the country and allowed it to work with a local firm on the controversial Sangley Point International Airport project, one of the China-backed multi-billion infrastructure deals greenlighted by the administration. The project is a joint venture between Lucio Tan’s Macroasia Corp. and CCCC. The CCCC not only had a hand in turning Philippine territory in the WPS into militarized Chinese outposts, it was also blacklisted by the World Bank from 2011-2017 over supposed questionable practices in building the Philippines' National Roads Improvement and Management Project. But the far bigger anomaly is that a company owned and controlled by the Chinese government will gain access to a strategic area crucial to the defense of Manila, the country's capital. In a Facebook post in December last year, retired Navy chief Alexander Pama called the project "highly objectionable and even worse," and said: "Only an idiot will not understand the adverse security implication to our country of this reported win of MacroAsia and its Chinese company partner to purchase Sangley airport. If this is implemented, it will be a dagger pointed to the heart of the nation!" Greg Poling of the US-based think tank Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative also noted in a tweet the jarring irony of the Philippines kowtowing to CCCC — the bullied, in effect, rewarding its oppressor: "This is bonkers. Manila to award a multibillion-dollar airport project, and at a strategically vital location, to the same Chinese company that illegally built an artificial island at Mischief Reef in PH waters." Read full story: opinion.inquirer.net |
Wednesday, September 2, 2020
NBI presses raps vs 20 tagged in ‘Pastillas’ scam. Inquirer Newsletter. September 3, 2020
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