No images? Click here A RIVER OF RAGE RUNS THROUGH IT Armed security escorts surround a handcuffed Reina Mae Nasino, an activist detained at Manila City Jail, allowing her no time to say final goodbyes in private to her 3-month-old daughter, River, who was interred at Manila North Cemetery on Friday. The baby died of pneumonia eight weeks after the court, despite an appeal to let her stay in Reina Mae’s care, ordered her separation from her mother, sparking outrage among Nasino’s sympathizers. —MARIANNE BERMUDEZ WorldVirus risk ‘very low’ on airliner–studyWASHINGTON—Masks, airplane filters, fast circulation and ventilation systems lower the risk of being infected by the coronavirus on an airliner, according to a study by the US military on long-haul flights. Researchers estimate that to receive an infectious dose, a passenger would have to fly 54 hours on a plane with an infected person, and that the risks on 12-hour flights are negligible. —STORY BY AFP AND REUTERS Read more: philippinedailyinquirerplus.pressreader.com NewsMall sales back; travel curbs easedThe government has allowed shopping malls and other commercial establishments as well as the travel industry to resume certain operations earlier restricted due to the pandemic. The government has also given the public more freedom of movement, allowing teenagers and senior citizens to leave their homes and even go on leisure or nonessential trips abroad. —STORY BY LEILA B. SALAVERRIA AND ROY STEPHEN C. CANIVEL Read more: philippinedailyinquirerplus.pressreader.com LifestyleQuarantine University is back in sessionLawyer Chel Diokno’s Quarantine University was back in session to celebrate World Mental Health Day on Oct. 10. This time, our classmates were Cheats band members and husband-and-wife podcasting team Saab Magalona and Jim Bacarro, Miss Trans Global winner Mela Habijan, YouTuber AC Soriano, and Dr. RJ Naguit, national chairperson of Youth for Mental Health Coalition.—STORY BY PAM PASTOR Read more: philippinedailyinquirerplus.pressreader.com LifestyleModule mishaps: Oddities found in students' self-learning materials
People have been finding ridiculous things in self-learning modules and there’s one so bad—one that uses lewd terms—that we couldn’t even publish it. That specific module, according to DepEd Secretary Leonor Briones, isn’t from DepEd, but from a review center in Zambales. “It’s really a sabotage of our programs,” she said, adding that the module “put us in a bad light.” —STORY BY PAM PASTOR Read more: philippinedailyinquirerplus.pressreader.com 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 storyPH resumes oil search in disputed watersBy Ronnel W. Domingo and Nikka G. Valenzuela “This unilateral action is done in good faith, not to set aside or undermine the MOU,” he said. Cusi announced on Thursday night that President Duterte had approved the recommendation of the Department of Energy (DOE) to lift the suspension of development work in waters off Palawan province, particularly in areas covered by Petroleum Service Contract (SC) Nos. 59, 72 and 75. Legal obligation “We need to explore so we may address the country’s energy security,” he said in a statement. “The lifting of the suspension places the service contractors under legal obligation to put capital into the contract areas and hire Filipino engineers and technical workers to resume exploration,” Cusi said. Asked when such activities would resume, Cusi told reporters in a virtual press briefing on Friday that he was not yet aware of any schedule. SC 59 is operated by state-owned Philippine National Oil Co.-Exploration Corp. SC 72 and SC 75 are held by the Manuel Pangilinan-led PXP Energy Corp. Due to the maritime dispute with China, the DOE under the Aquino administration declared a force majeure—the moratorium of activities—in these areas as early as December 2014. Maritime expert Jay Batongbacal said that the go signal for oil exploration was a “legal development” to assert the country’s rights on the West Philippine Sea as affirmed by the international arbitral tribunal’s 2016 ruling in favor of the Philippines which invalidated China’s expansive claims over the South China Sea. Exclusive rights “It’s an exercise of exclusive sovereign rights so you can consider it an implementation of the arbitration award,” he said in a phone interview with Inquirer. “No. 2, it’s long delayed because the moratorium should have been lifted soon after the arbitration award was handed down,” Batongbacal said. He said holding off on petroleum exploration in the West Philippine Sea was an “accommodation to China.” But with the decision to resume the search for oil and gas “it appears that the accommodation has ended,” said Batongbacal, director of the University of the Philippines Institute of Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea. However, he warned that there was a risk that China would prevent the Philippines from exploring its own seas, given that China took “harsh measures” against Vietnam for the same reason. Batongbacal also said the timing to end the moratorium was “off.” Because it is monsoon season and several storms are expected to hit the Philippines, the exploration could start late November at the earliest. “The next thing to watch out for is whether Philex will go ahead and whether the Philippines will commit resources—Navy or Coast Guard to protect the activity,” he said. Philex Mining is PXP’s parent company. Cusi said the contractors should not worry about their safety and security when they resume work. He said the Philippines had declared a “safety and security zone with a radius of 500 meters around the structures and work area of exploration,” which would be enforced by the Philippine Navy. “I am sure China will respect our actions,” the energy chief said. He cited recent words of assurance from a Chinese government spokesperson who said Beijing believed that members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations “will continue to work with China to ... make this region an oasis of peace and a promising land of development, and provide greater stability and inject more positive energy to regional and global development.” In Beijing, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian told a daily briefing on Friday that China hoped it could work together with the Philippines in jointly developing energy projects in the South China Sea. Agreements Presidential spokesperson Harry Roque said the search for oil and natural gas in the West Philippine Sea could now continue amid friendly ties between the Philippines and China. The oil exploration MOU was one of more than two dozen agreements signed during Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to the country in November 2018. Details of the MOU were not disclosed. Cusi said then that the MOU was “just a cooperation to explore solutions” on “how we can enjoy the resources” in the South China Sea. SC 59 is located southwest of Palawan while SC 75 is northwest of the province. SC 72 is in Recto (Reed) Bank. Forum Energy, an affiliate of PXP, reported about a decade ago that based on a 2006 study, the Sampaguita field had a potential of up to 566 billion cubic meters of natural gas, more than five times the initial estimate. Potential sources According to Energy Undersecretary Leonido Pulido III, the affected licensees are expected to pour in an estimated $25 million in investments with the lifting of the force majeure and a total of $78 million for the total remaining work commitment program period of their service contracts. Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian, chair of the Senate energy committee, welcomed the President’s decision as gas from Malampaya was dwindling. “It will augur well in ensuring the country to be energy-sufficient if there are potential sources within the EEZ [exclusive economic zone], which could secure our energy supply in the coming years,” Gatchalian said in a statement. Malampaya accounts for 20 percent of the power supply of the country and almost 30 percent of Luzon, he said. The service contracts “could be new sources of oil and gas which can secure, if not contribute to stabilizing the country’s energy supply,” Gatchalian said. “This could also open up the area to prospective investors under the Philippine Conventional Energy Contracting Program which is designed primarily to attract investors to explore indigenous energy resources,” he said. Former Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario, a critic of the President’s stance toward China and Beijing’s actions in the West Philippine Sea, praised Mr. Duterte’s decision, calling it “a constructive move.” “For as long as we pursue activities with China that is in accordance with Philippine law, this would be a step in the right direction toward a peaceful settlement of disputes,” Del Rosario said. The Recto Bank is about 200 kilometers west of Palawan, well within the Philippines’ 370-km EEZ, where the country claims exclusive rights to explore and exploit its resources. In August 2014, two Chinese hydrographic research vessels were spotted near the Recto Bank. It was unclear how long the Chinese vessels stayed in the area, but their presence was interpreted by Manila as the first provocative act by Beijing since it rejected the Philippine proposal for a freeze in activities that escalate tensions in the sea. The ships’ presence came more than a year after the Philippines filed a case in the international arbitral tribunal challenging China’s claims over nearly the entire South China Sea. Permit from Beijing In March 2011, two Chinese gunboats sailed too close to a vessel that was surveying at Recto Bank for oil and gas, forcing the Philippine military to send aircraft and vessels to drive them away. The Department of Foreign Affairs maintains that the Philippines has exclusive sovereign rights over Recto Bank as it forms part of the continental shelf of the Philippine archipelago under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. The Chinese foreign ministry, however, insisted on its claims over the area and that explorations there required a permit from Beijing. —WITH REPORTS FROM LEILA B. SALAVERRIA, MARLON RAMOS,, INQUIRER RESEARCH AND REUTERS
Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net EditorialProbe SEA Games fundsNow that Alan Peter Cayetano has been pried off his former post as Speaker, a thorough and transparent scrutiny of the unliquidated billions spent on last year’s 30th Southeast Asian Games (SEAG) should be the first order of business—after the passage of the 2021 budget—in the reconstituted lower House. Cayetano created and chaired the Philippine Southeast Asian Games Organizing Committee (Phisgoc), which was entrusted with P6.8 billion to fund the SEAG, an undertaking that proved so riven with controversy, charges of overpricing, and painful incompetence that President Duterte himself was compelled to apologize to participating Asian countries on the eve of the Games. Over 10 months after the close of the event, the Philippine Olympic Committee is threatening to press legal charges against Phisgoc for its failure to submit its financial report on the Games. Any further delay in the required disclosure will only fan speculation that the books are somehow being cooked, and that the money, or part of it, had ended up for other purposes. A thorough and transparent investigation into the funds, on the other hand, can help shore up the credibility of a House whose public image has recently barreled into new lows with the legislators' noisome brawls over turf, pork and power while the rest of the country reels from unprecedented hunger and an unabated pandemic. Read full story: opinion.inquirer.net |
Friday, October 16, 2020
PH resumes oil search in disputed waters. Inquirer Newsletter. October 17, 2020
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