Archive for April, 2008

Apr 30 2008

PageRank and Other Mumbo Jumbo

Published by lurchie under , PageRank, Uncategorized, weddings


I am not one who is so concious about the things she writes and so and so forth. I rant, I rave, and sometimes I get so inspired I spout about a zillion words per minute! Not really..hehe.. but seriously my mind talks even when I am asleep. Perhaps there is just too many thoughts that come to mind.

Once upon a blog hopping morning, I chanced upon a website that ranted because it’s Google PageRank was ZERO (as in Zip, Zero, Nada!). It got me a bit curious as to why it would mean so much to that person, but then I realized, of course, why wouldn’t that person be concious of his or her page rank when he or she was trying to monetize her blog?

I honestly want to become one of the great bloggers out there who monetize there blogs. I even pray at night that perhaps my other blog (Never Dainty: http://neverdainty.blogspot.com) would grow and have an audience, too! So it would have at least a PageRank of 1 or 2. Instead, this little baby got another one! Yey me! Perhaps I should start monetizing this one? Maybe. But this will still be my basecamp of broken dreams and endless woes. Teehee.. We’ll see.. we’ll see..
——-

On the other side of the Blue Lagoon, I rammed into Zr’s Better Than Ezrah page and her post on her wedded life. Remember her wedding? The one I wrote about around last month? Yeahp! That’s the one!!

I know I havent been writing about my wedded bliss and what nots, but if you are curious as to how wedded people become - in some instances - then do visit her website. I found it rather interesting. )

My comments? Well, I did not have all the things she had, and I did not go through a LOT things she is going through right now, but what do I know really? I had another version of my warped little fairytale. Hehehe.. Funny how different our lives are.. But I’ve heard talk from other newly wedded people about their after-wedding affairs and they - somewhat - parallel Zr’s description. Although admittedly still not the same, I think hers might hit closer to home.

If I get through this day without collapsing, tell you what, I will narrate the happenings of MY wedding day and the life after that. Hehehe.. If I can remember to do so, that is. ;)

Life is Beautiful!!

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Apr 30 2008

Family - Through Thick and Thin

Published by Annie under , Drug Rehab and Treatment

An ideal Family will always stick together no matter what, through thick and thin despite of any trials or typhoon that comes along. If one member needs help, a family opens their arms wider to help. As you can see, in most cases of drug addict kids or teenagers, the parents and the whole family always talk to decide on what is the best treatment for their kids. And most of them decide to bring addicted kids to a drug rehab for proper treatment.

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Apr 30 2008

Snow???????

Published by arlene under

Yes! we did have snow last Friday! I was confused there for awhile. I thought it was spring already. With all the flowers and stuff. Well, this was taken by Arvin on our way to my folks house last Friday. I knew it was a little chilly when we get in the car, but I didn't expect this scene. We didn't have snow here, it was actually quite amazing when I was driving and saw some cars coming from the opposite direction were covered with snow. And a few minutes later, we have this! Well, Arvin had fun taking photos while I was driving.... hope this is it for this season!


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Apr 30 2008

Q and A

Published by Annie under

A cute and fun tagay from a friend. It's pretty simple, just use the first letter of your name to answer the questions. They have to be real answers though, nothing made up and you can't use your own name as an answer. Since my name is Annie all my answers have to start with an "A".

1.Famous Singer: Annie Batungbakal
2.Four Letter Word: Aloe
3.Street: Alabang Village
4.Color: Ash blue
5.Gifts/Presents: Ambrella
6.Vehicles: Accord by Honda
7.Things In A Souvenir Shop:antique vase
8.Boy Name: Alexander
9.Girl Name: Alecia
10.Movie Title: Anaconda
11.Drink: Apple juice
12.Occupation: Attorney
13.Celebrity: Anne Hathaway
14.Magazine: Allure
15.City: Arlington, Texas
16.Pro Sports:
17.Fruit: Apple
18.Something You Throw Away:
19.Something You Shout:Aray!!!
20.Reason for being late for work:

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Apr 30 2008

Home Security And Insurance

Published by arlene under


It is great to find a website that gets straight to the point, just like those of a few years ago, before all the fancy javascript stuff was possible.
Homesecurityinformation.com does just that. It has a wealth of information about the subject of home security and also of related subjects, such as home insurance. In fact, there is a whole page of home insurance articles listed as well as a worthwhile amount of information about fire safety and similar things. Surveillance, should you choose to go that route is another featured subject - remember too, that if you add security features to your home, you might be able to apply for discounts on your home insurance, depending on the company. Car security to is featured, with advice on parking options, and other things that we generally never think about, but should!

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Apr 30 2008

Share Your Blessings

Published by Annie under

Sharing the blessings you received is such a wonderful feeling especially if you see the progressive outcome of what you have shared. Just like this Developing Artists Theater Company, a non-profit organization who raise money online to help kids from 8 to 19 years old in empowering them, assisting them in exploring self-expressions and highlights their skills to achieve for their goals and dreams on becoming a performing artist. Isn’t that great to see those kids achieve their dreams with your help?

Share your blessing to other and donate now. You can also visit firstgiving.com to donate to other fundraiser or charity.

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Apr 30 2008

diet pills, anyone?

Published by Melissa under , Health Matters, Online Finds!

I have never recommended diet pills for those wanting to lose weight. I have always advised them to diet (cut back calories) and exercise. But for some, this doesn't work, especially for those trying to get rid of the last...

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Apr 30 2008

How you gonna see me now

Published by Bambit under , Another world, Blogging, But Seriously, Life

Keith Richards, Steven Tyler, Alice Cooper, Pepe Smith

How you gonna see me now
Please don’t see me ugly babe
‘Cause I know I let you down
In oh so many ways

Albert Hofmann, father of mind-altering drug LSD, dies at 102

GENEVA – Albert Hofmann, the father of the mind-altering drug LSD whose medical discovery grew into a notorious “problem child,” has died. He was 102.

Hofmann died Tuesday at his home in Burg im Leimental, said Doris Stuker, a municipal clerk in the village near Basel where Hofmann moved following his retirement in 1971.

Hofmann’s hallucinogen inspired – and arguably corrupted – millions in the 1960s hippie generation. For decades after LSD was banned in the late 1960s, Hofmann defended his invention.

“I produced the substance as a medicine. … It’s not my fault if people abused it,” he once said.

I’m on my way, it’s you I turn to
How many days have I to love you
I got to say this is inside me
I’ve got to have someone to guide me
Hate it when you leave, hate it when you leave
Hate it when you’re leaving me

Hofmann himself took the drug – purportedly on an occasional basis and out of scientific interest – for several decades.

“LSD can help open your eyes,” he once said. “But there are other ways – meditation, dance, music, fasting.”

Her dog day’s just begun
Now everybody is on the run
What did her daddy do?
It’s Janie’s last I.O.U.
She had to take him down easy and put a bullet in his brain
She said ’cause nobody believes me. The man was such a sleeze.
He ain’t never gonna be the same.

Even so, the self-described “father” of LSD readily agreed that the drug was dangerous if in the wrong hands. This was reflected by the title of his 1979 book: “LSD - my problem child.”

In it he wrote that, “The history of LSD to date amply demonstrates the catastrophic consequences that can ensue when its profound effect is misjudged and the substance is mistaken for a pleasure drug.”

Ako’y may kaibigan
at sya’y nahihirapan
handa na ba kayong lahat
upang sya’y tulungan
Ang himig natin
ang inyong awitin
upang tayo’y magsama-sama
sa langit ng pag-asa

Hofmann’s last public appearance was at a Basel ceremony honoring him on his 100th birthday.

“This is really a high point in my advanced age,” Hofmann said. “You could say it is a consciousness-raising experience without LSD.”

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Apr 30 2008

Faith Thrives in Trust

Published by Momong under , Faith, Holy Spirit

Matthew 13: 54-58 Acts 18: 1-8 / Ps 98: 1-4 He did not work many mighty deeds there because of their lack of faith. (Matthew 13:58) Success seems like some kind of disease For people with crab mentality; The claims of envy and prejudice Can only lead to disunity. Jesus came back to His hometown of Nazareth and began to teach the people [...]

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Apr 30 2008

Back in Davao…

Landed in Davao City a couple of hours ago. I must say, although I love living in Davao, the less-than-a-week stint in the capital felt like it was cut short (although I actually extended my stay a few days). It had been nearly 3 years since I’d been to Manila before this trip, and it felt like I wasn’t able to do enough catching-up.

Still, the six days were productive. I was able to recruit some talented contributors to my current project, PinoyTech.TV, and I was able to touch base with my long-time friends in the industry, like Janette and Richard Eldridge of Infinit-O.

I actually came close to extending my stay… but my wallet was grumbling already. If you’re in Manila and you don’t have a clear itinerary or set schedule, you’ll find your resources getting drained faster than you planned. Since I’d decided to make the trip only a week before, that’s exactly what happened to me. Not that I’m complaining, really. I mean, on the whole, it was all worth it.

Arriving in Davao, the cool breeze was refreshingly welcoming, and the pull of free-wifi-enabled coffee shops beckoned to me almost instantly (yep, iniinggit ko kayo, guys! hehehe!). But I’m already missing some things in Manila: Fully Booked, the bookstore that occupies one entire building; the plethora of shops and restaurants; and the opportunity to cement close friendships with some bloggers I’ve come to know.

Well, there’s always the Internet, and the next trip to the Metro.

Oh yeah, it was great to see a lot of interest in Davao during the iBlog4 Summit. I hope this will translate to more Manila-based bloggers coming to Davao for blogging events this year!

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Apr 30 2008

Crap…

Published by arlene under

I was planning to be outside today. I was busy cleaning up inside and washing clothes and wasn't aware of the weather for today. If I have known that it's gonna rain,(actually gloomy and showery) I would have done the outside first yesterday- raking, weeding, etc. Oh well, I'll do it next time again. At least I am a little relieved I have done most of my inside chores yesterday. I guess, I can relax for awhile until next weekend I'll have...

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Apr 30 2008

I, Too, Sing America

Published by Annie under

I am thinking of the tittle of a poem a friend of mind gave me before but I can't remember what it was so I just search Poems online and saw this famous Poem of Langston Hughes tittled I, Too, Sing America. I, too, sing America. I am the darker brother. They send me to eat in the kitchen When company comes, But I laugh, And eat well, And grow strong. Tomorrow, I'll be at the table When company comes. Nobody'll dare Say to me, "Eat in the kitchen," Then. Besides, They'll see how beautiful I am And be ashamed-- I, too, am America.

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Apr 30 2008

No to Artificial Solutions! Yes to Decent Work and Pay!

Published by The Mindanao Examiner under , Labor Day, PSLINK

MANILA, Philippines - As the nation prepares to commemorate Labor Day, the Arroyo administration has certainly been busy conjuring artificial solutions to appease the growing frustration and resentment of workers nationwide over its anti-poor and anti-labor policies and programs.

GMA has declared that on May 1, she will be implementing a package of benefits to address workers’ concerns such as tax exemptions for minimum wage earners and provision of non-wage benefits for workers. But these plans barely touch on the real issues confronting the working class, both in the private and public sector.

Wages have never been as unacceptable, unjust and irreconcilable as they are now under the present regime which has indefatigably neglected the cries of workers for decent work, decent pay and decent life for all.

Working conditions continue to deteriorate and not enough decent jobs have been created for the people. Worse, the administration has even promoted the export of labor as a national policy, instead of working towards enhancing domestic employment and investing in human resources development.

We in the Public Services Labor Independent Confederation (PSLINK), a national union representing more than 80,000 government workers from national government agencies, local government units, and government-owned and controlled corporations, will not be mislead into accepting quick, artificial solutions which are obviously political stunts meant to cover up GMA’s piling atrocities against all Filipino workers and project an image of a seemingly responsive and concerned president.

We will not be duped into accepting her so-called package of benefits which are merely poor substitutes for genuine decent work and job creation.To adequately address the concerns of government workers and help them cope with the worsening energy and food crises due to rising cost of oil and basic commodities, we workers in the public sector call for the following:

* Increase the salary bracket for tax exemption of government workers (tax exemptions to include at least those receiving Salary Grades 1 to 15)

* Moratorium on withholding the income tax of government employees to increase their take home pay for at least a year

* Instead of the planned 10 percent increase in the salaries of government workers which will hardly impact on their take home pay as it will only be eaten by tax, the government should push for the passage of the proposed Government Classification and Compensation Act—a bill that will not only make salaries of workers in the government comparable to those in the private sector but will also appropriately value work based on performance and a set of identified compensable factors.

It seeks to address the distortions and inequities plaguing the present compensation system and consequently reduce corruption and ease the outmigration of government nurses and teachers that has already led to the closure of several hospitals and health facilities.

* Increase budgetary allocations for basic public services such as health and education
* Condonation of the loan penalties for the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) to ease the financial burden of government employees

* Reform of the Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) Transparency and accountability must be brought back to the state pension fund. The gross mismanagement of GSIS must be stopped by instituting a revamp of its current Board of Trustees and sacking its President, Winston Garcia

* Creation of plantilla items for the casual or contractual workers in the government including Barangay Health Workers and Day care workers who are merely recognized as volunteers in the government

* Allocation of funds for the implementation of the different laws covering different sectoral groups in the public sector such as the Magna Carta of Public Health Workers, Magna Carta for Public School Teachers and Magna Carta for Disabled Persons Unless these calls are met, government workers who form the backbone of the bureaucracy will continue to bear the burden of meager and inequitable pay, failing investments in public services, corruption, deteriorating professionalism, and demoralization. This does not bode well for the millions of Filipinos now driven to poverty and dependence on public services.

It is high time the administration institute genuine measures for the sake of the 1.5 million-strong workforce it employs. Government workers will not any more tolerate artificial solutions by an artificial president!

ANNIE ENRIQUEZ-GERON
General Secretary
Public Services Labor Independent Confederation (PSLINK)
#15 Clarion Lily St., Saint Dominic Subdivision I
Congressional Avenue, Project 6, Quezon City

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Apr 30 2008

Great Companion

Published by texas_sweetie under , Personal, wordless




This is a shot of an old man in the Air Force Village in San Antonio,Texas with his dog. I took this one last weekend when we went for a visit of my father in-law. I thought the master and the dog looked so cute together and I took a snap of them without their knowledge.


The man was so old,probably 80 years old I believe...alone and lonely perhaps? But having a dog around him makes his life worth living for dogs make great companion.

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Apr 30 2008

BAD TRIP 18: SMification

Published by Miki under

It pains me to see grand old cities lose their character simply because Henry Sy put his one-size-fits-all stamp on them. It used to be that cities like Baguio and Iloilo had a charm all their own. Session Road and J. M. Basa St. were lined with charming old buildings and quaint little shops where one could find unique treasures that warmed the heart, mind… and stomach.

Not anymore.

I was in Iloilo the other day on J. M. Basa St. and was appalled by the sight of boarded up shops and seedy clubs in what used to be the liveliest strip of road in the entire city. Now it reeks of urban decay, shunned by people who now flocked to malls built outside the city.

Baguio is in a similar bind. Old haunts disappeared on Session Road, unable to compete with the monstrous SM mall up on the hill.

Now they're beginning to look like any other city on the planet. Aaaargh!!!

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Apr 30 2008

Barter Traders’ Building Demolished In Zamboanga City

ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines - Backed by a Supreme Court decision, the city government Wednesday demolished the Zamboanga Barter Goods Retailers Association, Inc. (ZAMBAGORA) building in downtown Zamboanga City.

City Administrator Elias Enriquez, who supervised the demolition, said some 288 stall owners cooperated with the demolition crew. The second phase of the demolition is set on Friday.

Enriquez said the Supreme Court affirmed with finality the orders issued by the Regional Trial Court favoring the city government’s plan to occupy the property. The demolition marked the end of a 10-year legal battle on the property which started way back during the time of the late Mayor Maria Clara Lobregat, the mother of the current mayor.

“There was no resistance from the occupants, everything went on smoothly,” Enriquez said.
He said the demolition will pave the way for the proposed construction of a multi-level parking building, one of the priority projects under the City Development Strategies.

In 1998, the city government wanted to take over the property for the construction of a fire station. However, due to court litigations initiated by the ZAMBAGORA, the city failed to beat the deadline set by the Bureau of Fire and Protection for the identification of the site.

The funding for the purpose was also reverted by the national government for other purposes due to the delay in the identification of the lot. Erniquez is confident that the proposed project of the city government would push through this time in view of the support and cooperation of the ZAMBAGORA building occupants. (Sheila Covarrubias)

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Apr 30 2008

Repairing Your Credit Rating

Published by arlene under



Problems can occur if you have made some bad financial judgments or errors in banking in the past and so have ended up with slow or bad credit. In that case, it might be a good idea to give financial priority to getting your credit back into good shape, and this can be done by careful use of bad credit loans - the key being, of course, to make sure you look after the repayments properly, and this in turn will assist you in getting your credit rating back into good standing. Even easier than loans is to obtain bad credit credit cards these might require a deposit, but the deposited money then becomes available for 'borrowing' on the credit card. The whole key is to re-establish that you are a good, on-time, consistent re-payer.

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Apr 30 2008

Philippines’ DEA Gets New Building

Published by The Mindanao Examiner under

ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines – Zamboanga City Mayor Celso Lobregat inaugurated on Wednesday the newly renovated building of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) regional office financed by the Joint Inter-Agency Task Force (JIATF)-West and the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA).

“This new building is a testimony of the agency’s dedication and commitment to sustain the momentum in the fight against the drug menace,” Lobregat said in his speech during the unveiling ceremony in Calarian village.

PDEA Director General and Senior Undersecretary Dionisio Santiago and US DEA Country Attaché Timothy Teal graced the PDEA-9 building inauguration. Also present were Greg Mc Coy, representative of the JIATF-West, Naval Forces Western Mindanao chief Admiral Emilio Marayag, City Police Director Col. Jonathan Perez, PDEA-9 Director Adzhar Albani, Health Regional Director Dr. Aristedes Tan and representatives from the different agencies and sectors in the city.

Lobregat said the new building also manifests the strong support of the US government to the fight against illegal drugs.

“Like terrorism, the drug problem has become a global threat and we are very grateful that the United States has extended its support to us”, he said.

The construction of the building, costing about $250,000 was the result of a memorandum of understanding between the US government and the PDEA.

According to Lobregat, the difficulties faced on account of limited space or cramped environ of the old PDEA building are now a thing of the past. “With the inauguration and blessing of this new structure today, a new chapter is to begin in the history of the PDEA in Western Mindanao. This new structure signifies renewed efforts to combat drugs.”

He also praised PDEA-9’s accomplishments, the most recent of which was the discovery of shabu laboratories in Lamisahan, Tetuan and Talon-Talon villages and the consequent arrest of a Taiwanese suspect.

Lobregat vowed to continue supporting to the campaign against illegal drugs and called on all agencies concerned to work together for a drug-free Zamboanga. (Sheila Covarrubias)

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Apr 30 2008

Canned foods

Published by arlene under

I always buy canned goods for those times when I am in a hurry. They are quick and less messy to prepare especially vegetables. Is canned veggies healthier than 'fresh'?---i read that it is sometimes true! Tomatoes, spinach & corn canned right at harvest are more nutritious than 'fresh' vegetables that have been sitting in your refrigerator for a week! The longer produce is exposed to oxygen, the fewer nutrients it has.....so, i guess, i will stack on more canned veggies from now on:)

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Apr 30 2008

Summer Sports Clinic Kicks Off In Zamboanga City

ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines - While most employees across the country are off to observe the May 1 Labor Day celebration, hordes of young Zamboangueños and their parents, are expected to fill the Joaquin Enriquez Sports Complex for the city-sponsored Summer Learn to Play a Sports program.

The program, a top priority of the administration of Mayor Celso Lobregat, is a month long free training on 26 sports events for children aged 7-15 years old.

City Sports Division, reported CSD Director Bernardito Patiño said some 4,000 young children have secured registration forms.

The 26 sport disciplines offered for free to youngsters include aikido/arnis, athletics, badminton, basketball, baseball, body building, boxing, chess, dancesport, fencing, football, gymnastics, judo, karate-do, lawn tennis, muay thai, pencak silat, sepak takraw, softball, swimming, table tennis, taekwondo, volleyball, weightlifting, wrestling, and wushu.

All disciplines will be hosted at the Enriquez Sports Complex. However, Patiño detailed, table tennis will also be conducted simultaneously at the Mercedes Elementary School. Weightlifting will also have classes at Boalan, Talon-Talon and San Roque.

The sports program, now on its 13th year, had produced some of the city’s top athletes who perform exceptionally both at national and international competitions.

The 13th Summer Learn to Play will officially open with a short ceremony at the Enriquez Sports Complex at 1 p.m. with Mayor Celso Lobregat as keynote speaker.

Sangguniang Kabataan President Joefel de las Peñas and Councilor Roel Natividad will also grace the event. (Claudine Uniana)

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Apr 30 2008

One Dollar Loving

Published by Javi under , Show Me The Money

I'm trying out scratchback's Show Some Love widget on this site. Seems like a real fun way to earn a few bucks. I've made my pricing real low though, so if you want to show your love, you only have to shell out ONE DOLLAR.

There's actually a very good story behind the scratchback widget (wrote about it here). This came about the first Google purge-- that time when Google was running after blogs that were selling paid links. It was only recently when they've set their eyes on paid posting companies.

Anyway the scratchback widget is just like a tipping jar. You like some of the posts here in my blog for example and you're feeling really generous, you use that widget to show your appreciation. As I said, I'm very shallow. It only takes ONE DOLLAR to make me happy. And in return, you can highlight your link on the widget with all the anchor links you want.

Be the first to get in there!

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Apr 30 2008

…happy

Published by Aldrin under , Australia, work

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Apr 30 2008

National Guard On Their Way To Southern Philippines

SULU, Philippines (Mindanao Examiner / Apr. 30, 2008) – More US troops are expected to arrive soon in the Philippines to support hundreds already deployed in the southern part of the country aiding Filipino troops in battling terrorism.
At least 30 soldiers, part of the Guam Army National Guard's 1st Battalion under the 294th Infantry Regiment, are heading to support the "Operation Enduring Freedom-Philippines," the Guam-based Mariana's Variety newspaper reported Wednesday.

It said the soldiers will serve as security, at least for six months, for a unit of the Special Operations Command-Pacific that is conducting joint civilian-military operations and training with the Philippine military.

US soldiers deployed in the south are under the Joint Special Task-Philippines which is based in Zamboanga City, but its "area of operations", according to a US military publication, spans 8,000 square miles, covering the entire island of Mindanao and its surrounding islands and seas. With various military facilities now being constructed for their use, members of the unit refer to their bases in Mindanao as "forward operating base-11" and "advanced operating base-921".
Though US and Philippine government officials have consistently claimed that the unit is not involved in actual combat, US troops themselves describe their mission as "unconventional warfare" and "counter-insurgency" operations in the country. US troops join Filipino soldiers on patrol, provide them with intelligence, and assist in various aspects of their operation.

American soldiers are also active in many development and humanitarian activities in the southern Philippines, especially in Sulu province where they built roads and schools and join medical missions with local troops and provincial government mostly in poor areas.

The humanitarian missions is part of the Balikatan, which means "shoulder-to-shoulder," an annual Philippine and US bilateral military humanitarian assistance and training activity.

Sulu Governor Sakur Tan said the humanitarian missions helped many poor families in the province.

Just earlier this year, about 600 US troops worked with civilian authorities and the Armed Forces of the Philippines in various humanitarian projects that included free medical, dental and veterinary care in Sulu province and also in central and Western part of Mindanao.

US and Philippine soldiers, many of them construction engineers, built schools and other community infrastructures in those areas.

In 2006, the United States Navy hospital ship Mercy had treated more than 60,000 mostly poor Filipino patients in separate medical missions in Sulu, Basilan and Tawi-Tawi islands, including Zamboanga City, as part of the Project Bayanihan. (Mindanao Examiner)

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Apr 30 2008

Philippine Rebels Hold 2 Army Soldiers In South

DAVAO CITY, Philippines (Mindanao Examiner / Apr. 30, 2008) – Philippine communist rebels on Wednesday said they are holding two government soldiers captured during a raid on a southern town.

Rigoberto Sanchez, a rebel spokesman, said the two soldiers Napoleon Gerasmio and Huberto Corbita are both sergeants in the Philippine Army. They were captured at a rebel checkpoint on April 24 in the mountain village of Upper Ulip in Compostela Valley’s Monkayo town.

He said the captives are being investigated by a rebel court of any human rights abuses and crimes against civilians.

“The two prisoners of war are undergoing investigation to find out any culpability for serious violations of Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law and other war crimes that they may have committed in the conduct of the Armed Forces of the Philippines’ past and present counter-revolutionary war and anti-people campaigns of repression,” Sanches said.

Maj. Raymundo Aguada, spokesman for the Army's 10th Infantry Division, said government soldiers have mounted a massive operation since last week to free the duo.

The rebels warned the military that any attempt to rescue the two soldiers will put their lives at risk. “Attempts by the AFP to rescue the prisoners will only heighten the worry for the POWs' families as it will put their security in jeopardy,” Sanches warned.

Last year, the New People’s Army rebels also seized an army soldier Sgt. Raul Reyes in Compostela Valley and freed him three weeks later on humanitarian grounds after his family appealed to rebels to spare his life.

Reyes was seized with two other militiamen Glorieto Mahumas and Rudy Villaflor, also a village chieftain, in October 7 after NPA forces raided a government post in the village of Canidkid in Montevista town. Mahumas and Villaflor later escaped from their captors.

The NPA said it seized the soldier after villagers complained that military units deployed in the town had been notorious in committing human rights abuses and violations. The rebels previously said the three would be tried for crimes committed against civilians. They had in the past kidnapped military and police officers, but also freed them to the International Committee of the Red Cross after negotiations.

The rebels, armed wing of the outlawed Communist Party of the Philippines and the National Democratic Front, are fighting the Filipino government for the establishment of a Maoist state in the country. (Mindanao Examiner)

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Apr 30 2008

Cool Gadgets and Toys - I bookmarked this site, it is so great

Published by arlene under

At Last! I can stop some of the whining that my Hubby is famous for. He has been ranting on lately about how the people who make cellphones are what he describes as 'morons' because they make them so small that the buttons are hard to press.
Well, I can't resolve the problem with cellphones, but I can do something about his other favorite current whining, the one where our son, Arvin, pushes the remote down between the sofa cushions as he fidgets while watching TV. At Vat19 they have lots of cool stuff for sale, including a jumbo remote control so what a great idea that is, yet so easy to think of. Lots off people are irritated by things in life, but up until now, no-one does anything about it, so, top marks to vat19.com - speaking of which, they have cool toys as well, for small boys as well as big babies like my hubby. How about this radio controlled model forklift truck for some good fun. The great thing is that it doesn't look weird like small racing cars, as the speed looks like it is to scale.

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Apr 30 2008

Soldiers Harass, Threaten Union Leader, Workers: AHRC

Dear friends,

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has learned that soldiers continuously threatened and harassed a union president and her fellow workers. The workers, presently holding a picket line in front of their factory, were questioned in separate occasions about personal details of their president.

The soldiers were falsely accusing their leader as leftist; thus, anyone who associates with her would also be pursued. Two of the workers had been briefly taken into soldiers' custody where they were questioned in absence of their legal counsel about their union's activity. The soldiers have had their detachment set up close to their picket line.

CASE DETAILS: (According to information received from the Center for Trade Union and Human Rights (CTUHR)).

On 10 March 2008, some elements of 7th Infantry Division (ID), Philippine Army, had established a detachment at the Barangay (village) Hall in Cruz, Guiguinto, Bulacan. Though the municipal mayor has admitted giving consent to the soldiers' deployment supposedly for maintaining peace and order, one of the councilors in the area claimed this was not coordinated with them. Also, the soldier's presence is questionable as maintenance of peace and order should have been a police duty, not by soldiers.

Even before the soldiers established their detachment, there have been similar military deployments in different parts of the province of Bulacan where the soldiers have likewise set up detachments. Some observers testified that the deployments could be part of Oplan Bantay Laya, the government's counter-insurgency program. Since it was implemented, the province of Bulacan had its communities become one of many provinces nearly entirely militarized.

The 7th ID's detachment in Cruz, Guiguinto is about few meters away from where the picket line of the union Nagkakaisang Samahan ng Footjoy (United Association of Footjoy) is located. On the same day the soldiers setup their detachment, at around 2pm to 3pm, an unidentified soldier wearing camouflage pants and T-shirt was seen roaming close to the picket line.

The following day, March 11, at 9am another unidentified soldier accompanied by a certain Carlito, a villager whose house is close to the picket line, also visited at the picket line purportedly to conduct a census. Upon reaching the picket line, Carlito had introduced the military man to Satur Maraganas, one of the workers of Footjoy.

The military man then asked another worker Edgardo Hernandez, some details about their union president, Mercy Santomin. The soldier asked her last name, her address, when she usually visits their picket line and what her activities are when she's at the picket line. They were also asked if there are other groups or organization which provides support to their union.

Edgardo has confirmed that Mercy is their union president. He, however, told the soldier that he does not know her place of residence; that Mercy only visits when she has updates about their case to tell them and that there are no other organizations providing them support. But despite Edgardo's explanations, the military did not believe him.

The soldier insisted that there should be other organizations that provide support to their union and their strike. Edgardo told the soldier that they were not actually on strike but rather were forced to form a union and set up a picket line because their company, Footjoy Industrial Corporation, where they were formerly employed, had been slowly taking out the machines from their factory without paying their separation pays and other benefits. The factory is owned by Antonio Tan.

Mercy is indeed the union president; however many of her fellow workers and union leaders had to either conceal or deny this information as they fear for her own safety. Her colleagues had also refused giving personal details about her. The denial by some of the workers' that they are holding a strike was also purposely done to avoid being questioned further by the soldiers.

On March 12, at around 10am another four soldiers had come to the picket line. At the time, only two of the workers were present at the picket line; they were Aldrin Lipa and Erlando Ricohermoso. The soldiers then asked Aldrin to produce his identification card (ID) with picture.

As Aldrin was busy looking for his ID card in his wallet, one of the soldiers suddenly grabbed his ID card from Anakpawis. Anakpawis is a political party actively involve in social, economic and political issues in the country.

When the soldiers saw Aldrin's Anakpawis ID, they asked him who had given it to him. They, once again, also questioned Aldrin and Erlando about the details of their president, Mercy and why they are on strike.

Aldrin then patiently explained to the soldiers the reason why they are on strike. Meanwhile, Erlando also intervened and asked the soldiers a hypothetical question whether they would allow him to pay them only Php50 (USD 1) per day had he been their employer. The soldiers however did not pay attention to Erlando's question and instead left but without returning back Aldrin's ID card.

At about 12nn, the soldiers came back and asked for another worker, Enrico Lastimado. When asked about their identity, the soldiers refused to give their names.

On March 13, another three soldiers came to the picket line again at around 9am purportedly to conduct a census. There they questioned another worker, Rosalinda Villavicencio. Once again, the soldiers asked her about their union president and the whereabouts of another union leader, Rolando Nicol (a.k.a. "Teng-Teng").

To avoid being questioned further, Rosalinda played dumb denying their union has a president. The soldiers likewise asked her if Mercy stays at the picket line. Rosalinda however told them that Mercy is living in Barangay Tuktukan and that if they wanted to confirm if she's telling the truth, she could accompany them to her house.

Another worker, Jovy Isid, who was also in the picket line at that time, was also questioned by the soldier. Jovy said the soldiers asked her name, age, civil status, job and her group affiliations. Jovy told the soldier they do not have any affiliations but they instead forced them into admitting that they have. One of the soldiers asked her if she knew someone whose house is located close to the picket line. Jovy told them that her sister-in-law's house is close by and that if they have questions about her, they could ask her instead as she is busy with her job at the time. The soldiers then asked Jovy about Mercy. When Jovy asked why they were looking for Mercy, the soldiers told her Mercy is a leftist.

On the same day at around 11am, another worker, Elena Hernandez, also said that a soldier she had described as tall, dark, and tough looking had also interviewed her and her husband supposedly for census purposes. Elena and her husband were both at the picket line at that time. The soldier had asked their names, ages, birthplace and their organization and the reasons for their strike.

Elena, however, like Edgardo told the soldiers they are not actually on strike. The picket line that they have set-up was purposely to prevent their employer from taking the industrial machines out from the factory. Elena also told the soldier that she and her husband had no other choice but to stay in the picket line because they could no longer afford to pay rent should they decide to occupy an apartment.

The soldier then asked Elena whether there are other groups that instigated them into going on strike. She told him there was none and it is their own decision to form their union for lack of other choice when their employer started taking out some of the machines and transferred them to another place.

In the Philippines, it is the practice of some owners of factories to close down unannounced and without properly informing their employees. The employees, too, are not being paid their separation pays, salaries and other benefits. Thus, what the workers could only do is to prevent industrial machines inside the factory from being taken outside by setting up picket line in front or close to the factory. They closely monitor the activities of the factory to prevent the machines from being taken out or transferred. This serves at least as the workers' de facto collateral until their employers pays them what is due them.

The soldier then asked Elena if she knows Mercy, whether she is living in Sta. Rita, Guiguinto, and that if she still comes to the picket line. Elena told him that Mercy only comes at the picket line when she has any updates to tell them about their case. The soldier then asked her if she knew Rolando Nicol (a.k.a. "Teng-Teng").

The soldier then told the workers to cooperate with them in maintaining the peace and order. The soldier also added that it is common that when the communists know that a certain business is doing well, the communists would do anything to ensure its bankruptcy as that is what makes them happy.

Thus, it is for these reasons they are not convinced that the Footjoy workers have no supporters. Additionally, the soldier also asked if their union is a member of Kilusan ng Manggagawa sa Bulacan (KMB or Bulacan Workers' Movement) or Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU or May One Movement).

Then, at around 12nn to 1pm, a soldier now identified as Yonel dela Cuesta, had returned to the picket line telling Rosalinda that they wanted to speak to Mercy because they are going to give her a house and lot. However, before they could do so they wanted to question her and take her to Fort Magsaysay. Yonel also warned Jovy that anyone who is seen with Mercy would also be pursued. The soldiers have since visited the picket line almost everyday looking for Mercy.

On March 23, Edgardo had a conversation with one of the soldiers who had introduced himself as commander of the 7th ID. He, however, could not recall his name. It is in Shoetown, a branch of Footjoy, where this conversation took place, which is located in the same village.

According to this soldier, they have a list of their union members which was given by the factory's keeper, Domingo Obal. Leading on the list was the union's president, Mercy. The existence of the supposed list though is yet to be confirmed.

This soldier also claimed that whether the workers admit or not, they have been surely infiltrated by the communists. He also mentioned that the workers knew where Mercy is but they hid her from them. Edgardo told him it's up to them whether they want to believe the workers. Edgardo told him that it just so happened that Mercy is the one who always speaks during their meetings because she could grasp easily what their lawyer wanted to say. The soldier also mentioned that they are wondering why Mercy was also always present in rallies.

Edgardo's experience was then followed on March 25 when two soldiers entered the Footjoy factory and asked him to accompany them inside around 4:45pm. While Edgardo was accompanying them, the soldiers asked him whether he has anything to say about Domingo.

Edgardo however answered that Domingo was the keeper of their employer's fish pond. The soldiers then corrected their own question and asked him again about Domingo's involvement in their case. Edgardo answered that his co-workers were mad at Domingo because he had colluded with the factory owner in taking the machines out from the factory.

In another incident, on March 24 at around 3pm four soldiers visited the house of other Footjoy workers, Zenaida Magabo and her husband, Ronaldo, in Barangay Tabe, Guiguinto, Only Ronaldo was at their house at that time. According to the accounts of Ronaldo relayed by Zenaida, the soldiers asked her husband if he knows Mercy and the other officers of their union.

They also confronted Ronaldo for being a speaker in some rallies. But Ronaldo reasoned out patiently answering their questions but never believed him. Instead, they quoted a line from the bible stating that Judas was killed because he was a liar. They then told him that he and his wife should report to the detachment the following day, March 25, and if they fail to do so it would mean that they are hiding something.

However at around 11:30pm on the day, while Zenaida and Ronaldo, were asleep the soldiers arrived and pounded their gate. They also forced them to report to their detachment. When they arrived at the detachment, a certain Major Barnas/Vargas introduced himself telling the couple that he is the second high-ranking official in Bulacan. He also claimed that the barangays in Bulacan and Pampanga are under his command. He also told them that they had already given lecture to the "mother leaders" of their barangay--referring to the coordinators in the village--telling them that union organizing is Mercy's way of money making.

This military major also said that Mercy is Satur Ocampo's disciple and that communists wants to undermine the country's economy that is why they are urging the workers to go on strike. He also claimed that it is their way of recruiting members of New People's Army (NPA), a rebel group.

The soldier also added that with regard to the Php10 million (USD 2.3 million) monetary awards for the workers, the Php 2 million (USD 47,000) have been already taken by Mercy that is why their case is not making any progress and that there is no assurance if the workers would be able to get their share. He also added that even if the workers get their separation pay, some of them would still die. The couple was interrogated for about an hour and a half.

On March 25, at 1pm, Ronaldo and his wife Zenaida were again told by the military to report to the detachment and ordered Ronaldo to fill-up a form with a heading address of Panasahan, Malolos. He was then offered to become a member of Barangay Intelligence Brigade (BIB), but they were able to refuse by making excuses reasoning that they are very busy with their tiangge business (store of surplus products being sold with lower prices).

The couple also said the soldiers also visited their fellow workers living in Barangay Tabe. Like them they were also questioned about Mercy. On March 26, at around 1pm to 2pm, a man who introduced himself as a buyer from Shoetown had come asking workers Chito Ibardolaza and his fellow worker Satur to accompany him going to the Footjoy's building. However, upon reaching the place, the man, whose movement was seen suspicious, did not get out from his car. He instead gave Chito and Satur food to eat telling them he would come back some other time.

After a while, as the two were together with a neighbor Boyet having a rest under the tamarind tree near the picket line, when a man, carrying a gun, approached them introducing himself as an NPA member. He then asked who are the strikers and their president, and how long they have been holding their picket line. They told the said man that they have been on strike for seven years.

The man then commented that Antonio Tan, the owner of the company, has already left outside the country. He then asked if there are any "pulahan" (leftist) in their group. He also asked them about Mercy's whereabouts and told them that she was evil. After that, he left and went straight to the soldiers' outpost nearby.

Up until now, the threats and harassment perpetrated by the soldiers against the workers is still continuing. The soldiers also continue to pursue Mercy. During the incidents, Mercy was not at the picket line, but her fellow workers had immediately informed her once they are being threatened and harassed. For the time being, Mercy has since gone into hiding and could no longer be located. She was last known to have worked as a laundrywoman.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
The Footjoy Industrial Corporation, owned by Antonio Tan, is a company that produces shoes and slippers. It began its operation in 1991 in Cruz, Guiguinto, Bulacan. It has almost 15,000 employees including those employees in other branches of Footjoy such as Front Runner/BRC, Shoetown, KTP, Discovery Luggage, Bon Voyage, Cathay Luggage and Pulilan Footwear.

On 2 February 2001, the factory owner claimed they needed to temporarily shutdown their company due to financial losses. The workers, however, noticed that the management had been gradually taking their machines out from the factory which should have not been allowed.

Because of this unannounced closure, the workers had no choice but to hold a strike within the same month. They set up their picket line outside the factory which eventually became the residence of many of the workers after losing their jobs. They could no longer afford to pay for rent should they decide not to stay at the picket line.

On March 19, 2001, almost 505 workers have filed charges of Illegal Closure, Illegal Dismissal and Non-Implementation of the Wage Order No. 8 for underpayment before the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) in Region 3, against the owner of the factory. The NLRC is under the Department of labor and Employment (Dole). On October 2001, the NLRC ruled in favor of the workers granting them a monetary compensation of about Php51 million (contrary to the soldiers' claim of only Php10 million).

The owner, Antonio Tan, appealed the NLRC's decision on 14 December 2001 but was eventually dismissed due to his failure to complete the appeal bond. On July 2002, Antonio then filed another appeal before to the Court of Appeals (CA). On 29 November 2002, the CA ruled in favor of Antonio's appeal and ordered the case to be sent back to NLRC. He was also allowed a Php10 million appeal bond.

On 15 September 2003, the workers filed a Petition for Review before the Supreme Court (SC) with regards to the CA's decision. However, on 27 July 2007, the SC affirms the CA's earlier decision in favor of Antonio. At the present, the workers are still waiting for the SC's Entry of Judgment in order to set a hearing at the NLRC.

SUGGESTED ACTION:Please write letter to the concerned authorities requesting for their appropriate intervention into this case. A credible investigation must be conducted regarding these allegations against the soldiers. The soldiers should also be investigated regarding the actions they are taking against the union leaders and workers and that must be held responsible if found to have committed this violation.

The AHRC has also written to the Special Representatives of the UN Secretary General for human rights defenders; on human rights and transnational corporations and other business enterprises and the Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression. We have also endorsed the union's complaint to the Secretary General of the International Labor Organization (ILO).

To support this appeal, please write:

Dear __________,

PHILIPPINES: Soldiers continuously harass and threaten a union leader and her fellow workers
Name of victims: 1. Mercy Santomin, union president of the Nagkakaisang Samahan ng Footjoy (United Association of Footjoy) and her fellow workers; 2. Rolando Nicol (a.k.a. "Teng-Teng"), union officer 3. Satur Maraganas 4. Edgardo Hernandez5. Aldrin Lipa 6. Erlando Ricohermoso7. Enrico Lastimado 8. Rosalinda Villavicencio 9. Zenaida Magabo and her husband; 10. Ronaldo11. Chito Ibardolaza(All of them are union members and former workers of the factory Footjoy Industrial Corporation) Date of incident: Since 10 March 2008 to presentPlace of incident: Barangay (village) Cruz, Guiginto, BulacanName of alleged perpetrators: Yonel dela Cuesta, Major Barnas/Vargas and several soldiers attached to the 7th Infantry Division (ID), Philippine Army.

I am writing to raise my grave concern regarding the soldier's actions by continuously threatening and harassing a union president, Mercy Santomin, union officer Rolando Nicol and at least nine of their companions mentioned above. Mercy, Rolando and their fellow workers, all are members of Nagkakaisang Samahan ng Footjoy (United Association of Footjoy), had been holding a picket line in front of their factory since February 2001.

I am aware that after their factory shuts down unannounced, the workers were left without choice but to ensure that the factory's industrial machines kept inside would not be taken out until they are paid their separation pays and other benefits. The workers have lost their jobs and their factory closed down without paying their financial obligations due them. Some of them, too, were left without choice but to stay at their picket line despite enormous inconvenience as they themselves are no longer able to pay for a house rent after losing their job.

However, as the workers' compensation claims from their former employer remains pending, I have learned that the soldiers, whose names and unit is mentioned above, have continuously been employing threats and harassment against the union's leaders and members. They also falsely accused Mercy of either being leftist and insinuated they had been influenced by communists to justify their actions; for instance, of questioning them in absence of their legal counsel.

This incident began on 10 March 2008 when the soldiers had come to the village close to where the union's picket line is located and set up their detachment there. The soldiers, without any substantial reasons or explanation, have since been routinely going to the union's picket line and questioning the workers staying there. They have repeatedly questioned them regarding the whereabouts and personal details of Mercy and their union's activities since then. One of the workers was also asked details about Rolando.

Although the soldiers do not have any business with the pending labor dispute between the workers and their former employer, the soldiers nevertheless interfere claiming the workers' decision to go on strike since February 2001 could have been influenced by the communists. In doing so, the soldiers are making justifications to their obviously illegal actions. The civic service and census they are conducting with the workers is in fact a smokescreen in this case.

Also, there have been instances wherein the workers are held and questioned in absence of their legal counsel. This is what had happened to Zenaida Magabo and her husband Ronaldo on March 24. The couple, who are also workers and union members, were briefly held at the soldiers' detachment after having been forcibly taken from their house while they were asleep.

They were questioned regarding Mercy's details and other leaders. The soldiers likewise attempted to employ the couple's service into the Barangay Intelligence Brigade (BIB) organized by soldiers but they refused.

Apart from that, I am deeply concerned with the soldiers' action which is effectively undermining these workers rights to freely associate and to exercise their right to create union in pursuing their labour rights. The soldier's presence in the area, did not only counter the police' duty of maintaining peace and order, but have also threatened the very heart of the union's activity itself.

or soldiers to interfere with union activity on the pretext of civic service and fighting insurgency is completely unacceptable. I could not find any substantial reason that could justify the soldier's continuing actions against the workers.

It is extremely shocking that these soldiers continuously threaten and harass these workers on the basis of unsubstantiated allegations. Their interference with the exercise of the workers' right to freely associate must be stop immediately. The soldier's actions have in fact contradicted the very purpose of their deployment there. The soldiers' intervention into the workers' union activities does neither fall within the civic service nor maintenance of peace and order they supposedly ought to do.

I am deeply concerned by the misrepresentation, misleading and illegal actions taken by the soldiers as they perform their duties there. I therefore, urge you to ensure that the soldiers involved must be investigated to answer the allegations against them. The soldiers must give sufficient explanation as to why they should not be held accountable for continuously threatening and harassing these workers. Their failure to do so should hold them accountable.

Furthermore, I urge you to ensure that the workers affected are also afforded with adequate and immediate assistance. I urge you to consider providing some arrangement to ensure their security and protection.

It is disappointing that some of these workers had to go into hiding for unsubstantiated illegal acts. These workers have long suffered from lost of livelihood and homes due to the failure of their employer to pay separation pay and other benefits. On top of this, they suffer threats as they continue to make these rightful claims.

Yours sincerely,


---------------------

PLEASE SEND YOUR LETTER TO:

1. Mrs. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, President, Republic of the Philippines, Malacanang Palace, JP Laurel Street, San Miguel, Manila 1005, PHILIPPINES
Fax: +63 2 736 1010 Tel: +63 2 735 6201 / 564 1451 to 80 E-mail: corres@op.gov.ph

2. Commissioner Lourdes Quisumbing, Commission on Human Rights, SAAC Bldg., Commonwealth Avenue, U.P. Complex, Diliman, Quezon City, PHILIPPINES
Fax: +63 2 929 0102 Tel: +63 2 928 5655 / 926 6188
E-mail: drpvq@yahoo.com

3. Deputy Director General Avelino Razon, Chief, Philippine National Police (PNP)
Camp General Rafael Crame, Quezon City, PHILIPPINES
Fax: +63 2724 8763 Tel: +63 2 726 4361/4366/8763 E-mail: bluetree73@gmail.com

4. Mr. Emilio Gonzalez, Deputy Ombudsman, Office of the Deputy Ombudsman for the Military and Other Law Enforcement Offices 3rd Floor, Ombudsman Bldg., Agham Road, Diliman, 1104 Quezon City, PHILIPPINES
Tel: +63 2 926 9032Fax: +63 2 926 8747

5. Mr. Ronaldo V. Puno, Secretary, Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG)
A. Francisco Gold Condominium IIEDSA cor. Mapagmahal St., Diliman, Quezon City, PHILIPPINES
Fax: +63 2 925 0332 Tel: +63 2 925 0330 / 31 E-mail: rvpuno@dilg.gov.ph

6. Mr. Raul Gonzalez, Secretary, Department of Justice (DoJ), DOJ Bldg., Padre Faura
1004 Manila, PHILIPPINES
Fax: +63 2 521 1614 E-mail: agnesdeva@yahoo.com

7. Gen. Hermogenes Esperon, Chief of Staff, Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) AFP-GHQ Offices, Camp Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo, Quezon City, PHILIPPINES
Fax: +63 2 911 6436Tel: +63 2 911 6001 to 50

8. Mr. Marianito Roque, Acting Secretary, Department of Labor and Employment (Dole)
7/F DOLE Building, Intramuros, Manila, NCR 1002 PHILIPPINES
Tel No: +63 2 527 2131 E-mail: sec_art_brion@yahoo.com.ph


Thank you.

Urgent Appeals ProgrammeAsian Human Rights Commission (ua@ahrchk.org)

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Apr 30 2008

Enjoying my weekend

Published by arlene under

...well, not totally! Has been cleaning up and doing the laundry since yesterday. I just quit my job and now I am doing my own business with my family here. And yes, it was scary to do but a lot of people had inspire me to do this. Well, it's too late to back out now. I just started a contract. It's pretty good so far. I work 2 days a week and make the same money as I was working for 5 days. So for now, I have plenty of time until I get greedy and take a lot of contract, LOL..

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Apr 30 2008

How’s married life?

"How's married life?" How do you answer that question? Do you tell them that it is great? I mean, of coourse it is great but what do they expect that I would answer? Well, to those people who are...

This is only a teaser. Visit my blog for full links, other content, and more! betterthanezraH.blogspot.com

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Apr 30 2008

Costa de Valencia along the Mediterranean

Published by ivanhenares under , Spain

Valencia is one of the major cities found along the Mediterranean coast of Spain. In fact, it is said to be a prototype of big Mediterranean cities which are fertile, productive, luminous and commercially astute. It would be a pity if we did not check out its beaches. So we visited Playa de Levante.

Levante Beach is just a few minutes from the city center. In fact, there is a Metro station to it. It's right beside the port yet it remains clean and pollution free. Paseo de Neptuno (Passeig de Neptu in Valencian) is a walkway along the beach known for its row of restaurants. It's a relaxing stroll especially on warm afternoons.

As much as we would have wanted to swim, at 20 degrees Celsius, the temperature was just too low for tropical denizens like us. So we were content hanging out enjoying the Mediterranean breeze. Before leaving, we had more horchata at an heladeria (ice cream store). This time, it was horchata con helado (with ice cream). I spent an additional 1€ for the scoop of ice cream floating in the horchata! But it was perfect!

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Apr 30 2008

Let there be library

Published by Michael U. Obenieta under , books, writers

Where on earth do angels delight to hang out? Not inside cathedrals, no! As shown in my most cherished film, Wings of Desire, nowhere else are angels nearer to heaven than under the roof of a library. How they tarry and eavesdrop where silence hums in chorus with the constellation of words between the covers, hovering around readers.

With the recent celebration of the National Library Week (April 13-19, 2008), here's a curtsy to retired Maine librarian Glenna Nowell as she piques public curiosity on books.

Since 1988, Nowell has been writing to celebrities (presidents, actors, athletes and a couple of United Nations secretaries general) to ask and take note of their favorite page-turners. “I was looking for a hook that would get people to read a book,” explains Nowell, who wishes to steer literate folks toward stuffs beyond the bestsellers.

Check out Nowell’s Celebrity Reading List over the years and take your cue on “Who Reads What?

~~~ * ~~~
"Some books are to be tasted, others swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested.”

True to the words of Sir Francis Bacon, 27 culinary bibliophiles in Topeka, Kansas recently whipped up their imagination as sweetly as literally possible. The cake of their creativity took the spotlight at the reception and exhibit of the annual Edible Books Festival last April 4th at the Topeka and Shawnee County Public Library. Up for grabs were prizes for Best in Show, Most Book-Like, and Most Likely To Be Devoured that were chosen by votes from the exhibit’s audience.

While my kids tarried longer in front of the “Cat in the Hat” and “Snowballs” cakes, I slurped over the gothic confection patterned after Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Tell-Tale Heart.”

For more pictures of the entries and the winning edible books, check out the photo album in the library’s website.

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Apr 30 2008

hippopotamus in the house

Published by sinking into the abyss under

Reader's Discretion is Advise! :)

bakit bah kalimitan sa mga filipino co-worker ang laging napapansin sa kapwa kaopisina ay yung mga kamalian? bakit? sometimes, what their impression on you matters the most. sometimes, they don't see that yung napapansin nila sa iba ay ganun sila. Call me hypocrite and I admit, I am un/consciously.

as for me, as much as possible, i don't want to argue anymore because sometimes what i might utter/say doesn't go with the context of what was asked from you. you know, you're hurt already. so as much as possible, take it as a reminder/warning that there are 'hippopotamus' around you and have to be discreet and be professional as possible. "I appreciate people who are civil, whether they mean it or not. I think: Be civil. Do not cherish your opinion over my feelings. There's a vanity to candor that isn't really worth it. Be kind." Richard Greenberg, NY Times Magazine, 03-26-2006    

i'm just so pissed off but still trying to compose myself. sometimes, they can be so irritating and yet i need to understand because "they" might be irritated of my presence too. lol the feeling is mutual then!

(sa aking assessment sa entry na ito, hindi na ako masyadong rumereact sa mga bagay2x..)

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Apr 30 2008

Who in the world are we?

We're all alone, avers a song. But now that connectivity is just at the tip of our fingertips in this Age of the Internet, isolation takes a common and ironic turn.

Along that line goes the gist of one of my recent columns "So To Speak" in the op-ed page of Sun.Star Cebu (April 24, 2008). Hereunder is the reprint:



Sharing our story

BLOOD boiled up to their eyes. Upset by the ugly comments about them in their classmate's blog, eight high school students in Florida are now facing charges after they reportedly battered the poor young lady and left her almost unrecognizable.

Such blind rage, indeed, after they felt belittled in her MySpace page. What an oversight for her as well to have raised an eyebrow, looking for trouble by seeing other people in a bad light. In the netherworld of “nada” where one is degraded or rendered insignificant, invisible.

Who wants to be written off into the ignominy of anonymity? Not those who admitted to have Googled themselves at some point in their lives. They comprise almost half of the respondents (47 percent) in a recent survey by the Pew Internet and American Life Project that aims "to produce reports that explore the impact of the Internet on families, communities, work and home, daily life, education, health care, and civic and political life."

One's sense of self, in this age of Net surfing, can either sink or stay above water. "I Google myself to see what kinds of waves my life is making in the world," affirms travel writer Frank Bures in the latest edition of Poets and Writers Magazine. "Isn't that why writers, artists, and other egomaniacs obsess over the Amazon ranking of their book, the comments on their blogs, the hits on their websites?"

Almost desperate, what seems an emergency to make our presences felt—upending our universal isolation---in the grand scheme of technology. In this digital world, the democracy of bloggers and YouTube uploaders means never having to say sorry. Particularly in a pell-mell attempts at autobiography, a puny and slapdash binge at shaping some moments—no matter how trivial, or utterly devoid of larger-than-life hallmarks of heroism—against the flux called history.

Never mind if one can't cast one's words in gold with the touch of a Resil Mojares, who laments the lack of memoirs and autobiographies. "Since people do not leave behind written accounts of their lives, we miss out on a lot of the personal, human details of how larger histories are made," explains Mojares at the book launching of "Shapes of Memory," the biography of Cebuano labor leader and trade unionist Democrito T. Mendoza.

Sweat the small stuff, baby. "Little things can lead you to big events…," attests Mendoza, explaining the necessity "to write the details of his life…to encourage young people to face challenges and be ready to risk everything to achieve a better life." For a broad base of contacts, Mendoza might try to open a Multiply account.

Uploading himself at YouTube for a wider audience of his inspiring tale, however, might be a strain for him. He won't stand a chance, no matter how noble he is, compared to the almost extra-terrestrial dimensions of human condition shown in the unlimited scope of its videos.

It's where one can spot, for instance, a perfume canister stuck into someone's rectum. And how the victim ends up literally the butt of jokes, sprawled in the surgery room as the cameras zoom into the twilight zone of his anatomy. Behold the sharp edges of laughter cutting him to pieces, piercing us who witness into complicity. So much for a shared story.

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Apr 30 2008

Troops Shell Militant Lairs In Southern Philippines






Government troops on board a convoy of trucks and armored carriers pass through a crowded village in Indanan town in the southern Philippine province of Sulu, where fighting Wednesday, April 30, 2008 breaks out in the village of Cagay between security and Abu Sayyaf forces, backed by renegade members of the Moro National Liberation Front. At least one marine was wounded in the fighting that also left a still undetermined number of gunmen dead and injured. (Mindanao Examiner Photo)



SULU, Philippines (Mindanao Examiner / Apr. 30, 2008) – Government forces clashed with militants in the southern Philippine province of Sulu, leaving one soldier wounded and a still undetermined number of gunmen dead and wounded, officials said.

Military choppers fired several rounds of rockets at strongholds of the Abu Sayyaf in the town of Indanan, aimed at weakening the militant group, but renegade members of the Moro National Liberation Front aided the gunmen.

The human rights organization called Suara Bangsamoro said troops also fired canons around a major MNLF base in the village of Cagay, an area controlled by Khaid Ajibun, a senior leader of the former rebel group which signed a peace deal with Manila in 1996.

It said dozens of civilians have fled the village because of the bombings. “At least 28 howitzer canons were fired to that area and after the bombardments ground troops mounted an attack, sparking a firefight,” Amirah Lidasan, the group’s leader told the Mindanao Examiner.

She said seven soldiers were either killed or wounded in the fighting, but the military said only one marine was injured in the clash.

The military said the fighting only involved the Abu Sayyaf and that the operation was aimed to arrest the leaders of the group tied with al-Qaeda and blamed for past bombings and kidnappings for money in the south.

“Troops clashed with the Abu Sayyaf group. The operation began at dawn Wednesday and targeted the lairs of the Abu Sayyaf and Jemaah Islamiya. We have reports the area is being used to manufacture IED (improvised explosive device),” Maj. Eugene Batara, a spokesman for the Western Min