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UPDATE - Jun Lozada to interact with Pinoy community in Tokyo


UPDATE - The Crusade for the Protection of Philippine Interests in Japan is inviting the members of the Filipino community, the Japanese and foreign media to a live telephone and video conference with Jun Lozada for a candid and on the spot question and answer discussion.
This event will be held on July 27, 2008 from 5:30-8:00 p.m. at the Shinbashi Kumin Kaikan (Tel. no. 03-3444-0461) near Ebisu Station, located at 1-27-10 Ebisu, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo. It is a 10- minute walk from Ebisu Station of JR and Hibiya Lines, or a 2-minute walk from the Ebisubashi Stop of the Tokyo Metro bus. For particulars, please contact 03-3491-2408 / Crusade for the Protection of Philippine Interests in Japan.

BACKGROUND (from Press Release):
China's ZTE Corporation and Arroyo Government's Broadband Corruption Scandal Witness, Jun Lozada, to Talk Live in Tokyo
Controversies behind the 329-M dollar Zhong Xing Telecommunications Equipment Limited (ZTE) National Broadband Network contract signed by the Philippine and Chinese governments, witnessed personally by President Arroyo, last April 2007 in China are facts that need to be learned by Filipinos as well as the general public in Japan.

Rodolfo "Jun" Lozada, by his professional affinity to Economic Planning Secretary on-leave Romulo Neri, became intimately involved in the back room (and under-the-table) deal-making. Lozada has so far revealed that the project, by his reckoning, should really have cost about $132-M but that the amount had ballooned to $239-M due to "advances" to the project "fixer/s" including an alleged $130-M "commission" for Mr. Benjamin Abalos, Sr.

Lozada further claims having gotten "instructions" from Secretary Neri to "moderate the greed" of the actors in the scam. Lozada has also said under oath that the "dysfunctional supply-instead-of-need-driven government procurement system" also resulted in kickback-inflated costs in the South and North Luzon Railroad rehabilitation and extension projects, also funded from generous loans from China.

Posted by tpbnt on 07/02/2008 08:09 PM [1075 views]

Judy Ann, Ryan tie the knot By CRISPINA M. BELEN April 28, 2009, 6:06pm


Popular dramatic actress Judy Ann Santos is now Mrs. Ryan Agoncillo.

The long-time sweethearts, who till the last minute kept everyone guessing as to the details of their wedding plans, tied the knot at 7 a.m. Tuesday, April. 28, at the San Juan Nepomuceno Catholic Church in San Juan, Batangas. Officiating priest was Father Tito Caluag.

Judy Ann was resplendent and radiant in a white wedding gown designed by popular and sought-after fashion designer Paul Cabral.

The church in San Juan, Batangas, is where Ryan’s parents Luis and Nina Agoncillo also got married.

The wedding entourage included just very close friends and relatives. Among the principal sponsors were a brother of Judy Ann's mom Carol; a photographer named Bembem Bautista; movie/TV director Rory Quintos, Benjie Gonzales, Ryan's uncle from the US; Jane Buencamino, Judy Ann's Road Manager; Mon Isberto of Smart Communications and GMA 7 TV host Susie Entrata-Abrera.

Ms. Sharon Cuneta was maid of honor. Her husband Senator Francis “Kiko” Pangilinan was with her. The best man was Dondi Agoncillo, the brother of Ryan.

Three good friends of the couple, Regine Velasquez, Ogie Alcasid, and Agot Isidro sang appropriate songs for the occasion during the church ceremonies. Agot sang the wedding song, “Runaway.” Regine Velasquez and Ogie Alcasid sang “The Prayer” during the offertory then Agot and Ogie sang “One Hand, One Heart” during the communion.

There were no other showbiz celebrities and media people present at the wedding. Security did an efficient job of barring photographers and TV networks reporters and the media from entering the premises.

Judy Ann's long-time manager Alfie Lorenzo himself was not privy to the couple's wedding plans and this was why he even threatened to leave for the US so he wouldn't be able to attend, hurt that he wasn't included in the preparation. Judy Ann and Ryan kept to their word to make the most important event in their life as simple and as solemn as possible, without showbiz frill.
Breakfast reception was held at the Balay Laiya, also in San Juan, and this was where this writer caught up with Lorenzo and Alcasid while they were having their meal. Really clueless, Lorenzo revealed he was just fetched for the wedding Tuesday. “Mali lahat ang mga lumabas tungkol sa wedding nila,” he laughed.

Alcasid, who is Judy Ann's leading man in a forthcoming movie under Regal Entertainment entitled “Oh My Girl,” said there was also another wedding reception in Anilao, Batangas. But too bad for Sharon Cuneta and Regine Velasquez, as they had to leave ahead of the rest to fulfill earlier commitments.

There will be two other wedding receptions. The May 2 reception at Rockwell Plant will be for the couple's showbiz friends and colleagues, while the next one will be for their fans and the media and entertainment press.

Swine Flu: 5 Things You Need to Know About the Outbreak





Reuters – A passenger arriving on a flight from Mexico wears a mask at Barcelona's airport April 27, 2009. …

By BRYAN WALSH Bryan Walsh – 1 hr 42 mins ago



Concern that the world could be on the brink of the first influenza pandemic in more than 40 years escalated Sunday as France, Hong Kong, New Zealand and Spain reported potential new cases in which people had been infected with swine flu and Canada confirmed several new cases. In the U.S., where 20 such infections have been confirmed, federal health officials declared a public-health emergency and are preparing to distribute to state and local agenciesa quarter of the country's 50 million-dose stockpile of antiviral drugs. Meanwhile, in hard-hit Mexico, where more than 80 people have died from what is believed to be swine flu, the government closed all public schools and canceled hundreds of public events in Mexico City.

Though the World Health Organization (WHO) is referring to the situation as a "public-health emergency of international concern," the apparent emergence in several countries of an entirely new strain of H1N1 flu virus has led some scientists to believe that it is only a matter of time before the WHO declares pandemic status, a move that could prompt travel bans to infected countries. "We are clearly seeing wide spread," says Michael Osterholm, a pandemic risk expert who runs the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy.

"There is no question." (Read about the vaccine being prepared in case of a pandemic.)
Health officials in Washington were quick to point out Sunday that none of the 20 cases identified in the U.S. so far has been fatal; all but one of the victims has recovered without needing to be hospitalized. Officials also noted that only one American has been infected so far who had not recently traveled to Mexico - a woman in Kansas got sick after her husband returned from a business trip in that country, where he became ill - but that could change as more intensive disease surveillance begins. "As we continue to look for more cases, I expect we're going to find them," said acting Centers for Disease Control (CDC) director Richard Besser.


In the U.S., where cases have also been found in California, Texas, and New York City, the declaration of a public-health emergency is part of what federal officials termed an "aggressive response" to the outbreaks. In addition to releasing from the national stockpile some 12.5 million doses of the antiviral drugs Tamiflu and Relenza - which scientists say has so far been effective against the H1N1 swine flu virus - the Department of Homeland Security will begin "passive surveillance" to screen people entering the U.S. Any traveler coming from a country with a confirmed human swine flu infection will be questioned, checked for symptoms and potentially isolated if they are found ill. Though the CDC has issued public warnings about the more serious outbreak in Mexico, there are no recommendations from Washington against traveling to the neighboring country.
That is in contrast to the more extreme actions of some other governments, including Hong Kong, where officials on Sunday urged residents to avoid going to Mexico. Hong Kong officials also ordered the immediate detention in a hospital of anyone who arrives with a fever above 100.4 F, respiratory symptoms and a history of traveling over the past seven days to a city with a confirmed case of swine flu infection.

But Washington officials Sunday did their best not to overstate the situation and emphasized that their response wasn't out of the ordinary. "I wish we could call it declaration of emergency preparedness, because that's really what it is in this context," said Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano. "We're preparing in an environment where we really don't know ultimately what the size or seriousness of this outbreak is going to be."


Right now health officials around the world are trying to take precautions without inciting panic. Here are just a few of the questions facing them - and ultimately, us as well:
1. Is this a flu pandemic?
The influenza virus is constantly mutating. That's why we can't get full immunity to the flu, the way we can to diseases like chicken pox, because there are multiple strains of the flu virus and they change from year to year. However, even though the virus makes us sick, our immune systems can usually muster enough of a response so that the flu is rarely fatal for healthy people.
But every once in awhile, the virus shifts its genetic structure so much that our immune systems offer no protection whatsoever. (This usually happens when a flu virus found in animals - like the avian flu still circulating in Asia - swaps genes with other viruses in a process called reassortment, and jumps to human beings.) A flu pandemic occurs when a new flu virus emerges for which humans have little or no immunity and then spreads easily from person to person around the world. In the 20th century we had two mild flu pandemics, in 1968 and 1957, and the severe "Spanish flu" pandemic of 1918, which killed an estimated 40 to 50 million people worldwide.
The WHO has the responsibility of declaring when a new flu pandemic is underway, and to simplify the process, the U.N. body has established six pandemic phases. Thanks to H5N1 avian flu, which has killed 257 people since 2003 but doesn't spread very well from one human to another, we're currently at phase 3. If the WHO upgraded that status to phase 4, which is marked by a new virus that begins to pass easily enough from person to person that we can detect community-sized outbreaks, such a move would effectively mean that we've got a pandemic on our hands.

The H1N1 swine flu virus has already been identified as a new virus, with genes from human and avian flus as well as the swine variety. And since it is apparently causing large-scale outbreaks in Mexico, along with separate confirmed cases in the U.S. and Canada and suspected cases in other countries, it would seem that we've already met the criteria for phase 4. But though an emergency committee met on April 25 to evaluate the situation, the WHO hasn't made the pandemic declaration yet. Keiji Fukuda, the WHO's interim assistant director-general for health, security and environment, said on Sunday that its experts "would like a little bit more information and a little bit more time to consider this." The committee is set to meet again by April 28 at the latest.

As health officials have repeatedly emphasized, with good reason, the swine flu situation is evolving rapidly, and more lab tests are needed to ascertain exactly what is going on in Mexico and elsewhere. "We want to make sure we're on solid ground," said Fukuda, a highly respected former CDC official and flu expert.


2. What will happen if this outbreak gets classified as a pandemic?

Moving the world to pandemic phase 4 would be the signal for serious containment actions to be taken on the national and international level. Given that these actions would have major implications for the global economy, not to mention the effects of the public fear that would ensue, there is concern that the WHO may be considering politics along with science. "What the WHO did makes no sense," says Osterholm. "In a potential pandemic, you need to have the WHO be beyond question, and (April 25) was not a good day for them."

Of course, declaring a pandemic isn't a decision that should be taken lightly. For the WHO, phase 4 might trigger an attempt to keep the virus from spreading by instituting strict quarantines and blanketing infected areas with antivirals. But we appear to have missed the opportunity to contain the disease at its source since the virus is already crossing borders with ease. "We cannot stop this at the border," said Anne Schuchat, the CDC's interim director for science and public health. "We don't think that we can quench this in Mexico if it's in many communities now."


That would leave the WHO and individual countries to fall back on damage control, using antivirals and old-fashioned infection control - like closing schools, limiting public gatherings and even restricting travel - to slow the spread of the virus. But such efforts would likely inflict serious damage on an already faltering global economy - and the truth is, we don't know how well those methods will work.

3. Why have the U.S. cases been so much milder than the ones in Mexico?
This is the question that has health officials from Geneva to Washington puzzled. In Mexico, swine flu has caused severe respiratory disease in a number of patients - and even more worryingly, has killed the sort of young and healthy people who can normally shrug off the flu. (Fueling such concerns is the fact that similar age groups died in unusually high numbers during the 1918 pandemic.) Yet the cases in the U.S. have all been mild and likely wouldn't have even garnered much attention if doctors hadn't begun actively looking for swine flu in recent days. "What we're seeing in this country so far is not anywhere near the severity of what we're hearing about in Mexico," said the CDC's Besser. "We need to understand that."

Some of the difference may be due to the fact that Mexico has apparently been grappling with swine flu for weeks longer than the U.S. As doctors across the U.S. begin checking patients with respiratory symptoms for swine flu, CDC officials expect to see more severe cases in the U.S. as well - and as better epidemiological work is done in Mexico, we'll probably hear about more mild cases there too. Right now, however, the true severity of the H1N1 swine flu virus is still an open question, whose answer could change over time. The 1918 Spanish flu pandemic began with a fairly mild wave of infections in the spring, but the virus returned a few months later in a far more virulent form. That could happen with the current swine flu as well. "It's quite possible for this virus to evolve," said Fukuda. "When viruses evolve, clearly they can become more dangerous to people."

4. How ready is the U.S. - and the world - to respond to a flu pandemic?
In some ways, the world is better prepared for a flu pandemic today than it has ever been. Thanks to concerns over H5N1 avian flu, the WHO, the U.S. and countries around the world have stockpiled millions of doses of antivirals that can help fight swine flu as well as other strains of influenza. The U.S. has a detailed pandemic preparation plan that was drafted under former President George W. Bush. Many other countries have similar plans. SARS and bird flu have given international health officials useful practice runs for dealing with a real pandemic. We can identify new viruses faster than ever before, and we have life-saving technologies - like artificial respirators and antivirals - that weren't available back in 1918. "I believe that the world is much, much better prepared than we have ever been for dealing with this kind of situation," said Fukuda.

At the same time, the very nature of globalization puts us at greater risk. International air travel means that infections can spread very quickly. And while the WHO can prepare a new swine flu vaccine strain in fairly short order, we still use a laborious, decades-old process to manufacture vaccines, meaning it would take months before the pharmaceutical industry could produce its full capacity of doses - and even then, there wouldn't be enough for everyone on the planet. The U.S. could be particularly vulnerable; only one plant, in Stillwater, Penn., makes flu vaccine in America. In a pandemic, that could produce some ugly political debates. "Do you really think the E.U. is going to release pandemic vaccine to the U.S. when its own people need it?" asks Osterholm.


Indeed, the greatest risk from a pandemic might not turn out to be from the swine flu virus itself - especially if it ends up being relatively mild - but what Osterholm calls "collateral damage" if governments respond to the emergency by instituting border controls and disrupting world trade. Not only would the global recession worsen - a 2008 World Bank report estimated that a severe pandemic could reduce the world's GDP by 4.8% - but we depend on international trade now for countless necessities, from generic medicines to surgical gloves. The just-in-time production systems embraced by companies like Wal-Mart - where inventories are kept as low as possible to cut waste and boost profit - mean that we don't have stockpiles of most things. Supply chains for food, medicines and even the coal that generates half our electricity are easily disruptable, with potentially catastrophic results. Though we'll likely hear calls to close the border with Mexico, Osterholm points out that a key component used in artificial respirators comes from Mexico. "We are more vulnerable to a pandemic now than at any other time over the past 100 years," he says. "We can't depend on ourselves."
5. So how scared should we be?

That depends on whom you ask. Officials at the CDC and the WHO have emphasized that while the swine flu situation is serious, they're responding with an abundance of precautions. Even Osterholm, who has been highly critical of the U.S. government's long-term failures to better prepare for a pandemic, gives the CDC a 9 out of 10 for its response so far. Outside of Mexico, the swine flu hasn't looked too serious yet - unlike during the SARS outbreaks of 2003, when an entirely new virus with no obvious treatment took the world by surprise. In the U.S., the normal flu season is winding down, which should make it easier for public-health officials to pick out swine flu cases from run-of-the-mill respiratory disease. And there are simple things that people can do to protect themselves, like practicing better hygiene (wash hands frequently and cover mouth and nose when sneezing) and staying away from public places or traveling if they feel sick. "There's a role for everyone to play when an outbreak is ongoing," said Besser.

But the truth is that every outbreak is unpredictable, and there's a lot we don't know yet about the new swine flu. There hasn't been a flu pandemic for more than a generation, and there hasn't been a truly virulent pandemic since long before the arrival of mass air transit. We're in terra incognito here. Panic would be counterproductive - especially if it results in knee-jerk reactions like closing international borders, which would only complicate the public-health response. But neither should we downplay our very real vulnerabilities. As Napolitano put it: "This will be a marathon, not a sprint." Be prepared.

Susan Boyle or Shaheen??? - Britain's Got Talent 2009

Find it yourself who's next......

SUSAN BOYLE:
Source: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=luRmM1J1sfg

SHAHEEN:
Source: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYDM3MIzEHo

SEC revokes license of pre-need firm (by Manila Times) 21 April 2009 | 12:10 AM




The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced Monday that it revoked the license of Prudentialife Plans Inc. to sell preneed plans because it allegedly failed to meet the required fund infusion into its trust fund for planholders.

SEC Chairman Fe Barin initially told the Senate Committee on Trade that Prudentialife’s license was merely suspended. But after the hearing, she told the media that the license had been actually revoked.

Barin made the revelation while she was being taken to task by Sen. Manuel “Mar” Roxas 2nd, chairman of the committee, for SEC’s slow response to plug legal loopholes following the scandal involving the Legacy group of companies.

Later on Monday, the SEC issued a statement saying Prudentialife Plans has no license to sell preneed products.

In a document obtained by The Manila Times, Jose Aquino, SEC non-traditional securities department acting director, ordered Prudentialife to terminate the offering or sale of preneed plans, but continue servicing its obligations to its planholders.

SEC found that Prudentialife has capital deficiency of P4.498 billion and a trust fund deficiency of P3.641 billion, both as of end-March this year.

The regulator also ordered the preneed firm to infuse P100 million cash into its trust fund within 30 working days, and increase the periodic deposit to trust fund for its education, pension and life plans to 80 percent of the periodic collection starting next month.

The SEC also wants Prudentilaife to cancel all unsold plans and cause the publication of the cancellation within 10 days, and should not declare any dividends, stock options or warrant assets unless approved by the regulator.

Regulators also prohibited profit sharing, performance bonus and other compensation schemes to members of the board of directors, executives and officers of Prudentialife.
Increase in salaries, per diems, allowances, fringe benefits and any similar compensation and benefits to officials of the preneed company are also banned.

Prudentialife’s proposal
In a letter dated January 31, 2009, Prudentialife proposed to fund the multibillion deficiencies, by the way of shares of stocks of its related companies. But the SEC denied the proposal.
Instead, the government suggested that Prudetialife offer real property.
After the SEC’s denial, Pruden­tialife requested reconsideration, saying the preneed firm has pending deals related to some of its property, hence, its inability to contribute to the deficiencies.
In an argument submitted by Prudentialife, it said the trust fund is liquid enough to service its obligations to shareholders for the next five years.

Prudentialife also cited that the huge losses it incurred last year was was caused by market-to-market losses, and should return to profit as market conditions improve.
“Upon the review of the argument raised and records on file, we hold Prudentialife no longer possesses the qualification provided for under the existing SEC rules and regulations to be or remain a dealer of preneed plans,” Aquino said in the order.

Prudentialife statement
“The assets we offered are real estate properties that have good values but are not yet income-generating. Besides this, we offered unlisted shares of profitable companies but are affiliates of our preneed company. The SEC did not accept these assets for contribution to our trust fund and capital,” Prudentialife said in a statement also on Monday.

The statement noted that it was from Jose Alberto Alba, president of Prudentialife.
The statement added that despite the order of the SEC, it would continue to operate as a servicing pre-need company and would provide plan benefits to planholders.

The preneed company has blamed the global economic turmoil and impact of the controversy surrounding the Legacy group as culprits behind the preneed sector’s troubles.

Those reasons have “dragged down the confidence in our industry whose image has already been tarnished when major preneed firms went down years ago,” the statement added.

Legacy group
During the Senate hearing Monday, Jose Nograles, president of the Philippine Deposit Insurance Corp. (PDIC), said that their verification of deposit accounts in Legacy-affiliated banks showed that of the estimated P14 billion deposited in 134,653 accounts, some 28,847 accounts totaling P5.6 billion were found doubtful and that 40,152 accounts totaling P1.52 billion had been validated.

Nograles testified that his agency would start paying claimants of Legacy by the end of April. But Roxas said he was concerned that Legacy planholders would not get paid in full.

Roxas noted the results of an audit by the Philippine Deposit Insurance Corp. showed that of the P1.3 billion of assets claimed in the books of Legacy banks, the real value was only P2.5 billion, while of the P1.3 billion book value of Legacy preneed, the actual value was only 216 million.

“The chances of the plan holders’ getting repaid is becoming dimmer,” he said, while venting his ire on the slow action of the Department of Justice, the SEC and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas against Legacy and its owner, Celso de los Angeles.

Nograles pointed out that while SEC and the central bank had filed charges against Legacy and de los Angeles before the Justice department, it still has to file even a single case before the courts. A Justice department representative told the committee that six of 40 cases in Cagayan de Oro City have been submitted for resolution, and that the city prosecutor would make a recommendation next month.

Roxas said the committee would subpoena de los Angeles for the next hearing to submit his Statement of Assets and Liabilities and Waiver of Bank Deposits that the Lecacy owner had promised at a previous hearing. He warned that de los Angeles, who failed to attend Monday’s hearing, could be cited for contempt if he failed to submit those documents.

Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile also warned SEC to act on the complaint of 12,000 soldiers and policemen who had been victimized by Legacy.

“You better be careful in handling this. I know how they think and feel when aggrieved. They can turn their gun on you,” said Enrile, a former Defense secretary.

The Armed Forces of the Philippines Savings and Loan Association Inc. submitted to the committee a 125-page list of about 12,000 policemen and soldiers who paid a total of P317.55 million to the Scholarship Plan of the Philippines Inc. (SPPI) a Legacy-affiliated company.
Barin said that besides the list, SEC also needs documents on the payroll deduction of soldiers and evidence of the remittance to SPPI.-- Efren L. Danao and Chino S. Leyco

AMERICAN IDOL Updates


The eighth season of American Idol is in full swing, and we want to know which of these talented singers is your favorite. Let us know who you're rooting for, then use our cool new widget to get your friends in on the action. Watch American Idol on Fox Tuesdays at 8 and Wednesdays at 9!
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Zooming Out From Your Own Box


Case of ABS-CBN newscaster Ted Failon turning into overkill? April 18th, 2009 by Joey Alarilla Filed under Media, News.

That’s the question being posed by the banner story on INQUIRER.net.
Here’s an excerpt.

Is the Ted Failon case turning into a police overkill? Even the Philippine National Police (PNP) believes it to be so.

The PNP Internal Affairs Service (PNP-IAS) has begun an investigation into the excessive force employed by Quezon City police in arresting ABS-CBN news anchor Ted Failon’s in-laws and household staff in connection with the shooting of Failon’s wife.

Meanwhile, the QC police chief admitted that the cops might have used excessive force, according to this abs-cbnNews.com story.

“Accordingly when I saw the video, it would appear that there was an excessive use of force on the part of the [arresting officers],” Senior Superintendent Elmo San Diego, QCPD chief, told ABS-CBN News Channel.

San Diego said he had ordered the relief of Senior Inspector Rorberto Razon, Senior Police Officer 3 Jose Fernandez and Police Officers 2 Andy Salonga and Reno Riparip, who picked up the siblings of the late Trinidad Arteche-Etong — Pamela Arteche-Trinchera and Maximo Arteche.

Personally, I believe this tragedy has turned into a media circus, and for one my wife and I can’t understand why the cops had to take Trinidad’s kin into custody shortly before she died. Come on, it’s basic human decency — couldn’t the cops wait to invite them for questioning, and allow them to be with Trinidad in her last moments?

How about you, do you feel the police is guilty of overkill?