Magdalo Rep scores neglect of PH-occupied territories in Spratlys

Solar panels in Mischief Reef

Solar panels in Mischief Reef


In the power point presentation Rep. Ashley Acedillo of the Magdalo Party showed last Wednesday, he compared the massive fortification and expansion of the Chinese of their occupied reefs in the disputed Spratlys area in the South China with the miserable state of the islands and reefs occupied by the Philippines.

Acedillo, in a privilege speech titled “Our country is in grave danger,”questioned what seems to be a government policy of benign neglect in our occupied territories in Spratlys.

“With an Air Force that can’t protect our air space and a Navy that can’t protect our maritime interest, claimant countries have accelerated their creeping occupation of our islands,” said Acedillo, formerly an Air Force Officer who was detained for seven years for rebelling against Gloria Arroyo in what was known as “The Oakwood Mutiny.”

Furthermore, Acedillo said, there is no allocation for improvement of facilities in our occupied areas in the Spratlys in the Department of National Defense budget for 2015.

Acedillo said his understanding is that the DND does not want to go against the policy of the Department of Foreign Affairs of adhering to the provision of the 2002 Declaration of the Conduct in the South China Sea signed by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations of ASEAN and China which calls on claimant countries to “ undertake to exercise self-restraint in the conduct of activities that would complicate or escalate disputes and affect peace and stability including, among others, refraining from action of inhabiting on the presently uninhabited islands, reefs, shoals, cays, and other features and to handle their differences in a constructive manner.”

In the recent Asean Foreign Ministerial Meeting, Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario re-packaged the DOC provision adopting the proposal of Danny Russel, assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs calling for a “moratorium” on provocative actions in the South China Sea.

It didn’t fly, contrary to DFA’s press release as most of the ASEAN countries (except the Philippines) didn’t want to be seen as American proxies.

Acedillo enumerated the current state of occupation in the Spratlys which consists of 97 “features” which could be an island, a reef, a rock, or a cay. Some may be visible during low tide and submerged during high tide.

Acedillo said 41 features are occupied and 56 are unoccupied.

Of those occupied “features” the Philippines has structures and personnel in seven islands and two shoals. Vietnam occupies the most number with 21; Malaysia, three and Taiwan occupies only one, It Aba, the largest island in the Spratlys.

China, whose nine-dash-line map covers almost the entire South China Sea occupies seven features.

Another Spratly -claimant, the oil-rich Brunei does not occupy any island in the Spratlys.
Although China’s aggressive strategy of taking control of territories in the South China Sea goes way, way back (in 1974 battle with Vietnam over the Paracels, China sank several Vietnamese warships killing 53 of their crew), the Philippines became the target of China’s expansionism starting in 1995 with the occupation of the Mischief Reef, also known as Panganiban Reef.

Acedillo said “In 1995 the Chinese military occupied Mischief Reef and built wooden structures. The Philippine government protested this action. Then in 1998, China added more structures that resembled military installations. To date, this structure is now a three storey building equipped with solar panels, power generators, weather radars, communication equipment, and heavy machine guns. “

Acedillo further said China are fortifying their facilities in other areas they occupy among them, Subi Reef,Fiery Cross Reef, Cuarteron Reef, and Chigua Reef.

“Recently, China was found conducting land reclamation and construction on four of its occupied reefs namely: Johnson Reef, Chigua Reef, Cuarteron Reefs and Gaven Reef. It is suspected that they are building and airfield and naval facility at Mabini Reef that will pose a serious threat to our capability to sustain our garrisons at the Kalayaan Island Group of KIG ,” he added.

Acedillo showed the sorry state of our occupied territories in KIG: “Ang nakakalungkot po dito ay ang Pilipinas hindi nag-develop ng kahit alin man sa mga islang hawak natin. Ito raw ay alinsunod sa Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea na pinirmahan ng buong Asean at ng China nung 2002. (What is sad here is that the Philippines did not develop any of the islands we occupied. I was told this is in compliance with the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea that was signed by all ASEAN members and China in 2002.)”

Acedillo said, “Based on this precedent, similar construction might also be done in the Scarborough Shoal or in other areas in our Kalayaan Island Group of KIG.”

To secure our territory, Acedillo said “the ideal joint concept to adopt is defense- in-depth which is anchored on the principle of pressing the border out by engaging the enemy as far out as possible.”
He elaborated on the defense-in-depth concept: “The system incorporates a sequence of lines: detection line, decision line and interception line, and requires four basic steps: 1. detect the presence of airborne objects, aircraft, or missiles; 2. identify them as friendly or hostile; 3. intercept and examine those not identified as friendly; and 4. neutralize those identified as hostile.”

“This joint concept, applies in tandem with our Navy’s active archipelagic defense strategy. Situational awareness will be provided by the air defense radars, long range patrol aircraft and over the horizon radars. Hostile forces are held to a ‘no give zone’ within the range of attack craft and ground-based missile. Maneuver forces composed of frigates corvettes, and fighter aircraft, shall simultaneously attack from different locations to swarm the opposing force in multiple directions. “

What is preventing the government from adopting and implementing it?

Our Country is in Grave Danger by VERA Files

Xiaomi Redmi 1s lands locally, priced at Php5,599

Xiaomi Philippines has officially announced the arrival of the Xiaomi Redmi 1s in our country, a dual-SIM Android smartphone with a 4.7-inch HD display and runs on a 1.6GHz quad-core Snapdragon 400 processor with 1GB of RAM.

Xiaomi RedMi 1S Philippines

Xiaomi Redmi 1S specs:
4.7-inch HD IPS by Sharp, 1280×720 @312ppi
AGC Dragontrail Glass
1.6GHz Snapdragon 400 MSM8228 quad-core CPU
Adreno 305 GPU
1GB RAM
8GB internal storage
up to 32GB via microSD
8 megapixel rear camera w/ LED flash
1.6 megapixel front camera
Dual-SIM, Dual Standby
3G/HSPA
WiFi 802.11 b/g/n
Bluetooth 4.0 LE
GPS, A-GPS
MIUI V5 (Android 4.3 Jelly bean)
2,000mAh battery
137 x 69 x 9.9mm
158g

The new Xiaomi RedMi 1S will be available on Lazada on September 4 at the strike of noon and will be retailed for Php5,599.

The post Xiaomi Redmi 1s lands locally, priced at Php5,599 appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

Xiaomi Redmi 1s lands locally, priced at Php5,599

Xiaomi Philippines has officially announced the arrival of the Xiaomi Redmi 1s in our country, a dual-SIM Android smartphone with a 4.7-inch HD display and runs on a 1.6GHz quad-core Snapdragon 400 processor with 1GB of RAM.

Xiaomi RedMi 1S Philippines

Xiaomi Redmi 1S specs:
4.7-inch HD IPS by Sharp, 1280×720 @312ppi
AGC Dragontrail Glass
1.6GHz Snapdragon 400 MSM8228 quad-core CPU
Adreno 305 GPU
1GB RAM
8GB internal storage
up to 32GB via microSD
8 megapixel rear camera w/ LED flash
1.6 megapixel front camera
Dual-SIM, Dual Standby
3G/HSPA
WiFi 802.11 b/g/n
Bluetooth 4.0 LE
GPS, A-GPS
MIUI V5 (Android 4.3 Jelly bean)
2,000mAh battery
137 x 69 x 9.9mm
158g

The new Xiaomi RedMi 1S will be available on Lazada on September 4 at the strike of noon and will be retailed for Php5,599.

The post Xiaomi Redmi 1s lands locally, priced at Php5,599 appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

PowerColor intros Radeon R9 285 TurboDuo OC

In the wake of the announcement of the Radeon R9 285, a lot of third-party manufacturers have begun showcasing their own take on the new Tonga-based GPU. One of which is TUL Corporation who just unveiled the new PowerColor Radeon R9 285 TurboDuo OC graphics card.

PowerColor Radeon R9 285 TurboDuo OC Philippines

Right out of the gate, the PowerColor R9 285 is factory-overclocked to 945MHz from its base frequency of 918MHz. The graphics card is also equipped with an array of extra features, including two 80mm fans, Gold Power Kit and PowerPAK SO-8, which ensures stability even with the OC settings.

This, coupled with the R9 285’s respectable 2GB DDR5 RAM with a bus width of 256-bit makes it a very decent choice for gamers in the market for a mid-range GPU.

PowerColor Radeon R9 285 TurboDuo OC specs:
Process: 28nm
Architecture: GCN1.1
Stream Processors: 1792
Compute Performance: 3.29 TFLOPS
Engine Clock: 945MHz
VRAM: 2GB DDR5
Memory Clock: 5.5GHz GDDR5
Memory Bus Width: 256-bit
Bandwidth: 176GB/s
TDP: 190W
DirectX 12 support
AMD TrueAudio Technology
Power Connectors: 2x 6-pin
Video ports: 1x DisplayPort, 1x HDMI, 2x Dual-Link DVI

The new PowerColor Radeon R9 285 TurboDuo OC is slated for a September 2 launch and will be retailed for USD250.

The post PowerColor intros Radeon R9 285 TurboDuo OC appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.