Globe ready to transmit voice calls for emergency hotline 911 and complaint hotline 8888

Globe Telecom is ready to transmit voice calls for emergency hotline 911 and complaint hotline 8888 on August 1, as directed by the government.

globe logo

During President Duterte’s State of the Nation Address SONA the other day, he mentioned numerous plans for the country and among those announced the nationwide implementation of 911 hotline for emergencies and the establishment of 8888 hotline as an easy way to receive complaints regarding government agencies.

Globe has released a statement submitting to those announcements and hopes to make their services better for their subscribers. Attached below is the press release by Globe General Counsel Atty. Froilan Castelo:

“We are also expediting migration of our system to immediately enable transmission of SMS or text messages thru 8888 and we are confident that we will be able to achieve this target within the timeframe of 30-45 days given to us by the government. As suggested by the government to discourage prank calls, we would also like to inform our customers that those calling the hotlines will incur regular voice charges plus an additional P5/call for those calling the 911 hotline.”

{Globe Telecom}

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SONA sa Lansangan

By Jil Danielle Caro, Ehcel Hurna, and Davinci Maru

Libu-libong manggagawa, mangingisda, magsasaka, katutubo, estudyante, guro, at iba pang sektor ng lipunan ang nakilahok sa pagkilos para sa unang State of the Nation Address (SONA) ni pangulong Rodrigo Duterte. Inihain namin ang mga katanungang ito: una, ano ang inaasahan mo sa administrasyong Duterte; pangalawa, ano ang mga suliranin na agarang dapat masolusyonan, at ang huli, ano ang mensahe mo sa bagong pangulo. Ito ang kanilang mga naging kasagutan.

IPs

“Kung pwedeng matulungan niya kami dahil sa mahirap kami. Nagtatanim nalang kami ng kamote para may pangkain.” -Carmelita Dela Cruz, Esther Garcia, and Maria Provo, Aetas of Tarlac province

Jenilyn Manzon

“Marami po ang inaasahan naming mga mag-aaral sa kasalukuyang administrasyon. Isa na po dito ang libreng edukasyon na dapat matamasa ng bawat kabataang Pilipino. Hindi lamang po ito dapat maging isang prebilehiyo, kundi dapat po ay isa itong maging karapatan.” – Jenilyn Manzon, college student of PUP Sta. Mesa and president of Ugnayan ng Talino at Kagalingan

Domingo Bul-ul

“Yung Mindanao, specifically South Cotabato, ay talaga pong amin po iyon. Pero parang alien kami sa aming lugar. Dapat po tuparin yung mga sinabi niya pertaining to the IPs. Tulungan niya ang mga tribo. We are far behind. Malayong-malayo kami sa lipunan. Kaya kami sumama dito, ipapaabot namin sa presidente na kailangan namin ang tunay na demokrasya.” – Domingo Bul-ul of T’boli Tribe in South Cotabato

Elizabeth Penaverde

“Presidente, thank you, thank you very much sa ginagawa mo sa ating bansa. Napakaswerte namin. Siguro ito na kasi nag-pray ako kay God na bigyan kami ng presidente na magkakaroon ng changes sa bansa natin. Siguro ito na ang hulog ng langit.” – Elizabeth Peñaverde, teacher and property custodian of Antonio J. Villegas Vocational High School

Renato Cada

“Malaki ang inaasahan ko sa bagong pangulo natin sa usapin ng pag-minimize ng kriminalidad lalo na ang drugs at corruption. Krimen din ang corruption.” – Renato Cada of COURAGE, KASAMA KA Quezon City

Rachelle Lisora

“Ang isyu na dapat masolusyonan sa amin ay ‘yung ibinibintang ng mga paramilitar sa amin na kami raw ay mga supporter ng NPA pero hindi yan ang totoo. Ginagawa nila yan para masira ang aming kinabukasan at hindi na po kami makapagpatuloy sa aming pag-aaral para po madali nilang maagaw ang aming lupang ninuno.” – Rachelle Lisora, high school student of Alternative Learning Center for Agricultural and Livelihood Development (ALCADEV) in Surigao del Sur

Gerry Rivera

“Inaasahan namin na mawala na nang tuluyan ang contractual employment. Sa hanay naming mga manggagawa, ang human rights, kasama ang workers’ rights diyan. Ang regular na trabaho, this would be in line with the constitutional provision guaranteeing the workers of security of tenure. Ito ang gusto naming magawa na niya agad.” – Gerry Rivera, president of Philippine Airlines Employees Association (PALEA)

Raoul Manuel

“Inaasahan ko sa kasalukuyang administrasyon ni Duterte ay makinig sa hinaing ng mamamayang Pilipino. Nanalo siya sa pagiging presidente sapagkat sawa na yung mamamayang Pilipino sa kahirapan at pambubusabos na ginawa ng nakaraang administrasyon.” – Raoul Manuel, incoming Student Regent of UP System and first UP Visayas Summa Cum Laude

Camille Mones

“Inaasahan ko na mabawasan ang pagiging mahal ng bilihin dahil napakahirap ng buhay ngayon.” – Camille Mones, vendor

Jason Versola

“Meron akong tatlong punto na kailangang bigyang pansin: Una, sa usapin ng kawalan ng lupa sa mga magsasaka, ikalawa yung usapin ng karapatan ng mga manggagawa ‘yung laban sa kontraktwalisasyon, at ikatlo ‘yung usapin ng mga indigenous people na patuloy na napapalayas sa kanilang mga lupain dahil sa mapanirang pagmimina at pagtotroso.” – Jason Versola, college representative of UP Diliman

Vicente Alban

“Sa bahagi ng League of Urban Poor for Action, ay meron naman kaming malinaw na batayan kung bakit dapat ang gobyerno ay umaksyon para sa kagalingan ng mamamayan. Lalong lalo pa at ang gobyernong ito ay lumagda sa mga kasunduan, sa international at sa ating konstitusyon, na kung saan dapat ang estado ay magsagawa ng kaukulang pabahay sa kanyang mamamayan na makatao, may hanapbuhay, may kumpletong pasilidad at maayos na mga basic services.” – Vicente Alban, chairman of League of Urban Poor for Action NCR

 

Duterte’s war: Big kill of small fry, puny drugs haul, defies PNP rules

BANGKAY SA BANGKETA… kasi nga drug pusher ako.

This is the sad refrain in a sardonic poem that a young Filipina wrote and read in a video she posted last week on her Facebook page. It does not matter, she averred, that the so-called drug pushers falling by the dozens of late had not been read their rights or tried in court. Or even, that they had been killed by those who are supposed to protect them and enforce the law. Perhaps, she wrote, those who kill are drug pushers, too.

Indeed, a pall of death has cloaked the nation in mixed glee, grief, confusion, and anxiety in the first three weeks alone of the war on drugs of President Rodrigo R. Duterte, who will deliver his first state of the nation address today.

But who will be killed next is not quite clear as yet. In the meantime, the question of why the poor and puny pushers are dying in high numbers compared to just a handful of their rich counterparts, the drug lords, and their supposed coddlers in the police has been either inadequately answered or ignored.

By the data of the police — until now the singular source of information of the news media about the war on drugs — about 10 bodies have been showing up by the road and in the slums every day, or a total of 213 killed in Duterte’s first 21 days in office alone. The casualty toll includes 209 civilians and only four policemen that the police had tagged as alleged drug pushers.

Combatting drugs has always been a major police activity over the last seven years. Then and now, however, the PNP’s reports on the supposed “achievements” of the campaign have risen and fallen, across regions of the country.

By official PNP reports, Duterte’s war on drugs has netted much bigger numbers of those killed and arrested in its initial rollout period but also smaller seizures of drugs, by value and volume.

By all indications, however, Duterte’s war has assumed a random, free-for-all, brook-no-limits in law and due process, a kill-at-will campaign against mostly small-time drug suspects. This is happening despite the explicit rules of the 200-page Philippine National Police Handbook PNPM-Do-Ds-3-2-13 or Revised PNP Manual on Operational Procedures published in December 2013.

Cookie Diokno of the Free Legal Assistance Group of human rights lawyers says the big difference in the war on drugs then and now is this: Duterte’s war has flipped the “burden of proof” principle in the statutes inside out. In other words, says Diokno, “you are now presumed guilty, until proven innocent.”

Compared with data on the PNP’s anti-drug campaign in the 78 months from January 2010 to June 2016, Duterte’s three-week-old war has upped the numbers of alleged drug users and pushers killed and arrested multiple-fold.

The downside is Duterte’s war is unfolding with negligible documentation of the conduct of police operations and the death of suspects. In a majority of cases, the suspects were killed purportedly because they “resisted arrest” or tried to snatch the guns of and engaged arresting officers in a firefight.

Data from PNP’s Anti-Illegal Drugs Group (AIDG) in the 78 months before Duterte came to power, showed much lower numbers of casualties and arrests made, but also bigger values and volumes of drugs seized, compared to that recorded in the new government’s three-week war.

The 213 drug suspects killed under Duterte’s war from Jully 1 to 21, 2016 (an average of 10 persons a day) is a macabre figure compared to the 256 persons “killed in action” in the 78-month period or 2,336 days from January 2010 to June 2016 (an average of about one person every 10 days).

In the 78 months before Duterte, the PNP had conducted a total of 96,530 anti-drug operations, of which 46 percent were buy-bust operations; 28.4 percent “in flagrante” (the suspects were caught in the act); 16.1 percent via search warrant; 4.6 percent as checkpoint operations; 2.5 percent as “saturation drive”; 1.7 percent as “marijuana eradication” operations; 0.6 percent as “warrant of arrest”; and 0.1 percent as “interdiction.”

The PNP’s reports on Oplan Tokhang, though, do not offer data on how many of the various types of operations against illegal drugs have been conducted with mission orders, and which of these have been covered by search warrants or warrants of arrest. Many data fields in the PNP’s reports on the war on drugs prior to the Duterte administration do not appear anymore in its recent reports.

Yet another story should also raise grave concern among citizens. What drugs and substances, indeed, should be considered illegal?

Of the various types of drugs that the police had confiscated, over-the-counter substances and laboratory chemicals with legitimate but controlled uses have been enrolled, too. These include marijuana resin oil, rugby, Cytotec, ketamine, “Sulfuric,” sodium hydroxide, acetone, chloroform, palladium chloride, hydrochloric acid, Pseudoephedrine and Diazepam.

While most of the seized substances and drugs can only be bought in the black market, some items like hydrochloric acid (also known as muriatic acid), rugby, and acetone are easily available in sari-sari stores and hardware stores and are not on the list of illegal substances. Chemicals like chloroform and toluene are being used in research and industrial laboratories.— PCIJ, July 2016

How to watch President Duterte’s SONA online

President Rodrigo Duterte is set to deliver his first State of the Nation Address (SONA) at the Batasang Pambansa tomorrow, July 25.

duterte sona july 25

Presidential Communications Secretary Martin Andanar on Sunday said the President wrote the speech himself and that it is a “powerful” one that also made him cry after reading the speech.

“It’ll be a powerful speech that will awaken the patriot in every Filipino. The speech made me cry.” – Andanar said to CNN PH

The Presidential Communications’ official Facebook page will be streaming the SONA via Facebook Live tomorrow. You can bookmark their page or post below. You can also follow their real-time video highlights and live tweets via @PresidentialCom and join the Viber group here.

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‘Include FOI in short-list’

By Cong B. Corrales

NOW that the House Committee of Public Information has filed its report on the Freedom of Information (FOI) bill to the Office of the Secretary General, the bill’s authors are urging the House leadership for “extraordinary will” to calendar it for sponsorship at the soonest time possible.

In a briefing, Wednesday, Public Infomation Chair Rep. Jorge T. Almonte told reporters that they formally submitted their report (Committee Report No. 746) alongside the substitute bill (House Bill 5801) last Monday, May 25. After this, he added, the bill will go to the Committee on Rules for calendaring in the plenary session.

The bill, Almonte said, consolidates 23 FOI bills filed in Congress which includes the version filed by the Right to Know, Right Now! (R2KRN) Coalition through Direct Initiative.

FOI authors collectively made an appeal, in the briefing, to House Speaker Feliciano R. Belmonte Jr and Majority Floor Leader Neptali Gonzales II to include the bill in its “shortest list of priority bills.”

Earlier, R2KRN convenor Nepomuceno Malaluan expressed concern that the bill may again be passed over especially since the election year is drawing near.

This video short features excerpts of the House Committee on Public Information briefing on the Freedom of Information Bill.

In an interview after the briefing, Ifugao Rep. Teddy B. Baguilat Jr said he shares the concern of FOI advocates that there may not be enough time since the FOI bill is just one of 24 priority bills that will have to be considered before Congress adjourns.

“We are aware na pagdating na ng October, once people file their certificate of candidacies mas mahirap na humagilap ng kongresista sa plenary. Kung makipagsalaran ka doon, medyo nakakatakot nga,” Baguilat said.

“That’s why the need for an extraordinary will or decision ng House leadership na pabilisin yung proseso. We are not saying we will not follow the process. Kahit sponsorship lang before the sine die adjournment,” he added.

“I’m sure with the remaining months left in our terms there’s going to be a mad-scramble to have all of our pet bills approved.”

Meanwhile, Parañaque City Rep. Gus S. Tambunting appealed not only to the House leadership but also to his colleagues “across party lines” to support the committee report.

“This is a dream come true. Dalawang dekada na hong naghihintay ang taumbayan para po maaprubahan itong FOI bill,” Tambunting said.

For her part, Ang Nars Partylist Rep. Leah S. Paquiz hopes that her colleagues in the partylist system will vote for the approval of the FOI committee report in the plenary since the measure is all about “transparency.”

As for Almonte, he remains hopeful that the House leadership will pass the measure into law before the 16th Congress ends.

“I do believe in miracles but I know that it will not take a miracle to pass this law,” said Almonte.