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BJMP allocated over P13 m to repair jail facilities in Eastern Visayas

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TACLOBAN CITY- The regional office of the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) said that several jail facilities in the region would undergo repair.
This was revealed by Jail Senior Superintendent Hernan Grande, BJMP regional director, who added that two more jail facilities would be constructed to address decongestion among inmates.
According to Grande, their national office has allocated P13.32 million for the repair of various jail facilities in the region and another P9 million for the construction of additional jails.
The BJMP regional director admitted that the repair or upgrading of these facilities came in the wake of the April 2 jail break in Calbayog City that resulted for the escape of 16 inmates.
He said that the jail facilities in Tacloban and eight others would undergo repair works.
For the Tacloban City prison jail, the government has allocated P6 million for the repair.
Other similar facilities would undergo repair: Alangalang with a budget of P250,000;Baybay City,P250,000;Carigara, P500,000; Dulag, P60,000; Ormoc City,P600,000; Palo,P200,00 and Tanauan,P60,000. All are in Leyte.
He added that the jail in Dolores, Eastern Samar, was given an allocation of P200,000 for repair.
He also said that to decongest some of the jails, his office is constructing two additional jails. One is in Guiuan, Eastern Samar with a budget of P7 million while another is in Burauen, Leyte at P2 million.
Grande said that the jailbreak in Calbayog has caught the attention of their national office reason why these jail facilities were given allocation for repair.
The Calbayog Jail itself was given a budget of P500,000 for the construction of secondary perimeter fence. Absence of the perimeter fence made it easy for the inmates to escape. (RESTITUTO CAYUBIT)

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FoGouang Shan Foundation extend help to Yolanda victim in Leyte town

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ALANGALANG, Leyte- Residents of Barangay Holy Child, this municipality, expressed their gratitude to FoGouang Shan Foundation Inc. for the assistance they extended to them.
A representative from FoGouang Shan personally delivered the P200, 000 financial aid intended for the reconstruction of the day care center in the village which was severely damaged by supertyphoon Yolanda.
A wheel chair was also given to a pupil who is a polio victim.
A school building built by the FoGouang Shan Foundation Inc. was likewise turned over to the Mariano Salazar Elementary School, also this town.
Sarah Apurillo, who received the cash donation in behalf of the barangay, said that they are very thankful to the FoGouang Shan Shan Foundation for the immediate help they gave to the storm victims.
Apurillo added that this is the fifth time that FoGouang Shan Foundation came to the barangays wherein they donated kitchen wares, food packs, clothings and even cash assistance.
FoGuang Shan, literally mean “Buddha’s Light Mountain”, is an international Chinese Mahayana Buddhist monastic order based in Kaohsiung, Taiwan and one of the largest Buddhist organizations.
The order also calls itself the International Buddhist Progress Society.
Founded in 1967 by Venerable Master Hsing Yun, the order promotes humanistic Buddhism, a modern Chinese Buddhist thought developed in the 20th century and made popular by the FoGouang Shan Foundation and other modern Chinese Buddhist orders.
Humanistic Buddhism aims to make Buddhism relevant in the world and in people’s lives and hearts. (MARVIN T. MODELO)

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Mobile registration launch for storm survivors who lost their personal documents

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PALO, Leyte – A non-government organization will reach out 100,000 storm survivors in mobile civil registration project whose vital identification documents were destroyed by super typhoon Yolanda.
Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) Secretary Corazon “Dinky” Soliman noted that many survivors have been deprived of social benefits, due to absence of civil registration documents.
“After this initiative was introduced to us, we urged different agencies of the United Nations and national government to help survivors obtain important identification documents,” said Soliman, the keynote speaker of recent project launched in this town.
The official also urged local government units to waive documentary fees for survivors who will claim civil registration records.
Initiatives for Dialogue and Empowerment through Alternative Legal Services, Inc. (IDEALS) executive director Egad Ligon said they are targeting to complete the project by end of June 2014.
“The loss of identification documents has adverse impacts to the ability of family-victims and survivors to access benefits and legal claims that they are entitled to obtain after Yolanda. We recognize that legal assistance is one of the urgent needs of survivors,” said Ligon.
IDEALS has been implementing the Access to benefits and Claims after Disaster (ABCD) in storm-ravaged areas of Eastern Visayas. The initiative has benefitted 5,000 residents in Leyte since November.
“When the typhoon struck, the immediate needs were food and shelter. People started to realize the value of civil registration documents after few months when they need requirements to claim benefits,” said Palo, Leyte Vice Mayor Ronnan Christian Reposar, one of the lawyers who has been carrying out the ABCD project.
Through mobile registration, releasing of important documents can be done at the community level with beneficiaries claiming these documents for free. Civil registration is the recording of vital events – births, deaths, marriages – that affect the civil status of individuals.
To push through the community-based civil registration, different organizations donated computers, laptops, printers, copiers, generators and typewriters. Some 200 community organizers were hired to help LCR in conducting local registration.
Listed as recipients are typhoon-displaced residents in Tacloban City, Palo, Tanauan, and Tolosa in the eastern part of Leyte; Villaba, San Isidro, Tabango, Isabel, Matag-ob, and Ormoc City in the northwestern part of Leyte; Basey and Marabut in Samar; Lawaan, Balangiga, Quinapondan, Giporlos, Guiuan, Salcedo, Mercedes, and Hernani in Eastern Samar.
The civil registration project is being implemented by IDEALS, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, DSWD, Philippine Statistics Authority – National Statistics Office (PSA-NSO), 20 local government units (LGUs) and local civil registrar’s (LCR) office.
The initiative is backed by the United Kingdom Aid, United Nations Development Programme, United Nations Children’s Fund, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, International Organization for Migration, Department of Social Welfare and Development, Department of the Interior and Local Government, Office of the Civil of Defense, Oxfam, and Interchurch Organisation for Development Cooperation. (SARWELL MENIANO)

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Bracing for the new normal

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editorialEven before supertyphoon Yolanda (Haiyan) struck the Philippines, badly damaging the archipelago’s eastern board and through parts of the Visayan region, incidents of natural catastrophes of unprecedented devastation have already flooded the media and news portals. The outrageous destruction that appalled humanity faulting themselves for the onset of the atmospheric phenomenon called climate change, constantly nagged them with guilt.
With the massive information technologies utilized by various agencies involved in weather and environment studies and policy-making, the public knowledge of now of knowledge that the typhoon path pattern shifts permanently. Sty Yolanda hit the Visayas while the usual typhoon path would either hit the south or the extreme north of the archipelago. A megastorm at that, and though storm surge is not at all a new phenomenon, sty Yolanda was an eye-opener – a foreboding that it is the kind of catastrophe that the world should brace for in the coming years.
The United Nations’ report on climate change advancing a “grim climate forecast for Southeast Asia” is a call on the local government units to improve adaptation and mitigation efforts facing the great challenge that the massive destruction of sty Yolanda had caused to lives and properties in affected areas. The national government, is equally egged on to heed the demand for it to take on the lead in this adaptation plan by allocating funds for the People’s Survival Fund that will finance the adaptation plans of the LGUs.
Aksyon Klima Pilipinas, Greenpeace and Oxfam, at a press conference, expressed concern over the scenarios cited likewise in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) Working Group II Report on Impacts, Vulnerability and Adaptation. They are on in pushing the Aquino administration to initiate more tangible measures to guarantee the people’s survivability, with the Philippines as a highly vulnerable country, where “extreme weather events” have now become the new normal, and we need to take concrete measures to literally survive,”
While it may be true that the national government has started to muscle out it rhetoric to a commitment in the global concern on climate change by having its own law, the same remained is yet not operational as the implementing rules and regulations have yet to be signed by the President, programmed funds have yet to be allocated, and the PSF Board yet to be convened.
Incorporating climate change adaptability efforts, bracing for the new normal weather condition across the globe, could in the meantime be commenced at the local level through the disaster risk reduction plans. It is about time that LGUs give significant focus on this stance, like other developed and developing countries do.

Time for change

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Gem of thoughtsHoly Week is time for cool change. There are instances wherein a storm has yet to rage on before this astounding change happens. It is not the geophysical storm as strong as the destructive supertyphoon Haiyan, but one that swirls within one’s inner self prompting him to let go of what is kept hidden for years and not be bothered by the “cold” around him. The kind of hurricane that is truly life changing is the sincere return to the Holy One.
From the time Shirlee Herrera-Kaquilala, a beauty and wellness entrepreneur, felt her spiritual calling, she would not miss a time sharing about her transformation. She would recall having chided his husband, Marlaw, a successful businessman based in Metro Manila, for giving more time and part of his material wealth to his vocation, before she heeded to the vocation to a more solemn spiritual devotion. She then could not understand the essence of surrendering oneself to whom she now accepts as her true master – God, Our Father.
Not questioning any of the responsibilities that go with such calling, Marlaw over time became the president of God Our Father Foundation, while Shirlee an obliging follower sparing a regular part of her business income to the foundation’s missionary works. She is more than inspired every time they would visit places, including the remote sitios in Tacloban City’s northern barangay, to join in prayer and Bible service and giving out prayer books and Bibles to the members and the natives there. She admitted having to spend quite a sum, but assured that God is constantly returning what she shells out for God.
What is most astonishing in her is the transformation in the way she looks at life, paying special focus on what is most important – a fuller life with God and a place in Heaven. This Holy Week, she encourages friends to do the CARE – Confession, Adoration, Rosary and Eucharist, which she learned in the advices of priests, including his first cousin who is now a parish priest in Allen, Northern Samar. She believes that CARE should be fulfilled in CARE before the Holy Week.
Lent is a time for healing, Rev. Fr. Rex Ramirez, rector of the Sacred Heart Seminary in Palo, Leyte, said in a Lenten recollection he recently conducted. Besides being a chance for real spiritual conversion and transformation, Lent is the time for reshaping one’s soul and improving one’s health, properly utilizing each sense organ in ways pleasing to God. By meditation and sincere prayer as medicines for the soul, the body also gets a cleansing by God’s grace.
The Holy Scripture speaks of a story in Moses’ time about healing and conversion, which was one of the Holy Mass readings this week. While Moses and the people were on a journey, the people whom Moses led from slavery in Egypt complaint against God and him, yelling, “Why have you brought us out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? There is neither bread nor water here and we are disgusted with the tasteless manna!”
God sent fiery serpents. They bit the people and many died. The people then came to Moses and said, “We have sinned speaking against God and against you. Plead with God to take the serpents away.” So did Moses. God instructed Moses to mount a serpent on a pole and whoever has been bitten and looks at it will live.
In a similar passion, when one is almost dying because of sin but turns away from it and focuses his gaze on Christ at the wooden cross will live. This is how the change came into Shirlee. She is now a believer of the agonizing Christ on the cross. She felt she has change a lot when began to fix her attention upon the Lord who suffered for humanity in order to inherit a place in Heaven and have a more meaningful existence while on earth.

Reconstruction

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ALThe basic question is whether we will keep stagnated with our old communities where there are no clear streets and access roads as houses were erected adjoining with each other, set apart by party walls with no space for passage ways. The lack of access roads had been detrimental to our lives and a huge roadblock to development. This is a time for us to reflect on the message of super typhoon Yolanda, that perhaps God afforded us a good opportunity to reconstruct our communities and rid ourselves of our greed by taking so much of our properties based on our vested private interests without giving due consideration for the greater good of the greater number and for the general welfare of our people and our barangay.
People fence their properties because, indeed, those are private properties. But we never gave a damn considering that our actions had placed us to great inconvenience and danger, without passable access roads where vehicles and people could pass freely. We never thought of emergency situations when our lives would be put on great peril when for instance an ambulance could not pass to conduct an emergency patient or a fire truck could not reach a house on fire because passage ways are blocked by fences and houses that were erected on lots that should have been allocated for roads.
We cannot deny that our forebears owned privately the public places and streets that we have, as ownership of land during their era was based on occupation, the one who is strong and industrious to clear areas would occupy and become the owner of the land. But they surely were selfless in giving up what would have been their private property for their family generations to succeed for the welfare of the people. We enjoy the use of plazas, school sites, church lots and community centers mainly because our forebears generously gave up what they privately own for the good of the community.
Our generation is unquestionably better off than that of our forefathers in terms of education and capabilities. Ironically, we have miserably failed to follow the beginnings they left to us, allowing our greed to overcome our sense of community. There is no question that we have owned as private and appropriated as our own the lots of our communities. But to become greedy and insensitive to the needs of our fellowmen to have good access because we want to grab for our own what we consider as privately ours, is certainly a social mistake that we all were made to pay the price too costly. The number of fatalities in many communities may have been less if there are good roads that would allow people to flee than by breaking walls and fences.
It is perhaps the will of God that our communities were cleared of all greedy obstructions to allow us to reconstruct our places the way our forebears had envisioned. We have the capacity, we only need to muster our willpower to abandon our old communities and reconstruct a new one where we would live with contentment and a peace of mind that we are safe and that we will leave a legacy of a well reconstructed community.
The need to reconstruct our communities is urgent as it is at this time that the areas had been cleared by the force of nature. No human power or will could have done what the super typhoon accomplished in terms of giving the community and its people a rare chance of a lifetime to reconstruct our communities. Establishing a good road network had been brought to the fore by the resultant effect of the super typhoon. It is all up to the people if they want to remain greedy by still thinking just for individual goals, opting to rebuild our houses and fences along what must be roads and passage ways. We too have the power to choose to reconstruct our communities and make it a better, safer and progressive place to live for our and the many generations to come.
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