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Samar, SSU sign pact to transform plastic waste into sustainable resources

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Partnership for Sustainability. Officials of the provincial government of Samar and Samar State University sign a memorandum of agreement formalizing their partnership on sustainable plastic waste management. The collaboration institutionalizes the collection of soft plastics and promotes research, innovation, and the production of recycled plastic materials in support of the province’s circular economy and environmental sustainability initiatives.(GOV.TAN FACEBOOK)
Partnership for Sustainability. Officials of the provincial government of Samar and Samar State University sign a memorandum of agreement formalizing their partnership on sustainable plastic waste management. The collaboration institutionalizes the collection of soft plastics and promotes research, innovation, and the production of recycled plastic materials in support of the province’s circular economy and environmental sustainability initiatives.(GOV.TAN FACEBOOK)

TACLOBAN CITY – The provincial government of Samar and Samar State University (SSU) have formalized a partnership to strengthen plastic waste management efforts by transforming discarded plastics into useful products through research, innovation, and community participation.

The collaboration was cemented through the signing of a memorandum of agreement (MOA), institutionalizing the collection and donation of soft plastics while promoting the development of recycled plastic products as part of the province’s push toward a circular economy.

Under the agreement, the provincial government and SSU will jointly implement programs that convert plastic waste into valuable resources, helping reduce environmental pollution while creating sustainable livelihood and development opportunities.

Officials said the partnership reflects the shared commitment of the provincial government and the university to address the growing problem of plastic pollution through science-based solutions, research, and public engagement.

The initiative also aims to strengthen environmental awareness and encourage responsible waste management practices among communities across Samar.

The collaboration forms part of the province’s broader environmental agenda, which promotes conservation, climate resilience, and sustainable development by forging partnerships with academic institutions and other key stakeholders.

With the agreement now in effect, the provincial government and SSU reaffirmed their commitment to building a cleaner, greener, and more climate-resilient province through innovative and sustainable environmental programs.

(LIZBETH ANN A. ABELLA)

700 riders explore Eastern Visayas in Samar-Leyte motorcycle tourism loop

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Riding for Tourism. More than 700 motorcycle riders participate in the Philippine Motorcycle Tourism Samar-Leyte Loop, traversing some of Eastern Visayas’ top tourist destinations in Leyte and Samar. The three-day event promotes sustainable motorcycle tourism, road safety, and appreciation of the region’s natural attractions, cultural heritage, and local cuisine while boosting domestic travel and local economies.(DOT-Eastern Visayas Facebook)
Riding for Tourism. More than 700 motorcycle riders participate in the Philippine Motorcycle Tourism Samar-Leyte Loop, traversing some of Eastern Visayas’ top tourist destinations in Leyte and Samar. The three-day event promotes sustainable motorcycle tourism, road safety, and appreciation of the region’s natural attractions, cultural heritage, and local cuisine while boosting domestic travel and local economies.(DOT-Eastern Visayas Facebook)

TACLOBAN CITY — More than 700 motorcycle enthusiasts from different parts of the country explored the scenic and cultural attractions of Eastern Visayas during the three-day Philippine Motorcycle Tourism Samar-Leyte Loop, an initiative aimed at promoting sustainable tourism and responsible motorcycle travel.

Held from June 26 to 28, the event was organized by Loop PH in partnership with the Tourism Promotions Board (TPB) under the Department of Tourism (DOT). The activity featured guided rides showcasing some of Leyte and Samar’s top tourist destinations while advocating safe riding, road discipline, and cultural appreciation.

The ride officially began on June 27, with participants departing from the Boy Scout Monument in Palo, Leyte, at 5 a.m. for the Leyte Circuit. The route included stops at Carigara Baywalk, Palompon Freedom Park, Sal’s Pineapple Plantation in Ormoc City, the Binaybayon Convention Center, Lintaon Peak or 16,000 Blossoms in Baybay City, Inopacan Baywalk, and the iconic Agas-Agas Bridge in Sogod, Southern Leyte, before returning to the MacArthur Leyte Landing Memorial National Park in Palo.

On the second day, riders crossed the San Juanico Bridge to Samar, visiting the Ulot River Torpedo Extreme Boat Ride in Paranas, the “I Love Borongan” Monument in Borongan City, Canhugas Nature Park in Hernani, and the Historic Balangiga Bells in Eastern Samar before returning to Palo for the awarding of finisher kits.

Beyond visiting tourist attractions, participants also sampled local delicacies and regional cuisine in every province they passed through, giving local food producers and tourism enterprises additional exposure.

According to organizers, the Leyte-Samar Loop forms part of Loop PH’s nationwide moto-tourism campaign, which encourages leisure riding, navigation, endurance, and cultural immersion rather than speed-based competition.

The Ride. Tour. Explore. program features curated motorcycle routes across the Philippines, including regional circuits and the Full Philippine Loop, covering approximately 45 provinces, 65 cities, and 16 regions.

Organizers said the event seeks to boost domestic tourism, generate economic opportunities for local communities, and promote road safety while showcasing the natural beauty, heritage, and hospitality of the country’s destinations.

(ROEL T. AMAZONA)

Tricycle driver arrested in buy-bust operation

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ORMOC CITY — A 45-year-old tricycle driver listed as a street-level drug personality was arrested during a buy-bust operation conducted by the Station Drug Enforcement Team (SDET) of the Balangiga Municipal Police Station on Friday night, June 26, in Barangay Bacjao, Balangiga, Eastern Samar.

The suspect, identified only by the alias “Rene,” is a resident of Balangiga and is included in the local police’s drug watchlist.

Police said the suspect sold a sachet containing a white crystalline substance believed to be shabu to an undercover operative for P500 during the anti-drug operation.

A body search conducted in the presence of the required witnesses led to the recovery of two additional sachets of suspected shabu concealed inside the suspect’s belt bag.

Authorities also recovered P700 in cash, including the marked P500 buy-bust money, a lighter, and a red Honda TMX Supremo motorcycle with a sidecar believed to have been used by the suspect.

The suspect was informed of the reason for his arrest and apprised of his constitutional rights in a language he understood.

Police are preparing charges for violations of Republic Act No. 9165, or the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002, against the suspect, who is currently detained at the Balangiga Municipal Police Station pending the filing of appropriate charges.

(ROBERT DEJON)

PRO-8 conducts specialized training to enhance police response to active shooter incidents

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Enhancing Tactical Readiness. Police personnel from the Police Regional Office 8 participate in practical exercises during the launch of the Tactical Response on Active Shooting Incident program at the Convention Center in Barangay Tabgas, Albuera, Leyte. The specialized training aims to strengthen law enforcement’s capability to respond effectively to active shooter incidents and other high-risk emergencies through coordinated tactical operations and simulation drills. (ROEL T.AMAZONA)
Enhancing Tactical Readiness. Police personnel from the Police Regional Office 8 participate in practical exercises during the launch of the Tactical Response on Active Shooting Incident program at the Convention Center in Barangay Tabgas, Albuera, Leyte. The specialized training aims to strengthen law enforcement’s capability to respond effectively to active shooter incidents and other high-risk emergencies through coordinated tactical operations and simulation drills.
(ROEL T.AMAZONA)

ALBUERA, Leyte – Police personnel in Eastern Visayas underwent specialized tactical training on Sunday, June 28, as the Police Regional Office 8 (PRO-8) launched its Tactical Response on Active Shooting Incident program aimed at improving law enforcement’s capability to respond swiftly and effectively to active shooter situations and other high-risk emergencies.

The training, held at the Convention Center in Barangay Tabgas, this town, was organized by the 1st Leyte Provincial Mobile Force Company in coordination with the Albuera Municipal Police Station.

The activity was attended by police personnel under the leadership of PRO-8 Regional Director B/Gen. Jason Capoy, represented by Leyte Police Provincial Office Officer-in-Charge Police Colonel Celerino Sacro Jr.

Participants included personnel from the 1st and 2nd Leyte Provincial Mobile Force Companies, the Albuera Municipal Police Station, and Task Force Kamurayaw who took part in a series of lectures and practical exercises designed to strengthen tactical skills and operational coordination during critical incidents.

The training covered tactical response procedures, threat assessment, coordinated operations, rapid decision-making, and adherence to established operational protocols. Simulation exercises also focused on improving teamwork, communication, and the ability of first responders to make timely and effective decisions during emergencies.

According to PRO-8, the program forms part of its continuing efforts to enhance the operational readiness, tactical proficiency, and professional competence of police personnel in addressing evolving security threats across Eastern Visayas.

The regional police office emphasized that regular capability-building activities ensure officers remain prepared to protect lives, preserve public order, and respond effectively to crisis situations.

The initiative likewise reinforces the Philippine National Police’s commitment to delivering responsive, professional, and reliable public safety services under its mandate to serve and protect the Filipino people.

(LIZBETH ANN A. ABELLA)

Amend that law

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Senator Robin Padilla is right to call for a special Senate session to amend the Juvenile Justice and Welfare Act of 2006. The law, in its current form, has become dangerously outdated against the harsh realities of present-day violence involving minors. When a law begins to protect deliberate killers instead of innocent lives, it has failed its purpose.

The recent school shooting involving a 14-year-old student should shake lawmakers into action. A teenager entered school grounds armed, fired thirty-eight rounds, killed three fellow students, and wounded several others. This was not childish mischief or a moment of confusion; it was a deliberate act of violence. Yet under the current law, the shield of minority stands so wide that even such grave acts are met with legal softness. That sends a deadly message: age can be used as a shield for murder.

Laws are meant to guide society toward justice, not create loopholes for evil. The original purpose of the Juvenile Justice Law was understandable—to protect young offenders from harsh systems when their actions were born of immaturity, neglect, or poverty. But that protection was never meant to excuse calculated brutality. There is a wide difference between a child who steals food out of hunger and a child who plans a massacre, understands its consequences, and carries it out anyway. The law’s failure lies in treating both under the same broad mercy.

What makes the issue worse is the growing awareness among minors themselves. Reports and conversations now show that some young offenders know the law better than many adults do. They know they cannot easily be jailed, and that knowledge changes behavior. It removes fear. It encourages recklessness. When the law becomes part of the planning of a crime, that law has become an accomplice. No nation can afford a justice system that unintentionally trains young minds to exploit it.

Amending the law does not mean abandoning compassion for the youth. It means drawing a hard line between mistake and malice, between accident and intent. A minor who causes death by accident, or acts in genuine self-defense, deserves protection and rehabilitation. But a minor who knowingly commits murder, armed with full awareness of what he is doing, must face serious and proportionate punishment. Congress must act with urgency. Justice for the dead, safety for the living, and accountability for the guilty demand nothing less.

Monstrous tandem

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On August 5, 1972, the world watched as burglars tied to political power brought down a presidency in the United States through the Watergate scandal. It was politics and corruption dancing in the same room, and the building nearly burned. That unholy marriage remains one of the ugliest forces any nation can endure, and I have always believed it is among the fastest ways to rot a country from the inside.

I can tolerate politics in the way one tolerates rain on laundry day—annoying, inconvenient, often messy, but part of life. Politics, after all, is unavoidable; it is the machinery of power, the marketplace of ideas, the endless wrestling match of human ambition. But corruption is a different beast. Corruption is not noise; it is poison. And when politics begins feeding that poison instead of fighting it, what emerges is not government but a feeding frenzy, like vultures fighting over a carcass they themselves killed.

What’s sickening is how politics becomes the perfect shield for thieves. A plunderer in office no longer needs innocence; he only needs allies. The moment accusations rise, the script is always the same: “This is political persecution.” It is a cheap umbrella in a storm of evidence. Facts get buried beneath party colors, and stolen money vanishes behind speeches, press conferences, and finger-pointing. The public ends up staring at smoke while the fire quietly eats the house.

And that house, of course, is the nation itself. A government obsessed with political survival spends less time fixing roads, feeding children, or building hospitals and more time buying loyalty. Public funds become poker chips. Cabinet seats become rewards. Investigations become theater. Laws become elastic, stretched until they fit whoever is in power. I have always found that part almost comical—if it were not so tragic. It is like watching termites hold elections over who gets to chew the pillars first.

History is cruelly honest about this. Dictatorship showed how political machinery can protect massive theft for years while critics were silenced and institutions bent to serve one family’s appetite. Across the seas, Operation Car Wash in Brazil exposed how politicians and business giants built an empire of bribery so large it shook the entire government.

These are not fairy tales. They are receipts. Nations bleed not only from war but from men in barongs, suits, and neckties who know exactly how to smile while robbing the treasury.
And what chance does an ordinary citizen have when every gate is guarded? That is the cruelest joke. Protest if you must, but permits can be denied. Speak if you dare, but lawsuits can rain down. File complaints, but the offices meant to hear them may already be occupied by friends of the accused. I often think corruption with political backing behaves like an octopus—its head hidden, but its arms wrapped around courts, police, media, and budgets. Cut one arm, and another tightens elsewhere.

What makes this evil monstrous is not only the money stolen but the culture it breeds. Young people watch and learn. They begin to think honesty is for fools and power is the only real law. A child who sees thieves celebrated grows up measuring success not by character but by cunning. That, to me, is the deepest wound. Roads can be rebuilt. Economies can recover. But a generation taught to admire wolves instead of shepherds is harder to save.

That is why I cannot shrug this off as “just politics.” Politics is rough, yes, but it need not be rotten. The cure, as I see it, is stubborn transparency, strong institutions, and citizens who refuse to be hypnotized by slogans or bribed by crumbs. The broom must keep sweeping, even when the dust fights back. Because if corruption and politics continue to sleep in the same bed, the nation will keep waking up poorer and weaker, wondering who stole the morning.

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