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WB approves $176-million to enhance fisheries produce

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Dr. Paciente Cordero
Dr. Paciente Cordero

The World Bank (WB) approved $176 million to enhance the Philippines fisheries output. The WB fund is specifically for the Philippine Fisheries and Coastal Resiliency Project (FISHCORE) “aimed at improving fisheries management and the value of fisheries production, as well as increasing income in selected coastal villages. The beneficiaries are 1.15 million fisher, small-to-medium businesses, residents in coastal communities.

The FISHCORE project will be implemented in 2 fisheries management areas (FMAs) established by the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR), specifically FMAs 6 and 9 – known major fishing grounds. The 2 FMAs are in NE Luzon, and in waters between Visayas and Mindanao.

The WB expects to address the declining fish stocks by an average of 20 percent over the past decade due to over exploitation, destructive fishing methods, habitat degradation, and negative impact from land-based activities.

Specifically, the FISHCORE project funded by WB “will help the Philippines design and establish improved fisheries management systems in the selected FMAs coastal and municipal waters, law enforcement, capacity-building, infra-structure resilient to extreme weather conditions, and other necessary investments, e.g. fishing gear and aquaculture equipment providers to balance increasing productivity while conserving the natural resources.”

MY COMMENT:
The management of the WB $176 fund is critical as the FISHCORE project has a two-pronged objective, namely increased fish production to address food security issue and assist the coastal/municipal fishers enhance their livelihood.
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Missing the forest for the trees

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FR. ROY CIMAGALA
FR. ROY CIMAGALA

IT’S an idiomatic expression that means “to not understand or appreciate a larger situation, problem, etc., because one is considering only a few parts of it.” It’s an expression that aptly describes what was dramatized in that gospel episode where Christ was accused by a Pharisee who invited him for dinner of not observing the protocol of washing hands before the meal. (cfr. Lk 11,37-41).

“Oh, you Pharisees!” Christ said. “Although you cleanse the outside of the cup and the dish, inside you are filled with plunder and evil. You fools! Did not the maker of the outside also make the inside?”

With those words, Christ was trying to tell his host that he, being the son of God which the Pharisees could not believe, ought to be exempted from that detail of washing since he was trying to show them that he was the maker of both “the inside and the outside” of things.” In other words, the host missed to get the bigger and more important point Christ was showing him due to a tiny detail that blinded him from seeing it.

It’s a danger that we should be most wary about, because it can also happen to us quite often. It’s when we become too legalistic or too formalistic in our interpretation of certain things that we miss the more important part of a situation or issue. We would be missing the true spirit of a law, or get so trapped in the details that we fail to see the whole picture.
We need to be keenly aware of this common danger and do everything to protect ourselves from it and to fight it, since it will always be around, given our human condition here on earth.

The secret again is to be in vital union with Christ, referring everything to him, especially our legal and judicial systems, and the ways we make, interpret and apply our laws.

Christ clarified this point in so many words when he told the Pharisees who questioned him about why his disciples were doing something that was forbidden in the sabbath, that “the sabbath was made for man, not man for the sabbath. That is why the Son of Man is lord even of the sabbath.” (cfr. Mk 2,23-28).

We have to understand that all our laws should be based on what is known as the natural law that in the end is a participation of the divine eternal law of God, our Creator and the first and ultimate lawgiver.

And that part of natural law that is specific to man is called the natural moral law that would recognize, as its first principle, God as our Creator and source and end of all laws. It is the law that would lead us to be God’s image and likeness, and children of his, sharers of his divine life.

A legal system not clearly based on this fundamental principle about laws would already be a system that is defective ‘ab initio.’ A legal system that is based only on some human consensus would put the spirit of the law in full subservience to the letter of that law.

This kind of legal system is what is referred to as legal positivism. This means that the laws are valid not because they are rooted in moral or natural law, but because they are enacted by some human authority and are accepted by society as such.

‘Yolanda’ anniversary to be marked with thanksgiving, exec says

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On its 10th year anniversary

TACLOBAN CITY – This year’s 10th anniversary of the devastation of Super Typhoon ‘Yolanda’ will be more of a thanksgiving.

This was disclosed by city tourism officer Malou Tabao who said that the city government will be giving honor to all groups, nations, and individuals who extended assistance to Tacloban and its people when it was pummeled by Yolanda in the morning of November 8,2013.

Through their immediate assistance, the recovery of Tacloban not only became easy but rather fast, she said.

“This year will be a celebratory one. Like celebrating of life and thanking God that we are still here and we are back. Thanking all the organizations that helped us including, countries and national government agencies,” Tabao said.

Tabao disclosed that President Ferdinand Marcos was invited to attend the decade year observance of the Yolanda landfall that killed over 2,200 people in Tacloban alone.
The President, she said, has yet to confirm his coming.

Last year, the President graced the 9th year Yolanda commemoration where he attended the program and mass at the Yolanda mass grave site in Holy Cross Memorial Cemetery.
Secretaries of national government agencies were also invited.

Among those who had confirmed their presence were Defense Secretary Gilbert Teodoro, Jr., Department of Tourism Secretary Christina Frasco, and Department of Science and Technology Secretary Renato Solidum, according to Tabao.

Some of the international non-government agencies that signified their presence in next month’s event include the Oxfam, USAID, Save the Children, and World for Food Program, among the many international humanitarian organizations that aided assistance to the city and its people.

Among the activities prepared for the 10th Yolanda commemoration are the resiliency forum organized by the Office of Civil Defense, and Handa Pilipinas forum of the Department of Science and Technology.

Yolanda, the strongest typhoon to hit inland in modern times claimed about 6, 300 lives in the Visayas, of which 5, 902 were from Eastern Visayas.

The super typhoon affected 44 provinces encompassing five regions and displacing 4.1 million people with an overall damage estimated at more than $5.8 billion.
(ROEL T. AMAZONA)

Comelec in EV launches anti-vote buying and selling campaign

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3 days before the campaign period of Oct. 30 BSKE

TACLOBAN CITY– The Commission on Elections (Comelec) in the region launched on Monday a campaign to make the forthcoming barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan elections (BSKE) free of vote-buying and vote-selling.

Dubbed as ‘Kontra Bigay,’ the campaign was launched three days before the start of the campaign period which will run from October 19 to 28.

The program created a Kontra Bigay complaint center task to receive complaints and reports of vote-buying and vote-selling from any citizen who has personally witnessed the act of offering or promising by or of voter’s acceptance of money or other consideration from the relatives, leaders, or sympathizers of a candidate.

It shall assist in the preparation of the complaint, the affidavit of witnesses attesting to the offer or promise by or of voter’s acceptance of money or other consideration from the relatives, leaders, or sympathizers of a candidate.

In a statement, lawyer Felicisimo Embalsado, regional elections officer, said that the importance of a secured, accurate, free, honest, orderly, peaceful and credible election is the concern not only of the Comelec but all the stakeholders in our country.

He added that all these tend to motivate people to cooperate and develop trust which is a catalyst for unity. (LIZBETH ANN A. ABELLA)

Goma: EO 17-A not contradictory to EO 41

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HOUSES FOR THE REFORMED REBELS. Soldiers are constructing 17 housing units intended for members of the New People’s Army who have surrendered to the government. The housing units are located in San Jose de Buan, Samar. Story on Page 19.(Photo Courtesy, Emy Calagos)

3 Leyte mayors claim EO 17-A unconstitutional

HOUSES FOR THE REFORMED REBELS. Soldiers are constructing 17 housing units intended for members of the New People’s Army who have surrendered to the government. The housing units are located in San Jose de Buan, Samar. Story on Page 19.(Photo Courtesy, Emy Calagos)

TACLOBAN CITY – Leyte Rep.Richard Gomez dismissed the claims that an executive order he issued when he was the mayor of Ormoc City was contrary to the order of Pres. Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. to cancel the ‘pass through’ fee collection by local governments.

He also insisted that Executive Order 17-A he issued on February 27, 2020 did not impose any fee for vehicles transporting goods using the national roads within the city of Ormoc.
“EO 17-A only prohibited the exportation of sand and gravel materials from Ormoc City,” the Leyte solon said in a statement.

According to him, he issued the order on the basis of a report from the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) of ‘rampant illegal extraction and transport of sand and gravel materials and quarry materials’ in the district.

“So EO17-A was issued to address the urgent concerns in the DENR report, in the exercise of the authority by the city government to enforce measures for environmental protection, ecological balance, and environmental recovery…,” Gomez said.

“I did what was best for the people and the environment and I suggest other municipal mayors to do the same as well and respect the policies of mayors from other areas and observe their own jurisdictions,” he added.

To recall, Ramon Oñate of Palompon, Edgardo Cordeño of Isabel, and Bernardino Tacoy of Matag-ob claimed that Executive Order 17-A issued by Gomez is contrary to Executive Order 41 issued by Pres. Marcos.

They have sought the assistance of Interior Sec. Benhur Abalos for this local order be lifted.

The mayors claimed that EO 17-A is still being implemented by Mayor Lucy Torres Gomez.
On September 25, the President issued EO 41 directing all local government units to lift the ‘pass through’ fees to help lower the cost of goods and also help revive the local industries under the Philippine Development Plan 2023-2028.

The mayors claimed that EO 17-A has affected the flow of sand and gravel materials in the third district of Leyte as it resulted in the increase in prices of aggregates, in particular.
The mayors said that from the previous P900 per cubic meter, it now surged to P1,600 to P1,700 per cubic due to the additional cost of transporting it to their areas because vehicles that are transporting these materials have to pass to other municipalities to avoid crossing to Ormoc where their product will be confiscated as ordered under EO 17-A, they said.
“This EO 17-A is even more restrictive if not unconstitutional considering that it did not only impose fees upon entering the national highway of Ormoc City but it prohibits any sand and gravel business to pass through Ormoc City coming from other towns,” they said in their October 1 letter to Sec. Abalos.

The mayors, who are political allies of Rep. Gomez, hope that the DILG will intervene by ordering the city government of Ormoc to enforce the President’s EO 41 immediately.

JOEY A. GABIETA

USAID engages CSOs for transparency, participatory governance project in Tacloban City

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SUPPORT FOR CHANGE. Tacloban City Mayor Alfred Romualdez expresses his support on the campaign of the United States Agency for International Development(USAID)’s Cities for Enhanced Governance and Engagement (CHANGE) during his talks with various non-government organizations held on Thursday (Oct. 12). (TCIO)

Mayor Romualdez shows support of USAID goals

SUPPORT FOR CHANGE. Tacloban City Mayor Alfred Romualdez expresses his support on the campaign of the United States Agency for International Development(USAID)’s Cities for Enhanced Governance and Engagement (CHANGE) during his talks with various non-government organizations held on Thursday (Oct. 12). (TCIO)

 

TACLOBAN CITY– To advocate for participatory governance, social accountability, and transparency, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) commenced on Thursday, October 12, at the Rosvenil Hotel, the two-day Safe Space and Trust Building in Governance, Consensus, and Network Building Seminar Workshop for Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) in Tacloban City.

The activity, which will be held until Friday (Oct. 13), is a component of the Cities for Enhanced Governance and Engagement (CHANGE) and is being facilitated by USAID Change Project Component Leads Maria Paz Christi Moneva and Redempto Parafina, along with City Governance Coordinator Gemma Borreros and Program Coordinator Julie-Ann Deus.

To show his commitment to the event, Mayor Alfred Romualdez, in his welcome message during the event, underscored the significance of making smarter decisions and crafting policies that are adaptable to the culture to achieve development.The Chief Executive also expressed his gratitude to USAID for their support when the city was recovering from Super Typhoon Yolanda.

Among the CSOs participating in the two-day activity are the City PWD Federation, One Way Bike Club, World Vision, United Leymar Transport Cooperative, Kabalikat Civicom, United Architects of the Philippines Metro Tacloban, and PICE.

Increased engagement of CSOs in and oversight of local governance processes in a manner that the government approves of and supports is one of the goals of CHANGE.

One of the nine secondary cities where CHANGE initiatives are being carried out is Tacloban City. It is for this purpose that the local city council is being urged to approve the memorandum of understanding, which will most likely be finalized by the third week of November, 2023.
(TACLOBAN CITY INFORMATION OFFICE)

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