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  1. charlyB

    charlyB DI Senior Member

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    Yesterday evening around 6pm there was a checkpoint on the south highway between Bacong and Dumaguete, they call it a checkpoint but it really was only a place where all the illegal motorbikes parked before it (north & south) and partially blocked the road.
    I have no police training but i could deduce the reason they did not want to go through was that the the bike was somehow illegal, the PNP did not appear to have seen this or the traffic chaos it was causing as they did not walk the few meters it would have taken to arrest or move on these people.
    Why do they bother, next time just stay in the police station and stop f$%king up the traffic for no good reason.
     
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  2. alex

    alex DI Forum Patron Highly Rated Poster

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    Neil Domaille shared Hulagway ug Kasikas sa Dumaguete's post.
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    A Japanese man has drowned after trying to rescue his student drowning yesterday at Masaplod Norte, Dauin at around 4pm.

    Search and rescue team searched since yesterday and found the missing victim dead this morning at around 9am.

    Thank you to Mr. Alex Salboro from Maayongtubig who found the body and to those who helped in searching, Dumaguete Coastguard rescue team, Mr. Roland Tuble (Masaplod Bantay Dagat), Mr. Alon Banlaygas and team and Deutsch divers for helping in search and rescue operation.
     
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  3. Jack Peterson

    Jack Peterson DI Forum Luminary Highly Rated Poster SC Connoisseur Veteran Air Force

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    Just a heads up here Guys and Gals, THURSDAY & FRIDAY are Holidays so many Government Departments and Others will be closed as will the BI and Banks, so if you need to do stuff Tomorrow is the day. Have a Good Weekend all.
     
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  4. DavyL200

    DavyL200 DI Forum Luminary ★ Global Mod ★ ★ Moderator ★ Highly Rated Poster Showcase Reviewer

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    Tropical cyclones in the Philippines are becoming more extreme and causing greater amounts of devastation, a new study has shown.


    Geographers from the University of Sheffield have analysed annual data over the period from 1951 to 2013 and saw a slightly decreasing trend in the number of smaller cyclones (above 118 kilometres per hour) that hit land in the Philippines, particularly in the last two decades.

    More hazardous tropical cyclones (above 150 kilometres per hour) were shown to be on the increase in recent years, with the northern island of Luzon frequently affected by these weather events and associated rainfall.

    Previous research has suggested that the increase in the number of intense tropical cyclones could be due to rising sea-surface temperatures since the 1970s as a result of climate change. However it is too early to draw conclusions that will influence tropical cyclone projections, so this remains an active part of research on extreme climate events.

    Monica Ortiz from the Department of Geography and Scholar in the Grantham Centre for Sustainable Futures said: "Growing up in the Philippines myself, I understand the catastrophic loss of life and damage to property that extreme weather can cause. By analysing this data from the past up to the present, we can better adapt to further climate change and prepare for future disasters."



    Read more at: Philippines affected by more extreme tropical cyclones
     
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  5. DavyL200

    DavyL200 DI Forum Luminary ★ Global Mod ★ ★ Moderator ★ Highly Rated Poster Showcase Reviewer

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    PARIS, France - France has drawn up a blacklist of 17 countries, including the Philippines, that do not help investigate foreign aid fraud, banning the use of their banks to help distribute development funds, officials said Monday, May 27 (Tuesday in Manila).

    Aides to development minister Pascal Canfin were unable to say how much French foreign aid currently transits via banks in the countries featured on the new blacklist.

    The blacklist expands on an already-established register of 8 "non-cooperative states and territories" that already includes Botswana, Brunei, Nauru, Guatemala and the Philippines.

    It adds Switzerland, Lebanon, Panama, Costa Rica, the United Arab Emirates, Dominica, Liberia, Trinidad and Tobago, and Vanuatu. PH included in French aid blacklist
     
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  6. DavyL200

    DavyL200 DI Forum Luminary ★ Global Mod ★ ★ Moderator ★ Highly Rated Poster Showcase Reviewer

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    I have just had some info from a friend who has just been to bi main office at intramuros,Manila to renew his acr card for his tourist visa and he was told it was not needed anymore and the visa stamp will be enough now!
    This card has always been a complete waste of time and money anyway and just a money maker.
    I'm sure more will come out on this issue over the next few days or weeks.
     
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  7. alex

    alex DI Forum Patron Highly Rated Poster

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    12 person apprehended by joint forces of PNP, PIB, CIDG in canday Ong, Dumaguete City with drug value at 1.5 million peso,s
     
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  8. AlwaysRt

    AlwaysRt DI Forum Patron Highly Rated Poster Blood Donor Veteran Air Force Marines

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    I posted my recent experience on another forum but thought it was good enough info to post here also.

    Visa On-Arrival:
    OK, returned on PAL into NAIA Terminal 2. The setup there is a counter behind immigration. This means you have to go through the immigration line and tell them what you want when you get to the immigration officer. They will then send you though to the counter to do the paperwork and come back for the stamp. Unless, as in my case, the guy at the counter was off screwing around somewhere and the immigration officer didn't want to keep track of me waiting for him to return and told me to try again next time.

    How does that go again??? Oh yeah, It's more fun in the Philippines!

    Onward Ticket:
    My flight back to the Phils was on the evening of the 10th. Mid day I went on expedia and purchased a one way ticket to Singapore. Checked in and showed my flight with confirmation number. Arrived in Manila and after clearing customs, while waiting for my connecting flight to Duma, exercised Expedia's 24 hour cancellation policy. My credit card was charged for the Singapore flight on the 11th, and 100% credited back on the 12th.

    So, had a real onward ticket with a real reservation and a real confirmation number (for 12 hours). Total cost $0
     
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  9. Dave & Imp

    Dave & Imp DI Forum Patron Highly Rated Poster Showcase Reviewer

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    This is an exert from People’s lawyering Speech (I am sure you can find the whole thing on the internet.) It is interesting to get a perspective on the culture, society and political system from basic facts, not propaganda, so I did not copy much of the propaganda, as I thought it was very self-serving. We can each draw on own conclusions from the facts.
    These fact do not particularly interface well with the polical rehteric we will hear for the next few months.

    PEOPLES’ LAWYERING:
    A TIME FOR NEW CHALLENGES,
    A PROPER TIME FOR RENEWAL
    Keynote Speech on the Occasion of the 10th Founding Anniversary of the
    Union of Peoples’ Lawyers of Mindanao (UPLM)

    12 September 2015
    Cagayan de Oro, Philippines

    by:
    Edre U. Olalia
    Secretary General
    National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers (NUPL)

    . Most of the report is propaganda type information (they particularly like to point out the US as being a strong influence… (For most things that are wrong). Here are the actual facts they presented regarding the Philippines cultural life:

    According to IBON International, these are the facts and figures:
    • 66 million Filipinos are poor. They live on just Php125 (US$2.80) or less per day. They are the Filipino farmers, fisherfolk, workers, small-scale traders, vendors, domestic workers and other informal sector workers;
    • 4.3 Filipinos are million unemployed and 7.9 million underemployed;
    • 4 out of 10 or 44% of the workers are non-regular or agency-hired workers, over six out of ten or 63% do not even have written contracts; four out of ten or 40% employed Filipinos are in just part-time work with very low pay and no benefits;
    • the average daily basic pay of millions of Filipino workers nationwide increased by less than Php5 (Php4.50) or just 1.7% between 2005 and 2014;
    • there are 10.2 million overseas Filipinos in 2013;
    • 4,508 overseas Filipino workers were deployed every day because only 2,800 jobs were generated at home.
    • 7 of 10 peasants are still landless;
    • a third of landowners own or control more than 80% of agricultural land;
    • the wealth of the 10 richest Filipinos has more than tripled under the Aquino administration from Php630 billion in 2010 to Php2.2 trillion in 2015 (250% increase);
    • the net income of the country’s some 260 listed firms on the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) rose from Php438 billion in 2010 to Php583 billion in 2014 (33% increase);
    • the net income of the country’s Top 1000 corporations grew from Php804 billion in 2010 to Php1.0 trillion in 2013 (26% increase);
    • two-fifths (40%) of approved investment in the Philippines in the last decade-and-a-half is foreign rather than Filipino, not yet counting the use of dummy corporations;
    • the Philippines paid out over US$36 billion in profit remittances since 1980 which is on top of over US$178 billion in debt servicing;
    • the Philippines has exported over US$43 billion worth of mineral exports since the 1970s;
    • there was 115% increase in profit of mining companies between 2010 and 2014;
    • some 98% of Philippine domestic production is exported;
    • around 80,000 babies still die of preventable diseases every year;
    • 6 out of 10 Filipinos die without seeing a doctor;
    • power privatization has made electricity in the Philippines the most expensive in Asia, even more expensive than in Japan or South Korea;
    • water privatization has made water in the Philippines the third most expensive after Japan and Singapore;
    • rail transport privatization has caused fares to increase from 50-100%;
    • 61,000 houses of urban poor families with some 305,000 individuals were demolished and displaced under the Aquino administration;
    • over 1.2 million homes were damaged or destroyed by Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) but the government only built 364 homes; and
    • one million families with 5.6 million people was severely affected by Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) but less than 220,000 families were given livelihood support.
     
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