TOTOY BATO

Ang DJ na TIGAS naaaaaaaaaah TIGAS tuwing umaga at napakahilig mag 6to9.

KRISTINE DERA

Ang tinderang engkantada na nagmula sa langit bumagsak sa lupa ayon pulakda..

LALA BANDERAS

basta makinig lang lagi tuwing alas dose hangang alas tres ng hapon mga kapwa..

DIEGO BANDIDO

Ang talipandas sa balat ng radyo subaybayan at pakingan alas 3ng hapon hanggang 6 ng gabi.

New Batch

(top row)Sir Mark Ignacio (oic),R-yhell,Wilson,Risky, Chief Rei,Biboy Bibo,Diego Bandido,(front row)Totoy Bato,Kristine Dera,Maam Vanessa Ignacio,Maria Maldita,Benz Cason

AUTOMATIC YAN

Yan yung mga Astig...hehehehe

THE ORIGINAL

(Top row) Jim Butido,Ryhell,Risky,Fred Rice,Wilson, Bench,(front row)John Donut,Chief Rei,Mags Mallow, Paparonie

Friday, September 14, 2012

Karen' to bring weekend rains in parts of PH

MANILA – Typhoon “Karen” has maintained its strength as it continued to move farther from the country.   
According to weather bureau PAGASA, the typhoon was last spotted 770 kilometers northeast of Aparri, Cagayan.
Karen was packing winds of up to 185 kilometers per hour (kph) and gustiness of up to 220 kph.

It was moving north at 15 kph in the direction of southern Japan.

The typhoon, the 11th tropical cyclone to enter the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) in 2012, is expected to exit by Sunday.
It is the strongest tropical cyclone, based on its maximum sustained winds, to enter PAR this year.
As Karen moves away, rains are expected as the typhoon continues to enhance the southwest monsoon.
Over the weekend, provinces in central Luzon will be looking at fair weather with 10% to 20% chance of rains in the morning, going up to 40% to 60% by afternoon.
    
Calabarzon is also looking at rains Friday night, with most places having 90 to 99% chance of showers.
The area will still be under cloud cover and rains for most of the day tomorrow.
The same kind of weather is expected over the Bicol region and Mindoro.
The western potion of Visayas should also expect showers over the weekend with less rains expected over the eastern side, which means fair weather over Samar, Leyte, Bohol and Cebu.

In Mindanao, good weather is expected with partly cloudy skies and isolated showers.
Metro Manila, meanwhile, has 30% chance of rains over the weekend.

China edges Philippines in FIBA Asia Cup debut

TOKYO (Xinhua) - The Chinese men's basketball team, made up of young players like Guo Ailun and Wang Zhelin, beat Philippinese 71-68 to win their first appearance at the 2012 FIBA Asia Cup here on Friday.
Guo Ailin came from bench to score a match-high 18 points while Zhao Tailong took 11. Wang Zhelin finished with six points and 14 rebounds, as along with five turnovers and four fouls.
Zhao Tailong's three-pointer with three minutes to go to the end tied the score at 64-64. Guo made two free-throws to build the lead and secured China the victory.
Ranidel De Ocampo led Philippines with 11 points while teammate Marucs Douthit, who led the scoring and rebound board at 2011 Asian Championships, finished with only 10 points and eight rebounds.
"It was a difficult match for us," said Vincent Reyes, head coach of the Philippine team. "The Chinese team is higher, obviously. And we missed lots of free-throws in the final minutes, that's why we lost the match."
"And our only chance to beat China maybe is to play their younger team, like today's. If we were playing the China A, the score couldn't be so close," added Reyes.
"Our players are young and they failed to keep their advantage while they were leading in the match," said Fan Bin, Chinese team' s coach. "Winning the match will bring lots of experience to our young players."
It is China's debut in the FIBA Asia Cup, which was known as the FIBA Asia Stankovic Cup in the last three editions. It is the qualifying event for the 27th FIBA Asia Championship in 2013 while the winners will automatically qualify for the Asia Championship.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Aquino eyes ‘nice, quiet’ job for Puno

MANILA, Philippines—After accepting  Interior  Undersecretary Rico Puno’s resignation, President Benigno Aquino is  considering a “nice, quiet”  job  for  him in government,  Puno himself disclosed this Tuesday  night.
Puno, who appeared in an interview over Solar Nightly News, said  the President mentioned about  another possible post for him when  they talked  Monday.
“If you still want to work for the government, I will try  to look for a nice, quiet job for you,”  Puno quoted Aquino as saying.
Asked by the news anchor if he was open to the President’s offer, the resigned official said, “Yes!”
Farming, shooting
But in the meantime, Puno said he would return to farming and probably help train the policemen once he puts up his dream firing range in his farm.
“This is one way of giving something for our police. I will train them and give them the facilities,” he said.
Puno announced his resignation Tuesday, saying he wanted to give deceased Interior Secretary Jesse Robredo’s replacement, Manuel Roxas, a free hand in running the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG).
Puno, known as a close friend of Aquino, also denied accusations that he had tried to tamper with Robredo’s documents a day after the secretary died in the plane crash off Masbate on August 18.
“I believe that I have carried out my assigned duties to the best of my ability,” Puno said in a statement released in Malacañang Tuesday.
Anomalies
There were speculations that Puno tried to obtain from the residence and office of Robredo some documents that might link him to anomalies.
Aquino, however, later defended Puno, saying he had instructed the undersecretary to secure Robredo’s offices immediately following the plane crash at sea.
Despite Aquino leaping to Puno’s defense, critics had accused the undersecretary of other wrongdoing and Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago announced she would hold Senate hearings into Puno’s official actions on Friday.
Robredo, a popular reformist advocate who was in charge of the Philippine National Police and the DILG, is believed to have been probing possible corruption and collusion in the department.
No regrets
Presidential spokesman Edwin Lacierda said that Puno’s resignation “would put to rest all these accusations… that undersecretary Puno is close to the President and is being coddled.” He added: “That’s not true.”
Puno, meanwhile, showed no regrets on his decision to step down from his post. In fact, he said he sees it as an opportunity to spend more time with the President, his longtime friend.
“We’d see each other more often and we will be partners and we will be more shooting buddies now,” Puno said. “And we will shoot together.

Tropical storm 'Karen' moving closer to PH


MANILA, Philippines (UPDATE) – Tropical storm “Karen” has maintained its strength as it continues to move north over the East Philippine Sea, the state weather bureau said on Tuesday.
In its 11 p.m. bulletin, PAGASA said the storm has slightly accelerated while maintaining its strength, still packing winds of up to 65 kilometers per hour (kph) with gustiness of up to 80 kph.
It was moving at a speed of 15 kph and was located 740 kilometers east of Borongan, Eastern Samar at 10 p.m.
PAGASA said “Karen” is expected to be at 1,080 km east of Infanta, Quezon Wednesday night and at 910 km east of Aparri, Cagayan by Thursday night.
No storm signals have been raised in PAGASA’s latest bulletin.
Karen is expected to bring moderate to heavy rainfall within its 300 km diameter, but PAGASA said if the storm maintains its track, it will not make direct landfall.
PAGASA, however, warns fishing boats and other small seacrafts against venturing out into the eastern seaboard of Visayas and Mindanao due to rough seas caused by the storm.
The weather bureau is also monitoring a low pressure area (LPA) spotted 240 km west of Zambales.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Locked down


Now it is official: President Aquino admits to ordering DILG undersecretary Rico Puno to lock down Jessie Robredo’s office.
That, at least, provides some official cover for Puno’s actions the day after Robredo’s plane crashed. The President does not recall including Robredo’s condominium unit in his lockdown order but says he does not fault Puno for visiting the place. Aquino affirmed his continuing trust and confidence in his loyal, albeit beleaguered, friend.
At the same time, the President announced he was asking PNP Chief Nicanor Bartolome to take early retirement to assume Puno’s DILG post. Puno, it appears, will relocate to another post. Bartolome, for his part, sounded surprised by the turn of events.
The announcement seems to contradict Mar Roxas’ claim that he was being given full control of the DILG, including choosing all his subalterns in this powerful agency. It seems Aquino will still choose his preferred nominee for police affairs.
We have not heard anything from Mar Roxas yet after all these recent statements. Since Congress is still in session, he cannot fully assume his new post until he is confirmed by the Commission on Appointments. Imaginably, Roxas might take Aquino’s statement about replacing Puno with Bartolome a letdown.
It took little convincing for Mar Roxas to accept the DILG appointment. Some insiders say he angled vigorously for the post to keep this powerful department firmly under LP control. This is a vital vantage point not only for party-building but, more importantly, for preparing the ground for Roxas to resume his quest for the presidency in 2016.
It does not seem coincidental that information about Puno’s “raid” on Robredo’s domicile and about “investigations” conducted against the undersecretary leaked out only after it became clear he was not about to be taken out of his post. The President had appointed his Executive Secretary to be OIC at the DILG. His Executive Secretary, in turn, denied that Puno has been relieved or that he has resigned.
Earlier, voices identified with the LP bloc announced Puno had resigned (in effect to make way for Roxas’ appointment of his own man for the post). When it seemed that Puno might be difficult to uproot, a loud media chorus broke out itemizing “sensitive investigations” and demanding the President dump the man.
The plot, it seems, thickens by the day. What is clear is that LP partisans are not about to rest until Puno himself is locked down somewhere far away from what this faction considers its spheres of influence.
Economic threat
Too bad President Aquino failed to meet up with his Chinese counterpart on the sidelines of the APEC meeting in Vladivostok. There are many bilateral issues between our two countries, beyond the disputed shoals, that require urgent attention.
One of these issues concerns subsidies China provides her industries to export products their home economy can no longer support. Without intending it, Beijing’s policy could wipe out entire industries in the small economies of this region. Among the subsidized exports are steel products that now threaten, abetted by technical smuggling, our entire steel industry.
China is the world’s largest steel producer, with a manufacturing capacity exceeding 900 million metric tons a year. The US, second largest steel producer, accounts for only 64 million metric tons a year. Our total steel production is a miniscule 1.5 million tons annually even as the building boom has raised domestic demand to 2.5 million tons a year.
With the slowdown in China’s economic expansion, she now has a humungous excess steel manufacturing capacity of about 300 million tons. Subsidies for exports intend to encourage shipment of steel products abroad that will spare China from having to shut down hundreds of steel mills.
What that means, on our end, is that our domestic industries face a tsunami of Chinese steel exports that will swamp whatever little is left of our domestic manufacturing base, eradicating tens of thousands of industrial jobs. That destructive tsunami of exports is helped along on the Chinese side by manufacturers wrongly classifying semi-processed goods as finished products. It is helped along, on the Philippine side, by incompetent and vulnerable Customs personnel as well as inadequate policies.
For instance, large quantities of steel billets entering our ports last month were classified as finished products because Chinese exporters simply added boron, an unnecessary element in steel production, so that their exports may be classified as finished products for subsidy purposes. Other shipments wrongly declared billets as square rods.
Other unscrupulous Filipino importers simply undervalue the cost of the products they bring in to lower duties and taxes due, undercutting domestically produced steel. They are partners in the effective dumping of manufactures from over-capacitated China.
Alleged to be one of the notorious importers is Joyland Industries based in Mandaue, Cebu. For years, this firm declared the price of its imports of steel bars at less than half the prevailing market price for unprocessed billets. In fact, they valued their imports at substantially lower prices than scrap metal.
When confronted by local manufacturers about what, in effect, is technical smuggling on a large and continuing scale, Customs personnel simply shrug their shoulders and say they basically accept any transaction value an importer declares as long as it is notarized. Government lost hundreds of millions in potential revenues because of this excuse.
In the case of steel products, all our people in Customs have to do is to log on the website and see prevailing world prices for all products indicated in the Metal Bulletin Weekly. They may then effectively check undervaluation of imports.

Today in History: September 11

 
2001 U.S.A. 9/11 Attacks On World Trade Center and Pentagon
11th Sept. 2001 : The 911 attacks carried out on September 11, 2001 were a series of terrorist attacks upon the United States of America . Four commercial passenger jet airliners were hijacked on that morning and two of the planes were crashed into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, one plane into each tower, causing the collapse of both towers within two hours. The third aircraft was crashed into the Pentagon. Passengers on the fourth hijacked aircraft attempted to retake control of their plane from the hijackers, which crashed into a field in rural Somerset County, Pennsylvania killing all on board but in the process saving many other lives. Approximately 3,000 people died in these attacks. including a number of fire fighters and rescue workers.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Hu skips talks with Aquino

RUSSKIY ISLAND, Vladivostok—President Benigno Aquino returned to Manila on Sunday without meeting Chinese President Hu Jintao for much-anticipated bilateral talks that would have included their countries’ territorial dispute in the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea).
Mr. Aquino attended the 20th Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) forum and leaders’ summit on Russkiy Island, off the Russian far eastern port city of Vladivostok during the weekend. His plane landed in Manila at 5:35 p.m., 40 minutes early because of a tail wind.
In a five-minute arrival speech, the President said  the Apec goals—make regional investments and trade strategies productive, the supply chains continuous and financial systems able to withstand crisis—remaind on track.
Speaking in Filipino, Mr. Aquino reported his meetings with the leaders of Singapore, Malaysia, Vietnam and Chile.
“We have successfully imparted the new face of the Philippines: more open to business opportunities, fairer to those who are ready to invest and a lucrative center of commerce and trade not just in the Asia-Pacific but in the whole world,” he said.
Mr. Aquino and Hu had been expected to meet on Sunday before the close of the Apec leaders’ summit.
Question of time
Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario on Saturday said that the format for the meeting had been “finalized” and only the time for the two leaders to sit down for the talks remained to be worked out.
Sunday came, the summit wrapped up its business, and the host, Russian President Vladimir Putin, said goodbye to 20 other Asia-Pacific leaders, but Hu remained scarce.
“It just came to a scheduling challenge, but as you can see the scheduling challenge turned out to be a bigger challenge than we anticipated,” Del Rosario said.
Mr. Aquino’s aides had said beforehand that a meeting with Hu was his top priority for the summit.
Rival claims
China claims sovereignty over nearly all of the West Philippine Sea, which is believed to hold vast amounts of oil and gas, is a rich fishing ground, and is home to shipping lanes vital to global trade.
But the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam and Taiwan also claim parts of the sea, some claims overlapping, and Manila and Hanoi accuse Beijing of a campaign of intimidation.
Tensions between the Philippines and China have been particularly pronounced, rising dramatically in April when vessels from the two countries faced off with each other at Panatag Shoal (Scarborough Shoal), a rich fishing ground within Manila’s 370-kilometer exclusive economic zone.
The Philippines stepped back from the standoff in June due to stormy weather, but Mr. Aquino said he would order government vessels to return to the shoal unless the Chinese cleared out.
Chinese ships are reportedly still at Panatag Shoal.
Missed opportunity
Mr. Aquino and Hu had been expected to touch on the dispute during their talks, and Del Rosario tried one more time to secure a meeting before the 1 p.m. (3 p.m. Manila time) close of the summit but the Chinese leader’s schedules, which included a meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper Sunday morning, was loaded.
“Our schedules just didn’t jibe with each other,” Del Rosario said.
“We saw each other earlier, but we didn’t have the chance to talk,” Mr. Aquino told reporters on Saturday night. “The [leaders’] retreat [on Saturday] had already started before we saw each other. I didn’t see him actually at the cocktails before we had dinner. I think he was also busy with his own bilateral meetings,” he said.
The President met Chilean President Sebastian Piñera Echenique and Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong on Saturday and Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak and Vietnamese President Truong Tan Sang on Sunday.
Mr. Aquino’s chartered flight left for Manila at 4 p.m. (1 p.m. Manila time).
Aquino disappointed
Del Rosario said the President was disappointed. “I think that a lot could have been achieved in terms of a meeting between the leaders for them to be able to share the various points of view and I think that this probably is not only a downside for the Philippines but also for China. I think this is obviously a missed opportunity,” Del Rosario said.
The failure of the Aquino-Hu talks contrasted with discussions the Chinese leader had with the leader of Vietnam, which a Chinese government spokesperson described as friendly.
Hu also met with the sultan of Brunei, which is less vocal in asserting its claims, and the representative of Taiwan.
In a briefing for the press Saturday night, Mr. Aquino said he planned to have a “frank exchange of thoughts” with Hu to “divorce the talks from diplomatic niceties”
The President’s last meeting with Hu was during his state visit to China in August last year. Since then, their exchanges have been coursed through Philippine and Chinese ambassadors.
“I can’t say it’s a warmed-up relationship, but at least it’s less cold than what it was,” Mr. Aquino said.
Risky strategy
He said he would rather agree to disagree on things that divided the two countries, specifically the West Philippine Sea dispute, while moving forward on more negotiable matters.
He also said that bringing up the territorial dispute to the United Nations could be more risky than it looked.
“I was told by all the lawyers I talked with that once we enter into litigation, we can win but we can also lose,” Mr. Aquino said.
The President said some Apec leaders offered advice that no political leader in his right mind would abandon something that his predecessors had claimed as theirs.
“Nobody can give up their sovereignty just like that,” Mr. Aquino said. “The political cost will not be bearable by whoever proposes it. If I gave up even one centimeter of our national territory, I’m sure there will be many who will impeach me.”
Neighbors’ support
Speaking at the airport after his arrival on Sunday, Mr. Aquino said the leaders of Singapore, Malaysia and Vietnam extended to the Philippines “warm support” on matters pertaining to the West Philippine Sea.
He said Chilean President Piñera invited him to visit Chile for discussions of investments in aquaculture and mining, exchange of geothermal energy technology, and deployment to Chile of Filipino teachers of English.
Mr. Aquino said the international community was abuzz with talk that “the Philippines is now very different, more developed than others.”
He said Filipinos should be ready to contribute to increasing globalization by reconsidering the country’s economic barriers that might hamper further development

Aquino: Peace with MILF by yearend

RUSSKIY ISLAND, Vladivostok, Russia—President Benigno Aquino is confident he would be signing a peace agreement with Muslim rebels within the year, with Malaysia’s leader, whose government is brokering the talks between the Philippine government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), keen on attending the event.
Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said that in a bilateral meeting with Malaysia Prime Minister Dato Sri Mohd Najib Bin Tun Abdul Razak Sunday morning, President Aquino conveyed his “expectation that the peace process could be finalized in the next couple of months.”
“In that event, the Prime Minister of Malaysia expressed a desire to be present at the signing,” said Del Rosario.
Del Rosario said Mr. Aquino thanked Razak for Malaysia’s “continuing leadership” as a peace facilitator and praised Malaysia’s effective brokering of the peace talks. Del Rosario said Razak had been described as an “honest broker and very proactive.”
Last Saturday, the Philippine peace panel successfully ended four days of exploratory talks with the MILF in Kuala Lumpur. Philippine chief negotiator Marvic Leonen and MILF peace panel chair Mohagher Iqbal reported in a joint statement that they “reached substantive gains in the negotiations” through the facilitation of Malaysia.
Aside from Malaysia’s key role in the peace talks, Del Rosario said Malaysia had also reiterated its support for the Philippines’ position of a regional stand on the territorial dispute with China on islands straddling the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea) border.
“There was a very good discussion on how to be constructive in terms of addressing the challenge of the West Philippine Sea and, I think, what was decided on that was the code of conduct would be encouraged in terms of finalization and then we will to try to move this forward,” said Del Rosario.
Mr. Aquino and Razak also discussed trade issues that would enhance the traffic of goods between the Philippine and Malaysia.
After Malaysia, President Aquino also met with Vietnamese President Truong Tan Sang, wherein the two discussed their mutual interest against China’s alarming moves to take control of islands beyond the latter’s borders.
“It was a very good meeting. It was a renewal of the deep friendship between our two countries and the common challenges that we face in terms of the disputes in the West Philippine Sea. We are looking at initiatives to be able to cooperate more closely with each other in terms of dealing with the challenges that face both of us. Vietnam has been a partner of the Philippines,” said Del Rosario.

Apec leaders make free-trade pledge

VLADIVOSTOK, RUSSIA : The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) leaders' meeting ended yesterday by calling upon members to refrain from raising new barriers to investment through to the end of 2015.
The meeting focused on the theme of "ensuring food security and encouraging innovative growth".
"We reaffirm our pledge to refrain through to the end of 2015 from raising new barriers to investment or to trade in goods and services, imposing new export restrictions or implementing WTO-inconsistent measures in all areas including stimulating exports," read the leaders' statement.
All 21 Apec economic leaders recognised the importance of advancing regulatory consistency and stressed the need to strengthen regional economic integration and ensure product safety, supply chain integrity and environmental protection, it said.
They agreed to promote green growth and reiterated their commitment to reduce tariff rates to 5% on green products by the end of 2015.
"By reducing tariffs on environmental goods, we will help our businesses and citizens to get access to important environmental technologies, which will facilitate their deployment and use, contributing significantly to our green growth and trade liberalisation objectives," said the leaders' statement.
Promoting green growth should not be used as an excuse to introduce protectionist measures, they added.
Apec leaders also agreed to take steps to raise agricultural productivity by boosting investment and adopting innovative technologies, including biotechnology.
"We emphasise the importance of open and transparent market mechanisms in ensuring food security," the Apec leaders said.
They also recognised that a more open, stable, predictable rule-based and transparent agricultural trading system had a crucial role to play in enhancing food security.
They said bans and other restrictions on food exports may cause price volatility, especially for economies that rely on imports of staple products.
Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra said she called for all Apec member countries to share production and consumption information as well as establish reliable food reserves to reduce price volatility.