31.08.2015 Views

Overseas

Nine million reasons to be closer together, closer to ... - filipino globe

Nine million reasons to be closer together, closer to ... - filipino globe

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS
  • No tags were found...

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

THE MAKING<br />

OF SUPERMAID<br />

AND WHAT IT<br />

MEANS FOR THE<br />

FUTURE<br />

NEWS FEATURE 24-25<br />

PAQUIAO:<br />

THIS FIGHT IS<br />

FOR FAMILY,<br />

COUNTRY AND<br />

FOR MYSELF<br />

PALAKASAN 44-45<br />

hong kong / manila edition<br />

filipino globe<br />

Issue 1, Volume 1 www.filglobe.com November 2006<br />

Nine million reasons to be closer together, closer to home<br />

Ten years in the making,<br />

we arrive with the longest<br />

birth pains.<br />

We could not have picked a<br />

better time to be born. There<br />

are nine million reasons. You<br />

are one of them.<br />

In the past decade, more<br />

Philippines<br />

unveils new<br />

weapon in<br />

DH battle<br />

of us have come to live or work<br />

overseas than there are people<br />

in Hong Kong, Singapore,<br />

Kuwait or Switzerland.<br />

And we are everywhere, a<br />

virtual nation that has existed<br />

largely in economic statistics<br />

(US$12 billion in remittances<br />

every year)<br />

and in<br />

migrantspeak<br />

(overseas<br />

Filipino workers) — until now.<br />

Filipino Globe hopes to forge<br />

a stronger sense of community<br />

and closer ties with our country<br />

by providing a means for<br />

interaction while filling a need<br />

for news from home.<br />

Your newspaper comes<br />

to you with the added<br />

resources of an internet<br />

edition.<br />

Together, they provide the<br />

most comprehensive content<br />

by any publication of its kind.<br />

Going forward, we hope to be<br />

in key areas in the world where<br />

our kababayans live.<br />

Because we believe that<br />

where we are closer together,<br />

we are closer to home.<br />

‘Supermaid’ the nation’s answer<br />

to intensifying market competition<br />

JOSE MARCELO<br />

and LARA CLIMACO in Manila<br />

An ambitious and controversial<br />

policy is set to be implemented<br />

by the government in<br />

an attempt to unleash a new<br />

breed of domestic workers<br />

into the overseas market.<br />

The “supermaid” program<br />

is designed to churn out meticulously<br />

screened, specially<br />

trained, and highly skilled<br />

domestic helpers that would<br />

in turn command higher salaries.<br />

Under the program, a “supermaid”<br />

certification will be<br />

required for future deployment<br />

of Filipino domestic<br />

helpers overseas.<br />

“This will minimise the departure<br />

of inexperienced, illtrained<br />

and undocumented<br />

workers who are most prone<br />

to abuse,” Labor Secretary<br />

Arturo Brion said.<br />

The program has sparked<br />

wide debate, with placement<br />

agencies saying the policy is<br />

tantamount to banning the deployment<br />

of Filipino domestic<br />

helpers overseas.<br />

To qualify for the program,<br />

applicants must be at least<br />

25 years old and have a high<br />

school diploma. They must<br />

be proficient in oral and written<br />

English.<br />

A “supermaid” certification<br />

• Continued on Page 2<br />

EDITORIAL – PAGE 20<br />

<strong>Overseas</strong><br />

Filipino<br />

workers<br />

this way<br />

Special immigration<br />

check-in counters<br />

Good or bad, the ‘supermaid’ policy will change the market for Filipino overseas workers.


2<br />

filipino globe news<br />

November 2006<br />

Prisoners hope – and wait<br />

Inmates make appeal as final agreement on transfer languishes in congress<br />

JOSE MARCELO<br />

Filipinos languishing in Hong Kong<br />

jails are enduring more anxiety<br />

waiting for the implementation of<br />

an agreement that will allow them<br />

to serve out their sentences in the<br />

Philippines.<br />

Hong Kong citizens in Philippine<br />

jails face the same prospect.<br />

‘Black Jack’<br />

gang members<br />

fall in Kowloon<br />

police swoop<br />

Hong Kong police have arrested<br />

six Filipino members of a syndicate<br />

preying mostly on Japanese tourists<br />

in the Kowloon Park area in Tsim<br />

Tsa Tsui.<br />

Tagged as “Black Jack Squad”,<br />

the syndicate was in the process of<br />

divesting a 28-year-old Japanese<br />

tourist of HK$80,000 worth of gold<br />

when they were arrested.<br />

The six Fillipinos, aged 36 to 68,<br />

have bee detained. They are facing<br />

fraud conspiracy charges.<br />

Police learned syndicate<br />

members usually approach tourists<br />

at Kowloon Park and offer to teach<br />

them the fine points of the card<br />

game black jack.<br />

Three syndicate members had<br />

taken the Japanese tourist to a<br />

jewellery shop in Tsim Sha Tsui<br />

and encouraged him to buy, using<br />

a credit card, HK$80,000 worth<br />

of gold, which supposedly would<br />

be used as stakes in the card game<br />

against a rich businessman.<br />

Unknown to the gang members,<br />

Hong Kong detectives were already<br />

on their trail and made the arrests<br />

shortly after the purchase.<br />

JOSE MARCELO<br />

Philippines unleashes new weapon in DH market battle<br />

From Page 1<br />

The so-called Transfer of Sentenced<br />

Persons agreement was<br />

signed between Hong Kong and<br />

Manila in June 2002.<br />

But the long-delayed enabling<br />

legislation on the part of the Philippines<br />

is pending in congress.<br />

“We’re really just waiting for the<br />

final draft and approval of the implementing<br />

rules and guidelines,”<br />

said consul Victorio Dimagiba,<br />

head of the Philippine consulate’s<br />

legal division.<br />

He said at least five Filipinos have<br />

applied to serve their time back<br />

home, where it would be easier for<br />

their families to visit.<br />

More than four years later, the<br />

wait is still on.<br />

“Some of these inmates have<br />

been complaining why it is taking<br />

so long,” Dimagiba said. “They’ve<br />

been sending petitions to our government<br />

officials and they’ve been<br />

doing it for a while already.”<br />

A ray of hope came months ago<br />

when the Department of Justice and<br />

the Bureau of Corrections agreed to<br />

form an inter-agency panel to put<br />

together draft guidelines.<br />

But until the final hurdle has been<br />

cleared, the Filipino prisoners can<br />

only hope – and wait.<br />

Amid Kowloon Park’s lush and serene surroundings, criminals operate with impunity.<br />

will entail over 400 hours of<br />

training, including countryspecific<br />

language and culture<br />

orientation.<br />

In turn, a certified “supermaid”<br />

will be guaranteed a<br />

minimum salary of US$400,<br />

slightly below the minimum<br />

in Hong Kong.<br />

“The government of a labor-supplying<br />

country cannot<br />

demand what it wants from<br />

foreign employers,” Federated<br />

Association of Manpower<br />

Agencies Inc president Eduardo<br />

Makahiya said. “That is<br />

a function of a free market,<br />

dictated by demand and supply.”<br />

There are fears that the policy<br />

will create another layer<br />

of red tape in an already complex<br />

recruitment system.<br />

“Baka pagdating ng araw,<br />

pampadagdag lang sa gastos<br />

‘yan,” said Marian Macapagal,<br />

38, from Tsuen Wan.<br />

The biggest fear is that the<br />

stringent screening could lead<br />

to a decline in the number of<br />

Filipino domestic workers.<br />

Even without the policy, Indonesian<br />

helpers are on pace<br />

to outnumber Filipinas in<br />

Hong Kong by next year.<br />

“Paliit na nga ang mga bilang<br />

ng mga Pilipino rito,<br />

tiyak na liliit pa ‘yan,” said<br />

Remedios dela Cruz, from<br />

Manila.<br />

Dimapilis-Baldoz, however,<br />

believes the policy will elevate<br />

Filipino domestic helpers<br />

to a level that they won’t<br />

even need to compete with<br />

helpers from other countries.<br />

Lita Catimon, a 51-year-old<br />

domestic helper from Naic,<br />

Cavite, agrees.<br />

“Kahit ano pa ang ilagay<br />

nila riyan, marami pa ring<br />

employer and kukuha ng mga<br />

Pilipina.”<br />

“Alam nilang iba pa rin ang<br />

Pilipina.”<br />

EASTERN SAMAR<br />

The Department of Public<br />

Works and Highways<br />

is doubling its efforts to<br />

finish the Dolores-Oras-<br />

San Policarpio road<br />

project. DPWH director<br />

Gil Villanueva said the<br />

road concreting project is<br />

57.42 per cent complete.<br />

Being built at a cost of<br />

P117.8 million, the project<br />

is covered by a loan<br />

agreement between the<br />

Philippines and Japan<br />

Bank for International<br />

Cooperation. The project is<br />

under contract with Tokwing<br />

Construction. The road will<br />

serve as a vital link from<br />

municipalities in Eastern<br />

Samar to various market<br />

areas.<br />

BENGUET<br />

ANGBANSA<br />

Benguet provincial board<br />

member Cesar Soriano is<br />

urging local businessmen to<br />

invest in mini-hydroelectric<br />

dams to generate high<br />

revenues and profitability.<br />

Soriano was among<br />

Cordillera officials who were<br />

in guided tours of various<br />

hydro-electric plants of the<br />

Hydroelectric Development<br />

Corp (Hedcor) to personally<br />

see how the electric-irrigation<br />

systems are environment<br />

friendly and essential to the<br />

local economy. During the<br />

tour, Hedcor officials showed<br />

how Hedcor developed a<br />

small section of a river into<br />

an electric generator, making<br />

use of the water current and<br />

producing cheap energy.<br />

PALAWAN<br />

Opening of cross-border<br />

trade between the<br />

Philippines and Malaysia<br />

set in Brooke’s Point,<br />

Palawan on Tuesday<br />

has been shelved.<br />

Provincial information<br />

officer Rolando Bonoan<br />

blamed the unavailability<br />

of a commercial vessel<br />

to be utilised by Palawan<br />

governor Joel Reyes, other<br />

officials and members of<br />

the Development Exposure<br />

Trip and Trade, Tourism<br />

and Investment Showcase.<br />

The vessel reportedly lacks<br />

proper crew documentation.<br />

The East Asian trade<br />

grouping brings together<br />

Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia<br />

and the Philippines.


filipino globe news<br />

November 2006<br />

3<br />

Officials linked to visa scam<br />

Former OFW says immigration officers conniving with fake-passport gangs<br />

BRAD CAMPOS<br />

and RAUL ACEDRE in Manila<br />

Philippine immigration officials are<br />

being linked to a multimillion-dollar<br />

passport scam involving Filipinos<br />

bound for Europe.<br />

A former overseas Filipino worker<br />

serving a prison sentence in Hong<br />

Kong for possession of forged documents,<br />

said he was allowed to go<br />

through immigration at NAIA without<br />

being checked and was escorted<br />

by officers into the departure area.<br />

“I strongly believe some immigration<br />

officials are involved in the<br />

scam,” he said on condition of anonymity.<br />

“May hinala akong alam ng mga<br />

opisyal ang passport ko kaya hindi<br />

na ako pinadaan sa immigration<br />

check-in.”<br />

A spokesman at the immigration<br />

bureau in Manila declined to comment<br />

“without the benefit of an investigation”.<br />

The victim has been jailed for nine<br />

months in Hong Kong after being<br />

sent back from Rome. His situation<br />

became a domestic matter because<br />

he transited Hong Kong on his way<br />

to Italy.<br />

He said he had paid a recruiter<br />

P400,000 for the passport with a<br />

valid Italy visa. “Sinabihan akong<br />

magpanggap na kasama ang pamilya,<br />

pero hindi ko kilala ang mga<br />

kasama ko,” he said.<br />

“Pagdating sa Italy, kargahin ko<br />

raw ‘yung batang kasama namin na<br />

kunyaring anak ko para mapabilis<br />

ang proseso sa immigration dahil<br />

yung bata ay marunong ng Italian.”<br />

Known as “baklas”, the scam involves<br />

the use of genuine passports<br />

and visas. The details of the original<br />

owner are kept but the picture is<br />

substituted with that of the user.<br />

“Syndicates buy these passports<br />

from Filipinos in a foreign country<br />

and send these to Manila for forgery,”<br />

a foreign affairs official in Manila<br />

told Filipino Globe.<br />

Vice-consul Noel Novicio, chief<br />

of the assistance to nationals section<br />

of the Philippine consulate, said the<br />

consulate is handling nine such cases,<br />

eight involving Filipinos bound<br />

for Europe.<br />

“It’s alarming,” he said. “You<br />

cannot begin to comprehend the extent<br />

of the problem until you have<br />

talked to the victims.”<br />

The latest one is a Filipina barangay<br />

official from Batangas who was<br />

arrested in Hong Kong. She is serving<br />

time in jail.<br />

ANGBANSA<br />

CEBU<br />

Eric Amaro, 18, has been<br />

unable to get a college<br />

education because of<br />

poverty. His mother is in<br />

dire need of a leg surgery.<br />

Yet Amaro, and his cousin<br />

Arnel Pahanonot, 17, did<br />

not think twice when they<br />

decided to return to a<br />

television station a shoulder<br />

bag containing P100,000 in<br />

cash and two bank books<br />

containing a P160,000 that<br />

they found while biking near<br />

their home in Sitio Campo,<br />

Barangay Guadalupe in<br />

Carcar town. Amaro said he<br />

and Pahanonot were biking<br />

at around 5am when he<br />

noticed a brown shoulder<br />

bag at the roadside. Inside,<br />

he found the cash.<br />

DUMAGUETE<br />

Mayor Agustin Perdices<br />

has urged educational plan<br />

holders of distressed preneed<br />

educational companies<br />

to avail of scholarship grants<br />

offered by the Parents<br />

Enabling Parents (PEP)<br />

Coalition. Perdices issued<br />

his call following the recent<br />

visit of PEP Coalition officer<br />

In Hong Kong,<br />

strictly family<br />

affair – well,<br />

almost<br />

JOSE MARCELO<br />

Even presidents need some<br />

distraction from matters of state.<br />

President Arroyo is no exception<br />

– and Hong Kong was just the<br />

place for that.<br />

Coming after a hectic week of<br />

meetings of Asean and Chinese<br />

leaders in the mainland, four<br />

relatively quiet days in Hong<br />

Kong during All Saints’ Day<br />

came as a welcome and refreshing<br />

change of pace for the chief<br />

executive.<br />

Except for a handful of talks<br />

with top business executives<br />

and leaders of the Filipino<br />

community, the visit was a rare<br />

opportunity for the President to<br />

President Arroyo takes time out with Filipinos in Lamma (top) at the end of a hectic week<br />

which had taken her to Xiamen, China, where she addressed a regional summit (above).<br />

put her feet up, hit the fairways<br />

and spend time with her family.<br />

Elaborate state dinners, as a<br />

result, were replaced by lunch at<br />

an al fresco seafood restaurant in<br />

Lamma Island, and later a quiet<br />

dinner with the First Family at a<br />

floating restaurant off Aberdeen.<br />

She did meet with Hong Kong<br />

chief executive Donald Tsang,<br />

but it was no more than a chance<br />

encounter when the two leaders<br />

heard early-morning mass at St<br />

Joseph’s Church in Central on All<br />

Soul’s Day.<br />

The President squeezed in talks<br />

with Philip Chen, chief executive<br />

of Cathay Pacific and Robert<br />

Kuok, chairman of the Shangri-<br />

La group, as well as a round-table<br />

discussion with members of the<br />

foreign press.<br />

There was also a function<br />

attended by about 30 leaders<br />

of Filipino organizations<br />

in which the President was<br />

joined by Consul General<br />

Alejandrino Vicente and OWWA<br />

Administrator Marianito Roque.<br />

But that’s about it.<br />

Vicente Ortueste, wherein<br />

he disclosed that only four<br />

applicants from Dumaguete<br />

and Oriental Negros whose<br />

educational planholders had<br />

already matured, had filed<br />

for the tuition grant. The<br />

scholarship grant comes<br />

from a P50 million fund put<br />

up by former congressman<br />

Mark Jimenez.<br />

CAMARINES<br />

Authorities in Pili are<br />

keeping strict warning<br />

against consumption and<br />

selling of shellfish from<br />

three coastal towns of Bicol<br />

as investigations continue<br />

to determine if other toxic<br />

chemicals could be blamed<br />

for the latest death in Rizal,<br />

Sorsogon City. The Bureau<br />

of Fisheries and Aquatic<br />

Resources said it had<br />

launched another round of<br />

investigation in the affected<br />

areas, particularly Sorsogon<br />

Bay, to determine the toxicity<br />

of red tide in the water and<br />

the shellfish collected from<br />

the areas where the ban was<br />

earlier imposed. Two more<br />

deaths were reported after a<br />

family in Barangay Rizal ate<br />

mussel.


4 November 2006<br />

filipino


globe November 2006 5


6<br />

filipino globe news<br />

November 2006<br />

Remittances seen topping US$21b<br />

Robust demand for healthcare workers to drive explosive growth in deployment, says TUCP<br />

DANTE VINO in Manila<br />

Peso expected<br />

to gain more<br />

strength from<br />

Christmas rush<br />

If trends continue, the annual remittances<br />

of overseas Filipino<br />

workers will hit US$21.4 billion<br />

by 2010, or double the US$10.7<br />

billion last year, the Trade Union<br />

Congress of the Philippines (TUCP)<br />

said.<br />

“We foresee migrant worker remittances<br />

increasing by at least 100<br />

per cent over the next five years,<br />

barring a global economic shock,”<br />

former senator and TUCP general<br />

secretary Ernesto Herrera said.<br />

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas statistics<br />

show OFW remittances expanded<br />

at an annual average compounded<br />

rate of 16 per cent from<br />

2001 to 2005. Herrera said the annual<br />

double-digit growth rate is sustainable<br />

due to the continued robust<br />

demand for semi-skilled and highly<br />

skilled Filipino workers.<br />

Remittances reached US$6.04 billion<br />

in 2001; US$6.88 billion in 2002;<br />

US$7.58 billion in 2003; US$8.55<br />

billion in 2004; and US$10.7 billion<br />

in 2005. As a rule, any amount<br />

that grows at a compounded annual<br />

rate of at least 15 per cent doubles<br />

every five years.<br />

Herrera cited three key remittance<br />

growth drivers in the years ahead.<br />

These are:<br />

• The ageing of 77.5 million “baby<br />

boomers” (those born between<br />

1946 to 1964) in the US, which has<br />

spurred demand for foreign healthcare<br />

workers, including nursing<br />

home staff. The oldest baby boomers<br />

are turning 60 this year;<br />

• Soaring energy prices that have<br />

boosted the economies of oil-producing<br />

countries in the Middle<br />

East that, in turn, have stepped<br />

up hiring of foreign workers in<br />

industries such as construction,<br />

travel and tourism and oil and<br />

gas exploration, development and<br />

production;<br />

• Rapid globalisation that has<br />

increased the need for multinational<br />

corporations to retain highly<br />

qualified, experienced and Englishspeaking<br />

Filipino business and production<br />

managers.<br />

The US is the Philippines’ biggest<br />

source of remittances. Inflows<br />

from OFWs based in US<br />

grew by US$1.51 billion or 31<br />

per cent, from $4.91 billion in<br />

2004 to US$6.42 billion last year.<br />

About US$6.61 billion from<br />

North America, including $190 million<br />

from Canada, accounted for 62<br />

per cent of all remittances.<br />

The Middle East is the third<br />

biggest source of remittances at<br />

US$1.42 billion in last year, behind<br />

Europe (US$1.44 biliion).<br />

Hong Kong, home to more than<br />

120,000 OFWs, accounted for<br />

US$360 million of the estimated<br />

US$1.1 billion from Asia-Pacific,<br />

including Japan, Korea, Australia,<br />

Singapore, Malaysia and Taiwan.<br />

RAUL ACEDRE in Manila<br />

A surging peso is expected to pick<br />

up more steam after record remittances<br />

in the first nine months<br />

helped drive it to a 4-1/2-year high<br />

It is trading at just under P50 to<br />

the US dollar after touching a fresh<br />

high of P49.99, its strongest level<br />

since 2002, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas<br />

said.<br />

The currency is expected to stay<br />

on the strong side of trading for<br />

the rest of the<br />

year. The peso’s<br />

strength leaves<br />

room for the<br />

BSP to cut interest<br />

rates, which<br />

could push up<br />

the US dollar/<br />

Tetangco peso exchange<br />

rate. But most<br />

economists say any such cut would<br />

be taken by the market as an opportunity<br />

to buy back the peso.<br />

“I think there will be very little<br />

effect on the strength of the peso,”<br />

one economist said. It has had time<br />

to consolidate its gains.”<br />

Improved economic fundamentals<br />

and strong inflows of overseas<br />

remittances have combined to power<br />

the peso to levels not seen since<br />

more than four years ago.<br />

OFWs have sent home more than<br />

US$9 billion in the first nine months<br />

of the year, just under the the $10.7<br />

billion for all of last year, and within<br />

sight of the US$11 billion expected<br />

for this year.<br />

“There’s every reason to believe<br />

that the target for this year will be<br />

achieved,” BSP governor Amando<br />

Tetangco said. “This has implications<br />

on the continuing strength of<br />

the peso and on exchange rates.”<br />

THE STARS COME OUT<br />

A Philippne Airlines jet looks like part of the Christmas<br />

decor at the NAIA terminal. The airport is decking itself out<br />

for the holidays just before an expected surge of overseas<br />

Filipino workers returning home for Christmas.<br />

NAIA officers warned over ‘discourteous’ behavior after Luli fiasco<br />

RAUL ACEDRE in Manila<br />

NAIA personnel have been told to<br />

treat all passengers courteously and<br />

fairly, regardless of their nationality.<br />

Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita<br />

issued the reminder after an<br />

incident in which the President’s<br />

daughter, Evangeline Lourdes “Luli<br />

Arroyo” reportedly got a boorish<br />

treatment from an immigration officer.<br />

Edgardo Padlan has been suspended<br />

by his superiors at the Immigration<br />

Bureau pending an investigation.<br />

Ermita was reacting to the incident<br />

in which Arroyo was reportedly told<br />

off by Padlan after she complained<br />

about a foreigner being allowed to<br />

jump the queue. Padlan reportedly<br />

snapped at Arroyo: “Hindi ka ba<br />

marunong maghintay?” (Don’t you<br />

know how to wait?)<br />

“I called the attention of the public<br />

servants there (NAIA), dahil siyempre,<br />

kahit siguro hindi anak ng<br />

presidente could make that observation<br />

and call the attention of the immigration<br />

personnel,” Ermita said.<br />

“Hindi naman tama … what he<br />

had done at the expense of a Filipino,<br />

parang nagpapakita lamang sila<br />

na para bang binibigyan ng pabor<br />

ang mga foreigner,” Ermita said.


filipino globe November 2006 7


8<br />

filipino globe news<br />

November 2006<br />

Property tops<br />

wish list as<br />

OFWs step up<br />

buying spree<br />

The property market<br />

is being seen<br />

as the country’s<br />

next sunshine<br />

industry, potentially<br />

overshadowing the<br />

phenomenal growth of<br />

the telecoms sector.<br />

Short-term potential for market<br />

staggering, Globe survey finds<br />

BETING L DOLOR in Manila<br />

The Philippine property market<br />

is enjoying an unprecedented revival<br />

as overseas Filipino workers<br />

increasingly give priority to buying<br />

homes for themselves and their<br />

families.<br />

The continued exodus of Filipino<br />

workers means the number of families<br />

with the purchasing power to<br />

buy property will continue to swell,<br />

a poll of the biggest developers conducted<br />

by Filipino Globe shows.<br />

Robinson’s Land Corp general<br />

manager Danilo Ignacio says the<br />

potential for short-term growth of<br />

the industry is “staggering”.<br />

From mid-cost to high-end housing,<br />

to residential developments in<br />

the outskirts of Metro Manila, to<br />

sprawling leisure resorts in the regions,<br />

the market will continue to<br />

grow, Ignacio said.<br />

OFWs who have families in<br />

Metro Manila and who receive<br />

regular remittances are a new breed<br />

of consumer, he said.<br />

For this reason, the conglomerate<br />

founded by taipan John Gokongwei<br />

started the trend of building<br />

high-rise condominiums near their<br />

existing malls.<br />

The condos are aimed more at<br />

the Filipino middle class than the<br />

upper class. A large chunk of this<br />

new middle class are, in fact, OFW<br />

families.<br />

One of the country’s oldest and<br />

biggest developers, DMCI, has also<br />

taken note of the growing middle<br />

market created by OFWs.<br />

DM Consunji Inc, whose core<br />

business used to be infrastructure<br />

development (bridges and commercial<br />

buildings), is a pioneer in<br />

sending Filipino workers abroad,<br />

with the Sultan’s Palace in Brunei<br />

its biggest project.<br />

The company took part in the<br />

growth of the OFW phenomenon<br />

when it began sending Filipino<br />

workers to Brunei in the early<br />

1980s for its projects there, instead<br />

of hiring local labor. It can be said<br />

that DMCI helped create the OFW<br />

market for homes.<br />

For this new class of Filipino<br />

“<br />

They need to<br />

know that they<br />

will have a place<br />

to come home to<br />

CYNTHIA YAP<br />

Broker<br />

homebuyer, DMCI formed DMCI<br />

Homes, which has been responsible<br />

for such projects as Raya Homes,<br />

Mahogany Homes, Palm Grove,<br />

Vista de Lago, Lakeview Manors<br />

and Hampstead Gardens, among<br />

others.<br />

Alfredo Austria, the prime mover<br />

behind these developments, expects<br />

the deployment of skilled Filipino<br />

workers to continue.<br />

“This means a growing market of<br />

potential homebuyers,” he said.<br />

He said some OFW families prefer<br />

houses and lots, others condominiums,<br />

and still others may opt<br />

for agricultural land in their home<br />

provinces.<br />

The choices may differ, but all<br />

have the desire to own property.<br />

Broker Cynthia Yap, who specializes<br />

in the Filipino-American<br />

market, says half of her sales are<br />

to OFWs or Filipinos permanently<br />

residing abroad. “They<br />

need to know that they will have<br />

a place to come home to,” she<br />

told Filipino Globe.<br />

“In most cases, real property is<br />

the biggest investment most people<br />

will make. The broker must be both<br />

partner and, if possible, friend to the<br />

buyer,” she said. Yap also believes<br />

that the real estate industry will be<br />

the sunshine industry of the next few<br />

years -- decades even.<br />

Robinson’s Ignacio says the next<br />

few years could be the brightest for<br />

Philippine real estate. “Real estate<br />

could be seen as the investor’s new<br />

darling in the Philippines, replacing<br />

the telecommunications sector.”<br />

Expo taps growing class of cash-rich potential homeowners with dollars to spend<br />

BETING L DOLOR in Manila<br />

Up to 60 per cent of new projects are being<br />

snapped up by overseas Filipino workers or<br />

immigrants, some of whom have become<br />

citizens of their host countries.<br />

With this in mind, the Philippine real<br />

estate industry will hold the “Philippine<br />

Properties Festival 2007” in January next<br />

year, with more than 100 top developers<br />

taking part. The expo will be held<br />

specifically for OFWs and Filipino migrants<br />

living and working abroad. “They want<br />

to come back to buy properties,” festival<br />

chairman Rose Basa said.<br />

The expo reverses a trend that began a few<br />

years ago when the country’s top developers<br />

began tapping the OFW or Filipino migrant<br />

community by sending their sales people<br />

abroad via road shows, or by setting up<br />

satellite marketing places where OFWs<br />

abound<br />

Organizers estimate that roughly<br />

one-fourth, or 25 per cent of the entire<br />

Philippine labor force, is employed outside<br />

the country.<br />

They could be domestic helpers in Hong<br />

Kong, entertainers in Japan, teachers in<br />

Texas, nurses in California, oil refinery<br />

workers in the Middle East or seamen<br />

aboard merchant ships. They earn from<br />

$300 to $400 a month, to hundreds of<br />

thousands of dollars a year,<br />

To cater to this diverse class, the expo<br />

will showcase the widest range of real<br />

property, from socialized and middle-class<br />

condominiums, townhouses, house and lot<br />

units, to upscale property investments in<br />

golf, resort and country clubs, hotels, and<br />

leisure developments.


filipino globe news<br />

November 2006<br />

9<br />

Tindahan Natin program<br />

gets P160m budget boost<br />

What can you buy for P20,000<br />

these days? Not much,<br />

probably, if you’re a consumer.<br />

If you’re the entrepreneurial<br />

type, that’s enough money to<br />

start your own store.<br />

It will be called Tindahan<br />

Natin, which President Gloria<br />

Macapagal-Arroyo has<br />

described as the “poor man’s<br />

7-Eleven” store.<br />

The government is pouring<br />

P160 million to the scheme<br />

from next year’s budget,<br />

beefing up the program fivefold.<br />

The money will mostly<br />

be used to lend to store<br />

operators (P20,000 each) to<br />

start their inventories of basic<br />

commodities, at the same<br />

time expanding the number of<br />

outlets nationwide to more than<br />

7,000 from 1,400 today<br />

The program is part of efforts<br />

to fight poverty especially in<br />

rural areas.<br />

President Arroyo hands a certificate<br />

to a participant in the government’s<br />

Tindahan Natin program.<br />

Defense chief exit stirs Arroyo critics<br />

Widening cabinet rift seen as silence surrounds Cruz resignation and calls grow for civilian successor<br />

Malacanang moved to counter<br />

speculation of a widening cabinet<br />

rift after Defense Secretary Avelino<br />

Cruz resigned under guarded circumstances.<br />

President Arroyo accepted Cruz’s<br />

resignation last week and was<br />

promptly urged to appoint a civilian<br />

succesor. Arroyo critics said Cruz’s<br />

departure showed a rift in her administration<br />

and that this could lead<br />

her cabinet to collapse. Malacañang<br />

officials denied the allegation.<br />

“This is a clash among vested interest<br />

groups who wanted to widen<br />

their areas of influence. The military<br />

will end up a casualty,” retired<br />

Commodore Rex Robles said, referring<br />

to a squabble among cabinet<br />

members over proposals to amend<br />

the constitution. He said having a<br />

“civilian professional” to head the<br />

military had been recommended by<br />

a special commission.<br />

Even as Cruz maintained his silence,<br />

an ally said the resigned defence<br />

chief would prefer a civilian<br />

successor. “We just hope that his<br />

successor will continue the important<br />

work he has begun,” he said.<br />

He said one of the major accomplishments<br />

of Cruz was being able<br />

to put up the structure for a military<br />

reform.<br />

The country has had six civilian<br />

defense chiefs. They included Senator<br />

Juan Ponce Enrile (who served<br />

under Ferdinand Marcos) and former<br />

senator Orlando Mercado, who<br />

served President Joseph Estrada.


10<br />

filipino globe news<br />

November 2006<br />

RP moves on KL deportations<br />

House delegation asks Malaysia to ensure ‘smooth and humane’ transfer<br />

RAUL ACEDRE in Manila<br />

A House delegation has begun talks<br />

with Malaysian authorities for a<br />

“smooth and staggered deportation”<br />

of Filipino women and children<br />

found to have been staying illegally<br />

in the country.<br />

The mission follows a visit by<br />

Speaker Jose De Venecia to Kuala<br />

Lumpur in April, when he discussed<br />

the plight of the children of more<br />

than 1,000 illegal Filipino immigrants<br />

in Sabah.<br />

Of the 1,170 Filipinos held in detention<br />

centers in Sabah at the time<br />

of de Venecia’s visit, 241 were under<br />

17 years old, of whom 90 were<br />

girls.<br />

The delegation is composed of<br />

congressmen Hussin Amin (first district,<br />

Sulu), Nur Jaafar (Tawi-Tawi),<br />

Munir Arbison (second district,<br />

Sulu), and Partylist representative<br />

Mujiv Hataman (Anak Mindanao).<br />

De Venecia said the group will ask<br />

Malaysian authorities that there be<br />

no massive deportation of Filipino<br />

women and children and that they<br />

be extended full humanitarian treatment.<br />

He said he is confident the mission<br />

will be able to smooth out the<br />

process to the satisfaction of both<br />

countries.<br />

During his visit in April, de Venecia<br />

appealed to the government to<br />

allow children of illegal Filipino<br />

immigrants being held in detention<br />

centers to attend local schools or be<br />

given special instructors.<br />

Meanwhile, Foreign Affairs Secretary<br />

Alberto Romulo confirned<br />

the return of 136 Filipinos from<br />

Malaysia.<br />

Their return is part of a regular repatriation<br />

program of the Malaysian<br />

government that reunites migrant<br />

Filipinos with their families.<br />

“We continue to work closely with<br />

the Malaysian government, through<br />

diplomacy, coordination and meaningful<br />

dialogue to further improve<br />

World wide web nets US Pinay’s long-lost birth mother<br />

As a true convert, Jella<br />

Naguimbing believes you can<br />

find anything on the internet. True<br />

enough, it has turned up amazing<br />

things in her wonderful world of<br />

web design.<br />

Lately, it has turned up her<br />

long-lost mother.<br />

“She told me she wants to<br />

make up for lost time and invited<br />

me to live with her in Spain,”<br />

Naguimbing is quoted as saying<br />

in a report in the Philippine Daily<br />

Inquirer.<br />

It was the biggest hit she ever<br />

made, the final reward for a<br />

the implementation of both short<br />

and long-term, mutually agreed<br />

repatriation mechanisms,” Romulo<br />

said.<br />

The program also includes access<br />

to health facilities for returning<br />

Filipinos and an agreement to<br />

repatriate only those fit to travel.<br />

It also provides for a safe, secure<br />

and orderly return of affected individuals.<br />

painstaking<br />

search in<br />

cyberspace<br />

for her birth<br />

mother who<br />

she knew<br />

little about<br />

except her nickname (Gingging),<br />

her birthplace (Bacolod) and her<br />

possible whereabouts (Spain).<br />

The search began in the US<br />

where Naguimbing lives, then<br />

Ireland where some friends and<br />

family members have settled and<br />

finally Spain. Next step was a<br />

phone call, with fingers crossed.<br />

Bingo. “Si Jella ni? ’Day, ako ang<br />

imo iloy (Is this Jella? I am your<br />

mother),” were the first words<br />

Naguimbing heard from her<br />

mother.<br />

“My mom said we have a<br />

house in Spain. My brother is in<br />

London and he wants to see me.<br />

All my aunts from her side of the<br />

family are in Spain. My father’s<br />

Spanish relatives also want to see<br />

me because he never had a child<br />

and Ging never had a daughter,”<br />

Naguimbing told the Inquirer.<br />

Gingging Parreño became<br />

pregnant with Jella while working<br />

Speaker<br />

Jose de<br />

Venecia<br />

says the<br />

mission will<br />

secure the<br />

safety of<br />

the women<br />

migrants<br />

and their<br />

children.<br />

as a domestic helper in Spain<br />

in the 1970s. She went home to<br />

Bacolod to give birth but since her<br />

mother was already taking care<br />

of two children from a previous<br />

relationship, Parreño decided to<br />

put up her third child for adoption.<br />

Then she returned to Spain. Jella<br />

was adopted by a childless couple<br />

shortly after she was born in 1977.<br />

She never knew her father.<br />

Lagrimas, 53, now a school<br />

teacher, and Naguimbing are<br />

planning a reunion. Who knows<br />

what other wonderful things it<br />

might turn up. RAUL ACEDRE<br />

ILOCOS SUR<br />

A teenage student<br />

drowned and her two<br />

companions are missing<br />

after they were swept<br />

away by waves whipped<br />

up by an approaching<br />

typhoon. Clarissa Otrera,<br />

19, a second-year nursing<br />

student at the Northwestern<br />

University in Laoag, and<br />

her two companions were<br />

swimming in sitio Buneng,<br />

barangay Mansante in<br />

Magsingal town when<br />

high waves swept them<br />

into the sea. The victims,<br />

together with their<br />

relatives, were having a<br />

picnic at the beach when<br />

the accident happened.<br />

Police investigations are<br />

continuing.<br />

ILOILO<br />

Milkfish producers in<br />

Western European Union<br />

as a potential market, taking<br />

advantage of the country’s<br />

trade and offices in Europe.<br />

The region is one of the<br />

most competitive in the<br />

country, especially in the<br />

use of organic products<br />

for its produce. Trade<br />

Undersecretary Thomas<br />

Aquino told delegates to<br />

First Bangus Congress<br />

that the government is in<br />

a strong position to push<br />

Philippine products and<br />

services in Europe through<br />

its trade offices in Britain,<br />

Netherlands, Sweden,<br />

Germany, Italy, Switzerland,<br />

France and Spain.<br />

DAVAO<br />

ANGBANSA<br />

The local clergy led by<br />

Bishop Patricio Alo (below)<br />

has asked President Arroyo<br />

to put a stop to massive<br />

logging activities in Davao<br />

Oriental.The appeal came in<br />

the wake of<br />

the Aliwagwag<br />

Bridge tragedy<br />

that killed<br />

nine people<br />

and wounded<br />

three. The priests signed<br />

a manifesto denouncing<br />

the “never-ending” and<br />

intensifying logging activities<br />

in Cateel town and nearby<br />

municipalities. In a letter<br />

to the president, they said<br />

illegal logging in the area has<br />

bred anarchy, alienation, and<br />

a ruined ecosystem.


filipino globe November 2006 11


12 November 2006<br />

filipino globe<br />

MTR TST Station Exit C1 (opposite Fortess), Room 504, 5/F Metropole Building Peking Road, TST, Kowloon<br />

(same building as Spaghetti House); Licence No: 352022; Email: barryhkjb@pacific.net.hk<br />

2366 2818<br />

Our services: ticket booking, hotel reservation, visa application, travel insurance, outbound tours, China tours


filipino globe news<br />

November 2006<br />

13<br />

RP bids to save lives of Saudi Pinoys<br />

Top Middle East negotiator in whirlwind trip to win release of seven nationals facing death penalty<br />

CHITO MANUEL in Jeddah<br />

If he’ll have his way, DFA Undersecretary<br />

Rafael E Seguis would<br />

like to see families of seven Saudi<br />

OFWs facing capital punishment<br />

have a joyful Christmas with their<br />

return home to freedom.<br />

Tough call. Seguis, the undersecretary<br />

for special concerns, quietly<br />

slipped into Riyadh on a mission to<br />

secure their release.<br />

Of the seven, a woman has been<br />

convicted for murder with robbery<br />

and the rest for murder. They are<br />

languishing in jails across the Kingdom.<br />

“We are doing our best,” Seguis<br />

told Filipino Globe in a telephone<br />

interview from Riyadh.<br />

Seguis was tapped to help save<br />

the nationals from the death penalty<br />

given his legendary diplomatic<br />

skills and influence with people in<br />

the right places, having served as<br />

Philippine ambassador to Saudi<br />

Arabia from late 1999 to 2002.<br />

Also, Seguis headed a Philippine<br />

delegation to Iraq that successfully<br />

negotiated the release of Filipino<br />

accountant Robert Theodore<br />

Tarongoy from his Iraqi captors in<br />

June last year after more than 200<br />

days in captivity.<br />

On his first working day on Saturday,<br />

Seguis met with charge<br />

d’affaires Nestor Padalhin and other<br />

officials at the chancery of the Philippine<br />

embassy in the diplomatic<br />

quarter.<br />

The next day, Seguis made a side<br />

trip to Dammam then rushed back<br />

to Riyadh, where he was briefed by<br />

Consul General Pendosina Lomondot<br />

of the Philippine consulate general<br />

in Jeddah.<br />

Prior to his arrival, Seguis said<br />

the Philippine embassy and consulate<br />

had been doing their part in the<br />

negotiations with relatives of the<br />

victims.<br />

A lot of backchanneling work<br />

has been going on to negotiate for<br />

the relatives’ forgiveness, the first<br />

step in a long process to settle the<br />

matter via the payment of diyah, or<br />

blood money, under Islamic Sharia<br />

law, according to Seguis.<br />

“In the negotiations, we will have<br />

to satisfy the private rights of the<br />

victims’ relatives as well as the<br />

public rights of the government,”<br />

Seguis said.<br />

The negotiations are continuing.<br />

Labor Attache in Baghdad and now OWWA Deputy Administrator Angelo Jimenez, DFA<br />

Undersecretary for Special Concerns Rafael E Seguis and Consul Ezzedin Tago pose with<br />

Robert Theodore Tarongoy after the Filipino’s rescue from his Iraqi kidnappers.<br />

TOP RESCUE PLAYER TIPPED FOR JEDDAH POST<br />

Consul Ezzedin Tago is being seen<br />

as the man to succeed outgoing<br />

Consul General Pendosina<br />

Lomondot of the Philippine<br />

Consulate General Jeddah.<br />

DFA Undersecretary for Special<br />

Concerns Rafael E Seguis, on a<br />

visit to the Kingdom, said: “It is<br />

not certain yet whether Tago is<br />

indeed the official being groomed<br />

to succeed Lomondot.”<br />

“I am certain though that he is<br />

the most qualified to be assigned<br />

to Jeddah as Consul General. I will<br />

not hesitate to recommend him to<br />

when the proper time comes,” he<br />

added.<br />

Seguis confirmed Lomondot<br />

is already due back in the home<br />

office in accordance with the<br />

rotation system.<br />

Tago is well known as a Seguis<br />

protégé. They played a leading<br />

role in the Philippine Team<br />

that rescued Robert Theodore<br />

Tarongoy from his Iraqi captors<br />

last year. CHITO MANUEL


14<br />

filipino globe news<br />

November 2006<br />

Honolulu, Tokyo beef up OFW imports<br />

Steady growth in elderly population prompts increased efforts to tap Filipino healthcare workers<br />

RAUL ACEDRE in Manila<br />

Hawaii and Japan are increasingly<br />

turning to Filipino professionals to<br />

provide health care for their ageing<br />

populations.<br />

Senator Suzanne Chun-Oakland<br />

said the state’s elderly population<br />

is growing beyond the scope of the<br />

local healthcare system, making it<br />

necessary to import caregivers.<br />

“The ageing society is a great concern<br />

for us. We have to import people<br />

as caregivers,” Oakland said.<br />

“We need to get more nurses from<br />

the Philippines because the workforce<br />

is really a problem at present,”<br />

Oakland said. She said Filipino<br />

nurses in Hawaii are performing<br />

“very well”.<br />

Eighty-eight per cent work in<br />

adult care, while the remainder<br />

work in childcare centers.<br />

She said of the US$1.3 billion allocated<br />

for health care in Hawaii,<br />

about US$800 million goes to the<br />

aged and disabled. Elderly people<br />

in the state have reached 320,000,<br />

needing various kinds of care. The<br />

number is still growing, she said.<br />

In Japan, a foreign ministry official<br />

has singled out Filipino health<br />

workers to provide care for its elderly<br />

citizens.<br />

Tamohiko Taniguchi said Japan<br />

is reviewing its policy in light of<br />

its growing need for health workers<br />

even as he noted the rising number<br />

of Filipinos are already working in<br />

the country.<br />

advertorial<br />

INVEST IN WHAT<br />

REALLY MATTERS<br />

Death is not the greatest loss in life.<br />

The greatest loss is what dies inside<br />

us while we live.<br />

Whenever my mind is confronted with<br />

the topic of death, I always remember how<br />

short life is. It prompts us to ask questions<br />

like: What is the purpose of life? What gives<br />

meaning to life? Bakit ba ako nabubuhay?<br />

Ano nga ba ang tunay na mahalaga sa<br />

buhay?<br />

Si Alexander the Great ay isang tanyag<br />

na tao sa kasaysayan ng mundo. Ngunit<br />

nang siya ay nakaratay at malapit nang<br />

mamatay, ipinagbilin niya sa kanyang mga<br />

tauhan na kapag siya’y namatay, gusto<br />

niyang nakabukas ang kanyang mga palad.<br />

Sabi niya: “I want everyone to see that even<br />

if I have conquered the world, my hands<br />

are empty, for in my death, I cannot take<br />

anything with me.”<br />

For some reason, death has a way of<br />

putting things into perspective. Sa isang<br />

iglap, you realize the things that really<br />

matter and the things that are important.<br />

It reminds us that we do not hold the future<br />

and the only time that we have control of is<br />

what is given to us now.<br />

Ika nga ni Hellen Keller (1880-1968): “I will<br />

not just live my life. I will not just spend my<br />

life. I will invest my life.”<br />

Kaya Be Committed. Be committed to the<br />

right things in life. Be committed to invest<br />

in the things that really matter, moment by<br />

moment, day by day.<br />

1. Be committed to your dreams. Sa<br />

ating pagiging expat Pinoy ay binigyan<br />

tayo ng oportunidad na iuwi ang ating mga<br />

pangarap kaya’t kailangan ay panghawakan<br />

mabuti ang ating mga biyaya nang hindi<br />

ito mapunta sa wala. Ugaliing mag-ipon<br />

sa lalong madaling panahon Malaking<br />

kaibahan ang mag-umpisang mag-ipon<br />

habang ikaw ay 25 years old pa lang at<br />

kung mag-ipon nang ika’y 35 years old na.<br />

Ugaliing mag-ipon ng regular. Palagi nating<br />

sinasabi sa ating programa na kailangan<br />

i-develop ang HABIT OF SAVING. Handle<br />

your finances well. Handle your life well. Be<br />

committed to invest in the things that really<br />

matter.<br />

2. Be committed to your loved ones.<br />

Sabi nga nila, nobody on his deathbed<br />

will say”I wish I’d spent more time at<br />

work”, but instead will say “I wish I’d spent<br />

more time with my family”. Kaya sa ating<br />

pagiging expat Pinoy, huwag po nating<br />

makalimutang magbigay-panahon sa ating<br />

mga mahal sa buhay. Kahit tayo po ay<br />

malayo sa kanila physically, huwag nating<br />

hayaang malayo ang ating mga puso<br />

sa kanila. Mag-invest ng oras. Sumulat.<br />

Kye<br />

Diamante<br />

Tumawag. Magtext. Mag-email. Magtanim<br />

na sa paniniwala na sa tamang panahon<br />

ay aani ka. Love begets love. Life is too<br />

short. We have to seize the opportunity to<br />

continuously express our love to the people<br />

that matter to us.<br />

Kaya’t ngayong Nobyembre ay namimigay<br />

ng libreng tawag ang BPI sa bawat pagremit<br />

mo ng at least HK$1,500 through BPI<br />

Remittance Centre (HK) Ltd. Mag-remit na<br />

at tumawag sa inyong mga mahal sa buhay.<br />

Be committed to invest in the things that<br />

really matter.<br />

3. Be committed to God. Tandaan na sa<br />

gitna ng paghihirap at kalungkutan na ating<br />

pinagdadaanan bilang mga expat Pinoy ay<br />

may Diyos na nagbibigay ng kalakasan at<br />

saya sa ating mga puso. Oswald Chambers<br />

said that “Man cannot find true essential joy<br />

anywhere but in his relationship to God.” It<br />

is God who will give us the strength to go<br />

on. In the end, it is God who gives meaning<br />

to our lives. Kaya’t huwag makalimot<br />

magbigay-panahon sa Kaniya. Kaya’t<br />

huwag makalimot lumapit sa Kaniya. He<br />

knows what we go through and He loves<br />

us. Be committed to invest in the things that<br />

really matter.<br />

Be Committed. BPInoy.<br />

Nagpapasalamat kami sa AsiaTelecom<br />

na sumusuporta sa programang Gawaing<br />

Expat. Ang AsiaTelecom ang magbibigay<br />

ng libreng call cards sa lahat ng magreremit<br />

sa BPI Remittance Centre ngayong<br />

Nobyembre. Subukan ang tapat na serbisyo<br />

ng AsiaTelecom.<br />

Ang “Be the new Pinoy, BPInoy!” series ay handog ng<br />

BPI Remittance Centre. Ito ay mapapakinggan sa AM<br />

1044 Metroplus at mababasa sa Filipino Globe, Hong<br />

Kong News at Kayumanggi Magazine. BPI contact<br />

number 2527 2289.<br />

Japan’s growing elderly population has prompted a rethink of its policies.<br />

POEA confident of starting<br />

hiring for Japan caregivers<br />

RAUL ACEDRE in Manila<br />

POEA administrator Rosalinda Dimapilis-Baldoz<br />

said a memorandum<br />

of understanding on the recruitment<br />

of caregivers and nurses for Japan<br />

is yet to be finalised, so the hiring<br />

process cannot start immediately.<br />

Tokyo is expected to receive 400<br />

to 500 Filipino nurses and caregivers<br />

annually beginning next year.<br />

“Almost all issues relating to<br />

the selection and deployment of<br />

our workers, and the selection and<br />

qualification of Japanese employers<br />

have been resolved,” Baldoz said.<br />

She said the POEA should soon<br />

be able to announce the start of the<br />

hiring process.<br />

President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo<br />

and then Japanese prime minister<br />

Junichiro Koizumi signed the<br />

agreement in Helsinki recently.<br />

Candidates selected by the POEA<br />

will undergo a Japanese language<br />

course for six months in Japan before<br />

they receive on-the-job training.<br />

The training will last three years<br />

for nurses and four years for caregivers.<br />

Within that period, they will<br />

be required to pass a qualification<br />

exam in order to be allowed to work<br />

in Japan.<br />

The agreement<br />

provides for government-to-government<br />

hiring and<br />

excludes private<br />

entities, including<br />

recruitment agencies. “We tried to<br />

negotiate for the participation of the<br />

private sector, but Japan stood firm<br />

on its position considering that this<br />

is the first such program and they<br />

want to make sure that there will be<br />

no problems in its implementation,”<br />

Baldoz said.<br />

Under the agreement, placement<br />

fees, air fares and tuition fees for<br />

the language training course will be<br />

borne by employers.


filipino globe November 2006 15


16<br />

filipino globe news<br />

November 2006<br />

Bataclan comes<br />

to seamen’s<br />

aid in Sweden<br />

storm disaster<br />

RAUL ACEDRE in Manila<br />

Filipino workers will continue to be in demand in Canada, which is suffering from a shortage of skilled labor.<br />

Canada, Spain still top markets<br />

Joblessness in developed countries ‘should not affect OFW prospects’<br />

JOE MURILLOS in Vancouver<br />

Most of the Philippines’ overseas<br />

labor markets still offer solid employment<br />

opportunities for Filipino<br />

workers despite rising joblessness<br />

in developed countries.<br />

Senator Edgardo Angara said<br />

Canada and Spain, two countries<br />

mentioned in an International Labor<br />

Organization report as having<br />

a growing number of unemployed<br />

youths, remain a viable destination<br />

for skilled Filipino workers.<br />

“Canada is short on skilled manpower.<br />

The skills of Filipino workers<br />

can very well fit<br />

into the Canadian job<br />

market because Filipinos<br />

are creative, hardworking<br />

and trustworthy,”<br />

he said.<br />

“An aggressive marketing<br />

effort will place<br />

scores of Filipino workers<br />

there.”<br />

Angara<br />

He said resources-rich<br />

Alberta is enjoying an unprecedented<br />

boom, which could open job opportunities<br />

for Filipino engineers,<br />

geologists and technicians.<br />

Job openings in North America<br />

and Europe may compensate<br />

for the loss of Filipino<br />

markets in troubled<br />

Lebanon and other parts<br />

of the Middle East.<br />

Angara said Spain is<br />

one European market<br />

Filipinos can well serve.<br />

“The job openings are<br />

not limited to agriculture<br />

because Spain needs<br />

workers in the service industry as<br />

well,” he said.<br />

Angara said while he believes that<br />

there is nothing better than developing<br />

the domestic job market, he still<br />

Filipino Globe Picture<br />

sees the necessity of marketing the<br />

skills of Filipino workers overseas<br />

because the money sent in by these<br />

workers has been the life support<br />

system of the country.<br />

OFWs remit at least US$12 billion<br />

a year, which is roughly onefourth<br />

the country’s gross domestic<br />

product.<br />

“This just demonstrates how big<br />

and vital their contribution is to the<br />

national economy,” he said.<br />

“OFWs are our top-earning exports.”<br />

(With additional reporting from<br />

PNA)<br />

Pinoy jailed in Brunei, DH gets reprieve over bullets<br />

An overseas Filipino worker<br />

has been jailed for six months<br />

in Brunei after being caught by<br />

airport police with a live bullet in<br />

his wallet, the Philippine embassy<br />

said.<br />

The Filipino, whose name was<br />

not released, was due to take a<br />

vacation in the Philippines after<br />

completing a two-year contract.<br />

He was given a lighter sentence<br />

on a lesser charge of “negligent<br />

possession of ammunition”<br />

after the Philippine embassy<br />

made representations with the<br />

government,” Ambassador<br />

Virginia Benavidez said in a<br />

report to the Manila head office.<br />

The Filipino would have served<br />

from five to 15 years had the<br />

charge not been changed.<br />

Meanwhile, a domestic helper<br />

also caught in Brunei airport with<br />

a bullet, escaped imprisonment<br />

after an appeal by the Philippine<br />

embassy.<br />

She was enroute to Dubai when<br />

she was stopped and arrested by<br />

airport police shortly before she<br />

was to board her flight.<br />

She told consular officials the<br />

bullet had been given to her by<br />

a faith healer as a lucky charm<br />

when she was having difficulty<br />

getting pregnant.<br />

After giving birth a few months<br />

later, she kept the amulet in her<br />

wallet and thought nothing of it.<br />

She said she had forgottem<br />

about it until her arrest.<br />

She has been released and<br />

allowed to travel to Dubai to take<br />

up employment.<br />

Benavidez also reported that the<br />

embassy helped in repatriating<br />

the body of a Filipino tourist who<br />

drowned when she fell off a boat.<br />

RAUL ACEDRE<br />

Former Hong Kong consul general<br />

Victoria Bataclan jumped to the<br />

assistance of Filipino survivors in<br />

the sinking of a freighter during a<br />

storm in the Baltic Sea.<br />

Bataclan, the Philippine<br />

ambassador to Sweden, travelled to<br />

the south of the country to secure<br />

the safety of the nine Filipino<br />

survivors from m/v Finnbirch, a<br />

roll-on, roll-off vessel owned by a<br />

Danish company.<br />

A 10th Filipino crewmember died<br />

in the disaster, Bataclan said.<br />

The survivors, part of a<br />

14-man crew<br />

that included<br />

four Swedes,<br />

have now<br />

returned to the<br />

Philippines.<br />

They are<br />

Gilbert Salido,<br />

Benedicto<br />

Agngarayngay,<br />

Manuel<br />

Bataclan<br />

Barcelona, Gerry Dupo, Rolando<br />

Esguerra, Leo Jose Talipe, Wilfredo<br />

Ramos, Jose Noel Saquilayan and<br />

Ephraim Torre.<br />

The lone Filipino fatality, Danilo<br />

Paras, 52, died after being brought<br />

to a hospital suffering from severe<br />

hypothermia.<br />

The vessel was enroute from<br />

Helsinki, Finland to the Danish<br />

port of Aarhus when it was lashed<br />

by big waves and sank off the<br />

Swedish coast.<br />

Rescuers plucked all 10 Filipinos<br />

to safety, but Paras, the last to be<br />

found, had been suffering from<br />

extreme loss of body heat and died<br />

a short time later in hospital.<br />

The Philippine embassy in<br />

Sweden had been in constant touch<br />

with the shipowner, Lindhom<br />

Shipping, since the sinking, the<br />

latest in a string of marine disasters<br />

involving Filipinos.<br />

Bataclan was accompanied by<br />

Consul Flerida Anne Mayo, also a<br />

former consulate official in Hong<br />

Kong. They coordinated with the<br />

Swedish authorities for the return<br />

of Paras’ body to the Philippines.<br />

Meanwhile, 136 Filipinos have<br />

returned home from Malaysia as<br />

part of of a regular repatriation<br />

program to reunite migrant workers<br />

with their families.<br />

“Together with our partners in the<br />

international community, we are<br />

committed to further strengthening<br />

measures that will ensure the<br />

welfare of our nationals wherever<br />

they may be,” Foreign Affairs<br />

Secretary Albero Romulo said.<br />

“We continue to work closely on<br />

this program with the Malaysian<br />

government,” he said.


filipino globe November 2006 17<br />

Dr Steve Warren is board certified<br />

in family medicine as well as<br />

hospice and palliative medicine<br />

Today’s toxic environment coupled with the high-fat,<br />

high-sugar diets that are so common among most people<br />

combine to make it very difficult to achieve optimal health,<br />

slow aging and prevent chronic illness. In many ways,<br />

conventional medicine has failed to fully address the<br />

problems we face in today’s world.<br />

Overall wellness and disease prevention require not<br />

only a healthy diet and an active lifestyle, but also an<br />

added nutritional boost from the right supplements with a<br />

balanced nutrient and antioxidant profile. Surprisingly, the<br />

answer many people are looking for can be found in a juice<br />

blend that contains two important ingredients: chocolate<br />

and the acai berry.<br />

Most Americans tend to think of chocolate as a sweet<br />

candy created in relatively recent history. However, to the<br />

ancient peoples of Mesoamerica, chocolate was revered<br />

for its nourishing qualities and ability to provide energy and<br />

stamina for long periods of time. Today, health conscious<br />

consumers are learning that dark chocolate possesses<br />

some impressive health properties that are increasingly<br />

supported by science. Believe it or not, chocolate can be<br />

very good for you.<br />

In the past five years, science has finally begun to discover<br />

the actual health benefits of cocoa.<br />

The acai fruit offers an excellent array of phytonutrients<br />

to protect against free radical damage, slow aging, fight<br />

disease and promote optimal health. Acai can make a<br />

significant difference in overall health and quality of life.<br />

Fortunately it tastes great too, especially when used<br />

in combination with antioxidant-rich, immune-boosting<br />

superfood complements like red grapes, blueberries, chilli<br />

peppers, prunes, oranges and agave.<br />

The acai fruit has a long history of use in South America.<br />

The purple, berry-like fruit is roughly the size of a small<br />

grape. It grows on palm trees common to the Amazon<br />

www.xocaipinoy.com; email rsumallo@yahoo.com; mobile +63917 5390486;<br />

MXI Corp Philippines pick-up and training center: (632) 637 5279; fax (632) 634 7909


18 November 2006 filipino globe<br />

Jollibee<br />

at<br />

filipino<br />

globe.<br />

Tulad mo,<br />

Pilipino.<br />

Jollibee Central<br />

Des Voeux Road Central<br />

Hong Kong<br />

cut this box and present to counter staff<br />

FREE Mais Con Hielo<br />

with any food purchase<br />

save $11.50<br />

Please present this coupon upon order.<br />

Valid at Jollibee Central until December 15, 2006.<br />

This offer is not valid with any other promotion<br />

offer and will be accepted following<br />

one coupon per transaction only.<br />

www.filglobe.com<br />

1905 Lippo Centre Tower 2, Queensway, Admiralty, Hong<br />

Kong Telephone : 2918 8248


focus<br />

filipino globe editorial & features<br />

November 2006 19<br />

OFW phenomenon not a brain drain but a net gain<br />

I have to say I’m getting a bit<br />

tired with all these hand-wringing<br />

and gnashing of teeth over<br />

the so-called social costs exacted<br />

by the overseas Filipino workers<br />

(OFWs) phenomenon.<br />

Like that other intellectually<br />

slothful cliché of the Philippines<br />

as the sick man of Asia, it seems<br />

that no news story or commentary<br />

on OFWs is complete<br />

without the mention of social<br />

ills such as brain drain, juvenile<br />

delinquency among the children<br />

of OFWs left behind in the Philippines,<br />

broken families, crass<br />

materialism – you name it.<br />

With all this negativism, it is no<br />

wonder that some people think<br />

that Filipinos who head overseas<br />

for work are a kind of anti-social<br />

criminals.<br />

It is also not surprising that<br />

some OFWs who toil abroad<br />

must undeservedly bear the twin<br />

burdens of homesickness and<br />

guilt – the feeling that they have<br />

Saan ka man sulok ng mundo, mabuhay ka kabayan ko<br />

Noo’y naging popular ang salitang<br />

“itaas mo” mula sa propaganda ng<br />

serbesa. Kapag itinataas ang baso<br />

o bote ng serbesa ay naroroon ang<br />

tapat na pagsasama at pagdiriwang<br />

ng barkada.<br />

Kapag nagtatagayan naman<br />

mula sa isang baso kaharap ang<br />

isang pitsel ng serbesa ay itinataas<br />

muna ng nagtatagay ang baso bago<br />

tunggain. Pagkaraa’y sasalinan<br />

ang baso at ipapasa sa katabi<br />

patungo ang sinasalinang baso sa<br />

magkakasunod na nag-uumpukan<br />

sa inuman.<br />

Pero ang simbolo ng pagtatas<br />

ng baso at salitang “itaas mo”<br />

ay maraming sanga-sangang<br />

kahulugan. Maaaring kung nasa<br />

ibang bansa ang isang Pilipino na<br />

naging matagumpay sa trabaho ay<br />

makakatanggap ng text na “itaas<br />

mo pre” ang dangal ng Pilipino.<br />

Kung noo’y napapanood natin na<br />

itinataas ng yumaong FPJ ang baso<br />

at bote ng serbesa sa telebisyon ay<br />

tuwang-tuwa ang kanyang hukbo<br />

ng tagahanga. Ngayon naman<br />

FIRSTWORD<br />

editor’s briefing<br />

Rex<br />

Aguado<br />

done something terribly wrong<br />

by leaving their families behind.<br />

Well, it’s time to geld the guilt.<br />

The bleeding hearts who write<br />

and talk about what they deem<br />

to be the national tragedy that<br />

is the OFWs give short shrift<br />

to Filipinos both at home and<br />

abroad.<br />

For one thing, they seem to<br />

imply that Filipinos who leave<br />

the country for jobs overseas<br />

are mere ciphers who have no<br />

control over their lives – slow<br />

and dim-witted lambs offered<br />

for sacrifice by some sinister<br />

government policy.<br />

TEO<br />

ANTONIO<br />

ITAASMO<br />

kabayan<br />

ay ang idolong boksingerong si<br />

Manny Pacquiao ang nagtataas ng<br />

bote ng serbesa at katabi si Kris<br />

Aquino.<br />

Ang pagtatagay ng anumang<br />

inuming alak na nasa baso man o<br />

kopita ay bahagi ng marangal na<br />

pagkilala sa mabuting pagsasama<br />

o pagkakaibigan. Bahagi ito ng<br />

ritwal mula sa kanto, lansangan<br />

hanggang sa mga mararangal na<br />

piging sa alta sosyedad at palasyo<br />

ng Malakanyang.<br />

“Itaas mo” ang ating pambansang<br />

pangarap sa paghahanap ng<br />

dangal ng mga Pilipino. Ang<br />

ating mga OFW ang tunay na<br />

nagtaas ng pondo ng bansa mula sa<br />

kanilang remittances. Tinagurian<br />

Secondly, with this silly talk of<br />

brain drain, they are suggesting<br />

that the Filipinos who are left<br />

behind in the Philippines are<br />

dregs – unemployable and<br />

incompetent.<br />

Thirdly, commentators who<br />

glibly link the OFW phenomenon<br />

to an imagined rise in the cases<br />

of broken families and juvenile<br />

delinquency among OFW<br />

children usually fail to ask<br />

themselves a key question: What<br />

would have happened to the<br />

families of these OFWs had they<br />

stayed at home, jobless and or<br />

underemployed?<br />

The answer is a no-brainer:<br />

perpetual poverty, family fights,<br />

broken marriages, hungry<br />

children who invariably end<br />

up as beggars, child prostitutes<br />

and juvenile criminals, the<br />

proliferation of squatter colonies,<br />

an epidemic of crime – real hardcore<br />

social ills.<br />

Yes, OFWs may be a symptom<br />

silang mga Bagong Bayani.<br />

Ang reserbang dolyar ay tumaas<br />

dahil sa ipinadadalang dolyar ng<br />

mga OFW. Kaya’t bumaba sa 50<br />

piso ang palitan ng isang dolyar,<br />

patunay na umaangat ang halaga<br />

ng piso. Bumababa rin ang halaga<br />

ng ating binabayarang utang sa<br />

labas ng bansa.<br />

Hindi masisisi ang pagdami ng<br />

mga Pilipinong nais magtrabaho sa<br />

ibang bansa.Kamakailan pinutakti<br />

ang opisina ng <strong>Overseas</strong> Workers<br />

Welfare Adminsitration ng mga<br />

aplikante sa pagtratrabaho sa<br />

Korea. Kinailangan pang humingi<br />

ng tulong sa ating mga pulis upang<br />

maayos ang pila. Dahil wala silang<br />

placement fees na gagastusin.<br />

Kaya lamang, limitado ang pipiliin<br />

at ipadadala.<br />

Pero tuloy pa rin ang ating<br />

nga kabababayan na mangarap<br />

at umasa sa bawat pagkakataong<br />

makapagtrabaho sa ibang bansa.<br />

Sa katunayan ang isa kong<br />

pamangking babae ay kasama<br />

sa banda ng mga mang-aawit sa<br />

of bigger social and economic<br />

problems in the Philippines, but<br />

they are also part of the solution.<br />

Much has been said about<br />

the US$12 billion a year that<br />

Filipinos abroad send back<br />

home to the Philippines. But<br />

another not-as-tangible but just<br />

as revolutionary an impact is a<br />

radical shift in the mindset and<br />

attitudes of OFWs based on<br />

their experiences in their host<br />

countries – the realisation that<br />

things can actually work, that<br />

laws can actually be observed,<br />

that criminals can actually be<br />

punished, that corruption can be<br />

contained, that government can<br />

be made to work for the people.<br />

These positive ideas and spirit<br />

of renewal they will take with<br />

them when it’s time to go back<br />

home, for OFWs do pine for<br />

the Philippines.There is no such<br />

thing as a brain drain. At the end<br />

of the day, it’s a brain gain<br />

rex.aguado@filglobe.com<br />

Japan ang naroon na, dalawang<br />

buwan ang nakakaraan, habang<br />

naghihintay ang tatlo kong<br />

pamangking lalaki na tutungo sa<br />

Dubai.<br />

Ang aking kaibigang si Leo,<br />

na kasabay kong nagretiro sa<br />

korporasyon ng gobyerno ay isa<br />

nang business consultant sa Dubai.<br />

Wala pa akong natatanggap na<br />

email sa kanya. Ang aming dating<br />

kasamahan sa opisina, si Pidi ay<br />

kasalukuyang computer graphic<br />

artist sa Qatar. Madalas siyang<br />

mag-text sa akin lalo’t sumasapit<br />

ang Pasko at Bagong Taon. Isang<br />

UP fine arts graduate ang kaibigan<br />

kong ito.<br />

Si Leo ay nagtapos ng kursong<br />

agribusiness sa UP Los Banos<br />

at may master in business<br />

administration sa Ateneo.<br />

Saan mang sulok ng mundo<br />

naroroon ang kababayang<br />

sumasagupa sa masigwang laot ng<br />

pakikipagsapalaran para mabuhay<br />

na marangal.<br />

teo.antonio@filglobe.com<br />

Meet the A-Team<br />

of our new-found<br />

economic revival<br />

and strength<br />

FT<br />

Ocampo<br />

PRESSBOX<br />

comment<br />

<strong>Overseas</strong> Filipino Workers (OFWs)<br />

are invading contemporary<br />

economic history.<br />

Who would have thought that a<br />

good number of Filipinos could be<br />

working in a country such as Papua<br />

New Guinea, that some of them<br />

could be enduring the dizzying<br />

heights and numbing cold of Nepal<br />

or the burning desert sands<br />

of the Middle East?<br />

Even pocket wars did not<br />

deter our determined OFWs from<br />

working in Israel and Lebanon.<br />

And now, in the apocalyptic<br />

flashpoint that is North Korea,<br />

almost a hundred Filipinos are<br />

braving a potential nuclear crisis.<br />

Not much unlike the biblical<br />

diaspora, our intrepid and<br />

hardworking compatriots have<br />

encircled the globe over the past<br />

decades in search of the proverbial<br />

green pasture.<br />

In the process, they are<br />

contributing approximately US$10<br />

billion to US$12 billion annually<br />

to government coffers. The peso<br />

has dramatically strengthened from<br />

almost 56 to the dollar over the<br />

past months, to a little over P49 a<br />

few weeks ago.<br />

Thanks to OFWs, the prospects<br />

for the continuing improvement of<br />

the economy are decidedly more<br />

promising and rosy.<br />

The clear duty of the<br />

administration is to insure their<br />

welfare and safety.<br />

The government has<br />

demonstrated this by sending<br />

a peace-keeping force to Iraq,<br />

no matter how small, and by its<br />

response to the turmoil in Lebanon.<br />

These have gone a long way not<br />

only in securing the well-being of<br />

OFWs in those countries but also in<br />

easing the fears and apprehension<br />

of their families.<br />

This is the kind of relationship<br />

– based on mutual respect and<br />

responsibility – that without doubt<br />

will endure.<br />

Between the government and<br />

what has been dubbed the “new<br />

heroes”, the nation is in good<br />

hands.<br />

ft.ocampo@filglobe.com


20<br />

filipino globe forum<br />

November 2006<br />

Superskilling – that’s how we will prevail<br />

Superskill me. That could well<br />

be the next buzzword in the OFW<br />

market, and where slogans are an<br />

inexpensive commodity, it is sure to<br />

catch on, at least on paper.<br />

In fact, the notion of a superskilled<br />

overseas Filipino worker – trained<br />

in the ways of the outside world,<br />

from language to computer literacy,<br />

emergencies and human behavior<br />

– has just become national policy.<br />

It is the cornerstone of our initiatives<br />

in the overseas labor market in<br />

which competition is tightening by<br />

the day.<br />

Good concept, but will it work?<br />

We say it will, and it will work<br />

It’s disconcerting that we<br />

seem to be apathetic to<br />

elections after we have<br />

regained the privilege to vote.<br />

The results of the recent<br />

overseas voting registration<br />

confirm the worst: we refuse<br />

to stand up and be counted.<br />

Granted there’s nothing<br />

about Philippine politics<br />

worth taking part in, that’s no<br />

excuse to take for granted the<br />

efforts and sacrifices of those<br />

who worked to restore our<br />

privilege to vote.<br />

JULINO TORRES<br />

Singapore<br />

Kung tama ang tinatahak<br />

nating landas sa charter<br />

in a way that will ensure our competitiveness<br />

in all fields. This is how<br />

OFWs will prevail.<br />

Call it “supermaid certification<br />

program”, if you like, but this initiative<br />

goes beyond churning out takecharge<br />

domestic helpers. It is designed<br />

to reinvent our workers into<br />

engineers, health workers, seafarers<br />

and technicians that are trained and<br />

equipped to a level where they only<br />

compete against themselves.<br />

Admittedly, such an ambitious<br />

program cannot have smooth sailing.<br />

Not everyone is on board.<br />

Employment agencies fret that<br />

highly skilled domestic helpers who<br />

change, kailangan pa bang<br />

patagalin natin ang proseso?<br />

Dapat tigilan na ng mga<br />

proponents nito ang kanilang<br />

kampanya na manalo sa<br />

Korte Suprema sa kanilang<br />

People’s Initative at ituon<br />

na ang pansin sa mga<br />

realistikong paraan ng mabilis<br />

na pagbabago ng ating<br />

Saligang Batas.<br />

Makabubuting hayaan<br />

nang magkaroon ng<br />

TINGINNAMIN<br />

command higher salaries will force<br />

employers to look for cheaper alternatives.<br />

They’re reminded that<br />

Filipinos will soon be overtaken by<br />

the Indonesians in Hong Kong even<br />

without the policy.<br />

The biggest fear comes from the<br />

workers themselves. They worry<br />

that this is tantamount to culling,<br />

where only the best and strongest<br />

survive. What of the lesser skilled,<br />

lesser educated ones? What will<br />

happen to them?<br />

The answer is not here. It is in the<br />

future. Only by taking the pain now<br />

will we be able to enjoy the benefits<br />

of that future.<br />

SULATLETTERS<br />

constitutional assembly para<br />

isakatuparan ito.<br />

RONITA AGUAS<br />

San Jose, California<br />

Sa kabila ng pagiging<br />

efficient ng MTR, puwede<br />

ka pa ring mabuwisit pag<br />

bumaba ka nang wala<br />

sa oras at napunta ka sa<br />

concourse. Hindi mo alam<br />

kung nasaan ka dahil walang<br />

indikasyon o pangalan ng<br />

istasyon saan man dito.<br />

Lahat ng signs nasa platform.<br />

Lalabas ka pa para tingnan<br />

and pangalan ng istasyon sa<br />

entrance.<br />

TESSA ROMAN<br />

Tsuen Wan, Hong Kong<br />

We all have our chance to<br />

work overseas – I had mine<br />

The attraction of working<br />

abroad is common among us<br />

Filipinos. I should know. I had<br />

two opportunities to do so. In<br />

both instances, I was directly<br />

hired by two newspapers<br />

without having to go through<br />

the usual process.<br />

This means I did not have to<br />

go through the POEA and<br />

all the hassles attached to the<br />

procedures of being a<br />

documented OFW. This was<br />

both good and bad, as I<br />

eventually discovered.<br />

The first chance came when<br />

I attended the launch party<br />

of Emirates Airlines at the<br />

Intercon Hotel in Makati. I got<br />

to meet the editor-in-chief of a<br />

publication owned by Gulf News<br />

in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.<br />

The lady was a Bangladeshi and<br />

she asked me if I wanted to work<br />

in the Middle East.<br />

I was hesitant at first. But she<br />

convinced me that Dubai was<br />

the best place to work in that<br />

part of the world. Since it was a<br />

simple yes or no question, I said<br />

yes. I thought nothing of it since<br />

it sounded pretty rhetorical.<br />

About two months later, I got<br />

a call from a Singaporean who<br />

said he was following up that<br />

conversation I had with the<br />

editor of the weekly magazine.<br />

He said he had been working in<br />

Dubai for a few years and was<br />

sent to Manila to give me an<br />

offer.<br />

It was a working contract that<br />

mentioned how much I would<br />

get. Along with the document<br />

was a plane ticket. That was<br />

it. I had the choice of going or<br />

not. After a talk with my wife, I<br />

decided to give it a try.<br />

My appointment said I was to<br />

work as a reporter, but within<br />

one day of my arrival, I was<br />

asked if I could edit and lay<br />

out pages. Since that was the<br />

job I had in my local paper, I<br />

said I most certainly could. It<br />

was decided there and then that<br />

I would not be a reporter, but<br />

would instead work as a subeditor<br />

(their title for section<br />

editor).<br />

There were no adjustments<br />

in salary. Worst of all, and I<br />

was not informed of this, the<br />

company kept my passport.<br />

That was one of the things that<br />

bothered me about working<br />

in the Middle East. Like all<br />

Filipinos, our passports were<br />

Beting<br />

Laygo<br />

Dolor<br />

VIEWPOINT<br />

the observer<br />

taken by the personnel manager.<br />

We were told that we could<br />

get that most important of all<br />

documents anytime we needed<br />

to travel. This practice also<br />

applied to my other co-workers<br />

from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh<br />

and Sri Lanka.<br />

What I was disheartened to<br />

learn was that employees from<br />

Western and Arab countries<br />

were not subject to this rule. An<br />

American lady who worked as a<br />

reporter still had her passport<br />

on her. Ditto a Briton. I had an<br />

Irish co-worker (a really pleasant<br />

guy) who never surrendered<br />

his passport. My immediate<br />

superior was an American and<br />

he, too, could travel whenever<br />

he pleased. One African-Arab<br />

who worked as translator had<br />

the same privilege. When I did<br />

ask to go home on vacation on<br />

my 11th month in the job, the<br />

company did not give me any<br />

problems.<br />

A yearly vacation was, after<br />

all, part of the contract. I went<br />

home and went back after two<br />

weeks, on full pay.<br />

And yes, Dubai proved to be<br />

a decent place to work. Being<br />

a Christian, I could drink at the<br />

handful of bars in the city and<br />

could actually buy alcoholic<br />

beverages with a permit. The<br />

other Filipinos I worked with<br />

all became my friends. Most<br />

said they preferred to stay until<br />

retirement. By my second year,<br />

however, I had decided that I<br />

was better off going back to<br />

Manila.<br />

That’s precisely what I did.<br />

I went home and rejoined<br />

BusinessWorld. I didn’t know<br />

that 10 years later, I would end<br />

up as an editor of the biggest<br />

and oldest Filipino-American<br />

newspaper in the US. But that’s<br />

another story.<br />

beting.dolor@filglobe.com<br />

Beting Laygo Dolor worked as sub-editor<br />

of Gulf News in Dubai in 1990-92 and as<br />

managing editor of Philippine News in<br />

San Francisco, California in 2000-2002.<br />

In between, he was section editor of<br />

BusinessWorld and managing editor of<br />

Manila Standard. He is presently<br />

editor-in-chief of Inquirer’s Bandera.<br />

Executive EDITOR: Rex Aguado PUBLISHING CONSULTANT Philip Evardone MARKETING ADVISER Therese Necio-Ortega BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER Ricky Sumallo<br />

CORRespondents Eddie Alinea (Manila), Celeste Terrenal (Manila), Terrie Fucanan (Manila), Chito Manuel (Riyadh). Gina Putong (San Diego), Percy Della (Los Angeles)<br />

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Josephine Miranda (Philippines), TJ Badon-Doble (Philippines), Venice Austria-Paita (Hong Kong)<br />

EDITORIAL BOARD Rex Aguado, Philip Evardone, Prof Dr Maurice Teo CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Beting Laygo Dolor, Teo Antonio, Chito Manuel, Danny Vibas, Dante Vino<br />

Filipino Globe is published once a month by Apex Services (HK) Ltd, Suite 1905, Lippo Centre Tower 2, Queensway, Admiralty, Hong Kong, telephone (852) 2918 8248, email info@filglobe.com. No part of this publication<br />

may be reproduced without the written permission of the publishers. Printed by Premier Printing Group, Yuen Long, New Terrories, Hong Kong


- - - -<br />

P30,000<br />

P33,000<br />

P39,000<br />

P48,000<br />

filipino globe November 2006 21<br />

Special<br />

Offer!<br />

Insurance (Philippines) Corporation:<br />

A Prominent Member of the Sony Group of Companies<br />

Educ Lite<br />

The Best Gift to Your Child<br />

- Pay Lite<br />

- High Returns<br />

- 100% Guaranteed<br />

As low as<br />

P438 a month!<br />

Age of<br />

Child<br />

Pay only<br />

P1,235<br />

per quarter<br />

0 17<br />

Payment Period<br />

Get 179%<br />

More Than<br />

what you pay.<br />

Pay a Total of<br />

P83,980<br />

- - - - - - - - - - - - -<br />

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -<br />

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -<br />

20%<br />

Get<br />

P150,000<br />

Total Benefit<br />

22%<br />

26%<br />

32%<br />

17 18 19 20<br />

Pay-out Period<br />

EDUC LITE<br />

If insured dies<br />

before maturity date<br />

and policy is still in-force,<br />

premium paid or cash<br />

value, whichever is<br />

higher, will be received.<br />

Educ<br />

Lite<br />

Age of<br />

Child<br />

0<br />

1<br />

2<br />

3<br />

4<br />

5<br />

Amount You Pay<br />

Quarterly Monthly<br />

1,235<br />

1,359<br />

1,499<br />

1,676<br />

1,903<br />

2,177<br />

Pay til Age 17 of Child<br />

P150,000 (Sample Face Amount)<br />

(=438)<br />

(=482)<br />

(=531)<br />

(=594)<br />

(=675)<br />

(=772)<br />

Years<br />

to pay<br />

17<br />

16<br />

15<br />

14<br />

13<br />

12<br />

Total Amount<br />

you pay<br />

83,980<br />

86,976<br />

89,940<br />

93,856<br />

98,956<br />

104,496<br />

5 year premium payment option also available.<br />

P250K and P500K face amounts also available.<br />

Total Benefit<br />

you get<br />

150,000<br />

150,000<br />

150,000<br />

150,000<br />

150,000<br />

150,000<br />

Percentage<br />

179%<br />

172%<br />

167%<br />

160%<br />

152%<br />

144%<br />

HOW TO BUY<br />

1<br />

3<br />

Call Sony Life to fill up<br />

application form<br />

Choose your preferred<br />

total benefit and payment period<br />

Sign application form and<br />

deposit initial payment<br />

Once approved, you will receive your Policy Contract via mail!<br />

2<br />

Acceptable Owners<br />

- Parents<br />

- Grandparents (direct bloodline)<br />

- Legal Guardians<br />

- Older brother or sister<br />

if family breadwinner<br />

Age Limit of Insured Acceptable Beneficiaries<br />

- Pay 5 years: Newborn to age 12 - Immediate member of family<br />

- Pay to Age 17: Newborn to age 11<br />

For any questions or comments, please call the numbers below<br />

Payment Facilities<br />

- BPI : All branches nationwide<br />

- PNB : All branches nationwide<br />

- Sony Life Head Office (MM)<br />

Contact Person: Evelyn G. Bautista, Lifeplanner<br />

Contact Number: 0917-9908601<br />

Email address: evelbautista636@yahoo.com<br />

36<br />

Educ Lite is exclusively offered by Sony Life Insurance (Philippines) Corporation. Prices are subject to change without prior notice.


22 November 2006 filipino globe


filipino globe November 2006 23


She is one<br />

a new bree<br />

of highly<br />

skilled Filip<br />

workers,<br />

trained in<br />

everything<br />

from<br />

dealing wit<br />

challenging<br />

behavior to<br />

emergenci<br />

Lara Clima<br />

looks at ...<br />

24<br />

November 2006<br />

news fe<br />

Imagine this: you have just<br />

sent an important e-mail,<br />

written down the details on<br />

a check, tapped your grocery<br />

list on your mobile phone, and<br />

now you’re driving to school<br />

to pick up junior from music<br />

class.<br />

If you think it couldn’t be<br />

you, think again.<br />

Chances are, there are<br />

already a handful of multiskilled<br />

Filipino domestic<br />

helpers in Hong Kong and in<br />

many parts of the world. When<br />

the new skills certification<br />

program of the Department<br />

of Labor takes off, the<br />

reinvention of the overseas<br />

Filipino worker will also have<br />

kicked into high gear.<br />

The program aims to equip<br />

OFWs with the skills to further<br />

cement their competitiveness,<br />

project a more positive image<br />

to the market and eliminate<br />

a constant source of abuse<br />

stemming from poor training.<br />

Under the “supermaid”<br />

certification program, domestic<br />

helper contracts will not be<br />

processed unless applicants<br />

have acquired a certificate<br />

of competency from the<br />

Technical Education and<br />

Skills Development Authority<br />

(Tesda) and a certificate<br />

of completion from the<br />

<strong>Overseas</strong> Workers Welfare<br />

Administration of its countryspecific<br />

language and culture<br />

orientation.<br />

In return, the “supermaid”<br />

will get a guaranteed<br />

minimum salary of US$400<br />

per month and no deductions<br />

on her pay, according to<br />

the POEA. “For a start,<br />

this will cut the number of<br />

inexperienced, ill-trained and<br />

undocumented workers who<br />

are most prone to abuse by<br />

recruiters and employers,”<br />

Labor Secretary Arturo Brion<br />

said.<br />

The notion of a “supermaid”<br />

came up when the country was<br />

grappling with the repatriation<br />

of thousands of workers from<br />

war-torn Lebanon. President<br />

Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo<br />

started talking about the<br />

“supermaid” program after<br />

hearing about the plight of<br />

domestic helpers among the<br />

Beirut evacuees.<br />

At the same time, Secretary<br />

Brion announced reforms in<br />

“ It’s an eye-opener.<br />

Lahat ‘yan kayang<br />

magawa nating<br />

mga Pilipino.<br />

MILA DOLORICO<br />

Former Hong Kong domestic helper<br />

the deployment of domestic<br />

helpers. These include<br />

skills upgrade, orientation<br />

courses on country-specific<br />

culture and language, job<br />

site protection, requiring<br />

employers to pay for the cost<br />

of deployment, and increasing<br />

the minimum salary to a<br />

level commensurate to their<br />

competencies.<br />

The reform pegs the<br />

minimum basic wage for<br />

Filipino domestic helpers at<br />

$400 a month – slightly under<br />

the prevailing minimum in<br />

Hong Kong, the benchmark<br />

for trained and highly prepared<br />

FDHs. The new policy also<br />

makes illegal the industry<br />

practice of deducting one<br />

month’s salary to cover the<br />

applicant’s placement fee.<br />

The age threshold has<br />

been raised to 25, and since<br />

the “supermaid” training<br />

program makes household<br />

services certification an entry<br />

requirement, FDHs must also<br />

be high school graduates,<br />

able to communicate in both<br />

oral and written English.<br />

Not everyone, however,<br />

is excited about the coming<br />

of the “supermaid”. The<br />

Federated Associations of<br />

Th<br />

of su<br />

Manpower Exporters has<br />

complained that it was not<br />

consulted on the minimum<br />

wage increase.<br />

The consensus among some<br />

labor recruiters is that raising<br />

the minimum wage would<br />

increase the likelihood of<br />

illegal deployment and drive<br />

employers to other markets<br />

such as Indonesia, Sri Lanka,<br />

Vietnam and Thailand. That’s


ature filipino globe<br />

25<br />

of<br />

d<br />

ino<br />

h<br />

es.<br />

co<br />

e making<br />

permaid<br />

no cause for worry, says POEA<br />

Administrator Rosalinda<br />

Dimapilis-Baldoz. “The<br />

market will correct itself<br />

in a short while,” she said.<br />

“Besides, FDHs deserve a<br />

better deal. Let’s not<br />

race against other countries for<br />

positions that pay US$100<br />

to US$150,” she said. “The<br />

helpers we will be sending are<br />

better equipped and more<br />

highly skilled.”<br />

How’s that for defying Third<br />

World stereotypes of the<br />

domestic helper?<br />

“It’s an eye-opener,” Mila<br />

Dolorico, a former Hong Kong<br />

domestic helper, told Filipino<br />

Globe.<br />

“Lahat ‘yan kayang magawa<br />

nating mga Pilipino,” said<br />

Dolorico, who worked for<br />

eight years in Hong Kong<br />

before returning home in 2004.<br />

‘Manager’ si Mana Sayong sa bahay nila<br />

Noon pa man ay supermaid na si Rosario<br />

Feniza (kanan).<br />

Manager and papel niya sa bahay ng<br />

mag-asawang retirado, na nagmamay-ari<br />

ng hotel at restaurants sa Hong Kong at<br />

ibang bansa. “Ako na ang dumidiskarte sa<br />

maraming bagay, mula sa budget hanggang<br />

sa renovation ng bahay at mga handaan,”<br />

sabi niya.<br />

Dating guro si Feniza, na kilala ng mga<br />

kasamahan bilang Mana Sayong, mula sa<br />

barangay Mantang, Taft, Eastern Samar.<br />

“Kamag-anak ang turing nila sa akin at ‘yan<br />

din ang turing ko sa kanila,” wika niya.<br />

Sa kabila niyan, propesyunal ang kanilang<br />

pagtutunguhan. “Binigyan nila ako na laya<br />

na makapagdesiyon sa maraming bagay na<br />

may kinalaman sa bahay. Pati mga anak nila,<br />

ipinaubaya na rin ang mag-aalaga sa kanila.”<br />

May buntot na responsibilidad ang ganitong<br />

sitwasyon. “Mahirap din dahil nasa labas<br />

sila ng Hong Kong three months at a time<br />

at madalas ‘yun. Obviously, I am doubly<br />

responsible for the household when they’re<br />

away,” sabi niya.<br />

May katumbas din na fringe benefits ang<br />

ganitong sitwasyon. Talo pa ni Mana Sayong<br />

ang turista pagdating sa biyahe. Nakarating<br />

na siya sa France, Italy, London, US atbp.“Sa<br />

France, ang hiniling ko lang sa kanila na<br />

makapunta ako sa Lourdes. Hindi ako<br />

nagdalawang salita.”<br />

Sa katulad niya, di malayong may<br />

oportunidad na naghihintay sa ibang lugar.<br />

Ngunit sa ngayon, makaraan ang 20 taong<br />

paninilbihan, masaya sa kanyang employer.<br />

“Pag-nagretiro daw ako, magretiro ako sa<br />

kanila.”<br />

BRAD CAMPOS


26 November 2006 filipino globe


life<br />

filipino globe home, health & beauty, stars & sports<br />

November 2006<br />

27<br />

Leaky faucet giving me sleepless nights<br />

QMy leaky faucet keeps<br />

giving me sleepless<br />

nights. I’ve tried everything<br />

except throw the kitchen sink<br />

at it.<br />

How can I stop it getting<br />

into my nerves?<br />

VIR SAN JUAN<br />

Jordan<br />

AThe first thing you should<br />

do is figure out what kind<br />

of faucet you have.<br />

This will help you get an idea<br />

as to what replacement parts<br />

you need.<br />

ROBERT<br />

LUNARIA<br />

DIYBOB<br />

do it yourself<br />

Also, there are simple ways<br />

you can resolve the problem<br />

before you make that trip to<br />

the hardware store.<br />

With minimum plumbing<br />

skill, one should be able to do<br />

certain things and not end up<br />

feeling helpless.<br />

Start by turning off the water<br />

supply to the leaky faucet.<br />

Water shutoffs are often<br />

located under the sink, but in<br />

older homes, there may only<br />

be one main water shutoff<br />

for the entire house, usually<br />

located where the water pipe<br />

enters (often facing the street).<br />

Open the faucet and let any<br />

water in the pipes drain out.<br />

Put in the sink drain plug or<br />

put a towel in the sink bottom.<br />

Faucets have small screws<br />

and you don’t want to lose one<br />

down the drain.<br />

Remove the faucet handle.<br />

Virtually all handles are<br />

attached with a screw often<br />

hidden under a decorative cap<br />

that can be pried off with a<br />

small screwdriver.<br />

Remove the workings of the<br />

faucet and determine what<br />

kind of repair is required. Once<br />

you have identified what kind<br />

of faucet you have, you’re<br />

almost ready to start some<br />

repairs.<br />

A word of caution: When<br />

working with chrome and<br />

brass fixtures, make sure you<br />

protect the surfaces from tools<br />

that can scratch and scuff the<br />

finish.<br />

Use a cloth or put masking<br />

tape on wrench jaws to<br />

prevent marring the surface.<br />

Send your questions or comments to<br />

diybob@filglobe.com<br />

Ready-made<br />

or made to<br />

fit, it’s all<br />

up to you<br />

Prefab houses are opening<br />

doors to investment and<br />

profit, writes Lori Sandoval<br />

If it fits, wear it. Better still, live<br />

in it.<br />

Many housing developers live<br />

by that mantra. It’s based on the<br />

notion that buyers who are in the<br />

market for inexpensive homes in a<br />

hurry want instant gratification.<br />

It has not always worked,<br />

largely because of perceptions that<br />

anything cheap and done in an<br />

assembly-line fashion is not worth<br />

the investment.<br />

Then there is the realization that<br />

a house is probably the biggest<br />

investment anyone will make in<br />

his life.<br />

“It has always been a quality<br />

issue, more than a price issue,”<br />

said Gus Brion, a Manila-based<br />

project engineer for a developer<br />

that specialises in prefabricated<br />

housing.<br />

“But now, homebuyers are<br />

beginning to accept the idea that<br />

prefab is the way to go.”<br />

A rising number of OFWs are<br />

driving demand for ready-made<br />

housing, with cash chasing<br />

anything to invest in.<br />

“They have first-hand experience<br />

and they have seen that the idea<br />

works,” said Anthony Velasco, a<br />

Filipino architect in Hong Kong.<br />

“If you live in the US or any<br />

developed country for that matter,<br />

you will have been exposed to the<br />

prefab phenomenon.”<br />

Mostly, that’s what is being<br />

done there, but will it sell in the<br />

Philippines?<br />

Real estate broker Rita<br />

Campomanes thinks so.<br />

“Its already happening. To a<br />

great extent, most developers have<br />

embraced the idea,” she said.<br />

“There used to be a lot of<br />

resistance from the market but<br />

now, we are even getting inquiries<br />

and cold calls.”<br />

But this is not the end of<br />

traditional custom construction as<br />

we know it.<br />

Custom-made or prefab, homebuyers have a wider clear choice. Many are opting for ready-made houses.<br />

This market easily outstrips that<br />

for ready-made homes. For one<br />

thing, developers like the generous<br />

profit margins.<br />

“It’s a no-brainer. Those who<br />

have definite ideas about how they<br />

like their houses built, how they are<br />

designed and how much they are<br />

willing to spend make this market<br />

a going proposition,” Campomanes<br />

said.<br />

But those looking for value,<br />

rather than frills, now have another<br />

choice, and an increasing number<br />

are opting for it.<br />

“We’re able to pass what is saved<br />

in terms of manpower to buyers, so<br />

they pay less than they otherwise<br />

“ There used to be<br />

a lot of resistance<br />

from the market.<br />

Now we are even<br />

getting cold calls<br />

RITA CAMPOMANES<br />

Real estate broker<br />

would,” said Freddie Bartolome,<br />

who runs Royal Ventures, a<br />

Hong Kong-based company that<br />

has been cashing in on the prefab<br />

phenomenon.<br />

By being upfront with<br />

customers regarding the<br />

materials used in the “Lego”<br />

house, the industry has been able<br />

to ease worries over quality of<br />

construction. “We have to be<br />

transparent with them. We are<br />

always willing to show them<br />

what materials are being used<br />

to build their house and we<br />

explain why we do it this way,”<br />

Bartolome said. (With reporting<br />

from Raul Acedre in Manila)


28 November 2006 filipino globe<br />

Ang "Fastcard" ay isang remittance na magagamit ng<br />

inyong “ Beneficiary “ sa maraming paraan :<br />

Mabilis! Maari itong gamitin ng iyong mahal sa buhay<br />

or ( Beneficiarie’s) ora mismo pag pinadalhan mo ang<br />

Fastcard niya.<br />

Naiiba! Ang perang padala ninyo ay matatangap<br />

ONLINE sa pamamagitan ng Fastcard remittance. Hindi na<br />

kailangan magbukas sila ng bank account.<br />

Madaling Gamitin! Ang perang inyong pinadala ay<br />

maari nilang mai-withdraw sa higit na 6,000 ATM ng<br />

Megalink, Bancnet at Expressnet, 24 hours a day, 7<br />

days a week.<br />

Ligtas! Ang pag-wi-withdraw sa ATM ng beneficiary<br />

ninyo pagkat Fastcard ay protektado ng kanilang PIN na<br />

sila lang ang nakakaalam .<br />

Meron Pa! Ang "Fastcard" ay maari ding gamitin ng<br />

beneficiaries ninyo sa Gimik sapagkat ito ay<br />

tinatanggap na pambayad sa humiigit na 20,000<br />

Department stores, Groceries , Tindahan, Supermarket at<br />

Restaurants sa Pilipinas at International kasi nga Visa<br />

Electron.


filipino globe November 2006 29<br />

You’re invited<br />

Celebrate the festive<br />

season with our special<br />

Christmas issue<br />

coming out on<br />

December 17.<br />

To advertise, please call our account executives<br />

for bookings.<br />

Venice Paita (9312 0169) in Hong Kong<br />

Ricky Sumallo (0917 539 0486) in Manila<br />

Josephine Miranda (0920 951 6917) in Manila<br />

TJ Badon-Doble (0928 502 0379) in Manila<br />

filipino globe<br />

t h e O F W n e w s p a p e r


30<br />

November 2006<br />

featu<br />

For Calayan couple,<br />

the team is the thing<br />

Practice builds on the principle that<br />

everyone has the right to be beautiful<br />

Foresight is behind the<br />

success of the young but<br />

competent Cosmetiderm<br />

team. Headed by husband and wife<br />

Manny and Pie Calayan (below),<br />

the 11-year-old cosmetic surgery<br />

and dermatology clinic has steadily<br />

built a solid reputation in the<br />

medical field that is grounded in an<br />

efficient partnership.<br />

It did this college sweethearts<br />

well to decide on separate but<br />

complementary specializations<br />

in medical aesthetics. After tying<br />

the knot and graduating from the<br />

UERM College of Medicine, Pie<br />

Calayan developed a keen interest<br />

in dermatology, which in turn<br />

motivated her husband to pursue a<br />

related field in cosmetic surgery.<br />

“We agreed our choices would<br />

be advantageous in our future<br />

practice,” says Pie. “Manny would<br />

perform the operation and I’d take<br />

care of the finishing touches like<br />

treating the incisions to make sure<br />

they wouldn’t scar.”<br />

Clearly, the Calayans arrived<br />

at the perfect formula. For soon<br />

after they finished their respective<br />

residencies, the marriage of<br />

dermatology and cosmetic surgery<br />

drew patients to their clinic. Trust<br />

was easy to build because their<br />

qualifications were clear and<br />

specific. Treatments concerning the<br />

skin and hair were the domain of<br />

Pie, while any procedure involving<br />

incisions, big or small, were the<br />

“<br />

It’s not just the<br />

confidence of being<br />

in good hands with<br />

these doctors. It’s the<br />

certainty of being in<br />

the right hands for a<br />

particular procedure<br />

PATIENT<br />

On the Calayan pratice<br />

responsibility of Manny. “It’s not<br />

just the confidence of being in good<br />

hands with these doctors,” said a<br />

lady patient at the Cosmetiderm<br />

waiting room in the Medical Plaza<br />

clinics. “It’s the certainty of being<br />

in the right hands for a particular<br />

procedure.”<br />

It has always been this way with<br />

the Calayans since 1995, when<br />

they first established a simple skin<br />

and cosmetic surgery clinic at the<br />

Healthkard Building on Herrera St,<br />

Makati. Then called Cosmetiderm<br />

Skin Center and Aesthetic Surgery,<br />

the practice initially offered the<br />

more “traditional” dermatological<br />

and aesthetic procedures; the<br />

simple treatment of acne, allergies<br />

and other skin conditions, and<br />

straightforward enhancement<br />

procedures like rhinoplasty,<br />

facelift, and eye bag removal.<br />

“Lasers and other technologies<br />

were just being developed then,”<br />

says Manny. “But of course my<br />

wife and I kept ourselves updated<br />

on different developments, and we<br />

were quick to avail of the various<br />

training programs in Thailand and<br />

Singapore so we could administer<br />

the procedures here.”<br />

Keeping abreast of breakthroughs<br />

comes easy to Manny being a<br />

fellow of the American Academy of<br />

Cosmetic Surgery, the Asia-Pacific<br />

Academy of Cosmetic Surgery,<br />

and the International Society of<br />

Cosmetic Laser Surgeons, among<br />

other affiliations. The same goes<br />

with Pie, who is a member of the<br />

Philippine Academy of Clinical<br />

and Cosmetic Dermatology.<br />

By 1996, the advent of laser<br />

treatments, Cosmetiderm acquired<br />

its first carbon-based laser system<br />

and laser wart removal machine.<br />

More training and equipment<br />

acquisitions followed, most<br />

recently a hair removal machine<br />

and a high-powered lipoplasty<br />

equipment.<br />

“Everyone wants to be beautiful,<br />

and everyone has the right to be<br />

beautiful,” Manny says. “That’s<br />

why in our clinics, you would see<br />

everyone – from the rich to the<br />

masa – coming for treatments.”<br />

Seeing that the Calayans are<br />

an approachable tandem, GMA<br />

7 has offered them a segment<br />

on the early morning program<br />

Unang Hirit. On television, as in<br />

their practice, husband and wife<br />

complement each other.<br />

Ganda!<br />

PHILIPPINES TARGETS US$3 TRILL<br />

Medical tourism is being targeted as the<br />

next frontier for the Philippines in a bid<br />

to cash in on a market worth US$3 trillion<br />

a year.<br />

“It’s one of the solid niches for our<br />

country,” President Gloria Macapagal<br />

Arroyo said.<br />

Arroyo pushed the initiative in a meeting<br />

with her economic advisers, saying<br />

Filipino professionals “can serve the<br />

world right here at home, as we provide<br />

more jobs downstream”.<br />

The Philippines ranks fifth among<br />

Asia’s top healthcare centers after Thailand,<br />

India, Malaysia and Singapore.<br />

“Medical tourism is a rapidly growing<br />

trend where citizens of developed nations<br />

travel to other countries to avail


es filipino globe<br />

31<br />

Ganda!<br />

Beauty-conscious<br />

Filipinos are<br />

turning the<br />

cosmetology<br />

industry<br />

on its head.<br />

Tessa Mauricio<br />

profiles the<br />

country’s leading<br />

professionals<br />

in the business<br />

of looking<br />

and feeling good<br />

ION MEDICAL TOURISM MARKET<br />

themselves of quality but affordable<br />

medical and healthcare services, along<br />

with rest and recreation,” Health Secretary<br />

Francisco Duque III said.<br />

Duque said Filipino doctors are on par<br />

with their western counterparts, with<br />

most medical specialists in the country<br />

having undergone training overseas,<br />

Services offered in the country include<br />

cardiology, pulmonary and cervical<br />

care, and nephrology.<br />

Statistics show that blepharoplasty, a<br />

procedure to widen the contour of the<br />

eyes, popular among the Koreans and<br />

Japanese , costs P150,000, but costs<br />

roughly US$10,000 or P500,000 in<br />

their countries.<br />

RAUL ACEDRE<br />

She only wanted to be “your best friend in<br />

beauty”. But now, Victoria Belo is a famed<br />

“doctor to the stars,” and more significantly,<br />

one of the most successful businesswomen<br />

the country has ever had.<br />

She is the founder of Belo Medical Group, a<br />

16-year-old enterprise that boldly paved the way for<br />

cosmetic surgery to be widely accepted in Philippine<br />

society and turned the one-time taboo into a profitable<br />

industry.<br />

“It took me a long time to admit that we’re a<br />

business,” Belo tells Filipino Globe. “I was like many<br />

doctors who thought I shouldn’t mix medicine with<br />

business.”<br />

With six booming centers, including a newly opened<br />

practice in Glorietta, the group has joined the big<br />

league in the medical industry.<br />

But where business ends and medicine begins is<br />

well defined. “The lines are clearly drawn,” she says.<br />

“Our main objective is still based<br />

on what I’ve always wanted to do:<br />

make everybody equal if they want<br />

it. My dream has always been for<br />

people to have confidence and selfesteem,<br />

no matter how they look.<br />

If that could just happen, it would<br />

be great, right? But I know that<br />

those who are born with the better<br />

genes usually get the breaks.”<br />

As a young student in a girls’<br />

school, Belo noticed that the<br />

prettier ones were always the<br />

ones who made it big on campus.<br />

They were the popular girls, the<br />

teacher’s pets who also got all the<br />

dates. “I was right smack in the<br />

middle – I wasn’t really ugly or pretty,” she says. “All<br />

the same, I hated inequality or discrimination of any<br />

sort. It bothers me when people are judged for how<br />

they look.”<br />

When she developed a severe acne problem that<br />

went well into her 30s, she picked up mannerisms to<br />

hide her insecurity. She would either tilt her head low<br />

or repeatedly smooth the sides of her hair over her<br />

face.<br />

And so, after her father – a noted lawyer in his time<br />

– convinced unica hija Vicki to live his dream of<br />

being a doctor, a specialization of choice was obvious<br />

for the University of Sto Tomas medical graduate.<br />

In the late 1980s, she headed for Thailand, where<br />

she studied with a progressive team of doctors for a<br />

diploma in dermatology.<br />

“Even when I came home to start my practice in<br />

1990, I still had bad skin,” Belo says. “My patients<br />

who’ve been with me for the past 14 years had always<br />

told people, ‘Her skin was so bad, I wanted to turn<br />

around when I saw her!’”<br />

Her own condition made her go into dermatology,<br />

believing she was in a better position practice it.<br />

It was from her frustration as an acne patient that<br />

Belo came upon the concept of her present practice,<br />

a brand of dermatology that others had thought to be<br />

too untraditional in the beginning, but one that many<br />

duplicated almost immediately.<br />

While Belo, the patient, as more than familiar<br />

with the “alcohol-prick-inject” routine from years<br />

of visiting top dermatologists, she wished that her<br />

doctors had more time to get rid of her pet peeves:<br />

The white heads and black heads on her t-zone.<br />

“I knew that no dermatologist would bother to clean<br />

your face really well, so in between consultations, I’d<br />

go scout the best facialists but still I’d break out.”<br />

When she set up her first clinic at The Medical<br />

Towers in Makati, she made sure that she devoted<br />

an entire wing to facials, minus the concoctions of<br />

commercial creams. Her routine was that after she<br />

treated the patient’s acne or allergy, she would send<br />

them to her trained assistants for a final, thorough<br />

cleaning. The patients would then go home with the<br />

right kind of medicine for their skin condition, and<br />

with a bit of luck, all will be well.<br />

Belo’s interest in liposuction was also the result of a<br />

personal condition: weight problem.<br />

“The reason I went into<br />

liposuction to begin with<br />

“ The whole point<br />

is to be beautiful<br />

without people<br />

knowing what you<br />

have done<br />

VICTORIA BELO<br />

On quick and painless procedure<br />

was because I was a fatso,”<br />

she says. “That’s also why I<br />

went into teaching aerobics<br />

because I really needed to<br />

work out,” she adds, touching<br />

lightly on a widely publicised<br />

controversy involving<br />

Rosanna Roces. The feisty<br />

actor recently sued Belo for<br />

her weight gain, five years<br />

after her last liposuction;<br />

the word “five” being the<br />

operative word in the case.<br />

“My being an aerobics<br />

instructor was really a big<br />

help,” Belo continues. “It was then that I saw that<br />

no matter how hard my students worked out, their<br />

stomachs would still bulge, even if their muscles were<br />

so hard.<br />

It was then that Belo built on the wonders of<br />

liposuction, thereafter pioneering the procedure<br />

in the country. She trained with Dr Jeffrey Kline<br />

in Capistrano, California. The man is responsible<br />

for developing the safest and most effective form<br />

of surgical body sculpting, known as ultrasound<br />

tumescent liposuction.<br />

Even when colleagues came down hard on her for<br />

carrying out such alien procedures as liposuction,<br />

laser and Obagi treatment in the country, she persisted<br />

in research, training, and treatment.<br />

Belo looked straight ahead, and in the process<br />

helped change many lives for the better. “The whole<br />

point of undergoing cosmetic surgery is to improve<br />

a person’s looks, but unfortunately, the traditional<br />

methods entail a lot of pain, bleeding, and swelling<br />

and bruising during recovery. But with these new<br />

developments, cosmetic surgery becomes less toxic,<br />

and more importantly, safer for everyone.”<br />

She also says that downtime is cut significantly by<br />

more than half, which perfectly fits today’s active<br />

lifestyles.<br />

“The whole point is to be beautiful without people<br />

knowing what you have done.”


32<br />

filipino globe your money<br />

November 2006<br />

Sign here and be your own boss<br />

It could be as easy as that but franchising is a challenging concept that needs patience and hard work<br />

JUANITO CONCEPCION<br />

An increasing number of Filipinos<br />

overseas are turning to franchised<br />

businesses back home in the<br />

hope that the success of those<br />

businesses could one day provide<br />

an alternative to the income they<br />

are earning abroad.<br />

A franchised business is an<br />

ideal entry point for aspiring<br />

entrepreneurs among overseas<br />

Filipinos, especially because<br />

they often do not have the time,<br />

the means and energy to conduct<br />

proper research on a prospective<br />

business.<br />

Simply put, franchising is<br />

duplicating a successful business.<br />

“Between starting a business<br />

from zero and going into a<br />

franchised business which already<br />

has a track record for making profit<br />

and running well, it is obvious that<br />

returning overseas Filipinos face<br />

much lesser risks and have greater<br />

prospects of success if they will go<br />

into franchising,” said Tess Ngan<br />

Tian, immediate past president<br />

and chairman of the Association of<br />

Filipino Franchisers Inc (AFFI).<br />

Citing the Lots a Pizza franchise<br />

that her company is offering, she<br />

said investors can fully recover<br />

their investment over a relatively<br />

short period of time, depending on<br />

location and other factors.<br />

“We have three former OFWs, all<br />

seamen, who set up Lots a Pizza<br />

franchises in different parts of<br />

Metro Manila and they recovered<br />

their investments within six months<br />

to 1-1/2 years,” she said.<br />

She said the minimum investment<br />

for a Lots a Pizza cart-type<br />

franchised business is P350,000 in<br />

a package which includes setting<br />

up of the cart, equipment and<br />

training. A kiosk package costs<br />

P550,000 while a dine-in package<br />

costs P750,000.<br />

AFFI president Ricky Cuna<br />

said more and more Filipinos are<br />

going into different franchised<br />

businesses. “We have 65 member<br />

franchisers and people who want to<br />

have a franchised business can do<br />

so for as low as P150,000,” he said.<br />

“About 60 per cent of the<br />

franchised businesses being offered<br />

by our members are engaged in<br />

food while the rest is engaged in<br />

different types of services,” he<br />

added.<br />

Ngan Tian said the prospects are<br />

bright for the franchising industry<br />

in the Philippines. “Nowadays,<br />

most people recognise and<br />

understand the merits of going into<br />

a franchised business unlike in the<br />

past when not so many people were<br />

talking about it,” she said.<br />

“It is much easier for an aspiring<br />

entrepreneur to assess his or<br />

her prospects of success after<br />

observing the operations of the<br />

different branches of a particular<br />

franchiser that he or she is<br />

interested in,” she said.<br />

“He or she won’t have the benefit<br />

of this study if he or she were to<br />

start a business from scratch.”<br />

Rudolf Kotik, president of<br />

RK Franchise Consultancy, cited<br />

the major merits of franchised<br />

businesses.<br />

“By buying a franchise, you get a<br />

proven profitable business system,<br />

assistance in selecting the location<br />

and setting up the business, training<br />

and other help before and after<br />

opening the business,” he said.<br />

“You avoid totally the trialand-error<br />

stage which you will<br />

likely experience if you set up an<br />

independent business and you start<br />

from scratch.”<br />

S<br />

Super Ace Cargo Ltd.<br />

PALigayahin ang inyong<br />

PALmilya<br />

Sa bawat Box na ipapadala ninyo mula October 1 to December 15<br />

May Pag-asa Kayong Manalo ng Isa sa 10<br />

ROUNDTRIP PAL Tickets to Manila<br />

Hotline: 2348-6080/SMS: 6174-4718<br />

Box Size Manila/Rizal Luzon Visayas/ Mindanao<br />

SUPER Jumbo<br />

24x24x36<br />

Jumbo<br />

24x24x26<br />

Regular<br />

24x24x20<br />

Half<br />

24x14x20<br />

Mini<br />

24x12x12<br />

640 680 710<br />

540 580 610<br />

480 510 540<br />

320 350 380<br />

200 220 240<br />

Super Jumbo X 2 Promo<br />

980 1,080 1,180<br />

YAU TONG 10/F, Unit J, Wing Shan Ind’l Bldg., 428 Cha Kwo Ling Rd. * CENTRAL Shop 271, 2/F, World-Wide House Tel. 2522-7323 * TSUEN WAN Shop 276, 2/F, Lik Sang Plaza, Tel: 2499-6280<br />

NORTH POINT Shop 77-C, G/F, City Garden, Tel. 2503-2366 *HUNG HOM Shop D38-A, Planet Square Tel. 2330-7135 * TOKWAWAN Behmar Phil. Product, A-1, 6 Mok Cheung St.<br />

Philippines: 181 Ipil St. Cor. Ipil Ext., Marikina Hts., Marikina City, Tel: (632) 9414212<br />

UMAC Forwarders Express<br />

First Draw: November 12 (5 Winners) 2nd Draw: December 16 (5 Winners)<br />

(Manila/ Rizal) (Luzon) (Vis/Min)<br />

Net Price/ This November Only<br />

Free<br />

Shopping Bag<br />

with Goodies<br />

*$50 discount for SUPER Friends Card holders<br />

*6 Months Free Stripe Bag Storage No Hidden Charges for every Box<br />

*We also pick up Odd sizes, Tv, Computers, Sofa, Ref, Dining Table, Washing Machine and other Furniture<br />

NOW OPEN: TAI PO (1/F, MOON HOUSE, 14 HEI YUEN ST.) TEL. 6895-9260<br />

Sama na sa inyong mga Kaibigan: Ate Cynthia, Jay, JC, Jef, Cosme, George, Francis, Resty, & Ed2 Dahil<br />

Sa S uper Ace, S uper Bilis, S uper ang S ervice


filipino globe your money<br />

November 2006<br />

33<br />

Too busy making money? Spend some time managing it well<br />

TERRIE FUCANAN in Manila<br />

Wealth does not necessarily mean<br />

having lots and lots of money<br />

— as most people would usually<br />

think.<br />

The financial advisor Manuel<br />

Colayco, author of the Pera Mo,<br />

Palaguin Mo book series, offers a<br />

more substantial definition of this<br />

often misconstrued term: “Wealth<br />

is a condition where your present<br />

financial resources can support<br />

your lifestyle over a long period<br />

of time, even if you do not work<br />

to generate income.”<br />

Even a middle-income earner<br />

can be wealthy, as long as his<br />

earnings complement his expense<br />

profile. Colayco elaborates: “If<br />

your living expenses are very<br />

high because of your lifestyle,<br />

or perhaps because you have so<br />

much debt, then you would still be<br />

financially challenged even if you<br />

had P1 million.”<br />

Colayco’s statement could<br />

never be more applicable than<br />

to Filipinos. We are known to<br />

be hard workers, but we are also<br />

financially negligent.<br />

“Most people are focused on<br />

making money, but they have no<br />

real understanding of how to keep<br />

and manage their money. For<br />

some reason, people seem to think<br />

that wealth comes only from new<br />

earnings,” he says.<br />

Because Filipinos are often too<br />

preoccupied about making money,<br />

Colayco says there is no financial<br />

planning, making our quest for<br />

wealth more difficult.<br />

Misguided spending is<br />

commonly seen among OFWs,<br />

employees who suddenly got<br />

promoted, and entrepreneurs<br />

whose profits doubled overnight.<br />

The thrill of receiving a large<br />

sum of money seems to trigger<br />

a person’s urge to improve his<br />

lifestyle, but not his financial<br />

position.<br />

“Many OFWs come back with<br />

hardly enough money to retire<br />

comfortably,” he says. “Worse,<br />

they end up with just the same,<br />

or even less, than what they had<br />

when they first left. Many have<br />

perhaps been ill-advised with<br />

regard to the money they have<br />

earned.”<br />

For all the money they have<br />

made overseas, these OFWs are<br />

hard pressed to gain financial<br />

independence.<br />

In his book Wealth Within<br />

Your Reach, Colayco goes to the<br />

heart of the matter: “Financial<br />

independence is within everyone’s<br />

reach. All you have to do is to<br />

acquire the ability to reach it.”<br />

The book is intended not only<br />

for OFWs and retirees, but for<br />

all income earners who wish to<br />

manage their finances well.


34 November 2006 filipino globe


filipino globe celebrity<br />

November 2006<br />

35<br />

Erik on Rudy Hatfield: I have no wish to meet him or know him<br />

DANNY VIBAS in Manila<br />

Singing champ Erik Santos (left)<br />

had a press launch one afternoon<br />

recently for his new album, Your<br />

Love.<br />

The showbiz scribes invited to<br />

the event were too polite to grill<br />

him about the persistent talk that<br />

he is gay.<br />

Instead, we asked him which<br />

of the songs in the album he<br />

dedicates to his sweetheart of four<br />

months, Rufa Mae Quinto. His<br />

answer was All That I Need, which<br />

happens to be the only original<br />

song in the album that features hit<br />

Pinoy band songs of the 90s.<br />

We also gamely asked him about<br />

how he feels towards Rufa Mae’s<br />

ex, cager Rudy Hatfield, who is<br />

back in town and has been playing<br />

for Alaska.<br />

Erik said he has never met Rudy<br />

and is not at all interested to meet<br />

the Fil-Am hunk. He insisted he<br />

doesn’t believe in digging up the<br />

past with his girlfriends (he has<br />

had three before Rufa Mae), so<br />

he doesnt even bother to ask Rufa<br />

Mae at all about her ex-boyfriend.<br />

His relationship with Peachy<br />

(Rufa’s real-life nickname) is<br />

going stronger. They plan to put<br />

up a cafe together and they have<br />

an offer to do a series of shows<br />

together in Europe early next year.<br />

Erik celebrated his birthday<br />

recently and Peachy’s gift to him<br />

was a Cartier watch which he was<br />

proudly wearing that afternoon of<br />

the press launch.<br />

Erik does seem happy and oh<br />

so wealthy. From flood-prone<br />

Malabon, the music idol who is<br />

just in his early 20s, has moved his<br />

family to a five-bedroom house in<br />

Novaliches, QC. He also owns a<br />

condo unit in Mandaluyong City.<br />

His career is well-managed by a<br />

mighty gay named Boy Abunda.<br />

Pops takes<br />

time out for<br />

life and<br />

enjoys it<br />

Concert Queen looks to start<br />

all over again as she turns 40<br />

TERRIE FUCANAN in Manila<br />

Pops Fernandez says she has<br />

never enjoyed life to the full<br />

– until now.<br />

“I used to take life too<br />

seriously,” she says. “Now I’m<br />

enjoying it.”<br />

This is not to say that the<br />

Concert Queen, recording artist,<br />

actress, fashion entrepreneur, host,<br />

commercial endorser, and mother<br />

to Robin and Ram – her sons by<br />

Concert King Martin Nievera<br />

“<br />

I used to take life<br />

too seriously. Now<br />

I’m enjoying it<br />

POPS FERNANDEZ<br />

On turning 40<br />

– is retiring from showbiz to live<br />

a carefree life. Pops is actually<br />

doing the contrary, but with more<br />

energy and enthusiasm.<br />

“I like to work,” she says.<br />

And how. Pops just launched<br />

a new album under Universal<br />

Records entitled Silver, which<br />

marks her 25th year in the local<br />

music industry. It’s a 10-track<br />

follow-up to her 2004 album with<br />

Warner Music, When Words are<br />

Not Enough.<br />

“Most of my albums in the past<br />

carried romantic titles,” she says.<br />

“But for my latest one, we decided<br />

to highlight my 25th year in the<br />

music business, although it’s an<br />

album filled with sentimental<br />

songs.<br />

Composed of nostalgic remakes<br />

and never-before-released<br />

compositions, Silver is, indeed,<br />

very Pops Fernandez. “Filipinos<br />

like to hear painful songs, don’t<br />

you think? I like songs that make<br />

me cry.”<br />

This year, Pops turns 40, an<br />

age she has resolved to mark by<br />

“starting all over again.”<br />

“It’s not just through a new<br />

album, but also movies and a lot<br />

of new avenues for self-expression<br />

and artistic growth,” she says.<br />

Next year will be a busy one for<br />

Pops, but at the moment, she is<br />

focused on her 40th birthday show<br />

at the Crowne Plaza Galleria on<br />

December 11.<br />

On New Year’s Eve, she will<br />

perform live at the Makati<br />

Shangri-La Hotel. “I need to make<br />

a living for my boys,” she jokes.<br />

That’s Pops these days: positive,<br />

easygoing, yet driven as ever.<br />

She has some very good years<br />

behind her, but the best is yet to<br />

come.<br />

Pops Fernandez is<br />

starting with a clean<br />

slate, from her singing<br />

career to movies. “I do<br />

have to make a living for<br />

my kids,” she jokes.


36<br />

filipino globe celebrity<br />

November 2006<br />

Is she Robin’s new Angel? We’ll soon find out<br />

DANNY VIBAS in Manila<br />

After Regine Velasquez, expect<br />

Robin Padilla to be tightly and<br />

persistently linked next to Angel<br />

Locsin (left) – yes, the younger<br />

Locsin, not to the not-so-young<br />

but always beauteous Aquino.<br />

Robin is teamed up next over<br />

at GMA 7 with the star of Darna<br />

and Majica who is very much<br />

the girlfriend of Oyo Boy Sotto.<br />

Asian Treasures will take Robin<br />

and Angel to various parts of Asia<br />

for their filming. The publicity<br />

yarn from GMA 7 brags that<br />

Cambodia, China, India, Thailand,<br />

and, of course, the Philippines<br />

will be among the setting of<br />

the network’s newest fantasy<br />

adventure series.<br />

In the Philippines, the shooting<br />

venues include Corregidor, Bataan<br />

and Anilao in Mabini, Batangas.<br />

Robin is very much aware that his<br />

new leading lady is the girlfriend<br />

of a Sotto boy whose clan he<br />

respects. Pinoy showbiz’s Bad<br />

Boy is known for easily falling<br />

for his leading ladies and pursuing<br />

them with a passion in most cases.<br />

He did it to Regine Velasquez<br />

while they were filming and<br />

promoting their second and latest<br />

movie together Till I Met You, coproduced<br />

by GMA Films and Viva<br />

Films. And for some reason, as<br />

well as for the first time in her 20-<br />

year-old showbiz career, Regine<br />

made a big show of kissing<br />

passionately with her leading man<br />

even in public, such as during the<br />

second night of her recent concert<br />

at the Big Dome.<br />

‘The first time I saw Robin, I<br />

froze – and I was in the middle<br />

of retouching my make-up’<br />

Here’s why<br />

Bea has a soft<br />

spot for the<br />

tough guy<br />

Next to his<br />

macho machine,<br />

Robin Padilla<br />

exudes the kind<br />

of toughness<br />

girls swoon<br />

over and many<br />

women fall for.<br />

DANNY VIVAS in Manila<br />

Stunning Bea Alonzo may<br />

be delicately lovely but she<br />

likes bad-boy-looking men,<br />

not refined, neat dudes, thank you.<br />

Her biggest showbiz crush is not<br />

her on-cam sweetheart John Lloyd<br />

Cruz, but Robin Padilla.<br />

The young actress turned 19 last<br />

October 17.<br />

Star Magic of ABS-CBN 2, her<br />

career handler, hosted a dinner for<br />

her with the press recently, and it<br />

was during the after-dinner banter<br />

with Star Magic PR Rykka Dylim<br />

and other network staffers that we<br />

learned about the young actress’<br />

kind of guy.<br />

“The first time I saw Robin, I<br />

froze – and I was in the middle of<br />

retouching my make-up in one of<br />

dressing rooms (of ABS-CBN).<br />

“I must have stared at him for five<br />

full minutes before I realized that I<br />

had to finish what I was doing since<br />

my cue to face the camera would<br />

come any moment,” recalled Bea.<br />

With an impish, little girl smile<br />

(and she’s not petite at all due,<br />

perhaps, to her British blood<br />

from her hardly known dad), she<br />

admitted that up to know, she still<br />

gets reduced to nerves every time<br />

she sees Robin in person.<br />

And up to now, she still feels a<br />

little bad that ABS-CBN 2’s plan<br />

to have her paired up with Robin<br />

“<br />

That boy should<br />

stop getting into<br />

trouble and spend<br />

more time instead<br />

taking care of his<br />

showbiz career<br />

BEA ALONZO<br />

On John Wayne Sace<br />

never got off the ground. That<br />

night at Cheapsteaks restaurant at<br />

ABS-CBN’s The Loop mall, she<br />

showed her concern for another<br />

actor with a bad boy image:<br />

John Wayne Sace, who recently<br />

figured in a brawl with a neighbor<br />

who had him arrested by the<br />

police.<br />

“That boy should stop getting<br />

into trouble and spend more time<br />

instead taking care of his showbiz<br />

career,” she said. Realizing what<br />

she has just said, she quickly<br />

clarified: “Oh, God, why do I think<br />

of him still as a boy when he’s, I<br />

think, just a year younger than I<br />

am.”<br />

Bea has been saying she has no<br />

boyfriend, but we have it on good<br />

authority that there’s a brownskinned,<br />

unneat-looking young<br />

guy whose name is Mark and lives<br />

in a condo in the Ortigas area in<br />

Pasig where his family lives. He is<br />

known as Bea’s boyfriend.<br />

Bea, who admits that she now<br />

lives in a condo with only some<br />

maids as housemates, does not stay<br />

in the same building, though.<br />

Meanwhile, Bea insists she and<br />

John Lloyd are just very good<br />

friends who enjoy ribbing each<br />

other when they are together.<br />

They get that chance to do a bit of<br />

horseplay on the set of their new<br />

ABS-CBN soap opera Maging<br />

Sino Ka Man.


filipino globe celebrity<br />

November 2006<br />

37<br />

Singing stars Jessa Zaragoza<br />

and Dingdong Avanzado<br />

are a new kind of<br />

sensations in the US.<br />

“I am the phenomenal<br />

housemaid,” Jessa quips, “ironing<br />

clothes, washing dishes, name it.”<br />

“And I’m getting to be an expert<br />

at what I do around the house, like<br />

taking out the garbage” Dingdong<br />

chimes in.<br />

The couple immigrated to the US<br />

a few years ago, leaving behind<br />

the bright lights of the Philippine<br />

music scene.<br />

They have a four-bedroom,<br />

two-storey house in Vallejo,<br />

Califrornia, where Dingdong works<br />

on weekdays as marketing manager<br />

of a mortgage company owned by<br />

an uncle. Jessa has been busy lately<br />

learning how to drive. Dindong<br />

has just bought her a brand-new<br />

Mercedes-Benz..<br />

They still get to do shows either<br />

together or separately on most<br />

weekends. There are, after all, 2.4<br />

million Pinoys in the US eager to<br />

watch their kababayan perform.<br />

Jessa flew to Hawaii a few weeks<br />

after the October 15 earthquake<br />

that left several islands there<br />

without electricity for a few days.<br />

“I was supposed to do the show<br />

with Rica (Peralejo) but she got<br />

stranded on an island that had<br />

no power for several days due<br />

to the earthquake, so I ended up<br />

doing the show all by myself,”<br />

Jessa tells Filipino Globe.<br />

The couple are back in the<br />

Philippines for a visit and to<br />

promote their duet album, which<br />

they recorded a few months<br />

before they migrated to the US.<br />

On most weekdays, Jessa is a<br />

housewife who had to learn how<br />

to cook. She wakes up early and<br />

makes a big production out of her<br />

cooking.<br />

“You’d think she’s shooting a<br />

commercial for some kitchen<br />

product,” Dingdong says, teasing<br />

his wife.<br />

Like a typical household in the<br />

US, they have no maid, not even a<br />

yaya for their daughter who misses<br />

having a pet dog in the house.<br />

Dingdong and Jessa obtained<br />

special visas that classify them as<br />

“extraordinary persons” due to<br />

their singing talents. It’s the same<br />

type of visa<br />

granted to singer April Boy Regino<br />

who, according to Dingdong, lives<br />

in Carlson City.<br />

The couple had to hire an<br />

immigration lawyer to facilitate<br />

the processing of their application,<br />

backed by voluminous documents.<br />

Their greencards<br />

allow them to be away<br />

from the US for a<br />

maximum of four<br />

months in a row in<br />

a year. “So, if, for<br />

instance, Jessa gets<br />

offered a TV soap<br />

here and she would<br />

be taping for only<br />

four months, that<br />

could be arranged,” Dingdong<br />

says.<br />

Dingdong says settling in the US<br />

is a humbling experience even as<br />

the decision to move his family<br />

there was a well-thought-out one.<br />

One humbling experience he had<br />

was getting rejected for a credit<br />

She cooks, he<br />

takes out<br />

the trash<br />

Dingdong and<br />

Jessa miss the<br />

star treatment,<br />

but they’re<br />

doing just fine<br />

in the States,<br />

writes Danny<br />

Vibas<br />

“<br />

You’d think she’s<br />

shooting a<br />

commercial for some<br />

kitchen product<br />

DINGDONG<br />

On Jessa’s new passion<br />

card. “In the Philippines, agents<br />

and companies were running after<br />

me to offer me all kinds of credit<br />

cards,” he says. In the Philippines,<br />

of course, he was a well-loved<br />

pop singer for almost 15 years.<br />

He even became a councilor in<br />

Quezon City.<br />

Cleaning the house, mowing<br />

the lawn, taking out the garbage,<br />

going out to the laundry shop,<br />

and lining up for anything and<br />

everything are things Dingdong<br />

regularly does in the US. “Oh,<br />

once in a while some really sweet<br />

kababayan would recognize me<br />

and point me to a side door so I<br />

can be attended to without waiting<br />

for my turn in a long line of<br />

people,” Dingdong says.<br />

While he and Jessa miss the star<br />

treatment in the Philippines, they<br />

find life in the US well worth it.<br />

In fact, they want their next child<br />

to be Made in the USA.<br />

Ai Ai comes clean about children’s fathers<br />

DANNY VIBAS in Manila<br />

There must be something about<br />

turning 42 that moves comedienne<br />

Ai Ai de las Alas (right) into being<br />

more open about some truths in<br />

her life.<br />

For instance, she now openly<br />

admits that her three kids do not<br />

have only one father in the person<br />

of singer Miguel Vera who is now<br />

based in the US.<br />

Her only son, the eldest, has<br />

stage actor Rey Malte Cruz as<br />

father. However, the boy, who will<br />

be college age next year, seems<br />

to have always known that his<br />

father is not Miguel with whom<br />

her mother had an invalid marriage<br />

for years – since Miguel was<br />

already married (to a non-showbiz<br />

girl) when he deceived Ai Ai into<br />

matrimony more than a decade<br />

ago.<br />

Actually, Ai Ai did not keep it a<br />

secret to some press guys that one<br />

of her kids is not Miguel’s. That<br />

is, to press guys who happened to<br />

ask. But then she would not say<br />

which one of her three children<br />

was not fathered by Miguel and<br />

who the kids dad is. And after<br />

admitting her indiscretions, she<br />

would beg the scribes not to write<br />

about it to spare her children from<br />

embarrassment. To return her<br />

honesty, no showbiz reporter ever<br />

wrote that her three children had<br />

two different fathers.<br />

Ai Ai recently told some scribes<br />

that her son has met his halfsiblings.<br />

And since the boy is about<br />

to go to college, she has warned<br />

him not to get anyone pregnant.<br />

And that if he could not suppress<br />

his urge to bed some girl, he had<br />

better know how to use rubbers.<br />

Ai Ai is suddenly talking about her<br />

children and their father perhaps to<br />

avoid talking about her own flimsy<br />

and whimsical lovelife.<br />

And she has none these days.


38<br />

filipino globe celebrity<br />

November 2006<br />

The dead<br />

are getting<br />

richer and<br />

why not?<br />

How much is Marilyn Monroe’s<br />

pin-up photo worth these days?<br />

The good times roll for Elvis, Curt Cobain and Albert Einstein. They make millions a year.<br />

POL ISIDRO in Los Angeles<br />

They’re long gone, but they may<br />

be worth more now that they’re<br />

dead than when they were living.<br />

From Elvis to Frank Sinatra and<br />

Albert Einstein, dead celebrities<br />

are making more money than<br />

they ever did, ensuring their<br />

iconic status and making them a<br />

continuing business proposition,<br />

according to Forbes magazine.<br />

Elvis dominated the scene<br />

for many years, thanks largely<br />

to shrewd management of his<br />

estate by former wife Priscilla.<br />

When the estate sold the licensing<br />

rights to a management firm<br />

recently, the King of Rock ‘n Roll<br />

pocketed a handsome profit.<br />

Much of Elvis’ wealth comes<br />

from that deal with CKX, which<br />

paid US$100 million for 85 per<br />

cent of Elvis Presley Enterprises<br />

left to daughter Lisa Marie<br />

Presley.<br />

The purchase includes<br />

publishing rights to some 650<br />

songs and Graceland, Elvis’<br />

famously tacky Memphis home.<br />

But stripping out the one-time<br />

profit from the deal, Elvis can’t<br />

claim the No 1 spot on Forbes’<br />

list. That place has been taken by<br />

Curt Cobain, the former frontman<br />

of Nirvana, who killed himself in<br />

1994. His widow, Courtney Love,<br />

and their child, Frances Bean,<br />

sold 25 per cent of the band’s<br />

catalog to former Virgin Records<br />

chief Larry Mestel for a reported<br />

US$50 million.<br />

Then there’s proof that making<br />

loads of cash is not exactly rocket<br />

science. Albert Einstein has been<br />

dead more than 50 years, but he<br />

continues to inspire films and<br />

stories and his image remains<br />

widely used, for which his estate<br />

receives royalties to the tune of<br />

US$5 million a year. Einstein has<br />

helped create an industry that was<br />

worth US$400 million last year.<br />

Marilyn Monroe’s much-loved<br />

pin-up photo with her white<br />

skirt lifted up from under a<br />

manhole blower on a New York<br />

street continues to be a bestseller,<br />

accounting for much of<br />

the US$8 million she made last<br />

year. Recent uses of the blonde<br />

bombshell were in ads that peddle<br />

everything from Dom Perignon<br />

(her favorite drink) to a Spanish<br />

airline.<br />

Campbell’s Soup once<br />

fetched a quarter a can. Today, a<br />

paperweight tagged with Amdy<br />

Warhol’s pop rendering of the<br />

can sells for US$16.50, courtesy<br />

of the Andy Warhol Foundation<br />

for the Visual Arts, which owns<br />

his estate. It even gets royalties<br />

from a Warhol-influenced pair<br />

of Adidas sneakers. Last year,<br />

it brought Warhol, who died in<br />

1987, a whopping US$16 million<br />

in royalties.<br />

McCartney faces US$400m bill in ugly and costly divorce<br />

LOI LIWANAG in Los Angeles<br />

It’s as nasty as it gets. Not only<br />

that, former Beatle Paul McCartney<br />

could lose one-fourth of his<br />

estimated US$1.6 billion fortune<br />

in his split-up with Heather Mills.<br />

As the divorce is fought out in<br />

the tabloids, McCartney and Mills,<br />

once one of the most celebrated<br />

showbiz couples with their very<br />

public devotion to each other, are<br />

standing their ground over a final<br />

settlement.<br />

Ultimately, however, McCartney,<br />

64, who started the proceedings,<br />

could end up paying Mills, 38, up<br />

to US$400 million.<br />

The allegations range from<br />

Mill’s “unreasonable behavior”<br />

to McCartney’s abusive character<br />

and drug-induced violence, enough<br />

fodder to keep the British media<br />

fed for one year.<br />

“It’s not the money,” Mills, a<br />

former ramp model who lost a leg<br />

in a car accident, once protested.<br />

“But in this situation, something<br />

has got to give.”<br />

Michael Douglas is known to<br />

have paid off his wife US$100<br />

million to marry Catherine Zeta<br />

Jones, Tom Cruise parted with a<br />

“fairly good amount” in his divorce<br />

with Nicole Kidman and Brad Pitt<br />

is coy on how much it cost him<br />

to gain his freedom from Jennifer<br />

Aniston.<br />

McCartney’s potential settlement<br />

has drawn punters into the fray<br />

with some of the most outlandish<br />

betting on how much the final bill<br />

would be.<br />

No deal ... McCartney and Mills.


filipino globe November 2006 39


40 November 2006 filipino globe<br />

Where<br />

it’s at ...<br />

Internet Cafe<br />

Printing, Scanning<br />

Philippine Products<br />

E-Load<br />

E-Charge<br />

Phone Cards<br />

Lunch/Dinner Boxes<br />

Videoke<br />

Maus@Point<br />

62-A Sai Wan Ho Street<br />

Sai Wan Ho, Hong Kong<br />

(infront of Ki Wan School)<br />

Tel : 2567 9555<br />

filipino globe concepts


filipino globe celebrity<br />

November 2006<br />

41<br />

Cruise as movie mogul? It’s no mission impossible<br />

POL ISIDRO in Los Angeles<br />

Tom Cruise has been called many<br />

things, but up until now, studio<br />

mogul was not one of them. The<br />

Mission: Impossible star and<br />

longtime producing partner Paula<br />

Wagner have teamed with MGM to<br />

reform United Artists, the longdefunct<br />

studio founded 85 years<br />

ago by Charlie Chaplin, Mary<br />

Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks and<br />

D.W. Griffith.<br />

Cruise and Wagner will have<br />

“substantial ownership” of the<br />

revitalized banner and have<br />

nearly complete control – budget<br />

permitting – over developing new<br />

Adoption<br />

furor hounds<br />

Madonna<br />

Superstar hits back at critics and<br />

says she plans to take on another<br />

child, writes Loi Liwanag<br />

productions. MGM will financially<br />

back the deal and be responsible<br />

for marketing and distributing the<br />

Cruise-approved flicks.<br />

Wagner has been named CEO<br />

of the joint venture, while Cruise<br />

will both produce and star – though<br />

not exclusively – in the UA<br />

productions.<br />

Tom<br />

Cruise<br />

will have<br />

a firm<br />

grip on all<br />

projects.<br />

TAKEFIVE<br />

BRANGELINA THREAT<br />

Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie<br />

have received threats on<br />

their lives from members of<br />

al-Qaeda. The couple are<br />

in India shooting the film A<br />

Mighty Heart, based on the<br />

life of Daniel Pearl, the Wall<br />

Street Journal reporter who<br />

was killed at the hands of<br />

al-Qaeda militants in<br />

Pakistan in 2002. According<br />

to The Financial Times,<br />

British security experts were<br />

flown into Pune, India, earlier<br />

this week, after being alerted<br />

by authorities in neighboring<br />

Pakistan.<br />

SMITH IN HOSPITAL<br />

Anna Nicole Smith has<br />

been hospitalized in the<br />

Bahamas as medics attempt<br />

to drain fluid from her lungs.<br />

The former model was<br />

admitted to the hospital<br />

after experiencing pain in<br />

her chest. Her partner and<br />

lawyer Howard K Stern told<br />

Entertainment Tonight: “Anna<br />

Nicole was experiencing<br />

severe pain in her right<br />

chest and back. A CT scan<br />

at the hospital revealed that<br />

she has pneumonia, with a<br />

significant amount of fluid in<br />

her lungs.”<br />

CRIKEY FOR SHOW?<br />

Madonna will take on another<br />

child, but this time, she hopes the<br />

adoption process will not be as<br />

complicated as the one which is<br />

hounding her to the four corners of<br />

the globe.<br />

“I wouldn’t rule it out,” she told<br />

a British TV show. “But I would<br />

like it not to be as complicated.”<br />

The pop superstar was referring<br />

to the furor that her adoption of<br />

Malawian boy David Banda has<br />

caused over accusations she and<br />

husband Guy Ritchie flouted<br />

adoption rules and ignored national<br />

customs and traditions.<br />

The controversy has hounded her<br />

during her trips abroad and dogged<br />

her all the way to the recent MTV<br />

Europe Music Awards in Denmark.<br />

Madonna has fought back at<br />

criticism she should have adopted<br />

a Malawi orphan instead of a boy<br />

with a father, insisting she offered<br />

to pay for David’s father Yohane<br />

Banda to rear the child.<br />

The Material Girl and her<br />

husband were granted temporary<br />

adoption of the 13-month-old baby<br />

last month, which has sparked<br />

criticism from adoption support<br />

groups, who claim she could have<br />

adopted a child with no parents<br />

instead of “taking” David away<br />

from Banda.<br />

Banda placed David in an<br />

Madonna is the doting<br />

mother as David Banda<br />

enjoys his first moments<br />

in the bosom of his<br />

new family in Britain.<br />

TIMBERLAKE PUTS SUPERSTAR IN SHADE<br />

Madonna was lampooned<br />

on stage at the MTV Europe<br />

Music Awards as she failed<br />

to take a single prize despite<br />

being nominated for three<br />

titles in Copenhagen.<br />

The 48-year-old star<br />

was up for best pop act,<br />

best female and album.<br />

But best pop was won by<br />

Justin Timberlake, female<br />

by Christina Aguilera and<br />

album by The Red Hot<br />

Chili Peppers for Stadium<br />

Winner ... Justin Timberlake<br />

Arcadium.<br />

Madonna, who has enjoyed<br />

phenomenal success this year with a multimillion-selling<br />

album and a world tour, was even ridiculed. TV comic Avid<br />

Merrion dressed up as the Material Girl in her leotard-wearing<br />

incarnation and gave a comic rendition of her performance at<br />

MTV’s events last year.<br />

orphanage last year after the death<br />

of his wife because he couldn’t<br />

afford to care for the youngster.<br />

In an interview on NBC News,<br />

Madonna said: “When I met him, I<br />

said, ‘I would be happy to facilitate<br />

to bring him back to your village<br />

and help you financially raise him.’<br />

And he said, ‘No.’<br />

“And there was a lot of<br />

translation situations and I couldn’t<br />

really understand that decision.<br />

I don’t want to judge him. And I<br />

don’t know his life.,” she said.<br />

“And I think he truly felt in his<br />

heart of hearts that he (David)<br />

would have a better life with me.<br />

The Malawian baby boy has gone<br />

from extreme poverty to European<br />

luxury in just three weeks, after<br />

his new mother spent a fortune on<br />

his winter wardrobe, according to<br />

NBC.<br />

The singer called trendy Los<br />

Angeles baby store Petit Tresor<br />

at the beginning of the week and<br />

ordered the best cashmere winter<br />

clothes co-owner Nina Takesh<br />

had, from designers like CV and<br />

Larucci.<br />

“She wanted very high-end,<br />

luxury winter products and items.<br />

It’s the luxury of all luxuries,”<br />

Takesh said.<br />

The bill for the spending spree<br />

came to US$10,000.<br />

Late Crocodile Hunter star<br />

Steve Irwin (below) has been<br />

branded “a showman” by<br />

a BBC wildlife filmmaker,<br />

outraging fans and family.<br />

Alastair<br />

Fotherfill, the<br />

director of hit<br />

series Planet<br />

Earth, accused<br />

the recently<br />

deceased<br />

father of two of being more<br />

interested in showing off than<br />

helping wildlife. “Let’s face it,<br />

Steve was a showman,” said<br />

Fotherfill, to the dismay of<br />

Irwin’s followers.<br />

PRINCE CHARMING<br />

Salma Hayek has a real-life<br />

Prince Charming to thank<br />

for returning pricey jewelry<br />

to her when it ended up on<br />

the back seat of a taxi. The<br />

pretty Frida star picked out<br />

$50,000 worth of rented<br />

jewelry to show off at a<br />

recent New York benefit and<br />

her assistant left it in a taxi.<br />

Fortunately for the actress,<br />

Lorenzo Borghese - the royal<br />

star of The Bachelor - was<br />

the next person to hail the<br />

cab. “He’s a real prince. I<br />

couldn’t thank him enough,”<br />

said a grateful Hayek of<br />

Borghese.


42<br />

filipino globe palakasan<br />

November 2006<br />

Mata ng<br />

lawin: ang<br />

magikero<br />

sa bilyar<br />

Sa gulang na 51 anyos, hindi pa tapos<br />

si Bata Reyes sa kanyang inumpisahan<br />

CELESTE TERRENAL in Manila<br />

Noon, inaakala ng lahat na ang pagbibilyar<br />

ay isang “bisyo” lamang.<br />

Pero, binago ni Efren “Bata” Reyes<br />

ang pananaw ng lahat nang iangat<br />

niya sa ibang antas ang larong<br />

ngayon ay nagbibigay ng prestihiyo<br />

sa bansa.<br />

Kilala si Efren bilang “The Magician,”<br />

o “Bata.” Halos nalibot<br />

na niya ang buong mundo upang<br />

maglaro, manalo at pahangain ang<br />

mga dayuhan sa bilyar.<br />

Ang kanyang mga pakikipagsapalaran<br />

sa bilyar ay tila mga kuwento<br />

ng kabayanihan na pinagpapasapasahan<br />

hanggang sa tila maging<br />

isang bahagi ng alamat.<br />

Noong 1999 ginawaran si Efren<br />

ng Philippine Legion of Honour<br />

at dahil sa mga pakikipagsapalaran<br />

niya sa bilyar, tila kabute na sumulpot<br />

ang mga billiard halls sa mga<br />

kanto at karamihan sa mga bata ay<br />

gustong maging billiard player dahil<br />

sa laki ng premyong kinakamada<br />

ni Efren.<br />

“The Philippines is in search of<br />

heroes in the international scene,”<br />

sabi ni Aristeo Puyat, co-owner ng<br />

Shooting star si Mendoza pero hindi ang klaseng panandalian lang<br />

Nasa komportableng posisyon<br />

ngayon si Paolo Mendoza<br />

(gitna). Kaya’t hindi niya<br />

pinalalagpas ang pagkakataon<br />

na iangat pa ang kanyang<br />

laro makaraang malipat siya<br />

sa two-guard position sa<br />

pagsisimula ng PBA Philippine<br />

Cup.<br />

Ikinasa agad ni Mendoza<br />

ang mga statistikong hindi<br />

inaasahan na kanyang<br />

magagawa upang pamunuan<br />

ang Sta Lucia Realty na<br />

humahataw sa standings.<br />

Dating naglalaro sa point<br />

guard position, si Mendoza<br />

ang naging dahilan nang pagusad<br />

ng Realtors sa solong<br />

liderato habang isinusulat<br />

Puyat Sports at kilalang sponsor ni<br />

Efren. “The Olympics are a debacle;<br />

we never win a medal. Even<br />

in the Asian Games we have a hard<br />

time. But here, in billiards, we have<br />

a champion.”<br />

Nagsimula si Efren sa paglalaro<br />

sa Estados Unidos noong dekada<br />

80 bilang money player. Nineties<br />

nang magsimula siyang manalo sa<br />

mga major tournaments sa mga top<br />

player sa US. Noong 1995 nanalo<br />

siya ng anim na major events at kinunsidera<br />

siyang pinakamahusay na<br />

9-ball player sa bansa.<br />

Patuloy siyang nanalo ng major<br />

events hanggang sa bagong milenyo<br />

at pinatunayan na isa siya sa<br />

pinakamahusay na player na humawak<br />

ng cue – lalo na sa nine-ball<br />

– sa daigdig.<br />

Noong 2001, ipinoste niya ang<br />

mahigit sa $200,000 na panalo, isa<br />

sa pinakamalaki noong panahong<br />

iyon.<br />

Itinaas si Efren sa Hall of Fame<br />

ng Billiards Congress of America<br />

at noong Disyembre 2005 nanaig si<br />

Reyes sa International Pool Tour’s<br />

King of the Hill 8-Ball Shootout.<br />

Tumataginting na US$200,000<br />

ang artikulong ito kahit pa<br />

wala ang top draft pick na si<br />

Kelly Williams na nagpunta<br />

sa Estados Unidos upang<br />

umabay sa kanyang matalik na<br />

kaibigan.<br />

“Masaya po ako at nananalo<br />

Ganito katindi ang hawak ni Bata Reyes sa larong bilyar.<br />

ang halaga ng kanyang pagkampeon<br />

makaraang daigin ang kapwa Hall<br />

of Fame member na si Mike “the<br />

Mouth” Sigel sa straight sets.<br />

Kamakailan ay napanalunan ni<br />

Reyes ang 2006 International Pool<br />

Tour World Open 8-Ball Championship<br />

laban kay Rodney Morris. At<br />

ang US$500,000, na napanalunan<br />

po kami at nakakatulong<br />

po ako sa team ko. Malaki<br />

rin po ang pasasalamat<br />

ko sa coaching staff at sa<br />

management, sa tiwala nila,”<br />

sabi ni Mendoza.<br />

Maging si coach Alfrancis<br />

ni Efren ang pinakamalaking premyo<br />

sa kasaysayan ng pocket billiards.<br />

Habang isinusulat ang artikulong<br />

si Reyes ay nakikipagtunggali sa<br />

World Pool Championship kung<br />

saan itinuturing siyang paborito na<br />

makuha ang kampeonato kahit natalo<br />

siya sa kanyang unang laban.<br />

Chua ay nasisiyahan din sa<br />

laro ni Mendoza.<br />

Kumakamada si Mendoza<br />

ng 11 puntos kada laro. At ang<br />

mga puntos nito ay ginagawa<br />

niya sa pagkakataong<br />

kinakailangang ng kanilang<br />

koponan.<br />

Nagkaroon ng pagkakataon<br />

ang 28-anyos na si Mendoza<br />

na makabalik sa shooting<br />

guard nang makuha ng<br />

Realtors sina Alex Cabagnot<br />

at Ronnie Bughao noong<br />

nakaraang taon.<br />

“Mas komportable ako sa<br />

shooting guard kasi ‘yun and<br />

nilalaro ko noong amateur<br />

days ko,” sabi niya.<br />

CELESTE TERRENAL<br />

Dennis Espino<br />

walang kaba<br />

bilang puso’t<br />

kaluluwa ng SLR<br />

CELESTE TERRENAL in Manila<br />

Walang duda. Kahit pa dumagsa<br />

ang malalakas at malalaking player,<br />

si Dennis Espino pa rin ang puso’t<br />

kaluluwa ng Sta Lucia Realty.<br />

Sa kasalukuyan, may tatlong<br />

panalo sa apat na laro ang<br />

Realtors. Huli silang nakaranas<br />

ng ganito kagandang kartada<br />

noong 2001 sa Governor’s Cup na<br />

pinagkampeonan din nila kasama<br />

ang import na si Damien Owens.<br />

Ano nga ba ang mga katangian<br />

ni Espino na nagluklok sa kanya<br />

bilang isang tunay na lider?<br />

“Yung attitude niya,” sabi ni<br />

coach Alfrancis Chua sa kanyang<br />

32-taong gulang na team captain.<br />

“He’s a winner and he wants his<br />

teammates to adopt the same<br />

mindset.”<br />

Maging ang mga teammates<br />

ni Espino ay kinikilala rin ang<br />

kakayahan nito bilang lider ng Sta<br />

Lucia Realty.<br />

“He went out of his way to talk to<br />

us and he make us realize the team<br />

has fair chance of making it no<br />

matter what our record is,” sabi ng<br />

sophomore na si Alex Cabagnot.<br />

Sa nakaraang mga laro ng PBA<br />

Philippine Cup, hindi pumayag<br />

si Espino manatili lamang<br />

nakatago sa anino ng mga popular<br />

at malalakas na manlalarong<br />

sina Cabagnot, Kelly Williams<br />

at ang nasa ikatlong taon na sa<br />

propesyunal na basketball na sina<br />

Cesar Catli at Nelbert Omolon.<br />

Sa halip, mas kuminang si<br />

Espino at tinulungan pa nito<br />

ang Realtors na sumikwat ng<br />

tatlong panalo kasama na ang<br />

dalawang magkasunod na naglagay<br />

pansamantala sa kanila sa unahan<br />

ng standings sa kasalukuyang<br />

komperensya.<br />

“I feel responsible for the team,<br />

especially for my teammates,<br />

because no matter how many good<br />

plays coach gives us, if we don’t<br />

execute well, wala rin,” paliwanag<br />

ni Espino.<br />

Sa bawat laro ng Sta Lucia<br />

Realty, iyan ang nararamdaman ni<br />

Espino.<br />

Espino asserts his authority.


filipino globe November 2006 43


44<br />

November 2006 palak<br />

This one is<br />

for family,<br />

country –<br />

and himself<br />

Las Vegas grudge fight with Erik<br />

Morales means more to Pacquiao<br />

than anything else in his career<br />

RONNIE NATHANIELSZ<br />

One thing will weigh heavy on the<br />

mind of Manny Pacquiao when he<br />

climbs into the ring against Erik<br />

Morales: Himself.<br />

Pacquiao has made a ritual of<br />

dedicating his fights to country and<br />

family, but this time, in the glare<br />

of Las Vegas and in the presence<br />

of an audience expecting a settling<br />

of scores once and for all, the<br />

Filipino gladiator will be fighting<br />

for himself.<br />

“Nothing can be as important to<br />

him as this right now,” a boxing<br />

analyst said. “After all his successes,<br />

after all those conquests, he wants<br />

personal glory.<br />

And understandably so. The score<br />

stands at 1-1 in Pacquiao’s headto-head<br />

clashes with the legendary<br />

Mexican and the November 18 fight<br />

could be his crowning achievement.<br />

Or his opponent’s.<br />

With that in mind, Pacquiao is not<br />

short on detail about how he will<br />

execute the plan. “I always go for a<br />

knockout in every second of every<br />

round,” he said. “Morales will feel<br />

the strength of 80 million Filipinos<br />

with every punch that I throw.”<br />

Pacquiao has wrapped up a<br />

rigorous two-month preparation at<br />

Freddie Roach’s sweatshop in Los<br />

Angeles and has been installed, with<br />

good reason, as a heavy favorite<br />

by oddsmakers in Las Vegas who<br />

are convinced he is capable of<br />

duplicating his convincing win over<br />

Morales late last year.<br />

Talk in the lead-up to the fight has<br />

also centered on Morales’ reported<br />

battle with the bulge, so much so<br />

that a clause was inserted in the<br />

fight contract that would slap sevenfigure<br />

penalties on the Mexican for<br />

every pound in his body that goes<br />

beyond the 130-pound limit come<br />

fight time.<br />

Pacquiao, however, believes<br />

Morales, who has hired a team of<br />

physical conditioning experts to<br />

supervise his preparations in the<br />

mountains, will go into the fight in<br />

the best shape of his life and that<br />

the weight issue is only meant to<br />

breed overconfidence in the Filipino<br />

fighter.<br />

And he’s not about to take the<br />

bait.<br />

“(The weight issue) is only being<br />

blown out of proportion to make me<br />

overconfident,” Pacquiao insisted.<br />

He said he expects Morales to<br />

make the 130-pound limit. But<br />

nonetheless, Pacquiao said that if<br />

by some chance, Morales weighs<br />

over 132 pounds, he will take the<br />

US$1 million penalty and refuse to<br />

fight him – a luxury given him by<br />

the fight contract.<br />

Pacquiao’s camp anticipates a<br />

whole new game plan from Morales,<br />

who by now has broken down tapes<br />

of their first two fights and would<br />

find new ways to throw him off.<br />

But he’ll be ready, Pacquiao<br />

vowed. “Despite some distractions,<br />

we are on the right track,” he said.<br />

As for his own fight plan, Pacquiao<br />

said he and celebrated trainer Roach<br />

had been “working my right hook<br />

to perfection”.<br />

He is also working on some other<br />

new things, Pacquiao added, but<br />

would divulge little else, saying,<br />

“they are all top secret now”.<br />

When asked about a possibly more<br />

lucrative rematch with reigning<br />

world champion Marco Antonio<br />

Barrera next March, Pacquiao said<br />

he is not looking past Morales.<br />

It was his victory over Barrera in<br />

2004 that catapulted the Filipino to<br />

superstardom.<br />

“Right now, I am only focused on<br />

Morales and I will decide after the<br />

fight if Barrera is next,” Pacquiao<br />

said.<br />

“Of course, all the fans would<br />

want me to face Barrera. That would<br />

be a great rematch and I would love<br />

to face him anytime, anywhere.”<br />

Laki sa hirap, hindi kumuk<br />

“There’s something about hunger that drives a m<br />

sport like boxing, it’s your burning desire. Manny<br />

Sa murang edad ni Manny Pacquiao<br />

ay nahubog na ito sa matinding<br />

pakikipaglaban sa buhay.<br />

Bata pa ay nakibaka na si Pacquiao sa<br />

hamon ng buhay kasama na ang tindi ng<br />

kanilang kahirapan na isang malaking<br />

dahilan ng pagkakahiwalay ng kanyang mga<br />

magulang.<br />

Lumaki at ipinanganak si Pacquiao sa<br />

Kibawe, isang maliit na bayan sa Bukidnon.<br />

Ikalawa siya sa apat na magkakapatid.<br />

Ang kanyang ina, mula sa Tampakan,<br />

South Cotabato, ay may dalawang anak sa<br />

unang karelasyon. Ang ama niya ay isang<br />

magsasaka, mula Pinamungajan, Cebu.<br />

Maagang nabanat ang buto ni Manny sa<br />

pagtatrabaho. Nagtitinda siya ng mga gulay<br />

kasama ang dalawang nakababatang kapatid.<br />

Dahil na rin sa kahirapan, elementarya<br />

lamang ang natapos ni Manny.<br />

Labindalawang taong gulang si Manny<br />

nang iwan sila ng kanilang ama. Ang<br />

pangyayaring ito, ayon kay Manny, ang<br />

pinagmumulan ng kanyang determinasyon<br />

na makaangat sa kahirapan. Katunayan,<br />

habang siya ay nagtatrabaho bilang<br />

panadero sa isang bakery, sinimulan na rin<br />

niya ang pakikipagsapalaran sa larangan ng<br />

boksing. Sa isa sa kany<br />

siya ni Rey Golingan, i<br />

sa Bukidnon. Noon ay<br />

Pacquiao na 60 panalo<br />

Sinimulan ni Pacquia<br />

professional boxing ca<br />

106 pounds.<br />

Wala ni isang sentim<br />

nakipagsapalaran si Pa<br />

gulang pa lamang noon<br />

ng kanyang manager n<br />

Maynila upang maging<br />

boksingero.<br />

Sa L&M Gym nagsan


asan filipino globe<br />

45<br />

urap sa hamon ng buhay<br />

an’s determination. In a competitive<br />

has a lot of it.<br />

Shelly Finkel, Pacquiao’s coach<br />

Pacquiao gets taped up<br />

for practice in Freddie<br />

Roach’s LA sweatshop.<br />

After two months of<br />

rigorous training,<br />

Pacquiao is<br />

itching for action.<br />

The fight to watch may be<br />

the one outside the ring<br />

If you think Manny Pacquiao’s<br />

fights are among the fiercest<br />

and most thrilling in the game<br />

today, you should see what goes<br />

on around the celebrated prize<br />

fighter.<br />

Each time he climbs into<br />

the ring, a separate battle, just<br />

as fierce and as colorful and<br />

definitely more intriguing, is<br />

fought outside it among boxing<br />

people who would do everything<br />

to get a piece of the Manny<br />

Pacquiao pie.<br />

Since his impressive victory<br />

over Marco Antonio Barrera,<br />

Pacquiao has become one of the<br />

most marketable boxers of his<br />

time, commanding seven-figure<br />

purses for fights and raking in<br />

millions more from endorsement<br />

deals in the Philippines and<br />

overseas.<br />

This has understandably<br />

spawned a whole new war<br />

among blood-sucking managers<br />

and promoters, each hoping to<br />

cash in on Pacquiao’s earning<br />

potential. A separate and<br />

growing horde of hangers-on<br />

fight for the crumbs.<br />

This war has been going on<br />

from the time a web of intrigues<br />

and controversies, real and<br />

imagined, had Pacquiao’s<br />

longtime manager Rod Nazario<br />

and Murad Muhammad,<br />

a former Muhammad Ali<br />

bodyguard turned promoter,<br />

eased out of the gladiator’s good<br />

graces.<br />

But not long after, the people<br />

who managed to bump off<br />

the pair – actually an entire<br />

management team headed by<br />

Shelly Finkel and promoter<br />

Gary Shaw – would soon fall<br />

prey to the same tactics that<br />

got them in the first place.<br />

Approaching Pacquiao’s third<br />

fight against Mexican hero Eric<br />

Morales, word spread that the<br />

Filipino hero has signed a new<br />

management and promotional<br />

contract with the Golden Boy<br />

Promotions of the legendary<br />

Ronnie<br />

Nathanielsz<br />

RINGWISE<br />

analysis<br />

Oscar de la Hoya, supposedly<br />

lured by a lucrative seven-fight<br />

deal with a big signing bonus<br />

thrown in.<br />

Pacquiao would neither deny<br />

nor confirm the deal, but even<br />

in his silence, it has become<br />

apparent nonetheless that a<br />

whole new team is bound to take<br />

charge of the Filipino’s career<br />

regardless of what happens in<br />

Part Three of the Pacquiao-<br />

Morales trilogy.<br />

For all those who care about<br />

the Filipino hero, it is not what<br />

he does in the ring that should<br />

be worrying, rather the decisions<br />

and moves he does off it.<br />

Boxing is a dirty game, the<br />

dirtiest of all, and the stakes<br />

multiply for a fighter of<br />

Pacquiao’s caliber. Every step of<br />

the way, there will be someone<br />

out to take advantage, out to con<br />

and out to make a quick buck<br />

off him.<br />

The Philippines has had a<br />

long, proud history in the fight<br />

game, and a long line of great<br />

champions.<br />

But there, too, are chapters<br />

of sad, cautionary tales of<br />

great champions who end up<br />

battered and penniless after their<br />

heydays.<br />

Pacquiao has amassed quite<br />

a fortune in his career and<br />

millions more are bound for his<br />

coffers before his career is over.<br />

But as dirty as the fight<br />

game is, and given his<br />

well-documented penchant<br />

for gambling, there are no<br />

guarantees he won’t suffer the<br />

same fate when it’s all over.<br />

For his sake, here’s hoping he<br />

makes all the right decisions.<br />

ang laban, napanood<br />

sang local promoter<br />

may record na si<br />

at apat na talo.<br />

o ang kanyang<br />

reer noong 1995 sa<br />

o sa bulsa,<br />

cquiao, 15-taomg<br />

, bitbit ang pangako<br />

a sasanayin sa<br />

mahusay na<br />

ay si<br />

Pacquiao. Nanalo siya sa kanyang unang<br />

laban sa professional boxing laban kay<br />

Enting Ignacio sa four round decision.<br />

Pero barya-barya lamang ang kinita<br />

ni Pacquiao. At upang hindi magutom<br />

nagtinda siya ng sigarilyo sa kalsada.<br />

Nagtagumpay si Pacquiao sa sumunod<br />

niyang 11 laban bago ito nakatikim ng talo.<br />

Pero ang kabiguang ito ay nagsilbing<br />

leksyon kay Pacquiao na bumalikwas<br />

agad upang taluning sunod-sunod sina<br />

Thai veteran Chikchai Chokwiwat nang<br />

dalawang ulit upang makuha ang World<br />

Boxing Council flyweight crown.<br />

Matapos ang limang matagumpay na<br />

pagdepensa sa korona, nagtungo si Pacquiao<br />

sa US para maghanap ng mas mayamang<br />

laban. Naipanalo ni Pacquiao ang laban<br />

kay International Boxing Federation<br />

superbantamweight champion Lehlo<br />

Ledwabang South Africa. Sinundan ito ng<br />

apat pang panalo at isang draw.<br />

Tinalo siya ni Erik Morales sa kanilang<br />

unang enkwentro, bago siya bumawi<br />

noong Enero sa Las Vegas, kung saan niya<br />

pinatulog ang Meksikano, sabay dampot sa<br />

tumataginting na US$4 million prize money.<br />

CELESTE TERRENAL<br />

Morales tags Pacquiao ... there’s a lot riding on this fight for both men.


46<br />

filipino globe palakasan<br />

November 2006<br />

IT’S A CRYING SHAME<br />

We had everything going for us. The novelty of it, the initial<br />

excitement, the drive. Too bad, it’s all gone now. Michael Jordan, Dream Team I<br />

Team USA:<br />

The dream and<br />

the nightmare<br />

Shaquille O’Neil helped lead<br />

two Dream Teams to victory.<br />

It has been downhill for the<br />

Americans from there.<br />

RAUL AGOT in Los Angeles<br />

Basketball is in business again in<br />

the US. Weeks into the new NBA<br />

season, it’s a rip-roaring time for<br />

some of America’s biggest stars.<br />

For a while, they were also the<br />

world’s best outfit. Remember the<br />

Dream Team?<br />

“Forget it,” writes US basketball<br />

analyst Roger Hoffman. “There<br />

won’t be another one.”<br />

The NBA-laced dream ended<br />

in Athens during the 1998 world<br />

championship, where Team USA<br />

got hammered into third place.<br />

Although it swept into the gold<br />

medal in Sydney two years later,<br />

it sank back into ignominy in the<br />

2002 worlds in Indianapolis and<br />

the 2004 Olympics in Athens. The<br />

nightmare continued in Japan this<br />

year with the US ending up with<br />

nothing better than third place to<br />

show for all the hype and ripple it<br />

stirred across the ocean.<br />

So what’s wrong with Team<br />

USA?<br />

Everything. Unlike Dream Team<br />

I, II and III, which trotted out the<br />

likes of Michael Jordan, Magic<br />

Johnson, Larry Bird, Shaquille<br />

O’Neil, Grant Hill and Reggie<br />

Miller, subsequent teams had a<br />

hard time summoning the kind of<br />

patriotic fervor that drove their<br />

predecessors.<br />

Add to that the constraints of<br />

professional basketball, where<br />

commercial and legal interests<br />

play bigger than the game itself.<br />

The 1998 team, for instance, went<br />

to the world championship already<br />

a loser. It failed to get NBA players<br />

because of a lockout over pay<br />

dispute. Instead, the US sent the<br />

“Dirty Dozen”, a team of hardworking<br />

present-and-future stars<br />

of the minor leagues. Deprived<br />

of Dream Team status, they wore<br />

their new name like a badge of humiliation.<br />

Outside the US basketball establishment,<br />

there’s the inevitable: the<br />

march of once faceless, nameless<br />

players who came to the NBA,<br />

prospered and shone and went<br />

to play for their national teams.<br />

Around them, a small army is built<br />

and under their spell, the army<br />

responds to the challenge —to a<br />

man.<br />

“You can’t keep the coming of<br />

night, just as you can’t keep other<br />

teams from catching up with us,”<br />

blogs Rupert from Indianapolis,<br />

one of thousands of anonymous<br />

commentators of the game that<br />

earlier disparaged for their opinions<br />

but are now making a lot of<br />

sense.<br />

Since Dream Team I, the US had<br />

not lost a game until it fell to Russia<br />

in 1998. It lost to Argentina and<br />

Spain in 2002, to Puerto Rico, Lithunia<br />

and Argentina in 2004 and to<br />

Greece in Japan this year.<br />

The only way the US can ever<br />

regain basketball supremacy is to<br />

forget the dream and wake up.<br />

OBITUARY<br />

In his time, Auerbach smoked out the enemy<br />

For the best part of the 1950s and<br />

‘60s, the legendary Red Auerbach<br />

stood head and shoulders above<br />

the NBA, with his trademark cigar<br />

bringing a certain brashness to his<br />

figure.<br />

He had every right to behave<br />

like a giant. In that decade, he<br />

led the Boston Celtics – to a<br />

man a legend – to nine NBA<br />

championships.<br />

When he died early this month<br />

at 89, he had secured his sporting<br />

legacy: 938 wins, making him<br />

the most successful coach in<br />

NBA history until Lanny Wilkens<br />

passed him in the mid-1990s.<br />

Until his death, the straighttalking<br />

Auerbach served as team<br />

president. Fittingly, the team has<br />

dedicated the fledgling season to<br />

his memory.<br />

“Red was a guy who always<br />

introduced new things,” Steve<br />

Pagliuca, a Celtics managing partner,<br />

said. “He had some of the<br />

first black players in the league<br />

and some people didn’t like that,<br />

but you’ve got to do what’s right<br />

for the fans,” he said.<br />

“So I think we tried to do things<br />

thoughtfully.”<br />

Auerbach was born in Brooklyn,<br />

on September 20, 1917. He was<br />

inducted into the basketball Hall<br />

of Fame in 1968.


November 2006 dibersyon<br />

filipino globe<br />

47<br />

BUHAYPALAD<br />

ANGSISTE<br />

ARIES Mar 21-Apr 19 LIBRA Sep 23-Oct 22<br />

A banner month for<br />

your finances. It could<br />

also turn out to be<br />

a sexy month, filled<br />

with all sorts of possibilities with<br />

someone you care for, and finally,<br />

this may even turn out to be a<br />

month that allows you to improve<br />

your health impressively as well.<br />

This month should<br />

bring you lots of<br />

wonderful financial<br />

news, some of the very<br />

best of the year. Before you run out<br />

to buy a lotto ticket, wait. There’s<br />

actually no need. The money you<br />

receive now will be money you<br />

earn, not money you win.<br />

TAURUS Apr 21-May 20 SCORPIO Oct 23-Nov 22<br />

If you are married, you<br />

should find enormous<br />

benefit from being with<br />

your partner these<br />

days. Your significant other will do<br />

well financially, and so will signs<br />

of much more optimism about the<br />

future. Together, you will consider<br />

how you can do more with the<br />

relationship you share.<br />

This will be an<br />

amazing month for<br />

breakthroughs in<br />

the workplace and<br />

remarkable news concerning your<br />

health and fitness. You can see<br />

stunning progress in one or both<br />

areas, for you can count on the<br />

friendly help of a whole crowd of<br />

planets in rejuvenating Scorpio.<br />

You have not had a<br />

chart this outstanding<br />

for love for a long time.<br />

Your key date to watch<br />

will be November 20, the date of the<br />

new moon. From that day forward,<br />

with just a small effort on your part,<br />

you can start to see things develop<br />

nicely in matters of the heart. That<br />

will be a big date, indeed.<br />

This will be a sexy,<br />

interesting month, filled<br />

with a few unexpected<br />

twists and turns. No<br />

doubt about it, later you’ll say<br />

November turned out to be one of<br />

your best of the year. While you will<br />

have a few bumps here and there,<br />

you won’t encounter anything you<br />

can’t handle.<br />

GEMINI May 21-Jun 20 SAGITTARIUS Nov 23-Dec 22<br />

All eyes will be on you,<br />

so in the first three<br />

weeks of November,<br />

take a few moments<br />

to reflect on the coming twelve<br />

months. Your friends will help you<br />

look like a knockout. It’s now up to<br />

you to look the part and do them<br />

justice. You will be surprised how<br />

well you carry yourself.<br />

CANCER Jun 20-Jul 21 CAPRICORN Dec 21-Jan 19<br />

The month will start<br />

out quite highly<br />

romantic. It is likely<br />

to bring on quite<br />

an enchanting evening, one that<br />

you long remember. You may be<br />

surrounded by many smiling friends<br />

one weekend. Perhaps you will<br />

attend a wedding, charity event, or<br />

other magical party.<br />

Ano nga ba ang<br />

sex ng computer:<br />

Lalaki o babae?<br />

A Spanish teacher was<br />

explaining to her class that<br />

in Spanish, unlike English,<br />

nouns are designated as<br />

either masculine or feminine.<br />

“House” for instance, is<br />

feminine: “la casa.”<br />

“Pencil,” however, is<br />

mascucline: “el lapiz.”<br />

A student asked, “What<br />

gender is ‘computer’?”<br />

Instead of giving the answer,<br />

the teacher split the class into<br />

two groups, male and female,<br />

and asked them to decide for<br />

themselves whether<br />

“computer” should be a<br />

masculine or a feminine noun.<br />

Each group was asked to<br />

give four reasons for its<br />

recommendation.<br />

The men’s group decided<br />

that “computer” should<br />

definitely be of the feminine<br />

gender (“la computadora”),<br />

because:<br />

1. No one but their creator<br />

understands their internal<br />

logic;<br />

2. The native language they<br />

use to communicate with<br />

other computers is<br />

incomprehensible to everyone<br />

else;<br />

3. Even the smallest<br />

KATUWAANLANG<br />

mistakes are stored in longterm<br />

memory for possible<br />

later retrieval; and<br />

4. As soon as you make a<br />

commitment to one, you find<br />

yourself spending half your<br />

paycheck on accessories for<br />

it.<br />

The women’s group,<br />

however, concluded that<br />

computers should be<br />

masculine (“el computador”),<br />

because:<br />

1. In order to do anything<br />

with them, you have to turn<br />

them on;<br />

2. They have a lot of data<br />

but still can’t think for<br />

themselves;<br />

3. They are supposed to<br />

help you solve problems, but<br />

half the time, they are the<br />

problem; and<br />

4. When you commit to one,<br />

you realise that if you had<br />

waited longer, you could have<br />

gotten a better model.<br />

LARONGSODUKO<br />

LEO Jul 21-Aug 21 AQUARIUS Jan 20-Feb 18<br />

This month holds the<br />

luckiest day of the year,<br />

the day when Jupiter,<br />

the good fortune<br />

planet, is due to meet up with the<br />

mighty Sun. This is an annual event<br />

that we all always anticipate with<br />

enthusiasm. This year, these two<br />

“heavy hitters” of the solar system<br />

will meet on November 21.<br />

Give yourself some<br />

slack and by all<br />

means, don’t rush.<br />

When the answer<br />

comes to you, you’ll know. Actually,<br />

you will benefit from holding off<br />

on decisions until November 20<br />

anyway, so until then, keep your<br />

options open. Your family will want<br />

your attention.<br />

VIRGO Aug 22-Sep 22 PISCES Feb 19-Mar 20<br />

You will play a<br />

leading role in many<br />

gatherings, and during<br />

the first two weeks,<br />

you will need to untangle snags that<br />

will inevitably come up. Everyone<br />

will be looking to you for direction,<br />

and you will be able to provide it.<br />

Keep smiling, and be confident that<br />

all your efforts will prosper.<br />

There will be a spiritual<br />

touch to November<br />

that will appeal to you,<br />

so get set for one of<br />

the very best months of the year. If<br />

previous obligations have kept you<br />

at home, some unexpected events<br />

may give you time for a<br />

much-deserved holiday either alone<br />

or with someone special.<br />

Pinakamainit na laro ngayon, hamon sa kakayahang mag-isip at magbilang. Punuin ang mga<br />

square ng numero mula 1 hanggang 9 na hindi umuuulit. Hahayaan namin kayong hamunin<br />

ang sarili hanggang sawa. Suko? Magpadala lamang ng e-mail sa amin para sa kasagutan.<br />

USEFUL NUMBERS<br />

Philippine Consulate<br />

2823 2288<br />

2982 0384<br />

Labour Office<br />

2258 2311<br />

Immigration<br />

2982 2241<br />

Police/Fire<br />

2725 2241<br />

Labour Department<br />

2982 2231<br />

Labour Tribunal<br />

2242 2231<br />

HK Airport<br />

3212 2251<br />

Consumer Council<br />

2341 4421<br />

Caritas<br />

2312 1212<br />

Bethune House<br />

2922 2231<br />

St John’s Cathedral<br />

2232 1222<br />

Migrante Int’l<br />

2122 2222<br />

Bayanihan<br />

2922 1212<br />

Unifil Hong Kong<br />

2122 2323<br />

ISS<br />

2112 2211<br />

St Joseph Church<br />

2312 1111<br />

1221 2222<br />

NOVEMBER 12<br />

Candonian Hong<br />

Kong Association 10th<br />

anniversary celebration,<br />

1-4 pm, Bayanihan Centre,<br />

Kennedy Town<br />

NOVEMBER 12<br />

Passi City (Iloilo)<br />

Association of Hong<br />

Kong third anniversary<br />

celebration, 11 am to 6 pm,<br />

Grappa’s Cellar Restaurant,<br />

Jardine House, Des Voeux<br />

Road Central<br />

NOVEMBER 19<br />

Methodist Filipino<br />

Fellowship 22nd<br />

anniversary celebration,<br />

8 am onwards, Methodist<br />

Church, 271 Queen’s Road<br />

East, Wanchai. Call 9630<br />

2359 or 9327 6664<br />

NOVEMBER 19<br />

Palawan Migrant<br />

Association paralegal<br />

training, 2 pm to 5 pm,<br />

St John’s Cathedral,<br />

Central. Call 6238 4277 or<br />

9310 8752<br />

NOVEMBER 26<br />

Capiz Achievers<br />

Association Hong Kong<br />

post-arrival orientation<br />

seminar, 10 am to 1<br />

pm, Bayanihan Centre,<br />

Kennedy Town. Call 9342<br />

YOURDIARY<br />

5846 or 9187 7082 for<br />

details.<br />

NOVEMBER 26<br />

NOPT refresher course<br />

in professional education<br />

(teaching restructured<br />

curriculum, 12 noon to 5<br />

pm, Bayanihan Centre,<br />

Kennedy Town.<br />

Send you activities and<br />

programs for publication<br />

to info@filglobe.com<br />

EXCHANGE RATES<br />

Hong Kong dollar 6.41<br />

British pound 95.07<br />

Saudi riyal 13.30<br />

Canadian dollar 44.18<br />

Euro 63.67<br />

Australian dollar 38.41<br />

Japanese yen 42.35*<br />

Singapore dollar 31.99<br />

US dollar 49.99<br />

*per 100 pesos<br />

Above rates are for reference purposes only.<br />

Please check with your bank for actual rates.


the big picture<br />

filipino globe shoot, show & tell<br />

November 2006<br />

48<br />

GATHERING DUSK<br />

Wedged between the fading summer and the encroaching fall, the mangroves along this shoreline on Catalab-an Island, Eastern Samar, provide a stark<br />

background as Joann wades into the cool waters. This picture was taken by her cousin, Niccolo, with a Pentax digital camera during a family vacation in June.<br />

Bakit mas maraming tupa sa tao dito sa New Zealand<br />

Kung sa Pilipinas ang jeepney ang<br />

binansagang “king of the road”, sa<br />

New Zealand and katangiang ito ay<br />

pag-aari ng tupa.<br />

Saan ka mang mapunta, lalo na<br />

sa labas ng siyudad, malamang ang<br />

unang babati sa iyo ay karnero,<br />

hindi tao. “Saan ba sila galing<br />

daddy,” tanong minsan ng aking<br />

limang taong bunso. “Bakit mas<br />

marami sila sa taong nakikita ko?”<br />

Mahirap maintindihan, pero ang<br />

totoo, tama ang tinuran ng bata.<br />

Mas maraming tupa kaysa sa tao<br />

dito sa New Zealand.<br />

Kakatwa ang makita silang<br />

pinapastol na halos walang patid<br />

ang linya, tatawid sa kalsada na<br />

parang walang pakialam. Kung<br />

nagmamaneho ka, kailangan<br />

pagbigyan mo sila. ‘Yan din ang<br />

FRANKLYSPEAKING<br />

BOBBY<br />

GESOYOT<br />

Auckland<br />

kinakailangang bilis ng pag-iisip<br />

pag motorista ka sa Australia, kung<br />

saan bubulagain ka na lamang sa<br />

daan ng kangaroo. Gayunpaman,<br />

hindi sila kasing dami – at<br />

kasing-ingay ng mga tupa sa New<br />

Zealand.<br />

Hindi ako eksperto sa<br />

demographics ng bansa, pero sa<br />

tingin ko, may dalawang tupa<br />

bawa’t isang mamamayan sa bansa.<br />

May nagbiro nga noon na<br />

pag nagkagiyera daw, tupa ang<br />

ipapadala ng bansa, dahil kaunti<br />

lang ang sundalo rito.<br />

Sabagay, tahimik at maayos<br />

ang New Zealand at malayo ito sa<br />

anumang sentro ng karahasan.<br />

Maganda ang lugar at maamo<br />

ang mga tao. Walang kaba na<br />

makakalabas ka sa anumang oras.<br />

Katunayan, wala kang<br />

masyadong makikitang pulis<br />

na aali-aligid at nagmamasid<br />

sa mga mamamayan. Ito kaya<br />

ang sinasabing “Paradise Down<br />

Under”?<br />

Malamang magalit ang mga<br />

Australyano niyan dahil naging<br />

parang trademark na nila ang<br />

“Down Under” or “Lucky<br />

Country”.<br />

Sa katunayan, meron kaunting<br />

paligsahan, tahimik lamang, ang<br />

magkapit-bahay na ito, mula<br />

sa sports hanggang sa tourist<br />

attractions at teknolohiya.<br />

Sa panlabas na anyo, maunlad<br />

ang New Zealand, pero sa luklok<br />

nito, ito’y isang masaganang sheep<br />

farming community.<br />

Ang tupa ang unang<br />

pinanggalingan ng pag-unlad<br />

ng bansa sa pamamagitan ng<br />

eksportasyon ng buhok ng tupa, na<br />

ginagawang garments, lalo na sa<br />

mga malalamig na bansa.<br />

Mahal at de-kalidad ang<br />

buhok ng tupa, na ginugupit sa<br />

tinatawang na sheep shearing.<br />

Sa mahal nito, mas pinapaburan<br />

ang tupa bilang kasuotan, kaysa<br />

bilang karne.<br />

Masarap ang lamb chop, hindi<br />

ba? Pero ibang istorya na ‘yan.<br />

PHOTOESSAY<br />

Show us your flash for<br />

photography by giving us<br />

the big picture of the Filipino<br />

expat’s life. Photos must be<br />

accompanied by a caption<br />

of not more than 100 words,<br />

describing the event or<br />

circumstances behind them.<br />

Or tell us an interesting<br />

anecdote or observation in<br />

not more than 500 words and<br />

share them with the world.<br />

Each photo or essay entitles its<br />

owner HK$200 and becomes the<br />

property of Filipino Globe. Photos<br />

should have a minimum resolution<br />

of three megapixels. We reserve the<br />

right to make changes in line with<br />

house style. Entries should be sent to<br />

info@filglobe.com

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!