You plan to move to the Philippines? Wollen Sie auf den Philippinen leben?

There are REALLY TONS of websites telling us how, why, maybe why not and when you'll be able to move to the Philippines. I only love to tell and explain some things "between the lines". Enjoy reading, be informed, have fun and be entertained too!

Ja, es gibt tonnenweise Webseiten, die Ihnen sagen wie, warum, vielleicht warum nicht und wann Sie am besten auf die Philippinen auswandern könnten. Ich möchte Ihnen in Zukunft "zwischen den Zeilen" einige zusätzlichen Dinge berichten und erzählen. Viel Spass beim Lesen und Gute Unterhaltung!


Visitors of germanexpatinthephilippines/Besucher dieser Webseite.Ich liebe meine Flaggensammlung!

free counters

Saturday, May 21, 2016

In the jungle, you can't find them ....

One Man's Meat


‘In the jungle, you can’t find them’

Filepic
Filepic
 
“WHEN are we going to carpet bomb the Abu Sayyaf?” or “Why don’t the Philippine special forces wipe out the Abu Sayyaf?” are common reactions on Twitter or Facebook whenever there is a report of a kidnapping on the east coast of Sabah.
Early this year, a few months after Sarawakian Bernard Then was beheaded by the Abu Sayyaf in Jolo island, I met a high-ranking Philippine military commander to ask him these questions.
The commander, a dozen of his men and I had a “boodle fight” (dining in among the Philippine military by sharing the same food without regard to rank) at a restaurant in Zamboanga City, about a two-hour boat ride from Jolo island, an island the size of Perlis.
“We try our best, no matter the handicaps we have, such as lack of troops,” said the commander, who requested not to be named.
“Jolo island might be a small dot. But if you are in the area, you can’t cover everything.”
“It is a jungle. It is not an urban area where the enemies are fixed at a location; you have surveillance of them and you can attack them,” said the 50-something military man.
“In the jungle, you can’t find them because they are very mobile. They know the terrain and they have the support of the populace (villagers). My troops have to find a way to corner them. It is like a fishing expedition.”
“In Malaysia, the public will say how come the Philippine military does not launch an operation to rescue the Malaysian hostages?” I asked him.
“The problem is we have available forces but their numbers are negligible,” he said, refusing to give the strength of the army and marine forces in Jolo for security reasons.
“If you attack an enemy, you must have three times the number of men as your enemies. It is not like in the movies where a dozen men can overrun hundreds of bad guys.”
He added: “Your enemies are in an advantageous position as they know the terrain. If you don’t have the numbers, more often the casualty will be on the government side.”
“The Malaysian public will say ‘Why don’t the Philippines use their special forces to wipe out the Abu Sayyaf?’” I said.
“It doesn’t matter if they are special forces. There are many factors to consider.
“I’ll give one. We lack the capabilities to find the enemies. We are procuring drones and other equipment. Right now we are doing it manually,” he said.
“The Malaysian public ask, why don’t the Philippine military just bomb the Abu Sayyaf?” I said.
“That is not possible. I too want to wipe them out – an eye for an eye. But we have international laws and human rights. We want a legitimate encounter with the Abu Sayyaf,” he said.
“We can’t also antagonise the local populace just to get the Abu Sayyaf. We risk creating another generation who will rise up to become Abu Sayyaf.”
“In the last five years, has the Philippine military rescued any of the hostages held by the Abu Sayyaf in Jolo?” I asked.
“We have rescued four hostages. The latest were the two Filipino coast guards,” said the commander.
“The other hostage we rescued was the Swiss bird watcher (who was kidnapped in Tawi island).
“As a result of a military operation on the Abu Sayyaf, the kidnappers became disorganised and the Swiss had a chance to escape.”
“What’s your advice to Malaysia when a Malaysian is kidnapped and brought to Jolo?” I said.
“My stand is just don’t pay ransom, as you will add to their capabilities. They will just buy arms and will repeat another kidnapping,” he said.
“But we can’t do anything if the relatives of the hostage pay the ransom.”
The commander noted that the Abu Sayyaf foot soldiers were getting younger.
He explained that the Abu Sayyaf promised youngsters who were out of school, especially in the hinterlands, 30,000 to 35,000 pesos (about RM3,000 to RM3,500) a month and firearms to join the group.
Many – because they are inexperienced – are killed during military operations. And their families ask for blood money for their deaths.
To replace these dead foot soldiers, according to the commander, the Abu Sayyaf offers 40,000 pesos (RM4,000) a month and firearms to teenagers.
“These teenagers realise that they have signed up for hardship – always on the move, and lacking food and sleep (because of bombardment). Many times they are not paid,” he said.
“Once they realise that life as an Abu Sayyaf was difficult, they would try to escape. Some have gone to Sabah to find safe haven as if the Abu Sayyaf finds them, they will be killed.
“Are these recruits trained?” I asked.
“They are actually not trained as they already know how to use a gun. They are employed to guard the area or the hostages,” he said. “There is no time to train them – unless there is a lull – as we are always hunting them.”
“How well trained are the foot soldiers?” I asked.
“They are innocent about fighting. Most often, they are the ones who are killed. We have video clips taken by the Abu Sayyaf and more often than not the recruits are the casualities,” he said.
“How about the Abu Sayyaf commanders?” I asked.
“They are not trained as fighters. But they have combat experience.
“They might know how to assemble a bomb but through experience they know how to engage with the army and marines. They are more adept at evading or escaping from the military,” he said.
“If they are not well trained then is it easier for your men to hunt them?” I said.
“Yes, ideally. But they have the advantage of the terrain and the populace. Once we enter a barangay (village), the villagers will text message that the military are here and they will get out of the area,” he said.
The commander added: “It is not easy to fight the Abu Sayyaf. It is only incidental, coincidence or good luck that we are able to catch them off guard.
“And that is a very rare moment.”
TAGS / KEYWORDS:Philip Golingai , columnist
4%
4%
5%
14%
58%
15%

Saturday, May 14, 2016

Die Deutsche Botschaft Manila gibt bekannt. German Consular Day in Davao City


Die Botschaft der Bundesrepublik Deutschland in Manila gibt bekannt, dass am

Dienstag, den 7. Juni 2016 von 8 Uhr bis 12.30 Uhr und von 14 Uhr bis 17 Uhr

ein Konsularsprechtag stattfinden wird in der University of Southeastern Philippines (USEP) Board Room, Office of the President, Inigo Street, Haupteingang (in der Naehe der N. Torres/Cervantes und Porras Streets), Barangay Obrero, Davao City (hinter Victoria Plaza Mall), Tel/Fax: 082 - 221-7737 und 082 - 225-4696. Ansprechpartner ist Herr David Baumgaertner, Mitarbeiter des Rechts- und Konsularreferats der Botschaft Manila. 
Als Ansprechpartner vor Ort wenden Sie sich bitte an Herrn Klaus Doering, Tel. 082 - 227 1761 oder 0915 - 219 9002.

Bitte beachten Sie, dass wegen biometrischer Daten (u.a. Fingerabdruecke) nur noch vollstaendige Antrage auf Ausstellung vorlaeufiger Reisepaesse und Kinderreisepaesse - nicht jedoch Antraege fuer Europapaesse - entgegengenommen werden koennen.

Fuer eine erfolgreiche Bearbeitung Ihres Anliegens (z.B. Beglaubigungen etc.) setzen Sie sich bitte rechtzeitig zwecks Vorbereitung der Urkunde mit der Botschaft in Verbindung (rk-11@mani.diplo.de).

Informationen und Formulare finden Sie auf der Webseite www.manila.diplo.de .

+++

The Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany in Manila would like to inform you that Mr. David Baumgaertner, Consular Officer of the German Embassy Manila will be present on

Tuesday, June 7, 2016 from 8:00 AM to 12:30 PM and from 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM 
.
at the University of Southeastern Philippines (USEP), Board Room, Office of the President, Inigo Street, Main Gate (near N. Torres/Cervantes and Porras Streets), Barangay Obrero, Davao City (in the back of the Victoria Plaza Mall), Tel/Fax: 082 - 221 7737 and 082 - 225 4696.
 Contact person in Davao City is Mr. Klaus Doering, Tel. 082 - 227 1761 or 0915 - 219 9002.

Please note that due to the biometric specifications only complete applications for German Temporary Passports and Children's Passports can be accepted. Application for Regular Passports with biometric specifications (e.g. fingerprints) cannot be accept.

Unfortunately, visa applications cannot be accepted as well. Inquiries regarding visa applications will not be answered and should be directed to the Visa Section of the Embassy.

Kindly contact the Embassy well in advance in case legal documents have to be prepared.

You may also visit our website www.manila.diplo.de for information and application forms.




Cebu Yolanda Survivors to Duterte: Don't forget about us!

Survivors of Super Typhoon Yolanda in Cebu seek help from president-elect Rodrigo Duterte, hoping that he would speed up rehabilitation of typhoon-hit towns
By Richale 
CabauatanUNFINISHED. Prescilla Jumao-as stands in front of her house, which was constructed after Super Typhoon Yolanda struck in 2013. The house remains unfinished.
UNFINISHED. Prescilla Jumao-as stands in front of her house, which was constructed after Super Typhoon Yolanda struck in 2013. The house remains unfinished.
CEBU, Philippines – Filipinos in northern Cebu will never forget who and what they lost to Super Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan) on November 8, 2013.
Yolanda destroyed towns in the Eastern Visayas before plowing through northern Cebu.
Two and a half years later, most of the survivors of Yolanda are still suffering. Many of them say they have not fully recovered. (READ: Yolanda rehab: Only 30% complete as 2016 begins)
Last Monday, May 9, they trooped to the polls and voted for the first time since the typhoon struck.
What do the Yolanda survivors want from their leaders?
'We want homes'
"Kung maka-storya man gani nako ang sunod nga presidente... i-ampo gyud nako nga kami, mga biktima sa Yolanda, hatagan niya ug mga balay nga matawag gyud namo nga puy-anan," said a teary-eyed Prescilla Jumao-as.
(If I could talk to the president... I pray that he would give us, victims of Yolanda, houses we can really call home.)
Jumao-as, 65, said the government promised her a new home in 2013. Two and a half years later, she's still waiting.
What's worse, she added, is that her grandchildren had to suffer with her.
MAKESHIFT HOME. Tents housing Yolanda survivors haven't disappeared in Daanbantayan, Cebu. Photo by Richale Cabauatan/Rappler
MAKESHIFT HOME. Tents housing Yolanda survivors haven't disappeared in Daanbantayan, Cebu. Photo by Richale Cabauatan/Rappler
Jumao-as was dropped from the list of survivors who needed housing and was never told why. She believes it's because she knows no one from the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD). NGOs which promised to help also never returned.
Jumao-as said it seems that the government has forgotten about them. "And maybe God has, too?" she wondered.
She is now pinning her hopes on president-elect Rodrigo Duterte.
Free education
DREAMING. Catherine Bentulan dreams of free education for her children.
DREAMING. Catherine Bentulan dreams of free education for her children.
"Dili gyud siya sayon uy. Dili gyud," said Catherine Bentulan, a mother of 4.
(It's not easy. It really isn't.)
"Giampo gyud nako nga kung kinsa man gani ang musunod nga presidente, iyaha gyung himuon nga libre ang edukasyon para sa pareha namo nga dili pa gyud kaya ipadala sa eskwelahan ang among mga anak," Bentulan told Rappler.
(I pray that whoever the next president is, he makes education free for people like us who can't afford to send our kids to school.)
Bentulan's eldest child is in college; the second one, a 9th grader; and the third one, in elementary school. Her youngest is a toddler.
She was 4 months pregnant the day Yolanda destroyed their house, which had just been standing for a week and hadn't even been furnished yet. She had a miscarriage in the days following the typhoon.
Although Bentulan often wishes that her baby had lived, she said that what happened might have been for the best: "I'm glad he or she didn't live a day to experience our hardships."
Bentulan shared that even before Yolanda came, they struggled to send their kids to school.
She hopes to see the next president, even if he weren't the one she voted for, prioritize education for under-privileged families like hers.
Higher pension
PENSION. Lorita Alarde hopes president-elect Rodrigo Duterte will prioritize increasing pensions for senior citizens like her.
PENSION. Lorita Alarde hopes president-elect Rodrigo Duterte will prioritize increasing pensions for senior citizens like her.
"I hope pensions will rise. Today, it's not enough to raise a family. I'm old, you see. I can't work anymore. They don't hire the elderly and I have grandchildren to feed," said Lorita Alarde, 85 years old.
When Alarde's husband, Fernando, died in 1985, she had to make do with the small pension he left her. She had no job. She was always tending to the house and to the children.
A P3,500-pension today is not enough to provide for her 6 grandchildren, she said.
Alarde hopes Duterte will listen to the elderly like her – and fast – because she believes she doesn't have much time left.
Programs for farmers, fishermen
CABINET. Ruben Jumao-as shares that the cabinet behind him is the only possession that he was able to save during Super Typhoon Yolanda.
CABINET. Ruben Jumao-as shares that the cabinet behind him is the only possession that he was able to save during Super Typhoon Yolanda.
"I hope he gives more attention to the farmers and the fishermen. Give them more jobs and privileges," said Ruben Jumao-as, who has worked as a caretaker of a hacienda for more than 20 years.
Yolanda damaged hectares of the sugarcane plantation he takes care of. Tall sugarcanes turned into twigs scattered on the ground after the typhoon came. The plantation has yet to fully recover.
Jumao-as said it's painful for him to see the farmers working under these conditions. "They always seem tired and unappreciated," he said.
Big businesses, he added, make it even worse for farmers and fishermen who make so much less even with all their efforts combined.
Jumao-as relayed his message to Duterte: "Mr President, please take care of our farmers and our fishermen." – Rappler.com
Richale Cabauatan is a Rappler intern and Mover.

We're half-hearted

We’re half-hearted

OPINION In My OpinioNIN MY OPINIONKlaus Doring
The Re-public of the Philippines got a new president. The first in history from Mindanao. Congratulations Mayor Rodrigo Duterte. One term is on everybody lips now: unity! Yes, besides all black propaganda and smear campaigns from the past – this Philippine nation should continue as a united country.
Who is half-hearted? Let’s take a look again at Europe. The looming Europe crisis seems to continue. Can Greece deliver on its promises this time?
Five years, three bailouts, two governments and countless emergency meetings later, neither the country’s government nor its people – 25 percent of whom are unemployed in an economy that shrunk by a quarter in five years – fully back the latest austerity deal that was agreed on last Monday.
In fact, there have been major demonstrations against the €5.4 billion worth of measures, which will increase social security and pension contributions and raise taxes. Since the crisis broke out in 2010, similar deals have not borne fruit. So why would anything be different this time? In order to make a repayment due in July and receive the first tranche of funds from the EU bailout program, Greece desperately needed additional funds. The bailout money largely goes towards paying off Greece’s debt – and therefore has little effect on the economy.
‘Our agreement is a compromise’. In an exclusive interview with DW – Deutsch Welle, Nikos Pappas, Greek Minister of State, has now admitted the Tspiras government was “half-hearted in measures that we believe that could be implemented in a different way”. “Our agreement is a compromise. The agreement itself has got the elements that our partners asked us to implement, and our wi-shes. So, the program is not totally ours, it is a compromise,” Pap-pas added when Michel Friedman confronted him with a statement by the German Munich based Ifo Institute that said Athens were dragging its feet on economic reforms. Nikos Pappas currently serves as a Minister of State in Alexis Tsipras’ second cabinet.
Syriza – the far-left party that took government in 2015 – failed to deliver on its promises, posing a problem to Greek citizens, its creditors and EU diplomats in Brussels. German Klaus Regling, head of the Eurozone’s rescue fund EFSF said that although Greece has made some progress with its reforms, the overall “implementation capacity” has been slow – and in fact the “weakest in the European Union”.
Questions like ‘Is your tax collection office on a permanent vacation?’ have been noticed several times. When Friedman asked whether the constant emergency meetings don’t have a certain resemblance to a bad drama, with Athens simply repeating the same old lines, Pappas said: “We have never denied they were internal problems in the Greek state, the Greek economy and the Greek society, never. But these problems were matched with a totally wrong approach that resulted in such a severe recession.” Pappas also refused to take responsibility for the 17 billion EURO that escape state coffers every year, so that the Greek shadow economy repre-sents up to a quarter of the country’s GNP. Pappas called this figure “another extreme expression that does not reflect reality”.
Greece – quo vadis? Europe – quo vadis?
+++
Email: doringklaus@ gmail.com or follow me in Facebook or Twitter or visitwww.germanexpatin thephilippines.blogspot.com.

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Unity

Unity

EDITORIAL
History unfolds in Davao City with its mayor for decades, Rodrigo Duterte to sit as the country’s new President by June 30 after being favored by more than 15 million Filipinos and counting on election day, May 9.  It’s history for it’s the first time that the country’s president comes from Mindanao. It was a tough battle muddled with black propaganda that if it did bite, could have ruin the political career of the mayor. But it did not, in fact, the voters’ preference for the mayor shoot up. The dirty political scheme didn’t work to the dismay of his detractors and victory for his supporters.
However let bygones be bygones. The offering of friendship and healing by the mayor to his opponents which reflects the soft spot in him behind that robustness is proof he deserves the presidential post. Now that the people has made its judgment to all candidates, it would be best for everybody especially the losers to respect it.  Accept and forget the pain of defeat. The country has a lot of problems to address. How could the new leaders fix this ailing country if it remains polarized fueled by bitterness and hate.
The stigma of dirty politics should be unleashed to pave the way for unity and reconciliation. This is easier said than done most especially to those who were victims of smear campaigns. But what else is new in Philippine elections. Dirty campaigns have been there since time immemorial.  The politicians should have got used to it and just chew on all the election campaign residues for a  day or two, then move on.   Proclamation of the winners of the 2016 elections will be completed in next to no time.  Speed up the healing and buckle down to work.