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!

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Friday, February 24, 2023

DAVAO CITY's FAMOUS GIFT SHOP CALLED ALDIVINCO IS RELOCATED TO C. BANGOY...

The Manila Times partners with DZRH radio


 

MEDIA PARTNERSHIP (From left) Ruperto S. Nicdao, Jr., president of the Manila Broadcasting Company (MBC); The Manila Times Chairman and CEO Dante 'Klink' Ang 2nd; and lawyer Rejie Jularbal, DZRH station manager, sign a memorandum of agreement (MoA) to create more and better content for a wider audience. The partnership between two of the oldest and respected media groups was formalized on Thursday, Feb. 23, 2023, at the MBC Building, home of DZRH, in Pasay City. PHOTO BY J. GERARD SEGUIA


By Christian Crow Maghanoy, Manila Times

February 24, 2023 


(UPDATE) THE Manila Times and Manila Broadcasting Company's (MBC) DZRH radio on Thursday signed a memorandum of agreement (MoA) to create more content for two of the oldest and most respected media companies in the Philippines.


Manila Times Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Dante "Klink" Ang 2nd said the partnership hopes to "tap each other's expertise" to produce better content.


Lawyer Rudolph Steve Jularbal, DZRH station manager, said "collaboration is the key now — the more content creators get together for collaborative creation, the better it is for everyone." The agreement was signed at the MBC Building, home of DZRH, in Pasay City.


The tie-up will provide a more comprehensive coverage of key national events, particularly the Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan Elections on October 30, Ang and Jularbal said.


DZRH and The Times' qualitative content will "fill each other's gaps" in terms of its online and real-time presence for listeners and readers.


"We can make use of their (Times) content. Same way as far as we (DZRH) can share our content," Jularbal said.


"We are helping each other and covering national affairs has become a very expensive endeavor and there are gaps in any organization, so this is where the partnership comes in," Ang said.


Ang said the composition of stories from DZRH and The Times will be the area of collaboration, particularly the crafting of reliable news which will also battle the proliferation of fake news online.


"I think at the end of the day, people will have to rely on sources like MBC, DZRH and The Manila Times that are reliable, believable, factual and complete," Ang said.


For Jularbal, the collaboration provides limitless possibilities in delivering content to the public.


Ang said it was an "initial step" in bringing the partnership forward.


"MBC will have to see kung nakakadagdag ba kami (if The Times is useful to them), and certainly I think we will be happy if the partnership will be long-term. But then we (Times) don't want to impose ourselves on them. Small steps muna," Ang said.


The collaboration will make sure "that the Filipino people is better informed through reliable sources like MBC and The Manila Times about things that are happening around the country and around the world," Ang said.


Despite the fire that razed the MBC compound in 2019 and the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, DZRH never stopped regular operations, Jularbal said.


This is the second collaboration between The Times and DZRH. The first was the joint coverage of the 2022 elections.


The MoA is good until Dec. 31, 2023

First in Southeast Asia: DICT welcomes Musk’s Starlink to PH

Published February 24, 2023, 10:56 AM

by Charie Mae F. Abarca, MB

Billionaire Elon Musk’s Starlink operated by SpaceX is now in the Philippines, the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) confirmed on Friday, Feb. 24, calling it a “game changer” in terms of enabling better internet connectivity, especially in remote areas. 

Ahead of the Department of Information and Communications Technology’s confirmation, SpaceX, on Wednesday, Feb. 22, announced the availability of Starlink’s services in the Philippines (Photo courtesy of SpaceX / Twitter)

DICT Secretary Ivan John Uy welcomed this development, stressing that Starlink will “complement” existing broadband capacities in the country, raising the chances of improving internet access across the nation. 

“In welcoming this new technology that is Starlink, our BroadBand ng Masa can now provide free high-speed internet access to our geographically isolated and disadvantaged areas in the Philippines, ensuring that no Filipino will be left behind,” said Uy in an official statement on Friday.  

Broadband ng Masa is the ongoing project of DICT which seeks to ensure that all Filipinos have access to “efficient and effective” information and communications technology services in hopes of eradicating the so-called digital divide. 

As of writing, Starlink has 3,580 operational sites, but according to the DICT, it is aiming to establish around 40,000 satellites in order to fulfill its goal of providing “high-speed” and “low-cost” internet. 

The Philippines was the first country in Southeast Asia to offer Starlink’s internet services.

 

Palace moves EDSA holiday to Feb. 24 but wants its historical significance maintained

by Argyll Cyrus Geducos

Pursuant to the principle of holiday economics, Malacañang has declared Feb. 24, 2023, a special nonworking holiday in celebration of the EDSA People Power Revolution anniversary, which falls on a Saturday this year.

Proclamation No. 167 declares Feb. 24, 2023, a special nonworking holiday in celebration of the 37th EDSA People Power Revolution anniversary (File photos)

The Palace released Proclamation No. 167 on Thursday evening, a day before the new holiday date.

The Proclamation was signed by Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin and confirmed by Communications Secretary Cheloy Garafil in a text message. 

Based on Proclamation No. 167, Malacañang moved the celebration of the EDSA holiday to “enable our countrymen to avail of the benefits of a longer weekend pursuant to the principle of holiday economics.”

However, the Palace said that the historical significance of the People Power Revolution should be maintained.

“The celebration of EDSA People Power Revolution Anniversary may be moved from 25 February 2023 (Saturday) to 24 February 2023 (Friday), provided that the historical significance of EDSA People Power Revolution Anniversary is maintained,” it read.

The country will mark the 37th anniversary of the EDSA People Power Revolution on Feb. 25. The occasion commemorates the toppling of the first Marcos administration. 

In November last year, President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., through Proclamation No. 90, said there was a need to follow the principle of holiday economics.

“There is a need to adjust these holidays pursuant to the principle of holiday economics wherein a longer weekend will help encourage domestic travel and increase tourism expenditures in the country,” the Proclamation read.

“Holiday economics” became a buzzword during the administration of former President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. Under the principle, holidays falling on weekends may be moved to the nearest Monday or Friday. Even holidays falling in the middle of the week may be moved.

MAGNITUDE 6.6 NA LINDOL: YUMANIG KANINA SA DAVAO OCCIDENTAL | SARANGGANI

Thursday, February 23, 2023

TINGNAN LAGAY NG PANAHON NGAYON⚠️ MAY PARATING NA BAGYO?| WEATHER UPDATE...



'Last trip': Individual traditional jeepneys to stop operations after June 30


 

James Relativo - Philstar.com


MANILA, Philippines — Individual operators of traditional jeepneys will no longer be allowed to continue their operations after June 30, 2023 — unless they start joining a cooperative or a corporation.

The Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) shared this after approving Memorandum Circular 2023-013 last Monday, a move done amidst the calls of various transport groups and commuters to stop the much assailed phaseout of traditional jeeps.

"Individual operators may continue to operate by virtue of a [provisional authority], which is automatically extended until 30 June 2023 under this Memorandum Circular," said members of the board last Monday.

"Individual operators may join an existing consolidated entity until 30 June 2023. Only those individual operators who are able to join an existing consolidated entity on or before 30 June 2023 shall be allowed to have their PA extended until 31 December 2023."

The provisional authority of individual traditional jeeps in the National Capital Region was originally set to expire last April. The LTFRB earlier said the extension was already the "fourth and last time."

For routes without a "consolidated entity" (cooperative or corporation) or filed application for franchise consolidation, its application will only be entertained until October 31.

LTFRB chairperson earlier said that only 60% of the target number of vehicles for modernization have complied with the requirements under the program such as industry consolidation into cooperatives. The remaining 40% continue to ply routes using traditional jeepneys.

Cooperatives are being pushed at the moment to enable operators to afford the purchase of "modern jeeps" said to be worth at least P2.6 million each via loans from financial institutions.

The certificate of public conveyance (franchise) of individual operators who fail to join the exiasting consolidated entity after June shall be reverted to the State.


'High costs' of modernization prohibitive to operators

Mody Floranda, national president of transport group PISTON, last February 6 earlier explained that many jeepney operators continue to avoid entering into the PUV Modernization Program because of the high costs to change their vehicles, besides the posibility of losing their livelihood once they enter the franchise consolidation.

Floranda said that a reasonable way for the Department of Transportation and LTFRB to handle said concerns is to fully suspend the implementation of the DOTr Department Order 2017-011, which stipulates the rules and requirements of the PUVMP, and all its supplementing LTFRB memoranda while conducting a thorough review of the program.

"In the process of reviewing the whole program of modernization, the government must ensure that all jeepney drivers and small operators are consulted," he said in Filipino.

"Thousands of jobs are at stake, so it's important that we work together with the state in identifying how a proper transition towards modernization could be justly undertaken."

PISTON reiterated that they do not oppose modernizing traditional jeeps as long as the modernization program ensures and prioritizes a "fair and just transition for transport workers and all affected vulnerable sectors."

Manila faces worsening floods


By Agence France-Presse


BARAS, Rizal: From her house in a Manila suburb, Rowena Jimenez can't see the bare mountains around the built-up city. But she feels the impact of deforestation every time her living room floods.


Slash-and-burn farming, illegal logging, open-pit mining and development fueled by population growth have stripped the once-densely forested Philippines of much of its trees.


In Manila, where more than 13 million people live, low-lying areas are often inundated when storms lash the Sierra Madre mountain range, which lies east of the city and acts as a barrier to severe weather.


But without enough trees to help absorb the rain, huge volumes of water run off the slopes and into waterways that flow into the metropolis, turning neighborhoods into disease-infested swamps.


Jimenez, 49, has lost count of the number of times the Marikina River has broken its banks and flooded the ground floor of her family's two-bedroom concrete house, a few blocks from the water's edge.


"There is always fear that it will happen again," said Jimenez, who lives with her husband, youngest daughter, sister, nephew and mother.


"Your heart sinks because you realize the things you worked so hard to buy will be destroyed again."


Jimenez blames environmental "abuses" upstream in the nearby Upper Marikina River Basin — a catchment spanning roughly 26,000 hectares (64,500 acres) in the southern foothills of the Sierra Madre.


Only 2.1 percent of the watershed was covered by dense "closed forest" in 2015, according to a World Bank report.


Runoff from the mountains drains into the basin, which is critical for regulating water flow into Manila.


It was declared a "protected landscape" in 2011 by then-president Benigno Aquino, under a law aimed at ensuring "biological diversity and sustainable development."


That was two years after Typhoon "Ketsana," known in the Philippines as Tropical Storm "Ondoy," had submerged 80 percent of the city and killed hundreds of people.


But by then, many of the trees in the catchment had been cleared to make way for public roads, parking lots, private resorts and residential subdivisions.


Jimenez still shudders at the memory of the water reaching 23 feet (7 meters) high and forcing her family to huddle together on the roof of their house.


"We didn't salvage anything but ourselves," she said.


More Filipinos opened bank accounts last year

By The Manila Times

February 23, 2023


ALMOST 6 million Filipinos were able to open their very first bank account last year after completing the Step 2 registration for the national ID, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said on Wednesday.In partnership with the state-run Land Bank of the Philippines (LandBank), the PSA said 8.4 million unbanked Filipinos were onboarded in 2022. 

Of this number, 5.8 million were able to open transaction accounts."The opening of a bank account is the first step toward financial inclusion, which is one of the benefits from PhilSys," PSA Undersecretary and National Statistician Dennis Mapa said in a statement."In partnership with LandBank, millions of Filipinos were able to open their very first bank account that they can use for savings, safer and faster money remittance, payment of bills, and other online transactions," Mapa said.The PSA and LandBank achieved this goal through a co-location strategy, where registered persons were able to open transactional accounts with LandBank in PhilSys registration centers after their Step 2 registration.


.This service is free and provides those registered access to financial services with the issuance of a banking card that requires no initial deposit and no maintaining balance.PhilSys registrants who were issued LandBank Prepaid Cards used their accounts for various financial transactions.As of Dec. 31, 2022, the bank recorded 108,473 transactions made by registered persons through its mobile banking application, point-of-sale and over-the-counter transactions through various LandBank branches amounting to P275.8 million.

PSA and LandBank continue to work together in opening accounts for registered persons via LandBank's agent banking partners nationwide and through the mobile app LANDBANKPay.The bank will also continue to issue prepaid cards to registrants who have transactional accounts but have not yet been issued prepaid cards during the onboarding and co-location.

Marcos boosts PH culture; vows aid to Filipino artists

Published February 23, 2023, 8:37 AM

by Argyll Cyrus Geducos

President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. reiterated his continuous commitment to promoting Philippine culture and preserving and protecting the country’s cultural heritage.

President Ferdinand ‘Bongbong’ Marcos Jr. (Malacañang photo)
President Ferdinand ‘Bongbong’ Marcos Jr. (Malacañang photo)

Marcos said this at the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) Ani ng Dangal (Harvest of Honors) awarding ceremony in Malacañang on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

In his speech, the President told the artists that the government was there to support them. 

“Makaaasa kayo na kaisa ninyo ang pamahalaan at administrasyong ito sa pagsusulong at pagpapayaman ng ating sining at kultura (Rest assured that the government is one with you in promoting and enriching our culture and arts),” he said.

“Nagtitiwala ako na kung pauunlarin natin ang industriyang ito, higit tayong makatutulong sa paglago ng ating ekonomiya, at maiangat ang Pilipino saan mang dako ng daigdig (I believe that if we can grow the industry, we can help grow our economy and lift Filipinos wherever they are),” he added.

Marcos called on NCCA to support Filipino artists who significantly contribute to developing and promoting Philippine culture and the arts.

He likewise urged Filipino artists to show the country’s culture and identity and feature the Philippines’ rich artistry and cultural heritage.

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“Hiling ko na lalong magtulak ito sa inyo na ipagpatuloy ang inyong mga nasimulan upang mapangalagaan ang kultura at pagkakakilanlan ng ating sining at bayan (I wish that this recognition will push you to continue what you started to porotect our culture, arts, and the country),” Marcos said.

“Sa inyong patuloy na paglikha at pagsulong ng ating orihinal na mga katha, pinapa-unlad ninyo ang ating industriya ng sining at pinakikilala ang ating lahi sa buong mundo (With your continued creation of original crafts, you enrich the arts industry and introduce our race to the world),” he added.

Ani ng Dangal honors natural-born Filipino artists or groups who have received international awards and accolades in nine categories — Architecture, Cinema, Dance, Dramatic Arts, Literary Arts, Music, Visual Arts, Folk Arts, and Broadcast Arts — over the past year.

The awardees under Architecture and Allied Arts were: The Penthouse (Best Residential Interior Apartment); The Galleon Residences Showroom (Best Residential Show Home); Equilateral House (Winner for Innovative Architecture); Batangas Forest City (Best of the Best for Innovative Architecture.

For Cinema, the awardees were Jeric Gonzales (Best Actor); Dolly De Leon (Best Supporting Performer); ‘Di N’yo Ba Naririnig (Golden Kinabalu Award for Best Documentary): The Flight of Banog (Golden Kinabalu Award for Best Indigenous Language Film); Geraldo B. Jumawan (Best Actor); Black Rainbow (Best Short Film); Joaquin Ditan Domagoso (Best Actor); The HeadHunter’s Daughter (Grand Jury Prize); It’s Raining Frogs Outside (International Award); Days of the New (International Competition Grand Prix); Leonor Will Never Die (World Cinema Dramatic Special Jury Award).

For Dance, the awardees were Billy Crawford, ELECTRO GROOVERS, Halili-Cruz School of Ballet, and Bayanihan. 

Meanwhile, the list of awardees under the Music category includes Ryle Custodio, Darwin J. Lomentigar, Rafael Adobas Bayog, Ily Matthew Maniano, Theodore Julius Chua Tan, Adrik Cristobal, Jeanne Rafaella Marquez, Far Eastern University Chorale, Michael Valenciano, and Danikka Dy.

Albert Reyes, Mariah Zamora, and Froiland Rivera received honors for Visual Arts, while A Thousand Cuts, a film by Ramona Diaz, was honored as the Outstanding Social Issue Documentary.