Office of Civil Defense (OCD)-XI Regional Director Ednar Dayanghirang confirmed that one died while three were missing in the landslide that happened in Brgy. Salazar, Mati City, Davao OrientalAccording to Dayanghirang, the landslide is a result of incessant rainfall affecting the Shear line.: Roy Caña Andan
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This might not be the typical expat blog, written by a German expat, living in the Philippines since 1999. It's different. In English and in German. Check it out! Enjoy reading! Dies mag' nun wirklich nicht der typische Auswandererblog eines Deutschen auf den Philippinen sein. Er soll etwas anders sein. In Englisch und in Deutsch! Viel Spass beim Lesen!
You plan to move to the Philippines? Wollen Sie auf den Philippinen leben?
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!
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Friday, February 20, 2026
1 DEAD, 3 MISSING IN LANDSLIDE IN MATI CITY
PAGASA issues heavy rainfall warning due to shear line

Arbeitszeit, Rente, Migration: Deutsche laut Umfrage zu Zumutungen bereit – „mit einer Ausnahme“
Stand:
Von: Richard Strobl
Deutschland steckt in der Krise. Im Hinblick auf die Wirtschaft sind viele zu Zumutungen bereit, zeigt eine Umfrage. Doch auch die Demokratie ist in Gefahr.
Berlin – „Es ist momentan einfach auch die Vielzahl an Herausforderungen, die die Menschen ja auch wahrnehmen in ihrem Alltag.“ Mit diesem Statement erklärt die Ostbeauftragte Elisabeth Kaiser (SPD) im Morgenmagazin die Ergebnisse einer aktuellen Umfrage. Dabei wird klar, dass die Deutschen durchaus bereit sind, anzupacken, um die wirtschaftliche Krise zu überwinden. Allerdings nicht in jedem Bereich.
Das zeigen die Ergebnisse aus dem sogenannten Deutschland-Monitor – einer Studie, die seit 2023 von verschiedenen Unis gemeinsam erhoben wird. Zentraler Aspekt der Studie ist die Veränderungsbereitschaft der Menschen in Deutschland.
Studie zeigt Stimmungslage in der Krise – Deutsche wohl zu Zumutungen bereit
Demnach sagen 23 Prozent der Befragten, sie seien offen für gesellschaftlichen Wandel und nähmen ihn als Chance wahr. 52 Prozent sehen Wandel teils gut, teils schlecht. 26 Prozent sind eindeutig kritisch und sehen vor allem die Risiken. Besonders stark ist diese Gruppe in strukturschwachen Gebieten in Ostdeutschland.
Das erstaunliche Ergebnis: Bei den Themen Verteidigung, Wirtschaft, Digitalisierung, Demografie, Klima und Migration seien die Menschen mehrheitlich bereit, Zumutungen für sie selbst ganz oder teilweise mitzutragen, erklären die Forscher. „Mit einer Ausnahme: Das Ansinnen, angesichts der Alterung der Gesellschaft für die gleiche Rentenhöhe länger zu arbeiten, lehnen 58 Prozent als große Zumutung ab.“
Damit zeigen sich die Deutschen laut der Studie durchaus bereit, unterschiedliche Ansätze von Kanzler Friedrich Merz mitzutragen, um die schlechte wirtschaftliche Lage zu überwinden. Die Ablehnung bei der Rente ist jedoch kritisch. Experten aus Wirtschaft und Politik halten es allerdings für unumgänglich, das Renteneintrittsalter anzuheben.
Bis zu 40 Zentimeter Schnee
Wetterwarnung!
:Bis zu 40 Zentimeter Schnee
Glätte-Chaos in mehreren Bundesländern ++ Ausfälle am Frankfurter Flughafen
Markus
Arndt
Eisregen und Neuschnee im Südwesten:Winter-Walze stoppt Brummis
Wetterexperte Dr. Karsten Brandt von Donnerwetter.de sagt in BILD voraus: „Mit Schnee und Eisregen ist am Donnerstagmorgen zu rechnen. Deshalb mein Appell: Wer unterwegs ist, sollte mehr Zeit einplanen, mehr Vorsicht walten lassen.“
Ein Kleinwagen verliert in Sachsen auf schneeglatter Straße die Kontrolle
Warnung vom Deutschen Wetterdienst
Meteorologe Robert Hauser vom Deutschen Wetterdienst (DWD) warnt in BILD: „Das Schneegebiet weitet sich im Laufe des Donnerstags nach Nordosten aus. Oberhalb von 300 Metern kann die Schneehöhe 10 bis 15 Zentimeter erreichen.“ An den Alpen könne es sogar bis zu 30 Zentimeter Neuschnee geben. In den Staulagen des Allgäus und des Werdenfelser Landes sind sogar um 40 Zentimeter Neuschnee möglich. Aktuell gibt es für weite Teile Deutschlands vom DWD bereits eine Wetterwarnung der Stufe 1. Teilweise gilt auch Warnstufe 2.
Nur den Norden und hohen Nordosten soll das Wetter von größeren Mengen Neuschnee verschonen. Das liegt an einer Besonderheit: „Da liegt eine Luftmassengrenze, die sich kaum verändert. Deshalb schneit es auf der einen Seite und auf der anderen nicht“, erklärt Diplom-Meteorologe Dominik Jung vom Wetterdienst Q-met gegenüber BILD.
Thursday, February 19, 2026
In praise of listening

My maternity leave has led to an unintended consequence: opting out of my usual platforms for discourse. I had no students, no colleagues, no clients, and no column to which I can express my thoughts and ideas. It was not a slow month for news, either, making my self-imposed abstinence from opinion an even bigger challenge. There were concerning developments regarding civil rights violations in the United States, escalation of tensions around the West Philippine Sea, impeachment cases filed against the two highest positions in the land, and of course the infamous remarks of Sen. Robinhood Padilla regarding the youth as “weak” for having mental health issues. What a time to bring a child into the world!
That said, listening and observing are underrated skills and perhaps we should devote our time to it more often. In psychological first aid, we follow the core actions of “look, listen, and link.” Before we prescribe any intervention, we must first look at the situation and listen to our clients. In psychotherapy, listening and observing are fundamental and at times make up much of our work. I would often remind my students that if the therapist did most of the talking in session, that probably wasn’t therapy. This is what prompts the misconception that our work is easy, and that “all therapists do is listen.” In fact, listening is much more difficult, and has more impact, than talking.
There are depths to listening. One can hear but not listen. One can repeat what one hears but still fail to understand. To listen actively and empathically, which is what psychotherapy requires, is to observe at multiple levels at the same time. To hear what is being said, to hear what cannot be said, to observe how things are said, and to understand the context behind what is being said.
To listen to others well, you must also know how to listen to yourself. How are you receiving what you heard? What emotions and reactions are coming up for you as you listen to the experience of others? What urges accompany these reactions? What biases and context do you have that are filtering what you are hearing? For therapists, it is especially important to be well acquainted with your own voice, so you don’t impose it on others. One should also have the humility to acknowledge that our experience and views are, by essence, limited. This will allow us to listen to others without judgment or constraint.
Being forced to stay in listening mode this past month has been a good and humbling reminder for me. I’ve inhabited various positions of authority–of being a teacher, therapist, and professional–that has made me, perhaps, too comfortable in expressing and asserting my views. (Caring for a newborn is, likewise, a humbling experience. No amount of imposing my will on this little one will change when she wants to feed, cry, sleep, and poop. I am forced, as her mother, to hone my listening and observing skills to better anticipate her needs so that I can have even a sliver of a chance of sleep and rest.)
Listening opens us up to resources we usually gloss over. First, listening gives us time. Instead of reacting quickly, we have time to process and digest. If I had written this article right after Padilla’s statement, I would have probably expressed indignation and focused on providing counterarguments. But having to sit with it for a week, as well as allowing my emotions to complete their cycle, I feel less of a need to quench my personal frustration. I still do not agree with the senator’s sentiments. However, I can locate that my true frustration lies in the realization that such sentiments still exist in society–especially among leaders and elected officials–and that our work as mental health advocates are far from over.
Second, listening leads to empathy and compassion. The extra time I had to reflect on what I heard helped me see how our narrow definition of what it means to be strong and our unwillingness to be vulnerable has led us to cut short our empathy for others. Listening bridges us to others, helping us to see our interconnectedness. It opens us up beyond our personal and direct experience. It allows us to experience lives far different from our own. We see how this refusal to listen to others have led to cruelty. For example, refusing to listen to the lived experience of immigrants, instead labeling them as “illegals” or “criminals,” made supporting actions that violate their civil rights easier. Our version of it is “Red-tagging,” where we put labels such as “adik,” “tibak,” or “komunista” to give ourselves permission to stop listening and to stop seeing them as fellow human beings.
For this season of Lent, Pope Leo has urged us to abstain from speaking hurtful words and rash judgment. A good way of doing this is by focusing on listening. We might be surprised by what we hear.
Healthcare workers shortage: 56% of students don't make it to the workforce
By Manila Bulletin
Published Feb 18, 2026 04:16 pm
The shortage of healthcare workers in the Philippines is no longer an abstract policy debate. It is visible in overcrowded emergency rooms, months-long wait for specialist appointments, and rural communities without a resident doctor. Behind these realities is a stark statistic: the country needs an additional 290,000 healthcare professionals to adequately serve its population.
According to the Second Congressional Commission on Education (EDCOM II) in its report “Turning Point: A Decade of Necessary Reform 2026–2035,” the Philippines has only 21.2 healthcare workers per 10,000 people—less than half of the 44.5 benchmark recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO). Without urgent reforms, shortages are projected to reach 94,000 doctors, 196,000 nurses, and thousands more midwives and allied health professionals.
Migration is often blamed for the shortage. Nearly 27,000 Filipino healthcare workers leave the country each year for higher compensation and better working conditions.
But focusing solely on migration misses another problem. EDCOM II describes that as the “leaky” healthcare education pipeline, where large numbers of students fail to complete their training or enter professional practice.
Each year, about 59,000 students enroll in healthcare degree programs. Of these, roughly 15,000 drop out before graduation. Another 11,000 complete their degrees but fail licensure examinations. In the end, only 32,000 become licensed professionals. In total, an estimated 56 percent—around 33,000 students annually—never make it into the workforce.
This attrition rate is alarming. It signals financial hardship, uneven academic preparation, inadequate training facilities, and licensure barriers that prevent graduates from serving the public.
Access to education further compounds the crisis. Of the 80 medical schools in the country, only 28 are public institutions, limiting affordable options for students from low-income families. Entire regions, including Region 10 and the Cordillera Administrative Region, have no public medical schools at all. Dental education is even more centralized – of 34 dental schools nationwide, nearly a third are in Metro Manila, while 12 regions have virtually no access to dental education providers.
These geographic and economic disparities reinforce the uneven distribution of healthcare workers. Unsurprisingly, rural health units and government hospitals remain chronically understaffed. EDCOM II noted that 3,300 Department of Health plantilla positions remain unfilled, leaving the poorest Filipinos with the least access to care.
The crisis also has global dimensions. In November 2024, the Philippine-Pacific Health Initiative—launched by the Philippine government with Pacific Island countries and the WHO—underscored that health workforce shortages are a regional and global concern. WHO projects a global shortfall of 10 million health workers by 2030, disproportionately affecting low- and middle-income countries. Health worker shortages weaken health systems and make nations more vulnerable to pandemics and natural disasters.
Domestically, reform must begin with education. EDCOM II’s Workforce Development Plan calls for shifting from a “supply-driven” to a “demand-driven” system aligned with labor market needs. This includes expanding scholarships for medical and allied health students, improving training facilities, revisiting licensure policies to support competent graduates, and strengthening return service requirements.
Programs such as “Doktor Para Sa Bayan,” which fund medical education in exchange for mandatory service in underserved areas, should be expanded. Education agencies are also aligning efforts: the Department of Education is introducing healthcare electives in senior high school; the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority is developing advanced allied health certifications; and the Commission on Higher Education is prioritizing healthcare programs in its scholarships.
The private sector must step up—through scholarships, training partnerships, and investments in provincial medical education—to widen access and keep talent within the country.
The numbers are sobering, but they also offer clarity. Fixing the healthcare workforce shortage means sealing the leaks in the education pipeline, expanding equitable access, and creating conditions that make staying and serving at home a viable, dignified choice.
MOVIEGOER: Charo Santos lets her hair down

Ramadan in PH starts on Feb. 19
By Keith Bacongcokeith
Published Feb 18, 2026 12:16 pm
DAVAO CITY – The month-long holding of Ramadan among Muslims in the country will begin on Thursday, Feb. 19, as the moon was not sighted on Tuesday evening, according to Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdulrauf Guialani of the Bangsamoro Darul-Ifta (BDI).
Guialani made the announcement at the Shariff Kabunsuan Cultural Complex (SKCC), Bangsamoro Government Center (BGC), in Cotabato City following the receipt of the results of the nationwide moon-sighting activities.
Aside from the Bangsamoro region, the BDI also deployed teams for the moonsighting activities in Iligan City in Lanao del Norte, Misamis Oriental province, and other parts of the country.
“With that premise and by the authority vested in me as Bangsamoro Mufti, I, Abdulrauf A. Guialani, hereby announce that the crescent moon was not sighted today. Therefore, Ramadan fasting 2026 will officially commence on Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026, In Shaa Allah,” the Grand Mufti announced.
For 30 days, Muslims in the country will observe a month-long fast, as aligned with Islamic teachings, principles, and practices.
“In Islam, sawm (fasting) is among the pillars of the religion that promotes discipline, strengthens spiritual connection with Allah (Subhanahu Wa Ta’ala), and helps in body detoxification for healthy living,” the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao said in a statement.
Bangsamoro interim Chief Minister Abdulraof Macacua issued a memorandum on Wednesday, Feb. 18, implementing a new work schedule for Muslim officials and employees during Ramadan.
“The regular working hours of 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. is hereby modified to 7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., without a noon break, for Muslim officials and employees observing the holy month of Ramadan,” the memorandum said.
It added that there shall be no diminution on the 40-hour work week required under the Civil Service rules under these modified working hours.
After the Eid'l Fitr, Macacua said, all officials and employees shall automatically revert to regular working hours.




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