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, May 22, 2015

ComVal: 7th Provincial Summer Sports Fest 2015



Compostela Valley Province - Gisugdan na ang dakong engkwentro sa paugnat sa kusog nga gihimo sa pinili ug hinashasang mga atleta gikan sa mga kalungsuran atol sa tulo ka adlawng  “7th Provincial Summer Sports Fest 2015.”
                                                                    
Gidula sa tulo ka adlawng paugnat sa kusog niadtong Mayo 20-23, 2015 ang mga Sports Events nga Basketball, Volley Ball, Soft Ball, Base Ball, Soccer/Football,  Athletics, Sepak Takraw, Chess, Badminton, Table Tennis, ug Lawn Tennis.

Ang “7th Provincial Summer Sports Fest 2015” gisugdan sa usa ka dakong Motorcade niadtong Mayo 20 sa buntag sugod sa kapitolyo paingon ug pabalik sa Poblacion Nabunturan nga diin miapil niini ang mga players, coaches, ang mga dagkong opisyal sa lungsod ug sa probinsiya, ug ang uban pang mga katawhan sa Comval nga mahiligon sa Sports.

Human sa Motorcade ang Opening Program nga gipanguluhan nila Provincial Sports Coordinator Francis Secuya ug Provincial Sports Consultant Senior Board Member Tyron Uy ug mga kauban nga sila SP Member Raul Timogtimog, SP Member Macario Humol, SP Member Joseph Jaoud, Education Supervisor Ruben Reponte, Municipal Sports Coordinators, ug si Executive Assistant Isabelo Melendres nga maoy mihatag sa Welcome Message ni Gov. Arturo “Chiongkee” Uy.

Mihatag sad sa iyang inspiring message ang taga Comval nga “2015 Palarong Pambansa Taekwondo Gold Medalist” nga si John Paul T. Canillo sa Maragusan, ug sa iyang mensahe iyang gipasabot nga base sa iyang kasinatian makab-ot gyod sa usa ka maayong atleta ang dakong kalampusan sa iyang mga pangandoy ug tinguha kon siya duol kanunay sa Ginoo, 100% nga focus sa training, ug nga duna siyay hugot ug lig-ong  pagsalig sa iyang kaugalingong katakos (self confidence) nga modaug sa dula.

Ang dula gisugdan human ang mensahe ug declaration of the Opening sa “7th Summer Sports Festival 2015” nga gihimo ni Senior Board Member Tyron Uy, ug matud pa niya nga gawas sa competition labing mahinungdanon sad sa gihimong indigay sa paugnat sa kusog nga mapromotar ang panagsuod ug panaghigalaay sa tanang mga atleta ug sports enthusiasts sa tibuok Comval Province. (Gilbert Cabahug/ IDS Comval)



Photo captions:

An action-packed day as Compostela Valley opens its 7th Provincial Sports fest on May 20 spearheaded by the Physical Fitness and Sports Development Council. Games such as Badminton, Soccer, Billiards, Chess, Sepak takraw, Volleyball, among others are played by young athletes from the 11 municipalities.  (a. dayao/ IDS Comval)

Thursday, May 14, 2015

The Breakdown of The Philippines


GOTCHA By Jarius Bondoc, Philippine Star Manila

Government no longer is working. Services have broken down. Neglected by the irresponsible political class, Filipinos are demoralized.

Most visibly collapsed is transportation. Metro Manila’s main commuter railway is so rundown it fields only eight three-coach trains during rush hour instead of the contracted 20. Yet the transport secretary continues since 2012 to pay the maintenance contractors, his political party mates, P67 million a month for non-work. The two other light commuter rails are falling apart too. Fares have been raised, but riders have no choice but to go on jostling for rides. To complainers the press secretary had this advice: go take the bus.

Meanwhile, the Luzon railway has been stopped after a derailment the other week caused by missing track links. So inept is the manager, the secret partner of one of the metro rail contractors, that he can’t guard his turf against scrap-metal thieves.

Drivers’ licensing has become a racket for bogus optometrists, and vehicle registration for emission testers and plate-release fixers. Land transport franchising now takes longer; time delay is the easiest source of grease money. Regulators have failed to wipe out monopolies in port handling and shipping.

Airports are decrepit. At the Manila international gateway, planes line up for hours because two runways remain unpaved to augment the existing mere two. Contents of passengers’ checked luggage are stolen at unloading, and all the general manager does is blame them for carrying valuables. Cabbies mulct passengers openly because airport cops own the taxis. Long contracted is the erection of a new passenger terminal at the international airport in Cebu. Yet the transport chief merely has refurbished the old one. All other international and domestic airports stink; overseers have not seen fit to ensure working toilets and air-cons at arrival-departure lounges.

Most felt by the poor are rising food prices. Agriculture officials continue to collude with hoarders to smuggle in veggies and depress buying prices from farmers. Thus are they able to buy cheap and sell up to 32 times higher. Forsaken more than ever are rice and coconut farmers. Department racketeers have made billions in kickbacks from overpriced rice imports and cargo handling. Yet they’ve ignored the coco scale insect infestation in Southern Tagalog because there was no money to be made from it. The secretary has failed on his promise to make the country self-sufficient in rice by 2013. So dismal is his performance that even former colleagues in Congress are asking him to resign. He refuses, on grounds that only his appointer-friend, the President, can make him do so. After which, he sets him up with another one of those blind dates.

 The Ombudsman long ago should have indicted the two secretaries. Documents and witnesses abound of their plundering. But they escape prosecution under the time-honored Philippine political tradition of “what are we in power for.”

Other basic services have vanished. Mindanao and Mindoro Occidental continue to suffer six- to 12-hour blackouts daily. Natural resources and local officials give away nickel, iron, and black sand mines to tax-evading, polluting Chinese nationals who use the metals to fashion weapons and spy systems against the Philippines. Nationwide agrarian reform should have been completed five years ago, but continues to idle along. Social welfare has gone the “Imeldific” way of hiding street children and beggars in beach resorts during major international conferences in Manila or Cebu. By the dozens, Filipinos still are dying of dengue epidemics, but health authorities hide it by trumpeting discoveries of more and more HIV-AIDS sufferers.

Captured by the very importers it regulates, Customs has become a haven of smugglers and influence peddlers. Internal revenue agents have the temerity to tell investigated taxpayers to legally pay just a third of what they owe the government, and hand over the balance under the table. Regulatory capture plagues as well the water and power sectors. That’s why water rates rise arbitrarily, and electricity in the Philippines is the costliest in Asia-Pacific. Meanwhile, the budget chief keeps busy thinking up new presidential pork barrels.

Peace and order have become mere buzzwords. Porch climbing, kidnapping for ransom, and street assassinations have become so rampant. Yet police higher-ups are preoccupied with gunrunning and kickbacks from the purchase of patrol jeeps and defective grenades. Jail wardens take commissions even from daily food allowances of detainees. Fire officers continue to sell inspection clearances along with homemade extinguishers.

Justice? There’s none when prosecutors sell cases to rich litigants, or convicts stay in VIP cottages from where they manufacture and sell methamphetamines. None when immigration agents let criminal aliens into the country for million-peso fees, and land registrars resist computerization in order to continue counterfeiting land titles.

National Defense? That term has come to mean the purchase of defective helicopters and night-vision goggles, overpriced armored personnel carriers and cannon shells, and fake bulletproof vests and helmets. And like in agriculture, they make excuses to avoid work from which no kickback can be made. Like, the foreign office has given diplomatic clearance to repave the airstrip of faraway Kalayaan municipality in the Spratlys, part of Palawan. Yet yellow defense officials say such act might provoke war with China.

Speaking of which, the government cannot even be imaginative enough to involve local officials and the citizenry in defending against Chinese invasions. It stopped an ex-Navy lieutenant in 2012 from leading a 2,000-boat flotilla of coastal dwellers to protest Beijing’s grabbing of their traditional fishing ground Bajo de Masinloc (Scarborough Shoal). It has not harnessed the 11 million overseas Filipino workers, or even just the 400,000 seafarers who man every merchant ship in the world, to denounce Beijing before their employers.

Malacañang has limited itself to “paper protests,” as an ex-senator says. The one time it thought of back channeling, it sent a pro-Beijing traitor senator, who promptly lambasted the foreign secretary and Philippine ambassadress. That enabled China to seal off Bajo de Masinloc from Filipinos.
To all this, Malacañang spokesmen can only lie about the moment. Like, one day they say that the Executive has no influence over the coequal Legislature, then the next bamboozling Congress to create a Bangsamoro sub-state or else start counting body bags.

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Sleepy Nueva Ecija Town Wakes up for Mary Jane Veloso Drama

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Organic farming is one of the means of livelihood for native folks in Talavera town in Nueva Ecija seen here in the Inquirer file photo. ARMAND GALANG/Inquirer Central Luzon
Organic farming is one of the means of livelihood for native folks in Talavera town in Nueva Ecija seen here in the Inquirer file photo. ARMAND GALANG/Inquirer Central Luzon
TALAVERA, Nueva Ecija—Whether through online searches or accounts on television and in newspapers, this sleepy town 161 kilometers north of Manila has drawn unexpected attention for the simple reason that migrant worker Mary Jane Veloso once called Esguerra village here her home.
Talavera has become part of the media landscape because it is also home to Maria Kristina Sergio and her partner, Julius Lacanilao, who are facing charges for their suspected role in sending Veloso to Malaysia in 2010, which eventually led to her arrest and conviction for smuggling heroin into Indonesia.
“We have been lending support for the cause of Mary Jane since [news about her conviction and scheduled execution emerged],” Mayor Nerivi Santos-Martinez said.
She said the local government had given relatives of Veloso financial assistance so they could travel to Manila and get support for her.
She said Veloso’s relatives also sought help from the local government when close family members, including her children, flew to Indonesia last week to be with her before her execution by firing squad.
At the municipal building here, a tarpaulin streamer announces the town’s plea to save Veloso from death row.
The streamer reads: “Save Mary Jane. The town of Talavera is praying for her deliverance.”
Unwanted attention
The town has seen how this unwanted attention has played out for Sergio and Lacanilao, who have sought police protection for fear of reprisal after news reports took them to task over Veloso’s predicament.
The two have been charged with human trafficking, illegal recruitment and fraud by the National Bureau of Investigation.
They have been ordered to appear in the Department of Justice for their preliminary investigation on May 8 and 21.
Sergio said the threats came from Veloso’s relatives.
But Imelda Magday, Veloso’s aunt, denied that the threats came from them, adding that these were most likely coming from members of an illegal drug syndicate.
“We cannot help but laugh at her statements. If indeed there are threats, these must have been coming from members of an illegal drug syndicate,” she said.
Veloso’s grandmother, Milagros Fiesta, also belied Sergio’s claims. “How can that happen? My children and other relatives are not here,” she said.
Sergio, in an earlier interview with the Inquirer, said she just helped Veloso find a job abroad, and did not set her up as a drug mule by forcing her to fly to Indonesia carrying a bag concealing illegal drugs.
Veloso became acquainted with Sergio, a native of Naga City, through Lacanilao.
Sergio, who described herself as a freelance marketing consultant for a realty company, said she helped Veloso enter Malaysia as a tourist so she could find a job after an offer in Dubai hit a snag.
Anti-Sergio rallies not allowed
Esguerra village chair Jimmy Dumaguit said life had never been the same for the community since Veloso blamed the couple for her woes.
“We have joined prayer vigils in Cabanatuan City for Veloso. However, we have not allowed anyone from holding rallies against Sergio and Lacanilao,” Dumaguit said.
“Sergio and Lacanilao are also our townmates. They have not approached us for assistance but if they need our support, we are ready to give them whatever we can,” Martinez said.
“We can’t dismiss them if they come. Let the court decide if they are guilty or not,” she said.
Dumaguit said Veloso and her parents used to own a house in the village, but they sold the property and relocated to Barangay Caudillo in Cabanatuan City.
Veloso married Michael Candelaria and they lived in a house adjacent to the home of Candelaria’s parents, he said.
Martinez said Veloso’s situation had drawn the town’s sympathy. With a report from Armand Galang, Inquirer Central Luzon


Sunday, April 26, 2015

How the Filipino Could be Proud Before the World

By: Thelma Sioson San Juan, Philippine Daily Inquirer
  
The Madrid Fusion Manila that runs until Sunday is a welcome, think-out-of-the-box idea that makes the world sit up and listen (or eat).

It’s not the run-of-the-mill promotion of Filipino cuisine, indeed of the Philippines.

“People have always asked me, ‘How do we promote Filipino cuisine?’” Tourism Secretary Ramon Jimenez told us at the Malacañang Palace grounds last Thursday, before the cocktail reception for the foreign and local chefs participating in the event.

This is the first time that this world-famous gathering is held outside of Spain.

“I’ve always said it’s the people, our chefs [who can best promote Filipino cuisine],” said Jimenez.

At sundown, guests entered the Palace grounds to the upbeat music of the Makiling Ensemble—energizing sounds emanating from traditional and ethnic instruments played by young artists (from the Philippine High School for the Arts in Makiling, Laguna, we presume) which included, we were told, Diwa de Leon, son of our good friends Anna Sarabia and NCCA head Felipe de Leon Jr.

The Diwa we last saw ages ago was a kid so we couldn’t recognize that young man with a hat on.

The music wasn’t rustic or stereotypical native. It was hip and cool—perfect for this innovative event.

The tourism secretary was as upbeat as the music. According to him, the country earned some P4 billion this year from the influx of foreign tourists.

Apart from that, however, what really gladdens his heart is how local tourism has grown by leaps and bounds—to a trillion pesos. That’s how much Filipinos are spending to travel around the country these days.

We were not surprised at all by that revelation.

Years ago, dining out became the new element in the Filipino lifestyle. But recently, the Filipino lifestyle has been marked by more and more leisure travel. Never have Filipinos been traveling so much than they do now.

It seems this travel frenzy began with the annual trips to Boracay. Next came exploring Palawan, Bohol, Cebu, on top of the weekend road trips to Tagaytay and Batangas.

Pinoys have even rediscovered Baguio more recently. The Lenten holidays the past two years in the summer capital have seen overflow crowds—and humongous traffic jams.

Filipinos are becoming more and more like Americans or even Europeans, who plan their vacations way ahead of time and make them the highlights of their year.

For instance, I have some friends who have booked their destinations for Christmas.

And many have travel plans for the long May 1 Labor Day weekend.

Whichever way you look at it, this must be a sign that Filipinos are somehow feeling secure in their own country, not the least of which is its economy.

Jimenez noted how, today, “there’s not a single province” in the country which doesn’t have tourism in its agenda. Indeed, provinces are recognizing the pivotal role tourism plays in their growth. It could be a viable revenue source, a way out of poverty.

This is why he’s proud of the fact that Filipinos themselves are becoming the No. 1 tourists in the Philippines.

But while there are those who bemoan another fact, that there are Filipinos who’d rather go on foreign trips than explore their own country, Jimenez feels that this could also be a good thing.

“The more my countrymen travel, the more sophisticated they become and learn to appreciate their country,” he explained.

Later that night in the Palace, in his brief speech, President Aquino noted why “eating is indeed more fun in the Philippines.”

He began by recalling how, at one time, before he became President, he and his aide were left to their own devices and attempted to cook—with dire results. They almost burned the soup.

That ice-breaker brought him closer to an audience not typical of Palace gatherings— consisting mainly of culinary professionals and restaurateurs, not the usual businessmen or politicians.

This must have been one of the rare occasions that a Palace event was held for the culinary arts industry.

Top Filipino chefs as well as visiting foreign chefs (“rock stars” of the era) were around. This was the eve of the series of activities of Madrid Fusion Manila, to be held the next day at SMX Convention Center.

From April 24 to 26, there would be lectures, demonstrations—and, of course, food tasting—by these culinary stalwarts, a “palate conversation” of sorts.

That Thursday night at the Palace, the “conversation” between Filipinos and their Spanish counterparts had somewhat started.

Margarita Fores, who helped Madrid Fusion Manila become a reality, prepared the cocktail buffet. By now she’s an expert in sourcing food from all over the country.

Mingling with the guests, Mr. Aquino would stop by the buffet once in a while, curious about the spread. He stood before the deck of pastillas and wondered aloud if we should explain to the guests a brief background of the sweets.

As it turned out, there was no need for that. The foreign culinary personalities feasted on the pastillas, longganisa and other native fare. No questions asked.

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Ballet Philippines' Principal Dancer Retires

ABS-CBNnews.com

Katherine Trofeo. Photo: Handout
MANILA – Katherine Trofeo, the principal dancer of Ballet Philippines (BP), is hanging up her pointe shoes.
Fondly called “Mommy Kit,” Trofeo was recently presented with roses onstage as the curtain fell on the last show of BP’s Sapphire Season. Her last role as principal dancer was the psychic vampire Gonongleda in “Manhid: The Pinoy Superhero Musical.”
Despite her retirement, Trofeo will continue to teach intermediate ballet in the BP Dance School’s Summer Dance Workshop.
“I look forward to watching the younger dancers bloom and find their own voices in our art form,” she said in a statement released by Ballet Philippines. “BP has always had this culture of excellence and passion for dance. I was very privileged to have experienced that and humbled by how the creators of the company along with past directors and ex-dancers keep giving and passing on their knowledge to the current generation.”
“I look forward to being part of that… of those who keep coming back and helping the family out,” she added.
Trofeo started taking up ballet at the age of 8 and turned professional at 15 under Enrico Labayen’s Lab Project.
She joined Ballet Philippines in 2008 and performed lead roles such as Swanilda in “Coppelia,” Marie in “The Nutcracker,” Wendy in “Peter Pan,” Maria Clara in “Crisostomo Ibarra,” Manda in “Pusong Wagas” and Sita in “Rama Hari,” among others.

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

The Top Ten Richest People in The Philippines

Things have changed since Forbes’ list of The World’s Billionaires was released in 2014. This 2015 there have been a few shakeups in the Top 10 richest people in the Philippines, and some changes in net worth. 

 
Interestingly, many of the country’s wealthiest people are self-made (including the richest man in the Philippines, Henry Sy). So if you’re determined enough and have the right business savvy, you might just find yourself on this list in the future.
 
Sy of SM Investments Corporation consolidates his status as the richest person in the Philippines for the seventh year in a row, his net worth increasing by 10 digits due to the growth of the largest Philippine retailer. Sy is also now the 73rd richest person in the world. 
 
John Gokongwei climbs to second place on the back of the strong revenue growth of JG Summit Holdings Inc.
 
The construction boom has propelled to No. 7 DMCI Holdings Inc.'s David Consunji, who is more than $1 billion richer now than he was when Forbes calculated his wealth in 2013.
 
Lucio Tan’s net worth took a hit over worries about the cigarette market. 
 
Jaime Zobel de Ayala, who ranked No. 9 in 2014 with a net worth of $3.4 billion, is a surprise exclusion from the list, but that’s because the data for his net worth this year is not yet available.

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Saturday, April 18, 2015

It's great in the Philippines


I am blessed having so many tasks in the Philippines: teaching, writing, translating, consultations and much more. 

The Spanish Influence in Building Our Nation The Philippines


It may sound ironic but there is enough evidence to show that Spain’s influence in helping build the Philippine nation has not been properly appreciated. There were evils, true but there were also good ones.
The most notable of good Spanish influences was the Spanish Cortes or Parliament of 1812 when it promulgated the Cadiz Constitution.

Filipinos were invited as delegates. The first Philippine delegates were Pedro Perez de Tagle and Jose Manuel Coretto who took their oath of office in Madrid. The Cadiz Constitution was officially implemented in Manila soon after.
According to Wikipedia, it established the principles of universal male suffragenational sovereignty,constitutional monarchy and freedom of the press, and supported land reform and free enterprise.
It also dealt with policies on Spain’s colonies including the Philippines. It issued a decree “granting all its colonies representation as provinces in the Spanish Cortes through deputies chosen by the various capital cities.” This can be said to antedate the contemporary push for a parliamentary federal system states by Bayanko for the Philippines.”
 Here is the report on what happened in  the Philippines under the Cadiz Constitution.
Opinion ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1
“Governor General Manuel Gonzales Aguilar called for an election of Manila officials which resulted in the selection of Don Ventura de los Reyes, a wealthy merchant and member of the Royal Corps of Artillery of Manila, as the deputy. The Vigan-born Don Ventura de los Reyes was a son of poor Ilocano parents. He took part in the Ilocos revolt led by Diego Silang in 1762, but later on engaged in the vegetable and indigo business. He was one of the delegates who signed the Constitution but it was only after a year that those in Manila knew about its decrees.
One of the more important creeds embodied in this constitution was the exemption of the natives from paying tributes and rendering public services based on its equality clause. The natives conviction that they should exercise their rights as established by the Cadiz Constitution, created a problem which compelled the governor of the islands to issue an edict on Feb. 8, 1814, explaining the extent of the benefits bestowed by the Constitution.
It is important to note that it was a liberal constitution which vested sovereignty in the people, recognized the equality of all mean and the individual liberty of the citizen, and granting the right of suffrage. But it also provided for a hereditary monarchy and for Catholicism as the state religion.
Not surprisingly, Filipino constitutionalists of the time were more aware of the tenets of the Cadiz Constitution. It can be said that the first attempts for a system of government for the Philippines was parliamentary federal patterned after Spain. Even then there was a partiality of parliamentary government.
It is a pity that not enough study has been made of this crucial period from Spanish to American culture. A useful resource for such studies is the cinema, especially the early struggle of Filipino film makers.
One such movie, really a telenovela is Secreto de Confesion. It was directed by Fausto Galauran and produced by Don Danon. It was written by Manuel de Amechazurria and among its stars were Armando Villa, Rosa Maria, Nita Farias and others. I am especially interested in this film because it was distributed by Parlatone Hispano Filipino with majority shares owned by my late father, Raymundo F. Navarro.  I would be grateful for any information on whatever happened to the film. It will be included in a book I am writing about my father’s role in Filipino film making. There were other stockholders, surprise, surprise among them was a Jose Cojuangco. Later, Parlatone Hispano Filipino became a major film producer and funded most of the best films directed by Jose Nepomuceno who is considered the father of Philippine Movies.
“Secreto de Confesión was the first Filipino film in the Spanish language, which was presented at the time as “la primera película hablada y cantada en español producida en Filipinas” (the first film spoken and sung in Spanish in the Philippines)” according to Wikipedia.
Parlatone Hispano Filipino did a good job of distributing Secreto de Confesión worldwide. It was a box office hit in the United States, Cuba, Puerto Rico, and several other Spanish speaking countries in the American continent. It was also shown in Macau, Hong Kong, Spain and Portugal.
Other Filipino films in Spanish soon followed the success of Secreto de Confesion. Among them wereLas Dulces MestizasMuñecas de Manila or El Milagro del Nazareno de Quiapo. According to Wikipedia, these later telenovelas  “had an even greater success at the box office, and started to create international distribution channels for the Philippine film industry spoken in Spanish.”
Unfortunately, copies of the film were lost or destroyed during the US bombing of Manila. There are only copies of five pre-war Filipino movies, none of them in Spanish. (CNP: Again I would be grateful for any reader of this column to come forward with information on this films.)
A Tagalog version, produced years later, was screened after the end of World War II in 1945 in major cities throughout the Philippine archipelago, but with very limited box office success.
Guillermo Gómez Rivera, Spanish-speaking Filipino writer and academic, director of the prestigiousAcademia Filipina de la Lengua Española (Philippine Academy of the Spanish Language), worked to recover this film in the memory of the Filipino film industry.” (Wikipedia)
According to cinema historians, the cinema of the Philippines (Filipino: Pelikulang Pilipino or Sine Pilipino) began with the introduction of the first moving pictures to the country on January 1, 1897 at the Salón de Pertierra in Manila.
The following year, local scenes were shot on film for the first time by a Spaniard, Antonio Ramos, using the Lumiere Cinematograph. Early filmmakers and producers in the country were mostly wealthy enterprising foreigners and expatriates.
 But on Sept. 12, 1919, a silent feature film broke the grounds for Filipino filmmakers. Dalagang Bukid (Country Maiden), a movie based on a popular musical play, was the first movie made and shown by Filipino filmmaker José Nepomuceno who later made other films for Parlatone Hispano Filipino.
The formative years of Philippine cinema, started from the 1930s. “Scripts and characterizations in filmscame from popular theatre and familiar local literature. Nationalistic films were also quite popular, although they were labeled as being too subversive.” There is much to learn of our history from films of those days.

Thursday, April 16, 2015

Cebu City's Water Source is Drying Up

A barangay in Cebu City may have to double efforts to conserve water after one of its water sources is drying up due to the hot weather.


Four sitios of Barangay Busay have been experiencing water supply problems, GMA Cebu's Vic Serna reported Tuesday.

Worse, water rations from the City Hall have not been very frequent since the water source in Sitio Lower in Barangay Busay dried up as early as March.

Also affected by the water shortage are animals and even vegetables and flowers.

Private water truck owner Crispin Prantar has increased the prices of his water delivery service due to the short supply.

Prantar now sells water at P7 per container – more than double the P3 when the city's Department of Public Services was regularly delivering water.

The barangay is now considering acquiring a submersible pump to use in Sitio Garaje, to supply the affected residents with water.

For now, the residents may have to depend on Prantar's water truck delivery for their supply.

Dams drying up

Elsewhere in Cebu, GMA Cebu's Mark Anthony Bautista reported dams at the Jaclupan water facility in Talisay City have been drying up as well.

This has affected residents of Sitio Tabok-Sapa in Barangay Jaclupan as three of four water lines had gone dry.

Water pressure had also weakened for the other water lines, while the river in Barangay Jaclupan has started to dry up.

"Apektado talaga kami dahil sa init, wala na ngang tubig ang ilog kaya ngayon nagba-budget kami para makagamit rin ang iba," said resident Renato Elnace.

But some who set up water refilling stations are seeing brisk business.

"Opo lalo ngayong tag-init," said Lilia Elegin, when asked if her water refilling business had picked up.

The Metropolitan Cebu Water District said the water it produced had gone down from 42,000 to 21,000 cubic meters due to the drying of its basin.

Eight of 15 water pumps at the Jaclupan water facility are working.

"We cannot assure there will be convenience but there will be water to drink," said Engineer Lasaro Salvacion, MCWD acting assistant general for operation.

However, MCWD assured there will still be enough water supply as it gets 18,000 cubic meters from Carmen town.

"We are doing our best. We also need cooperation of our customers during this El Niño that (may) last up to October. The best way is to save water," said Salvacion.

 — Joel Locsin/LBG, GMA News