Sun.Star Baguio

Fest of Trade Fairs

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This Ikarao son is fortunate to be assigned to mingle with the business sector as it is the nature of his work in the government. And one of his core functions is the promotion and marketing of products and services most especially the micro, small and medium enterprise­s.

Trade shows and exhibition­s are a good way of promoting individual and collective businesses. These give chance to businesses to meet with other players of the industry which develops the process of learning. These activities open the window for the sector to improve their products and services at the same time to increase their marketabil­ity.

For this month until December, government agencies and private individual­s scheduled trade fairs/exhibits that you might want to visit. This is your chance to look for your gifts this coming holiday season at reasonable prices.

The Adivay Festival always include a Trade fair to promote local products of Benguet. This year, the trade fair, located at Wangal, opened last November 19 which will end on December 3. Also on November 22, one activity during the festival is the MSME Summit which will be held at the Ben Palispis Hall, Benguet Capitol.

Meanwhile, the Department of Trade and Industry is bringing the best products of the Cordillera­s to Carousel Court, Festival Mall Alabang, Muntinlupa City on November 23-December 2. The displays will include organic and natural products, fresh and processed food, wearables, coffee and cacao, bamboo crafts, furniture and fixtures and woodcrafts.

The DTI’s activity entitled IMPAKABSAT is a yearly regional trade of the Cordillera. The activity will showcase the handcrafte­d upland products from the six provinces of CAR including Baguio City and Tabuk City. IMPAKABSAT literally means sibling-like relationsh­ip and it’s coined from the initial of the six provinces completed

IAM already 71 and according to the Re vised Penal Code, you have to be released once you reach the age of 70. After the end of my term, I will be 77. Where will they place me?”

— President Duterte

When the Supreme Court in August 2015 granted bail to then senator Juan Ponce Enrile, it even thrashed the Sandiganba­yan for earlier rejecting his request twice. The antigraft court, the SC said, “arbitraril­y ignored” the purpose of bail: to guarantee Enrile’s appearance in court. It also “unwarrante­dly disregarde­d the clear showing of fragile health and advance age” of the senator.

Enrile was then 91 and, according to his doctor, suffering from chronic hypertensi­on with “fluctuatin­g blood pressure levels, diffuse atheroscle­rotic cardiovasc­ular disease, irregular heartbeat, asthma-COPD overlap syndrome.” He’ll be 95 next Feb. 14, three months before next year’s elections. Different treatment

The high court flogged the decision of the trial court which must have considered that the senator, accused of plunder in connection with the P172 million stolen from his pork barrel, should not be treated differentl­y than ordinary citizens accused of a crime, such as a 79-year-old man who stole P36 worth of chocolates and a 94-year-old woman who was arrested for killing an allegedly abusive husband.

Last Friday (Nov. 16), the Sandiganba­yan fixed the bail of Rep. Imelda Romualdez-Marcos, former First Lady and Manila governor and human settlement­s minister during the martial law regime of Ferdinand Marcos. A furor had erupted over whether she should not be arrested when she did not appear last Nov. 9, the day the anti-graft court convicted her of seven counts of corruption for salting away US$200 million in Swiss banks. Bail for Imelda

The Sandiganba­yan didn’t cancel her bail and set it at P150,000 during pendency of her appeal. At 89 and with seven ailments listed by her doctor, she will run for Ilocos Norte governor next year while her daughter Gov. Imee will join the Senate race even as her son Bongbong continues to wait in the wings to take over as vice president when or if he wins his election protest against Vice President Leni Robredo.

Old age and ill health must have been considered by Sandiganba­yan this time, what with the SC scolding that it got in the Enrile case. Apparently, old age combined with poor health – but with extreme wealth, at least in the cases of Enrile and Imelda Maros — seem to benefit the accused.

Sense of impunity

The thought that old age could protect a public official if he is charged criminally in the future might lead to a sense of impunity. Gideon Lasco, writing in Inq.net last Nov. 15, referred to it as “impunity from senility.”

President Duterte must already be thinking about it, given the number of enemies who are expected to hound him after he steps down from Malacañang. He said that at 77 when his term expires, where would they place him? The Revised Penal Code he cited provides that age is a “mitigating circumstan­ce”; meaning, it may reduce the penalty. Capital punishment is no longer in the statute books; the benefit is no longer relevant. But the over70 convict is not automatica­lly released. Cry for ‘lock ‘em up’

This is not to banish compassion for the elderly who is punished for violating the law. People wouldn’t call for a just penalty against a convicted public official who already owned up the crime and atoned for sins against the nation.

The call for the equivalent of blood against public officials like Imelda and Enrile could be that they never admitted wrongdoing. Seeing them up and about, waving their COCs for the next elections, must have prompted the cry of “Lock ‘em up” from worried citizens. with ‘kabsat’ at the last part which is an Ilokano word for brother or sister.

Lastly, as part of the Municipal Yuletide Season Calendar, KEKKAN: A taste of La Trinidad is being organized by Gawis Enterprise­s. The activity will feature local foods, arts and music which will be held on December 12-16 at the La Trinidad parking lot in KM5. On-the-spot skills competitio­ns will be a part of the celebratio­n.

This year, La Trinidad implemente­d at least four local trade fairs that created good partnershi­p between the actors of the industry including line agencies. members. Be open-minded. Magpakatot­oo kayo, tayo! Oh, dba? Practice lang ang mga statement na 'yan para sa future speech ko hohoho .....

Mabuhay and responsabl­eng industriya ng pagmimina sa Pilipinas. PUSO! (at utak, dba Jonathan?).

"The worst distance between two people is misunderst­anding."

"More people would learn from their mistakes if they weren't so busy denying them."

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