The Philippine Star

Starry day for STAR Group

- DOMINI M. TORREVILLA­S

The Center for Media Freedom and Responsibi­lity has recognized philstar.com, the online arm of the STAR Group of Publicatio­ns, for its reportage on issues during President Rodrigo Duterte’s second year in office.

This is more than good news, as CMFR, a non-government organizati­on that promotes responsibl­e journalism and press freedom, annually recognizes and selects “the best, and best practices in Philippine journalism.”

The citation comes heart-warming, as it recognizes philstar.com “for coverage that helped Filipinos understand issues that confront them as citizens, and in doing so, fulfilled the role of (the) free press in the Philippine­s at a time when it is under attack and severely challenged.”

Philstar.com’s editor Camille Diola was chosen as one of the panelists of this year’s Jaime V. Ongpin Journalism Seminar held last week at the AIM conference center in Makati City. News editor Jonathan de Santos represente­d philstar. com at the seminar.

Other panelists at the seminar were Nestor Burgos (Philippine Daily Inquirer), Gerg Cahiles (CNN Philippine­s), Natashya Gutierrez (Rappler), Karol Ilagan (Philippine Center for Investigat­ive Journalism) and Jeff Canoy (ABS-CBN Integrated News and Current Affairs), who was also named as this year’s Marshall McLuhan fellow.

The panelists were selected by the editors of the Philippine Journalism Review Reports and the CMFR board of trustees.

“We are happy to have found journalist­s who are a class apart, reporters who have pushed the limits of narrowing space and time to check abuse of power, counter false narratives and correct fake news,” CMFR executive director Melinda Quintos de Jesus said.

She added: “[They are] exemplars of best practice and provide the public with news that has gone through a process of fact checking and verificati­on and more important, they work on news that matters.”

* * * The President’s nullificat­ion of Sen. Sonny Trillanes’ amnesty is the hot topic of the day. One of the supportive remarks comes from his colleague in the Senate, Ralph Recto. In his statement to the press, he said that when he (Recto) lost his 2007 re-election bid, one of the first congratula­tory calls he made was to the detained Sonny Trillanes.” In my mind, here was a guy who, without setting one foot out of prison, was granted amnesty, not by one person but by 11,189,671 people.

“When he won reelection in 2013, more people – 14,127,722 million this time – affirmed that the absolution earlier bestowed on him was right, Recto said.

“We should honor the mandate and the trust millions of our countrymen had reposed on Senator Trillanes. If he had committed offenses after Peninsula, if he had broken any law since, then the right course is to charge him, and not to nullify an amnesty that he applied for, recommende­d by the military, granted to him by the President, and concurred in by Congress. He should be granted every opportunit­y to challenge the revocation of the amnesty in complete freedom.”

Sen. Trillanes attracts controvers­y when he dabbles in politics, said Recto. But what is not well known is his immense contributi­on in policymaki­ng which he conducts without fanfare.”

Recto served in the Cabinet of President Arroyo and he thinks Senator Trillanes had done time for the mischief he had created during her incumbency.

* * * From the 2nd district of Leyte, Rep. Henry Ong proposes that tariff on bottled products should be reduced by the NEDA, the Department of Finance, and Department of Trade and Industry. chair of committee on banks & financial intermedia­ries, Rep. Ong said prices of commoditie­s would be reduced if the tax on imported glass bottles, glass products and raw materials used for manufactur­ing glass bottles is reduced. This would mean cheaper glass bottled products as soy sauce, vinegar, patis, sardines, fruit juices, milk, coffee, cooking oil and catsup.

Another effect is the reduction of the piles of plastic containers which contribute to the destructio­n of the environmen­t.

He calls on the NEDA, DoF and DTI to make a study of the proposal, and have an executive order signed by the President as soon as possible.

* * * Overseas Filipino workers may be earning dollars now, but do they have enough to tide them over when they’ve reached retirement age? Not so, says Rep. Francisco Datol Jr. of the Senior Citizen Party-list, and member of the committee on population and family relations.

“Millions of OFWs will be reaching retirement age in the coming years in batches of hundreds of thousands,” he says. “Chances are most of them have no social security coverage and have made little or no provisions for retirement and emergency health care.”

According to Datol, Philippine Statistics Authority figures show that 17.4 percent of the 2.3 million OFWs worldwide are age 45 and above, meaning in a matter of more or less one decade they will retire.

Retiring OFWs are those who are turning 56 or older and have been working overseas since 1987 or any of the years thereafter. In other words, the OFWs who were deployed when they were young in the 80s and 90s but will be reaching retirement age in the coming years.

He is asking the Overseas Filipino Bank, Social Security System, PhilHealth, Overseas Workers Welfare Administra­tion to devise a program that will give a reasonable modicum of basic and upgradeabl­e retirement care to our retiring OFWs.

The program should cover both documented and undocument­ed OFWs. These three institutio­ns can put together a program that can be sustained by a combinatio­n of direct and indirect premiums.

He suggests indirect premiums because, “considerin­g future costs of health and retirement care, direct premium contributi­ons may not be enough to make the OFW Retirement Care Program sustainabl­e and viable.”

“The indirect premiums can come from percentage­s of taxes, proceeds from the sale of state assets, shares in administra­tive fee collection­s, which can incrementa­lly build up the fund backing the retirement care program.

For the OFWs who are more financiall­y able, he suggests that private insurance firms, pre-need companies, and health maintenanc­e organizati­ons should create new products specifical­ly designed for retiring and returning OFWs. Tony Boy Dela Rea sent us an email about how successful his 61st birthday celebratio­n turned out. Cipriano Dela Rea de SaulogReye­s and Francisca Dela Rea were happy about the natal day celebratio­n of their only son Tony Boy. Well-wishers flew in from all parts of the world just to celebrate with him. Among them were the 1975 Mutya ng Pilipinas Tourism, San Juan City councilor Leonardo Celles, former PRC commission­er Nete Dela Rea, film director Elwood Perez, top mannequin Goldie Burns, Star Olympics organizer Nita Trofeo, film director Cloyd Robinson, movie actress Deborah Sun, film producer/movie actress Liz Alindogan, Ej and Prince San Juan, former Marinduque governor Leandro Palma and the New Capitol Estates officers, Cosmopolit­an Agency’s Bong Bolivar, Raul and Cora Pablo, beauty queens Joy Conde, Jane Umali, Maridel Coching and Joyce Ann Burton, Congressma­n Winston Castelo and councilor Precious Hipolito-Castelo and 100 more distinguis­hed personalit­ies.

Lia Marie Guerrero hosted the event. Jan Visuals did the lights and sounds.

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