My travel qoates

My travel qoates
travel addict

Monday, December 11, 2017

LPA spotted off Mindanao

By Lily Ramos 

MANILA -- The weather bureau is monitoring a low pressure area (LPA) estimated 450 kilometers east of Surigao City, Surigao del Norte.

According to the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services' (PAGASA) 24-hour weather forecast, the LPA is expected to bring scattered to widespread rainshowers and thunderstorms over the Bicol Region, Eastern Visayas, Quezon Province, Cavite, Laguna, Batangas and Rizal.

Meanwhile, the tail end of a cold front is affecting the eastern section of southern Luzon while the amihan or northeast monsoon prevails in northern and central Luzon.

Rains from the LPA and cold front may trigger floods in Mindanao, MIMAROPA and the rest of the Visayas.


The northeast monsoon will bring light rains over Metro Manila, Cagayan Valley, Cordillera, Ilocos and Central Luzon regions. (PNA

Sunday, December 10, 2017

Lawmen pursue BIFF for harassing police, Marine posts in Maguindanao

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Big waves temporarily halt Underground River tours

By Celeste Anna Formoso  

PUERTO PRINCESA CITY, Palawan – More than 900 foreign and domestic tourists were temporarily prevented Saturday morning from entering the Puerto Princesa Underground River (PPUR) cavern in Sabang, Cabayugan due to big waves.

Jan Elmer Badilla, spokesperson and staff of the Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park (PPSRNP) World Herigate Site, said they are provisionally stopping all tours to the famous underground river following advise from the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG).

“The PPUR tours today are cancelled due to big waves. But guests can still explore the park through the jungle trail, which is open,” Badilla said.

He said they are ready to resume paddle boat tours inside the underground river if the strength of the waves has relegated.

According to the UNESCO, the PPUR features a spectacular limestone karst landscape with an underground river.

One of the river's distinguishing features is that it emerges directly into the sea, and its lower portion is subject to tidal influences.

The area also represents a significant habitat for biodiversity conservation. The site contains a full 'mountain-to-sea' ecosystem and has some of the most important forests in Asia. (PNA)


Friday, December 8, 2017

DOTr, housing agencies agree to move 100K families along PNR

 By Aerol John Pateña 


MANILA -- The Department of Transportation (DOTr) has inked an agreement with concerned housing agencies on the relocation of around 100,000 informal settler families (ISFs) that will be affected by the construction of the North-South Railway Project (NSRP) next year.

Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade and officials of the Philippine National Railways (PNR) signed the Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) Friday with Presidential Commission on Urban Poor Chairperson, James Mark Terry Ridon; National Housing Authority General Manager Marcelino Escalada Jr.; Social Housing Finance Corporation president Arnolfo Ricardo Cabling; and Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council Chairman Eduardo del Rosario.

The MOA will enable government agencies to provide affordable housing assistance for ISFs that will be relocated due to the construction of the railway project.

“Talaga pong kinakailangang ma-relocate ang ating mga kababayan na nakatira malapit sa riles, para sa kanilang kaligtasan (We really need to relocate the informal settlers living near the railways for their safety),” PNR Chairman Roberto Lastimoso said.

“Ang MOA signing po na ito ay isang patunay na ang mga ahensya ng pamahalaan ay nagtutulung-tulong para sa pagsasakatuparan ng mga pangako ng administrasyon (This MOA signing is a proof that the government agencies are united in fulfilling the promise of the administration), Tugade said.

For his part, Cabiling said, “We assure you that the houses that we will provide for the affected ISFs are livable, affordable, and inclusive.”

NSRP, also known as the PNR South Long Haul, is a 653-kilometer railway project that will run from Manila to Batangas, Laguna, Bicol, and Sorsogon.

The rail line is expected to reduce travel time from Manila to Laguna from two and a half hours to 45 minutes, while travel time from Manila to the Bicol region will be cut in half from 12 hours to 6 hours.

Construction of the PNR South Long Haul is set to start in 2018 and the railway is expected to be operational by the second quarter of 2022.

The railroad's Commuter Line segment will start from Solis-Hermosa in Manila to Los Baños, Laguna.


Meanwhile, the Long Haul segment will start from Los Banos and will run through Batangas, Quezon, and the Bicol provinces of Camarines Sur and Albay to Sorsogon. (PNA)

Wednesday, December 6, 2017

LTO to start issuing license plates in March 2018

By Aerol John Pateña 

MANILA -- The Land Transportation Office (LTO) will start issuing license plates by March next year, assuring motorists it will proceed with the procurement in accordance with the law.

In a statement Thursday, the LTO said it has issued a notice of award to the winning bidder in the procurement of license plates worth PHP978.8 million last December 1.

The winning bidder Trojan Computer Forms Manufacturing Corporation and J.H. Tonnjes E.A.S.T. GmbH & Co. KG Joint Venture will provide the performance security with the initial delivery of license plates scheduled sometime in March 2018.

“The LTO assures the public that the agency is doing the best it can, in compliance with existing laws and regulations, to deliver the license plates,” LTO chief and Department of Transportation Assistant Secretary Edgar Galvante said in a statement.

The delay in the issuance of license plates was caused by the temporary restraining order of the Supreme Court (SC) in June 2016 preventing the LTO and then Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC)  from distributing 700,000 license plates turned over by the Bureau of Customs after the plates' supplier-importer failed to pay the required customs duties.

The 2013 procurement of motor vehicle (MV)/ motorcycle (MC) plates, which covers the supply of license plates from ‎2014-2018, was questioned before the courts and the Commission on Audit which remains pending to date.

“Thus, when the present administration came in July 2016, there was no budget allocation for procurement of license plates for 2016, 2017 and 2018. Unconvinced that the procurement of license plates is dependent on the resolution of the cases involving the previous procurement, Asec. Galvante then requested for additional funds to be included in the LTO’s 2017 budget in the amount of PHP 400 million in order to proceed with the procurement of license plates,” the LTO said.

Department of Transportation (DOTr) Secretary Arthur Tugade approved the request and allocated PHP1 billion from the department’s budget for LTO’s procurement of license plates in November last year.


House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez on Wednesday urged Galvante to resign over the agency's failure to release new license plates with an estimated backlog reaching 6 million. (PNA)

Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Survey shows Japanese women too busy to fall in love

TOKYO -- Some 60 percent of eligible women in Japan are reluctant to start a love relationship due to the growing burden at work, The Japan Times reported Saturday citing a survey at cocoloni.jp, an online dating advice service.

As women today are facing the same workload as men in Japan, the ensuing fatigue has made women more willing to lounge on a sofa and watch soap operas after work instead of going to dates, said the report.

Office love is no longer alluring and blind dates are even regarded as stressful and tedious which seldom bring satisfying results. One in four women admits having fallen asleep on a date due to tiredness caused by work, according to the survey.

Another online dating site Lovely Media says a growing number of women are quitting random dates because they think it's a "waste of time." Instead, they make pregnancy their ultimate goal, thus turning to matchmaking routes for seeking an ideal husband.

Back in the 1980s, over 60 percent of young people in their 20s in Japan were in a relationship, while today this group is in the minority, The Japan Times said.


Shorter working hours, guaranteed maternity and paternity leaves, and a less forbidding atmosphere will go a long way in getting women to think about love," it concluded. (Xinhua)

DOTr, DPWH opens TPLEX Binalonan-Pozzorubio segment

By Aerol John Pateña  

MANILA -- The Department of Transportation (DOTr) and the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) opened on Wednesday a segment of the Tarlac-Pangasinan-La Union Expressway (TPLEX) stretching from Binalonan to Pozzorubio, both in Pangasinan which will ensure ease of travel in the northern Luzon.

This as the Toll Regulatory Board (TRB) has granted a Toll Operation Permit (TOP) to the Philippine Infrastructure Development Corporation (PIDC) for the maintenance and operation of the new segment of the expressway last November 29.

“The TOP was issued after a joint inspection conducted by the DPWH, TRB Technical Staff, and representatives of PIDC, who confirmed that the particular portion of TPLEX is substantially complete and is safe to be operated commercially,” the DOTr said in a statement Wednesday.

The DPWH and representatives from DOTr and PIDC opened the 10.10-km TPLEX Segment 7, Section 3A-2 which stretches from Binalonan to Pozorrubio, Pangasinan.

This is the second to the last portion of the TPLEX project that would be constructed by PIDC. Segment 7, Section 3A-1 of TPLEX officially opened last July 28, 2016

DPWH Secretary Mark Villar said in an earlier statement that the additional 10 kilometer segment would ease traffic and significantly reduce travel time from Tarlac to Pozorrubio from two and a half hours to just 45 minutes.

The completion of the new segment will make TPLEX a 78.39-km expressway connecting provinces of Tarlac and Pangasinan.
Its last section, the 10.92-km Pozorrubio, Pangasinan to Rosario, La Union segment is set for completion in June 2019.

Upon full completion, TPLEX would be able to reduce travel time from Tarlac to Rosario, La Union from 3.5 hours to just an hour benefiting an average of 20,000 vehicles per day. (PNA)


Saturday, December 2, 2017

Thousands of Civil Engineer's attended the 43rd PICE convention in MOA.


Manila - Hundreds of  calibrated Civil Engineers coming from  the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao who attended the 43rd PICE Convention held in MOA Convention Center last Novemebr 28 - 30, 2017.

These engineer's who works 24/7 everyday in order to support the program of the President Rodrigo Roa Duterte about  "Build,  Build, Build program" in order to enhance the living condition of the people here. (By: Becky D. de Asis/Redline News Philippines)

Steven Seagul visit troops in Sulu


Feature: Illegal drugs and their ill-effects

 By Juzel Danganan 

MANILA -- What's with drugs that make the world so deeply concerned about people using them? In the Philippines alone, an estimated four to seven million of its 104 million population are said to be using prohibited drugs.

As a campaign promise, President Rodrigo Duterte has made the crackdown on illegal drugs a centerpiece of his administration -- for which he has been chastised from all fronts, in and out of the country.

Drug addiction, no doubt, has severely affected society, cutting across all socio-economic echelons and demographics. No one can deny that drug addiction is a societal menace, resulting in countless crimes, financial problems, and broken relationships, both with families and friends.

Here’s a glimpse of what the common prohibited drugs are and how they affect the body and mind.

According to a primer of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) posted on its website, drugs are chemical substances that affect the normal functioning of the body, either physically and/or psychologically.

Not all drugs are illegal, it says. The caffeine in coffee, the nicotine in cigarettes, and alcohol are technically legal drugs. Medicines are pharmaceutical drugs used to treat or prevent illnesses. They are legal, although they could also be abused.

The ones people should totally shun are the illegal drugs because they alter a person’s mood, thinking, and behavior.
All illegal drugs have immediate physical effects, and they also hinder psychological and emotional development, especially among young people, says the UNODC.

Drugs cloud a user’s judgment, making him/her take more risks, for instance having unsafe sex that could lead one to contract sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV/AIDS.

The effects of illegal drugs do not last long. When they wear off, a user gets depressed, lonely and sick, appears confused, sweats a lot, has red eyes, and neglects his/her physical appearance. Then comes the irrational craving.

The following are the most common prohibited drugs and how they affect their users:

Methamphetamine
Methamphetamine, a.k.a. Shabu, also goes by the names Crack meth, Ice, Crystal meth, Tik, and Yaba.

Methamphetamine belongs to a group of drugs called amphetamine-type stimulants. Like ecstasy, it is manufactured in illegal laboratories and sold in powder, tablet or crystal form. It could be swallowed, sniffed, smoked or injected. 

The UNODC says meth produces a feeling of physical and mental wellbeing, euphoria, and exhilaration. Users experience a temporary boost in energy, often perceived to improve their performance of manual or mental tasks, along with delayed hunger and fatigue. At times, they become more aggressive and violent.

Over the short term, users tend to lose their appetite, start to breathe faster, and sweat due to increased heart rate, blood pressure, and body temperature.

Taking in large doses would make users feel restless and irritable and could induce panic attacks. Taking in excessive doses could result in convulsions, seizures, and death from respiratory failure, stroke or heart failure.

Long-term use could also lead to malnutrition, weight loss, and psychological dependence.

Stopping its use results in a long period of sleep, followed by depression.

Ecstasy
Ecstasy goes around by the names E, Snackies and New Yorkers. The drug, usually made in illegal laboratories, consists of a range of substances that make it dangerous to consume. It comes in the form of tablet, powder or capsule and is usually swallowed, but could also be snorted or injected.

Ecstasy increases users’ empathy levels and induces a feeling of closeness to people around them. It makes them feel more sociable and energetic. Short-term use of ecstasy prompts the body to ignore distress signals such as dehydration, dizziness, and exhaustion, and interferes with the body's ability to regulate temperature. It could also severely damage the liver and kidneys and could cause convulsions and heart failure.

In large doses, ecstasy could cause restlessness, anxiety and severe hallucinations. Long-term use damages certain parts of the brain, bringing about serious depression and memory loss.

Cannabis
Cannabis is known by many names -- Bongo, Ganja, Grass, Pot or Thai sticks. Its most famous name, however, is Marijuana, or Mary Jane.

Cannabis, a tobacco-like greenish or brownish substance made of dried flowering tops and leaves of the cannabis plant, is usually smoked, but its resin and oil could also be swallowed or brewed in tea.

According to the UNODC, cannabis smoke contains 50 percent more tar than high-tar cigarettes, putting users at an increased risk of lung cancer and other respiratory diseases.

After taking cannabis, users feel relaxed and sometimes euphoric, with an intensified sense of sight, smell, taste, and hearing.

Short-term use makes them experience increased appetite and pulse rate, and an impaired ability to perform physical and mental tasks, such as driving a car and thinking logically.

With large doses, users’ thinking slows down and they become confused and have bouts of anxiety, panic, and psychotic episodes.

The UNODC said that regular users of cannabis run the risk of developing psychological dependence to the point that they lose interest in all other activities, such as work and personal relationships.

Cocaine
Cocaine is known as Crack, Bazooka, Blanche, Cake, Coke or Lady. It is a fine white or off-white powder extracted from the leaves of the coca plant.

The UNODC said that on the street, cocaine is diluted with other substances, such as ammonia or sodium bicarbonate (baking soda), to increase its quantity and produce crack.

Cocaine is usually sniffed or injected, while crack is usually smoked. After snorting cocaine, users feel exhilarated and euphoric, leading to increased energy levels and alertness, along with delayed hunger and fatigue.

Short-term use results in loss of appetite, faster breathing, increased body temperature and heart rate. Users may act strangely, erratically and at times violently.

Ingesting large doses of cocaine could cause convulsions, seizures, stroke, cerebral hemorrhage or heart failure. Long-term use of cocaine damages the nose tissue and leads to respiratory problems, abscesses, and infectious diseases.

Other risks include strong psychological dependence, malnutrition, weight loss, disorientation, apathy and a state similar to paranoid psychosis.  Mixing cocaine with alcohol is dangerous and could lead to sudden death.


Heroin
Heroin is also called Smack, H, Horse, Junk, Harry and White Lady. Heroin is a painkiller processed from morphine, which comes from the opium poppy plant.

Pure heroin is a white powder, but street heroin is brownish white. This highly addictive drug is usually injected, but could also be snorted, smoked or inhaled.

Heroin could relieve tension, anxiety, and depression, including physical distress or pain.

According to the UNODC, its short-term effects include constricted pupils, nausea, vomiting, drowsiness, inability to concentrate and apathy.
Long-term effects, meanwhile, include severe weight loss, malnutrition, constipation, menstrual irregularity, sedation and chronic apathy. Users could develop a tolerance for the drug, making them ingest more to achieve the effect they want.

Overdosing on heroin could lead to coma and death through respiratory depression. Abruptly quitting heroin leads to severe withdrawal symptoms, such as cramps, diarrhea, tremors, panic, runny nose, chills, and sweats.

LSD
Also known as Acid or Hippie, LSD is a semi-synthetic drug made from lysergic acid, which is found in a fungus that grows on rye and other grains.

Dealers often sell it in squares of blotting paper with drops containing the drug, but also in the form of tablets, capsules, and liquid. The colorless and odorless drug is often swallowed and has a slightly bitter taste.

According to the UNODC, LSD use leads to strong changes in thought, mood, and senses, along with feelings of empathy and sociability. Its exact effects, however, vary, depending on the mental state of the user and the environment when taking the drug.


Over the short term, users experience delusions and distorted perceptions in terms of time and color, severe and terrifying thoughts and feelings, such as fear of losing control, insanity, death, and despair.  Users manifest dilated pupils, increased heart rate and blood pressure, dry mouth and tremors. They lack appetite and are sleepless. (PNA)

PH, Spain partner for sustainable tourism in Intramuros

By Joyce Ann L. Rocamora  

MANILA -- The Spanish government in collaboration with the Philippines revealed efforts to integrate the human resources in Intramuros to make activities within the so-called walled city more sustainable and attractive to tourists.

"In Spain, a country of tourism, we have almost 50 sites that are declared world heritage by the UNESCO, we know that in urban centers like Intramuros, urban historical sites made out of streets, people live in and work inside," Guillermo Escribano, first secretary of Spain Embassy in Manila said.

"You're not taking all of these people out of historical sites as if it were a museum," he explained. "You have to integrate them to take advantage of their presence in order to make this attractive. What we're talking about here, preserving human heritage."

In an interview, he said Rolling Manila, a project to redesign food carts and stalls in Intramuros, is a "special methodology" that aims to promote a "sustainable" integration of livelihood and tourism.

Escribano said the vendors are part of the microcosm of Intramuros. "It is of course much better if the tourists see that the place where food is being cooked are in very good shape and condition and under hygienic conditions."

Cora Linsangan, the first beneficiary and owner of the prototype Rolling Manila food stall said the initiave indeed came in as a "big help".

"Malaking tulong, dahil sira-sira na yung dati naming kariton, magandang move para rin mas ma-attract lalo yung mga turista [This is a big help to us... our old cart is dilapidated. This is a good move to attract tourists]," she said.

Escribano said the next step now is for Philippine institutions and the government to take decisions whether the "methodology" and its outcome can be replicated or not.

Maria Rita Matute, executive director of the Design Center of the Philippines, said the concept is to cash in on the food culture in Manila.

Together with Intramuros Administration and ZOOHAUS, a platform for networking that combines interests of different agents linked to architecture and urban planning, the three agencies aimed to "uplift" the Filipino street food vendors collective as well as reflect a gastronomic culture that is distinctively Filipino.

"This is still a prototype but the target of the Intramuros Administration is (to roll out) by first quarter of next year," Matute said.

Data by the Embassy of Spain in the Philippines show that the vendors, whether or not officially registered as such, "represent a unique collective composed mainly of women (69%) with years of experience (50 to 60 years of age) that manages a homey modus vivendi, more often stationary than itinerant."

"Despite being a living treasure of the other side of Manila, the real one or the one that is not mentioned in tourist guides, like in other capitals in the world – belittled," it said. (PNA)