School teaches love for environment

By Ephraim Aguilar
Southern Luzon Bureau
Last updated 07:05am (Mla time) 05/31/2007

DARAGA, Albay – Painted white and surrounded by lush scenery, the four-story school building portrays the environmental cause it has been pushing for for 27 years now.

 

At the Sunshine International School in Daraga, Albay, children are taught to be good stewards of the earth.

 

School founder and director, Dr. Ofelia Mesias-Peralta, has entwined two of her passions—nurturing the environment and teaching children—in one enterprise. Having a green thumb herself, she says she simply passes on her love for the environment to the pupils.

 

Pieces of garbage are segregated according to their type—biodegradable, nonbiodegradable, or tin cans. A no-littering policy is strictly implemented.

 

This solid waste management system is taught to the children, like the kindergarten game of grouping similar and dissimilar objects. The non-biodegradable trash are recycled while the biodegradable ones, like dried leaves, are turned into organic fertilizer to be used in the school’s botanical garden.

 

Unlike almost all other private schools, Sunshine, the first homegrown international school in Bicol, does not hire janitors. The students themselves do the cleaning.

 

“We want to inculcate on these children the love of work and the value of discipline and independence,” says Peralta, who is popularly called Teacher Ofel by her students.

 

The school values, she says, are explained to the students’ parents, who are also encouraged to partner with the teachers in imparting these values.

 

Long before there were suggestions to incorporate climate change education into the Philippine school curriculum, Sunshine had already been teaching its students to plant trees as a simple and practical means of solving environmental ills.

 

The school, which is inside a subdivision in Daraga town, is far from the vexations of city life. One can smell the breeze there without choking from car exhausts. Chirping birds can be heard from the trees, which students and parents planted 10 years ago at a nearby block.

 

In 1997, the students, their parents and the school faculty lined up yellow bells and pili trees along the Magayon Drive, a road leading to the Legazpi City airport from the school gymnasium.

 

Until now, the plants are still there and motorists can enjoy a view of the blooming yellow bells, now that the plants have recovered from the many typhoons that ravaged Bicol last year.

 

Botanical garden

 

The school won the Saringaya Award from the Department of Environment and Natural Resources in 2004 for its advocacy of environmental preservation and conservation.

 

It was also given the Gawad Agkatek by the Clean and Green (Save the Earth Movement) of the Rotary Club. The same body gave the school the Award of Sustainability for “continually creating a major impact [on] its surrounding community.”

 

Not far from the school is a half-hectare play center and botanical garden, and another half-hectare football field, gymnasium, and prayer garden.

 

Established in 1990, the Sunshine Botanical Garden keeps a growing flora collection. The plant species are labeled with their common and scientific names and the countries they originated from.

 

In one corner are pine trees and other plants from the Solomon Islands, Africa, India, Mexico, China, Thailand, Malaysia and other countries.

 

Aside from the gardening classes, clean and green activities are common in the school calendar. The children are brought to the garden once in a while to learn about plant propagation and experience soiling their hands.

 

Peralta says the play center and botanical garden were built to provide an alternative place for families to enjoy a serene, unpolluted park. She advises that the children should be brought to other places that will make them more environmentally aware, and not just to air-conditioned malls and noisy arcades.

 

The play center has a museum where the children’s artworks and projects, mostly made of recycled materials, are on display.

 

The school propagates the use of natural products that are environmentally friendly, like organic fertilizer and coconut soap.

 

Peralta has also concocted a natural insecticide made of dried “siling labuyo” (chillies) mixed with water.

 

International students

 

Since the school has foreigner students, it seems to have become a prototype of a global initiative combating ubiquitous environmental problems. Korean, Canadian, Japanese, Chinese and Indian students not only learn English from Filipinos but also environment preservation.

 

At present, the school has a small population of 300 with only one class per level, each having 30 students at the most to ensure quality teaching. It was founded in 1980 as Sunshine Nursery School and classes were held at Peralta’s house. The grade school department was opened in 1986.

 

Then named the Sunshine Learning Center, it was accredited as an international school in 2005.

 

When she was 12 years old, Peralta recounts that she used to play “teacher” to poor children living at the back of their house.

 

She first taught in 1968 at the St. Agnes’ Academy, the oldest existing school in Albay. Her 12 years of teaching has greatly honed her skills because of the good training given by the German sisters running the Benedictine school.

 

Her love for the environment she learned from her parents, Sevara and Salvador Mesias, both teachers and nature lovers.

 

“My father was a garden and agriculture teacher. He was the one who taught me to use organic fertilizer from decomposed biodegradable materials,” she recalls.

 

Her mother planted ornamental plants while her father had his fruit trees. A known bougainvillea collector in town in the 1960s, her mother had the vastest collection of different colors of bougainvillea flowers.

 

Now, the school awaits expansion as its high school department will be opened in 2008.inquirer.net

Leaders’ reelection revs up Aklan fiber industry

 

By Hazel P. Villa
Inquirer
Last updated 01:34am (Mla time) 06/02/2007
KALIBO, Aklan – With two of its top leaders, who have pioneered initiatives to modernize the fiber industry, reelected, Aklan is set to cement its niche as the destination for any needs related to raffia, abaca and piña.

 

“We are upbeat on the fiber industry. Our desire is to boost economic activity with the production of fibers,” said reelected Gov. Carlito Marquez.

 

The bullishness on Aklan fiber comes in part from the loom-woven products getting the Aklan Quality Seal from the Intellectual Property Office on May 13, 2006.

 

“Having this seal means piña, piña seda, abaca and raffia cloths can now be exported in volume following quality standards and after passing compliance with quality control,” said Ermelinda Pollentes, provincial director of the Department of Trade and Industry.

 

On its 51st anniversary celebrations as a province on April 23-27, Aklanons and visitors saw for themselves how the first Aklan Fiber Fest had metamorphosed into the 8th Aklan Piña and Fiber Festival aiming for the global market.

 

First initiated by former governor and now congressman-elect Florencio Miraflores, the 8th Aklan Piña and Fiber Festival at the ABL Sports Complex at the Provincial Capitol showcased the best products of blended loom-woven fabrics, fashion accessories, furnishings from piña, abaca, raffia and other indigenous fibers, as well as gifts, houseware and furniture.

 

This year’s Fiber Fest distinctive features were the Fairtrade Zone and the “contemporary lifestyle setting of living spaces” by international lifestyle designer PJ Arañador, who is also the regular designer-consultant of the DTI and visual merchandiser of the Fiber Fest.

 

Piña capital

 

“Legislation can help, but I’d rather support our local initiatives. As congressman, we have assisted in fairs and marketing,” said Miraflores, now on his second term as representative.

 

Both Miraflores and Marquez are pushing for the development of the abaca fiber since the Philippines supplies 84 percent of the world’s abaca, according to Marquez.

 

He said that the provincial government had appropriated P2 million this year for financing assistance to abaca planters.

 

“In order to have an abaca pulp mill of our own, we need 10,000 hectares to sustain supply. We currently have only 3,000 hectares,” said Marquez.

 

Miraflores plans to establish Aklan as a major exporter of abaca but said it had to produce enough and come up with a critical mass to attract investors.

 

The DTI, on the other hand, envisions Aklan as “the piña capital and loom-weaving destination of the country” after the numbers showed consistently increasing revenues in the past two years.

 

Domestic sales of woven fiber products were P58.24 million in 2005 and P73.16 million in 2006. Export sales were $86,488 in 2005 and $105,948 in 2006, DTI records showed.

 

While abaca as a fashion and lifestyle product is still the bestseller in the domestic and international markets, Aklan’s leaders intend to further develop the piña fiber to take the lead in this niche market.

 

“Piña weaving was a dying industry revived by former Rep. Allen Quimpo. Now, it is a major industry with transfer of technology. We intend to further develop this since Aklan’s soil and climate gives it an edge in piña fiber production,” said Miraflores.

 

Piña will always remain as a niche market, he said, because labor cost could not be lowered and it had always been that way since the airy and delicate fabric has been considered “high-end” even during the Spanish era.

‘Naked truth’ in education bared

By Tina Santos
Inquirer
Last updated 01:52am (Mla time) 06/02/2007

MANILA, Philippines – Some 20 out-of-school youths showed the “naked truth” about the “pathetic education system” in the country when they staged a brief protest yesterday morning in Manila.

 

The group of nude men also protested the impending tuition increase in 80 universities and colleges.

 

The demonstrators said that last year, over 14 million youths were not able to go to school due to unreasonable tuition increases.

 

The protesters, all members of the Alyansa ng Nagkakaisang Lakas ng Kabataan and aged 18 to 22, were dropped off by three vans in front of the Far Eastern University campus on Nicanor Reyes (formerly Morayta) Street. They ran in the direction of España Street.

 

The men held banners with the message “14.6 million out-of-school youths noon, paano pa sa tuition increase ngayon?,” while chanting anti-administration slogans.

 

As cops approached, the men got into a waiting vehicle that sped away.

 

The protest that lasted five minutes halted traffic and elicited embarrassed giggles from bystanders.

 

Alyansa national secretary general Jehhan Silva said the protesters were all residents of impoverished communities in Metro Manila and nearby provinces.

 

“All of them had to stop schooling for lack of resources,” Silva told the Inquirer.

 

Silva said the protest action was intended to highlight “the naked reality of the education sector” and how the government had been ignoring the problem.

 

“While the fortunate ones are busy preparing for the opening of classes, many of us are suffering because of the lack of opportunities to improve ourselves through higher education,” she said.

 

The group said the Commission on Higher Education (CHEd) approved through an en banc resolution the tuition increase petitions of 80 private colleges and universities nationwide.

 

“Due to the Arroyo government’s and CHEd’s incompetence, (we can) expect the number of out-of-school youth (to) increase drastically this year,” the protesters said.

 

The group called on colleges and universities to defer their plans to increase tuition citing lack of consultation.

 

“We also challenge Arroyo’s government, CHEd, and other educational institutions to stand true to their duties to provide quality and accessible education. If there were 14.6 million out of school youths in 2006, surely (the number) will double in 2007,” Silva said.

Illegal business in Binondo


Inquirer
Last updated 01:51am (Mla time) 06/02/2007

MANILA, Philippines — An Indian businessman is reportedly engaged in underground lending and has replaced the so-called Binondo Central Bank in the 1980s in dollar salting.

 

My source in the Indian community says the businessman lends or finances big-time Chinese, Indian and Filipino smugglers.

 

The trader neither pays taxes, nor is his business registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or the Manila City Hall, according to my little birdie.

 

His office in Binondo, Manila, although it looks like a boarding house from the outside, handles hundreds of millions of peso and dollar transactions every day.

 

Inside the unassuming office are money counting machines, calculators and duffel bags containing millions of dollars. The employees there are fellow Indians, most of whom are illegal aliens, says my source.

 

The man’s illegal shipments of dollars and other currencies bound for Hong Kong have been intercepted on two occasions at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (Naia), according to my source.

 

But the seizures were kept secret after some officials and employees at the Bureau of Customs were allegedly paid off to release the illegal cargo.

 

The illegal business is allegedly protected by some officials at the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR), National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) and Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG).

 

But the protection the Indian enjoys could come from some people from way up in the government ladder.

 

His fronts for his illegal business, says my source, are small jewelry stores selling cheap watches paid in installments. The watches were reportedly smuggled in.

 

All told, the businessman reportedly earns billions of pesos in his lending and dollar salting business.

 

His non-payment of taxes for his billion-peso business makes him an economic saboteur.

 

He should be imprisoned and deported after serving his sentence.
His protectors in the BIR, NBI and CIDG should likewise be unmasked.

 

* * *

 

Cheers to the Supreme Court for siding with a customer of Mercury Drug who was given the wrong medicine by the drugstore chain.

 

A Mercury salesclerk sold Sebastian Baking medicine that made him fall asleep behind the wheel. As a result, he figured in a road accident.

 

The high court did not believe Mercury Drug’s contention that Baking had an accident because he was a reckless driver.

 

The accident “could not have occurred had (a staff of the drugstore chain) been careful in reading the prescription,” said the high tribunal.

 

As one who puts trust in this firm for my medical needs, I am alarmed over the insensitivity of the drug store chain over the misfortune of its customer.

 

It’s the height of callousness on the part of the drugstore chain to blame a customer for the fault of its salesclerk.

 

Mercury Drug should know ordinary customers like Baking have made it into the giant corporation that it is today.

Comelec: No proclamation this weekend

By Jocelyn Uy, Nikko Dizon
Inquirer
Last updated 01:13am (Mla time) 06/02/2007

MANILA, Philippines—The Commission on Elections yesterday ruled out any partial proclamation of winning senatorial candidates this weekend as votes from Caloocan City gave Genuine Opposition aspirants Antonio Trillanes IV and Aquilino “Koko” Pimentel III a tighter clasp on the last two slots of the Magic 12.

 

The more than half a million votes from Caloocan City, which were finally canvassed more than two weeks after the elections, enabled the two GO candidates to pad up their lead over Team Unity’s Miguel Zubiri, who clung to the 13th slot.

 

With the certificates of canvass from all of Metro Manila and 82 provinces canvassed—accounting for 94 percent of the 103 CoCs—Trillanes hung on No. 11, or 449,786 votes away from Zubiri.

 

Pimentel clung to the last spot, 218,317 votes ahead of the Bukidnon representative.

 

As of yesterday, GO was still out front by an 8-2-2 ratio in the fight for 12 Senate seats, according to the Comelec tally.

 

GO was also holding a similar 8-2-2 winning edge in the unofficial count of the National Citizens’ Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel), with 84.65 percent of precincts already counted, as of late Thursday night.

 

With more than 2.7 million votes still to be tabulated, Comelec Chair Benjamin Abalos Sr. again postponed the partial proclamation of the front-running candidates, much to the disappointment of GO lead lawyer Sixto Brillantes.

 

The opposition had hoped for a proclamation today.

 

“What hurts us is why do they have to announce that they will make a partial proclamation when they can really do it if they want to … They left us hanging,” said Brillantes, unable to hide his displeasure.

 

‘Why not proclaim 6?’

 

What he could not understand, Brillantes said, was the Comelec’s repeated announcement of a partial proclamation when it knew that the CoCs—or province-wide tallies—from Lanao del Sur and Basilan were still being accomplished.

 

The GO lawyer added that with four GO candidates consistently in the top five places of the winning slate—leading by 3 million to 7 million votes—it was already appropriate for the Comelec, sitting as National Board of Canvassers, to proclaim them as winners.

 

“They can even proclaim at least six … but I think the problem is there are no TU candidates [who are in the top six] so let them proclaim eight to include the two TU candidates,” Brillantes said, sarcastically.

 

When the NBC adjourned its session before noon yesterday, TU candidates Edgardo Angara and Joker Arroyo were at No. 7 and No. 9, respectively.

 

Arroyo, who had occupied the eighth slot for at least five days, slipped to ninth when vote tallies from South Cotabato and Caloocan, giving GO a 9-2-1 lead, were canvassed.

 

Loren and Chiz

 

Helped by votes from South Cotabato and Caloocan, Cayetano was pushed to No. 8, switching places with Arroyo.

 

GO candidates Loren Legarda and Francis “Chiz” Escudero still held the top two slots in the winning circle.

 

Trailing them were fellow GO candidates, Panfilo Lacson and Manuel Villar, at No. 3 and No. 4, respectively.

 

Independent candidate Francis “Kiko” Pangilinan maintained his standing at No. 5, with Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III trailing him by 188,795 votes.

 

Gregorio Honasan, an independent, clung to No. 10.

 

The amended CoC from North Cotabato was to have been canvassed also yesterday but the NBC deferred the canvassing when it found out that four municipal CoCs (from Matalam, Pikit, Banisilan and Tulunan) were still missing.

 

The four municipal CoCs accounted for 133,088 votes, or 25 percent of the total registered voters.

 

Macalintal opposes

 

Citing a law, Brillantes said that the poll body had the authority to make a partial proclamation when the results of the election would no longer be affected by untabulated returns from other provinces.

 

“I think what they should do is not to make announcements when they don’t intend to comply with it,” he said.

 

TU lead counsel Romulo Macalintal said the Comelec should not make any partial proclamation when the canvassing of CoCs had not yet been terminated as this would result in the disenfranchisement of the more than two million voters.

 

The TU lawyer added: “It is not a matter of whether TU will enter (the Magic 12) or not, but a matter of protecting the interests of voters whose ballots have not yet been counted.”

 

He also said that a partial proclamation could only be made if the remaining returns, or CoCs, were missing.

 

Abalos: ‘Before June 30’

 

In a press briefing, Abalos affirmed the Comelec’s right to make a partial proclamation but said it was just not possible over the weekend because the more than two million votes were sizeable and crucial in determining the Magic 12.

 

The 2.7 million votes that have not yet been tabulated are from Basilan (181,447 registered voters); Lanao del Sur (396,800); Shariff Kabunsuan (198,277); Sultan Kudarat (355,496) and Surigao del Norte (261,735).

 

The deferred CoCs are from Maguindanao (337,108) and North Cotabato (556,678).

 

“If we are to make a partial proclamation of five or seven winning candidates, we might as well wait for the rest of them,” Abalos said.

 

When asked for his target date for proclaiming winning candidates, he said: “Before June 30, definitely.”

PNP chief says Panlilio ‘prime target’


By Tonette Orejas
Inquirer
Last updated 01:22am (Mla time) 06/02/2007

CAMP OLIVAS, Pampanga—The chief of the Philippine National Police met with Pampanga governor-elect, Fr. Eddie Panlilio, on Friday to assure him of “full security protection until he takes his oath of office” on July 2.

 

Emerging from an hour-long closed-door meeting with the priest, Director General Oscar Calderon told reporters that the police were giving priority to Panlilio because he could be a “prime target” of an attack.

 

Asked by the Inquirer if there were concrete threats on the life of Panlilio, Calderon said there was none.

 

The risks, he said, came with the nature of Panlilio’s new public position. He was the first priest to be elected governor in Pampanga, the home province of President Macapagal-Arroyo.

 

Calderon took charge of the security of Panlilio at a time when the latter has no command yet of the provincial police.

 

Mayors’ boycott

 

Friday’s meeting came four days after Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita, Political Adviser Gabriel Claudio and Luzon Urban Beltway super region Secretary Edgardo Pamintuan voiced concern over the safety of Panlilio on the heels of the murder of one of his leaders in Guagua town on May 28.

 

The Cabinet officials also warned that any attack on Panlilio could “be used as an issue” against Ms Arroyo, according to Chief Supt. Ismael Rafanan, Central Luzon police director.

 

Calderon visited the province a day after many mayors in Pampanga, who are mostly members of the Kabalikat ng Malayang Pilipino (Kampi), failed to show up in Thursday’s peace initiative set by Panlilio.

 

At the press briefing, Calderon said he ordered Senior Supt. Guillermo Lorenzo Eleazar, chief of the regional Criminal Investigation and Detection Group, to lead the investigation of the murder of Mario “Jomar” Nulud, barangay captain of San Juan Bautista in Guagua.

 

Lasting friendship

 

Panlilio, who said he was “very grateful” to Calderon for exerting efforts to ensure peace and order in the province, also asked the police to investigate the recent killings of village chiefs Benigno Sigua of Mabalacat and Fernando Santos of Porac, and to address the fear of reprisals by losing candidates as reported by other village chiefs.

 

Nulud had left Kampi to campaign for Panlilio, his friend for over 30 years.

 

Archbishop Paciano Aniceto on Friday also issued a pastoral statement denouncing the spate of killings in the province.

 

“We appeal to politicians to join us in denouncing these acts, as well as in renouncing violence as a means for redressing political grievances. We urge them rather to seek all legal means to resolve conflicts at all times, to use their authority to put a stop to these killings, and to foster peace through dialogue,” Aniceto said.

 

“We appeal to the perpetrators of these crimes to come to their senses and convert to the Lord. We remind them to put a stop to this desecration of life,” he added.

 

Also on Friday, the Pampanga police’s Task Force Nulud filed a murder case against two suspects identified as Willie “Ninoy” Montemayor and Roger Esteban at a Guagua court.

 

Sketchy

 

Rafanan said a relative of Nulud, whose identity has been withheld for security reasons, initially helped a police artist to sketch the suspects and later matched those with photographs kept by the PNP.

 

Nulud’s relative said the man believed to be Montemayor was the gunman. Esteban, on the other hand, was believed to be the man who drove the motorcycle during the 9 a.m. attack in front of Nulud’s house.

 

Calderon offered an initial reward of P100,000 to anyone who could provide information on the whereabouts of the suspects.

 

Eleazar, he said, took over the case to “remove apprehensions of a cover-up” by local investigators.

 

Rafanan said the two suspects were not identified with any political leaders in Pampanga but are connected with the communist army Rebolusyonaryong Hukbong Bayan.

 

However, in a phone interview, RHB’s Gabriel Soliman denied Montemayor and Esteban were RHB members.

 

“We are a revolutionary organization working for the causes of the masses. We are not a criminal gang as how the PNP is portraying us,” Soliman told the Inquirer. “We have no reason to kill Jomar (Nulud).”

2007 Election turn out and areas of immediate concerns

This is just a link from the inquirer. It is interesting to see the present areas of concern and the relationship between 2004 and 2007 election.

POLITICS VS THE MARKETS

 

 

POLITICS VS THE MARKETS. Within hours of arriving from Australia, President Macapagal-Arroyo put on Havianas flip-flops and braved the rain-soaked streets of Divisoria to check on the prices of school supplies ahead of the opening of schools nationwide on Monday. LYN RILLON. inquirer.net

MEDIA RELEASE

June 2, 2007 

LACK OF GOV’T SUPPORT FOR EDUCATION HIGHLIGHTED BY SHORTAGES –IBON

 

 

 

Government support for the public educational system has been declining and this is manifested by the severe shortages besetting the sector, according to independent think-tank IBON Foundation.

 

 

 

The 2006 budget of the Department of Education (DepEd), expressed in real terms (2000=100) has fallen by almost 6% from 2001 allocations. This means that, based on school year (SY) 2005-2006 enrolment figures, each public school student is allocated a share of only P5,082 of the DepEd budget, down 11% from P5,726 in 2001.

 

 

 

Declining allocations for education are reflected in the severe shortages of teachers and teaching materiel that have crippled the public education system.

 

 

 

The shortage of teachers reached 49,699 in SY 2005-2006, a 31% increase from the 37,932 recorded in SY 2001-2002. Over the same period, the shortage of classrooms grew by a whopping 586% from 8,443 in SY 2001-2002 to 57,930 in SY 2005-2006, and the lack of seats increased 65% from 2.11 million to 3.48 million. Meanwhile, in SY 2004-2005, the lack of textbooks reached 34.7 million.

 

 

 

The chronic lack of teachers and educational materials highlights the low priority government gives education. According to the law, the education sector should receive the highest share of the national government budget, but its allocations are dwarfed by the huge amounts government shells out for debt servicing.

 

 

 

In fiscal year 2006, for example, education, culture and manpower development was allocated P131.2 billion in the national budget. But debt service of both the principal and interest of the country’s debts was allotted a total of P784.43 billion or almost six times the total budget for education.

 

 

 

Lack of government resources has resulted in falling participation and completion rates. 5.7 million children (1.8 million in the elementary level and 3.9 million in the secondary level) are not enrolled in school. Further, for every 10 Grade 1 students enrolled, 3 will not finish elementary and four will not finish high school.

 

 

 

The lack of adequate government resources for education compromises the future of the country’s children, 14 million of whom are already considered poor. (end)

 


Town cops file complaint vs boss

By Rene F. Alima
Cebu Daily News
Last updated 03:31pm (Mla time) 06/01/2007

CEBU, Philippines—Eight Carcar town policemen filed a complaint against their police chief, accusing him of using a stolen motorcycle to extort money and harassment.

 

Carcar town police chief Jason Mangaron, however, denied the allegations. He said the eight policemen were trying to get back at him after he filed neglect of duty charges against them for releasing three illegal gamblers.

 

Two of the eight policemen, SPO1 Meliton Agadier and SPO1 Rolan Navales, went to the Cebu Provincial Police Office (CPPO) and said Mangaron took the motorcycle out of the police station and gave it to a certain Boy Aser.

 

The two policemen said Aser was Mangaron’s bag man and was collecting protection money from criminal groups in Carcar.

 

Cebu Provincial Police Director Carmelo Valmoria ordered Supt. Teofilo Siclot of the Provincial Investigation and Detective Management Branch to start an investigation on the allegations.

 

Valmoria said he could not relieve Mangaron from his post because he has not yet looked at the controversy from both sides.

 

He said the eight policemen and Mangaron were supposed to face off yesterday at the CPPO. The policemen, however, accused Mangaron of blocking their vehicle just as they were about to leave for Cebu City, and pointed an M-16 rifle at them.

 

Valmoria said that issue came up after Mangaron filed neglect of duty charges against six of the complaining police officers for releasing three persons from jail without proper authority.

 

The provincial police chief said he was so far satisfied with Mangaron’s performance against illegal drugs and illegal gambling in Carcar town. inquirer.net