Showing posts with label Vice Admiral Alexander P. Pama AFP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vice Admiral Alexander P. Pama AFP. Show all posts

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Navy removes China marker, invokes 'active defense'

GMA news, Thursday, June 16, 2011

After dismantling a China marker at a disputed reef in the West Philippine Seas, the Philippine Navy on Thursday vowed to maintain its "active defense" in the area to prevent other parties from placing another marker there.

Navy flag officer-in-command Rear Admiral Alexander Pama said they have a mandate to protect the Philippines’ 200-nautical-mile (370 km) exclusive economic zone (EEZ).

On Wednesday, the military said it removed a marker found at the Boxall Reef, which is about 125 nautical miles from Palawan's western shoreline.

“Tuluy-tuloy sa pag-iikot at pagpapatrolya ang Navy, kasama ang Philippine Coast Guard... I-emphasize natin ito sa loob ng ating exclusive economic zone. Base sa mandato namin ating pinapangalagaan ang lugar na sinasabi na atin at alinsunod doon sa EEZ natin," he said in an interview on dzBB radio.

He also noted Armed Forces chief of staff Gen. Eduardo Oban Jr. had ordered a policy of “active defense" where the Philippines will not trigger tension while defending its territory.

Pama said this means that while the Philippines will not start any conflict, neither will it run away if it is “attacked."

“We strictly follow the Chief of Staff's guideline na active defense lang. Importanteng bagay na hindi tayo mag-uumpisa pero karapatan ng lahat ng tao yan, self-defense. Pag tayo pinutukan, hindi pwedeng manonood lang o tumakbo," he said.

For now, he said the military’s Western Command will continue to have Air Force and Navy assets there maintain their vigilance against attempts to put back the markers.

The Philippines is disputing the Spratly Islands with China, Taiwan, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei.

Recently, the Philippines had exchanged strong words with China following recent encounters between Philippine and Chinese forces in the area.

Pama said the markers they dismantled consisted basically of a steel bar with graduated markings.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

US leads Asean war games in Sulu, Palawan

By Donna Pazzibugan
Philippine Daily Inquirer, Wednesday, June 15, 2011

A US-led naval exercise in the Sulu Sea involving the Philippines and five other members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) began on Tuesday.

In the next 10 days, combined naval units from the Philippines, Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and the United States will be in the Sulu Sea, Malacca Strait and Celebes Sea.

The naval exercise will be followed by another naval training exercise between the Philippines and the United States in the Sulu Sea. The Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training (Carat) exercise from June 28 to July 8 will be held in the waters east of Palawan.

Dubbed the Southeast Asia Cooperation and Training (Seacat), the annual maritime exercise initiated by the United States covers training against terrorism, transnational crimes “and other maritime threats.”

A Philippine Navy spokesperson said the naval exercises had been arranged before fresh tension broke out between the Philippines and China over the disputed Spratly islands.

Asset reinforcement

The exercise coincided with a visit by Philippine Navy chief Vice Adm. Alexander Pama at the Naval Forces West in Palawan, his first since assuming office in January. It came as the military was reinforcing its naval and air assets in the West Philippine Sea.

The Navy spokesperson, Lt. Col. Omar Tonsay, said Pama toured Naval Station Apolinario Jalandoon, headquarters of the Naval Forces West, as well as the Oyster Bay detachment at Naval Station Carlito Cunanan in Ulugan Point, Macarascas, Puerto Princesa City.

Pama also paid a courtesy call on the Armed Forces of the Philippines Western Command commander, Lt. Gen. Juancho Sabban, who is based in Puerto Princesa.

The BRP Gregorio Del Pilar, acquired from the US Coast Guard and due to arrive in August, will be stationed at Naval Station Carlito Cunanan, 260 kilometers (140 nautical miles) from Recto Bank (Reed Bank) facing the West Philippine Sea.

Capt. Sebastian Pan, Philippine exercise director, said three Philippine Navy ships would participate in this year’s Seacat exercise. The USS Safeguard, a rescue and salvage ship, was designated as “contact of interest,” or COI.

Special operations

“This activity will involve surface, air, and special operations units in the conduct of surveillance, tracking, and boarding of the COI from the different participating navies within their respective maritime territories,” Pan said.

He said maritime interdiction operations with boarding opportunity would be conducted in the Sulu and Mindanao Seas.

The Coast Watch stations of the participating naval forces will be utilized to exercise their capabilities in surveillance, tracking, communications and operations.

The annual Seacat exercise is conducted to protect vital sea lanes in Southeast Asia from terrorists, poachers and transnational lawless elements.

The exercise aims to promote “regional coordination, information sharing and interoperability in a multilateral environment.”

Venues are determined in advance in planning sessions with participating navies.

newsinfo.inquirer.net

Thursday, June 2, 2011

How the al-Qaeda Threat Lingers

By Luke Hunt

The Diplomat, Thursday, June 2, 2011

Osama bin Laden is dead, but in Southeast Asia, nagging problems persist for law enforcement officials seeking to stamp out al-Qaeda’s influence in the region.

Most of the focus is on Mindanao, where the Philippines military has drawn up a list five foreigners who had established links to bin Laden, and who are believed to be currently hiding out in the country’s south.

Most wanted is the Malaysian-born, US-trained engineer Zulkifli bin Hir, aka Marwan, who has made it his business to train aspiring members of the Abu Sayyaf Group in bomb making.

Commander of the Philippine Navy, Vice Adm. Alexander Pama, says bin Hir had lived in Tipo-tipo in Basilan, working with Abu Sayyaf leader Khair Mundos before moving to Sulu, adding the Armed Forces of the Philippines had intensified its intelligence operations in a bid to locate ‘these terrorists.’

Bin Hir fought alongside bin Laden in Afghanistan, and is on the FBI’s list of most wanted terrorists for his activities in Indonesia and the Philippines and was head of Kumpulan Mujahidin Malaysia (KMM) as well as a member of Jemaah Islamiyah's (JI) central command.

Parma also named a Singaporean known as Mauwiyah as significant. Authorities believe Mauwiyah, a seaweed farmer, is hiding in Sulu along with two Indonesians, Saad and Qayyim, and a Malaysian suspect Amin Baco.

The five are the most prominent remains of al-Qaeda’s heyday, when they could count on JI to go on the rampage with some support from Abu Sayyaf. JI was responsible for many of the region’s worst attacks and much of the carnage over the past 12years, including the 2002 Bali bombings, which left 202 dead. But the group seems all but extinct now, with its co-founding cleric and last standing senior figure Abu Bakar Bashir now before the Indonesian courts, where he claims the United States, along with liberal Muslims, are trying to frame him.

The 72 year-old is accused of funding Jemaah Ansharut Tauhid (JAT), which was born lout of JI. JAT was dubbed ‘al-Qaeda in Aceh,’ and was allegedly plotting attacks and the assassination of senior politicians in Indonesia. Prosecutors have demanded the maximum life sentence for Bashir.

Since bin Laden’s death at the hands of the US special forces last month, counter terrorism experts, military analysts, politicians and commentators have gone into overdrive warning that the Saudi militant could still pose a threat, perhaps more so in death than in life, as a symbolic figure for wannabe jihadists.

In Africa, this argument certainly has some merit. Somalia and Yemen provided a fertile breeding ground for like-minded affiliates that established strong relations with al-Qaeda. Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq, where the presence of US-led troops serve as a magnet for bin Laden acolytes, also figure prominently. In Southeast Asia, however, not everyone is so sure, and some analysts are sceptical about claims that bin Laden remains a threat from beyond the grave.

Pivotal to this argument is Mindanao, says Jakarta-based security analyst Keith Loveard of Concord Consulting. ‘You have to ask how relevant the Mindanao factions are to the global jihad process, given the extreme pressure they are under from the Philippines military and the US advisers,’ he says. ‘There’s a sense that they are so tied down in their local area that it’s very difficult for them to operate beyond the southern Philippines, with even attacks in Manila now rare. That doesn't mean jihad will go away as a threat, but it can be contained.’

Gavin Greenwood, a regional security analyst with Hong Kong-based Allan & Associates, says alleged links between bin Laden through JI and Abu Sayyaf were anyway always minimal ‘at best.’

‘Rather, they have served on both sides as a useful narrative to bolster JI's credibility while also internationalising local insurgent groups as a means to dispense resources and gain assets (from the United States and Australia) for the Armed Forces of the Philippines,’ Greenwood says. ‘Abu Sayyaf has always been intensely local and restricted to a small number of interconnected clans and families, carrying on and updating traditional piracy activities.’


Bin Laden’s death has also provided a timely opportunity to examine the role of the Philippines’ armed forces, their foreign allies and claims that foreigners were persistently involved in the seemingly perpetual conflicts that plague Mindanao.

‘The suggestion that only wicked Malaysians, Singaporeans and Indonesians — led from afar by a Saudi/Yemeni or Egyptian — play a significant part in an insurgency that has barely paused for breath since Magellan was killed by Lapu-Lapu on Mactan island in April 1521 is patronising and manifestly nonsense,’ Greenwood says.

However, he also said there was little doubt that fugitive Muslims have sought sanctuary in the areas controlled by various native Moro groups, where even the military concede that their priorities now are to settle down and make a modest living in professions like seaweed farming.

That’s if they can evade the authorities, who last week arrested a notorious Abu Sayyaf bandit blamed for a series of kidnappings in Western Mindanao and the beheading of coconut plantation workers.

Andurahman Luy Andang, alias Abu Nas, was reportedly captured while riding his tricycle in Isabela City. His arrest followed the capture of the last senior JI figure at large, Omar Patek, who was arrested in Pakistan in January.

The authorities had thought Patek was still hiding out in the Southern Philippines, where he had forged a close friendship with Abu Sayyaf. His arrest raised questions about his presence in Pakistan, in particular Islamabad’s relationship with the West and its role in the war against Islamic militants. Patek was nabbed just a short distance from the luxury mansion in Abbottabad, about 60 kilometres northeast of Islamabad, where bin Laden was killed.

Patek was apparently being protected by an al-Qaeda cell, which among other tasks ran the local post office. Seasoned counter-terrorism observers suggested Patek had transited from Tawi Tawi in the Southern Philippines through East Malaysia onto Kuala Lumpur, Bangkok and then Karachi.

They also said information obtained following his seizure was traced back to Malaysia, where Singaporean businessman Abdul Majid was arrested on May 6. He’s suspected of channelling funds to the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, which has spent decades fighting for an independent homeland in the Southern Philippines.

Most pointers indicate that the threats posed by Islamic militants who use terrorism as a strategic weapon has now largely diminished. Still, this is cold comfort for governments and intelligence networks that must still deal with the issue on a daily basis.

‘At the moment it would appear that the Southern Philippines isn’t such a threat, but if the heat was lightened, there’s the chance that attacks beyond the immediate area would start again,’ Loveard says. ‘This carries with it a depressing message for governments faced with budgeting large amounts of revenue for "what if" threats.’


The Diplomat

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

In the navy

Photo By Sonny Espiritu
Manila Standard Today, Wednesday, May 25, 2011


Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin troops the line during the Navy's 113th founding anniversary. At left, is Vice Admiral Alexander Pama, flag officer in command.


JI's presence being monitored

By Alexis Romero
Philippine Star, Wednesday, May 25, 2011


Marines stand on the deck of the BRP Emilio Liwanag during the 113th anniversary celebration of the Philippine Navy yesterday. The refurbished gunboat will be deployed to Zamboanga to boost internal security operations. Photo By JONJON VICENCIO

MANILA, Philippines - Security forces are closely monitoring the movements of three members of terrorist group Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) and are bracing for possible military action against them.

Marine Brig. Gen. Romeo Tanalgo, commander of the Sulu-based 2nd Marine brigade, said they have managed to restrict the movements of the terrorists.

“We are closely monitoring the activities of the three JI members for possible military action,” Tanalgo said on the sidelines of the 113th anniversary of the Navy in Manila.

He said one of the JI members believed to be in the south is Marwan, whose real name is Zulkifli Bin Hir. Marwan, reportedly a member of the JI’s central command, has a $5 million bounty for his capture.

Tanalgo did not identify the two other JI members believed to be operating in Mindanao. He said they are continuously stepping up their anti-terror operations to thwart the plans of lawless groups.

Meanwhile, the Navy sent off yesterday its newly refurbished ship BRP Emilio Liwanag to boost its internal security operations.

The ship, which was provided by the South Korean Navy in 2006, will be deployed to Zamboanga and other critical areas, Navy chief Vice Admiral Alexander Pama said.

It is expected to provide support to Marine forces deployed in the south, in line with the so-called Fleet Marine concept. This concept seeks to enhance the interoperability among Navy troops.

Pama said the deployment would intensify the drive against the Abu Sayyaf and other security threats in the country.

“It would be all-inclusive. It is for the ISO (internal security operations). If positioned in the south, this (ship) would support the Fleet Marine concept,” he said.

The military has vowed to remain vigilant despite the death of Osama bin Laden, the founder of international terror group al-Qaeda, which has links to JI and the Abu Sayyaf. 

Bin Laden, the alleged mastermind of the 9/11 US attack, was slain by US Navy Seals in his compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.

Some sectors have raised concerns that bin Laden’s death could prod his supporters to launch retaliatory attacks. Military officials, however, have given assurance that they are ready to repel such atrocities.

Earlier reports said Saif al-Adel, a former Egyptian military officer, will serve as interim leader of the al-Qaeda until bin Laden’s successor has been named. Al-Adel is reportedly connected with the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, the group tagged in the killing of former Egyptian President Anwar Sadat.

Philippine defense officials are unfazed by the new al-Qaeda leader as they vowed to enhance intelligence gathering to ensure that the Philippines would remain safe.



Former finance sec, private sector move to save the PH navy

By Donna Z Pazzibugan
Philippine Daily Inquirer, Tuesday, May 24, 2011

MANILA, Philippines—Prominent figures in politics, business and civil society, led by former Finance Secretary Jesus Estanislao, have taken up the cudgels for the Philippine Navy by leading a fund-raising and support drive.

They have taken it upon themselves to organize a foundation that seeks to marshal support and resources from the private sector to support the Navy’s modernization and capability-building programs.

They would serve as the founding board of trustees of the “Support Your Navy Foundation”, which was formally launched Tuesday during the Navy’s 113rd anniversary rites.

The multi-sectoral group, however, has served as board of advisers to the Navy since last year.

“We accepted the invitation of the Flag Officer in Command (Vice Admiral Alexander Pama) to serve as board of advisers to save the Navy because we wanted to bring down the many walls keeping the various sectors of society apart,” Estanislao told Navy officers and personnel during the anniversary program.

“We decided to take the lead … We want to say that our Philippine Navy can not do it alone. Our Navy needs the support of all sectors,” added Estanislao, who is chairman of the Institute for Solidarity in Asia.

In his own speech, Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin did not mince words as he described the Navy’s state as “truly deplorable” since it has no modern ships and vessels, and hardly any aircraft. The Navy is still using 65-year-old warships from World War II.

“We have thus solicited the support of our stakeholders through the representation of the members of the Navy board of advisers, like-minded professionals who believe in the advocacies of the Navy,” Pama said during the anniversary.

He said the board of advisers has “voluntarily champion(ed) such well-meaning cause through their wise counsel and sound advice on the Navy’s strategic concerns.”

Estanislao said the Support your Navy Foundation would serve as a “major bridge” between the Navy and the private sector to achieve the Navy Sail Plan goal of becoming a “strong and credible Navy” by 2020.

“We believe that together we can become a great maritime nation. We hope we can contribute to a strong Navy,” he said.

The other members of the foundation’s board of trustees are former senator Leticia Shahani; Development Bank of the Philippines president Francisco Del Rosario; Budget Undersecretary Mario Relampagos; National Economic and Development Authority Deputy Director General Margarita Songco; newspaper columnist Jarius Bondoc, former defense undersecretary and Asia Pacific Security Forum president Rodel Cruz; retired vice admiral Eduardo Santos; Asian Architects co-managing partner Miguel Guerrero; University of the Philippines professor Aileen Baviera; lawyer Antonio Oposa; and Doris Magsaysay-Ho of the Magsaysay Group of Companies.

Pama and Capt. Augustus Iglesia who is director of the Naval Resource Management Office, will serve as ex-officio trustees.

Capt. Giovanni Bacordo, director of the Center for Naval Leadership and Excellence, said the foundation would help fund Navy programs since seventy per cent of their budget goes to personnel salaries, while the rest goes to maintenance and operating expenses so there is hardly left for capital outlay.

“Through this foundation, we will no longer be one hundred per cent dependent on the GAA (General Appropriations Act) for the things we need,” he said.

Bacordo said donations to be raised by the foundation may include equipment upgrades, scholarships for Navy personnel, housing facilities and other morale and welfare programs.

He said the foundation would be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission in June or July.

Navy spokesman Lt. Col. Omar Tonsay said through the foundation, well-meaning private groups and individuals could actively participate in the Navy’s programs.

newsinfo.inquirer.net

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Navy to deploy 2 gunboats, supply ship for anti-terror operations

By Jaime Laude
Philippine Star, Sunday, May 22, 2011

Manila, Philippines - The Navy will deploy two gunboats and a supply ship for anti-terror security operations in the Sulu Sea next week.

Navy spokesman Lt. Col. Omar Tonsay said Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin and Navy chief Vice Admiral Alexander Pama would officially send off BRP Manuel Gomez, BRP Emilio Liwanag and BRP Dagupan City to show its commitment to upgrade its capability.

The deployment of the gunboats and supply ship will coincide with the Navy’s 113th anniversary celebration at its headquarters in Roxas Boulevard, Manila.

Tonsay said the gunboats would be deployed under the Fleet-Marine concept, the Navy’s program devoted to fighting terror in several areas of Western Mindanao.

“They will be bringing in supplies and logistics to our units in Western Mindanao. Included in their mission is the conduct of maritime security patrols,” Tonsay said.

Cmdr. Kenneth Tingabngab of the Navy’s Modernization Office said the two gunboats were acquired from South Korea and were upgraded in Navotas City.

He said the Philippine government paid only $100 for each ship as these were practically donated by South Korea as a goodwill measure.

“By letting the local firms undertake the upgrade, we can generate jobs and promote the local shipyard industry,” Tingabngab said.

The 110-foot tall patrol killer mediums were manufactured in the 1980s and primarily for patrolling and interdiction.

The upgrade involved the refurbishment of the ships’ guns, engines, generators, sensors and communication items. The Navy has six patrol killer mediums in its inventory.

Tingabngab said they are also expecting the delivery of a locally manufactured landing craft utility in August.

Philippine Iron Construction and Marine Works in Misamis Oriental manufactured the 51-meter craft, which cost P178 million.

“Tapping the local industry has advantages. We encourage the local firms to upgrade and we create employment,” Tingabngab said.

The Navy also expects the delivery of three multi-purpose attack craft worth P276 million in December.

“These (multi-purpose attack crafts) can be used for special operations. We already have three of them in the inventory and we will add three more,” Tingabngab said.

He said the Navy’s modernization efforts would boost the morale of troops.

“It brings confidence to the people if they are well-equipped. They will also have a fighting edge,” Tingabngab said.

Other Navy projects to be implemented this year are the one-ton troop carrier (P45,999), two-ton troop and cargo carrier (P80,499), the upgrade of Jacinto class patrol vessel (P353.65 million) and configuration of a 20W radio (P231 million).

The Navy is searching for ways to upgrade its capability as it cannot rely solely on its yearly budget, which is usually allotted for salaries and operational expenses.

It has bared plans to solicit assistance from private firms and individuals who want to help in improving its capabilities. -With Alexis Romero

philstar.com

Navy reservist Dingdong leads PDI simultaneous Read-Along via video

By The Inquirer Read-along Team
Philippine Daily Inquirer, Sunday, May 22, 2011


THE READER Actor Dingdong Dantes reads to poor children and children of Philippine Navy personnel at the Navy headquarters on Roxas Boulevard. It was a simultaneous Read-Along with 8 other naval bases in the country, one of the Navy’s activities to mark its 113th year
Photo By ARNOLD ALMACEN

MANILA, Philippines—Loud shrieks and applause from hundreds of children and adults from all over the country greeted the actor and Navy reservist Dingdong Dantes as he arrived for a special Inquirer Read-Along session at the Philippine Navy Headquarters on Roxas Boulevard yesterday.

The Saturday session was a simultaneous read-along, greatly facilitated by the Navy’s video teleconferencing system (VTS), so that some 300 children from eight other naval bases around the country were able to join the readings which were mainly conducted in Manila.

Unknown to many, Dantes holds a major sergeant rank as a Navy reservist.

“My grandfather used to be with the Philippine Constabulary. My family has maintained a close relationship with the Navy. So when some of my friends urged me to be a reservist in 2006, I did not hesitate,” he said. He said he also joins Navy activities like medical missions whenever his schedule permits.

“I was actually amazed how I was able to read to kids from different naval stations across the country. It was very interactive,” said the actor who seemed comfortable and at ease even if he was swarmed by star-struck kids.

Allyssa Noveen Sustigmers, 11, a participant from Zamboanga City, said she was especially moved by Dantes’ reading of “Lost at Sea” by Raechelle Castellon, a story about a girl who is reunited with her father, a seafarer whom she thought had been “lost at sea”.

“My father is in the Navy. He is always away, always at sea,” Allyssa said.

In tears

Castellon’s story, which is part of the Gig Seafarer Children’s Stories series published by Gig and the Amazing Sampaguita Foundation, seemed to have a special resonance with the participating children.

“Some shed tears while they were listening to Dantes’ reading,” said Commodore Armando Guzman, the Naval Forces Western Mindanao commander. It could be that they were able to relate to the story because the main character had a similar job to their parents, he said.

Eleven-year-old Irish Roxas said she became appreciative of her father’s kindness and sacrifices from listening to Dantes.

“I learned to give value to my parents’ hard work, just like the girl in the story,” said Roxas, who joined the session in Cavite City.

Navy’s 113th year

Yesterday’s Read-Along session became part of the Navy’s 113th anniversary celebrations.

According to Vice Admiral Alexander P. Pama, Flag Officer in Command of the Philippine Navy, the Navy uses the video teleconferencing technology almost daily for meetings with staff and commanders from other naval forces, precluding the need to travel for conferences.

“We thought, since the technology is already there, we might as well use it for other worthwhile activities, such as reading sessions like this,” he said.

The video feed of the session in Manila was transmitted via the Navy’s VTS to eight other naval stations, where children had been gathered for the readings.

The participating naval bases were Naval Station Ernesto R. Ogbinar in Poro Point, San Fernando City, La Union; Naval Station Julhasan A. Arasain in Rawis, Legazpi; Naval Station Apolinario Jalandoon in Puerto Princesa City, Palawan; Naval Station San Miguel in San Antonio, Zambales; Naval Station Heracleo Alano in Sangley Point, Cavite City; Naval Base Rafael Ramos Mactan Naval Operating Base in Lapu-Lapu City, Cebu; Naval Station Romulo M. Espaldon in Lower Calarian, Zamboanga City; and Naval Station Felix Apolinario in Panacan, Davao City.

Joining the readers was Navy 1st Lt. Marie Angelica Sisican of the Office of the Chief of Naval Staff, who opened the session with “Si Pilandok sa Kaharian sa Dagat” by Victoria AƱonuevo, a story about how Pilandok outsmarted the greedy Datu Usman by luring him with the riches of the sea.

Alitaptap storytellers Rich Rodriguez and Percy Gapas capped the session with a lively tandem reading of “Hipon and Biya” by Carla M. Pacis, which tells how two different sea creatures learn how much they need each other. Both stories were published by Adarna House.

With Navy cameras filming the Manila session, the readers were able to interact with the children in the various naval bases during the question and answer portions that followed each reading.

Session highlight

For the more than 100 children, mostly Aeta and children of Navy personnel, who joined the session in Zambales, the highlight of the event was when Dantes threw a question at a participant in San Antonio.

When Hazel Dumulot, a 13-year-old Aeta girl, answered Dantes’ question correctly, the children gathered at the main classroom of the Naval Education and Training Command (NETC) erupted in cheers and applause.

“We enjoyed watching the story read by Dingdong Dantes and answering his questions,” said Jason Zafra, 7, an orphan under the care of the Children’s Joy Foundation, in Puerto Princesa.

Personal advocacy

Dantes considers education as his personal advocacy. “I really believe in the power of knowledge, that’s why whenever I can, I get involved in activities like this,” he said.

“I tell kids that knowing is half the battle, so reading is really important,” he said.

First-time reader Sisican said the session was a “learning experience.”

“Our events are usually with adults. Children are really different as an audience. You have to always have ideas on how to keep them entertained,” she said.

Most of the children who attended the sessions were first-timers as well. For 10-year-old Dianne Ociel in Manila, the most memorable lesson she learned was from “Lost at Sea”.

“A family should stay together, through the good times and the bad,” she said.

In Davao City, children with the Padre Pio Home for Children, a religious nongovernment organization that provides temporary shelter for abandoned, orphaned and neglected children, attended the session. Kris, 12, said the experience has inspired her to strive more to learn “and encourage other children like me to love the art of reading and the learning that one derives from it.”

Social integration

Lieutenant Colonel Omar Tonsay, director of the Naval Public Affairs Office, said one of the goals of the sessions was to facilitate the interaction of dependents of Navy personnel and underprivileged children.

The participants in all the venues were a mix of Navy dependents and underprivileged kids invited in coordination with the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) and local government units.

In La Union, the 35 participants gathered at the Poro Point naval station who followed the stories through visuals projected on the wall, said they enjoyed the stories, especially the one read by Dantes, because it had a “happy ending.”

In Southern Luzon, the facilities used only by the naval top brass and off limits to civilians, were transformed into children’s corners, complete with buntings and balloons.

“I wish we can do more of these forms of community service,” said Mercado.

Community service

Lieutenant Darwin Nieva, director of the Public Affairs Office of the Naval Forces of Southern Luzon based in Rawis, Legazpi City, said the Read-Along was a better idea than the free circumcision that the Navy usually provides as a form of community service during the summer months. “It encourages learning,” Nieva said.

The Sangley Point, Cavite City, session drew some 30 children, mostly kids of Navy personnel and those from the poor communities surrounding the naval camp.

“It is also bonding and reaching out to the depressed communities,” said public affairs officer 1st Lieutenant Rommel Rodriguez. With reports from Kate Pedroso and Lawrence de Guzman, Inquirer Research; Yolanda Sotelo and Charles Keith, Inquirer Northern Luzon; Robert Gonzaga, Inquirer Central Luzon; Maricar Cinco, Juan Escandor Jr. and Redempto Anda, Inquirer Southern Luzon; Edison delos Angeles and Cris Evert Lato, Inquirer Visayas; Julie Alipala and Jeffrey Tupas, Inquirer Mindanao; and Marz Ragpala, intern.

newsinfo.inquirer.net