Friday, June 10, 2011

Phl navy, coast guard rescues 26 lost fishermen

By Joel Catencio, Friday, June 10, 2011

MANILA, Philippines - The 26 missing fishermen have been found alive and floating with their life vests a few kilometers away from the shorelines of Pangasinan by the Philippine Navy (PN) and Philippine Coast Guard (PCG), disaster authorities said.

National Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council (NDRRMC) executive director Undersecretary Benito Ramos said they are very thankful the fishermen on board a 45 tonner vessel named FB 3MS WOF were found alive by navymen and coast guard elements aboard rescue helicopters.

Ramos said the 26 fishermen, whose names were not available, were on board a boat were reported missing 6:30 p.m. in Bolinao, Pangasinan. He said they were hit by strong waves while on their way to Spratly Islands to do fishing.

He also said all evacuees in affected areas by Tropical Depression “Dodong” in the provinces of Maguindanao, Batangas, Bataan, Cotabato have returned to their homes after floods have subsided.

Ramos said there is minimal damage in areas where “Dodong” passed through Thursday.

In a report by Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) to NDRRMC in Camp Aguinaldo, Quezon City said "Dodong" has intensified into a storm as it exited of the of the Philippine area of responsibility PAR by 12:30 p.m. on Friday

Cargo ship rescues 24 Filipino fishermen

Philippine Star, Friday, June 10, 2011

MANILA, Philippines (Xinhua) - A transiting cargo ship on Friday rescued 24 Filipino fishermen whose ship sank off the northern Philippine province of Pangasinan after venturing into fishing in the South China Sea at the height of a tropical depression, an official of the Office of Civil Defense (OCD) said.

Andrew Alex Uy, a regional director of the OCD, said MV Sea Palace picked up the 24 fishermen, not 26 as previously reported by another official, upon coordination by a Philippine Navy islander plane tasked to conduct an aerial search.

Uy said the fishermen went on fishing aboard the F/B 3MS Wolf. On their way back to Pangasinan yesterday afternoon, the fishing boat lost radio contact, prompting the search.

Earlier, National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council executive officer and OCD administrator Benito Ramos said the fishermen were numbering 26.

At around 12 noon Friday, Uy said, a Navy aircraft spotted the fishermen floating in the water with their life jackets 70.4 kilometers northwest of Bolinao town, Pangasinan province.

The aircraft then spotted the transiting cargo vessel.

"The Navy established communication, it coordinated with the MV Sea Palace to pick up the victims and ferry them..All of them are alive and were rescued," said Uy, adding the cargo ship was due to arrive at Bolinao 4:30 p.m Friday.

philstar.com

Philippine Navy spot 26 missing fishermen, rescue ongoing

By Xinhua, Friday, June 10, 2011

Navy and Coast Guard ships have been deployed in the northern coastal province of Pangasinan to rescue 26 Filipino fishermen who were earlier reported missing due to a tropical depression after venturing into fishing in the South China Sea, officials said Friday.

"It's ongoing," National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) executive officer Benito Ramos said of the rescue mission, "Our ships from the Navy and Coast are on the way."

Ramos said the last radio contact with the fishermen's fishing boat was 3 p.m Thursday, about three and a half hours before its expected arrival in Pangasinan. Ramos surmised the boat's radio bogged down or the ship sank.

"There's a progress on the (incident)...Aircraft pilots spotted the 26 floating," said Ramos, adding a helicopter spotted the fishermen before 11 a.m. Friday west of Anda town, Pangasinan.

"My understanding is that since they (pilots) were not able to see the boat, it probably sank. They saw them (fishermen) in orange life vests. We just don't know how many of the 26 are alive," he said.

Xinhua.net

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Senators bring to plenary bill fixing AFP chief’s term to 3 years

By Christian V. Esguerra, Friday, June 10, 2011


Senators belonging to the committee on national defense have unanimously endorsed a bill seeking to slam shut the “revolving door” policy that allowed military chiefs of staff to serve even for just a few months before retiring.

The report prepared by Sen. Panfilo Lacson, committee chairman, fixes the term of a chief of staff to three years, regardless whether the official reaches the mandatory retirement age of 56 before the term expires.

Senate Bill No. 2869, which consolidated three related measures, was submitted for plenary deliberations in time for the congressional break sine die, which began on Thursday.

The so-called revolving door policy has long been criticized given that it barely allowed for any meaningful program to be implemented by a chief of staff who served for just a few months.

Former president and now Pampanga Rep. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo appointed a total of 11 chiefs of staff during her term from 2001 to 2010.

“(The bill) grants security of tenure to ensure continuity of programs that (are) free from patronage and geared only toward good performance,” Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago said in the explanatory note for her previous version of the bill.

Santiago’s brother Benjamin Defensor himself benefited from the revolving door policy when he served for a little over two months as chief of staff of then president Arroyo. His was the shortest term in the Armed Forces so far, from Sept. 10 to Nov. 28, 2002.

The consolidated bill also sets a minimum term of two years for heads of the major services – the Philippine Army, Navy, and Air Force. The fixed term will be “without prejudice” to an official’s appointment as chief of staff.

The only restriction is that an officer cannot be appointed as a major service commander if he or she has less than two years to go before retirement.

Only the chief of staff will enjoy the possibility of a term extension but only “in cases of war or national emergencies as Congress may declare.”

SB No. 2869 defers the “statutory compulsory retirement of the chief of staff” until the three-year term is completed.

But the official may be “removed by the President as commander in chief for loss of confidence at any time before the end of the term of three years.”

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