Polo Ravales plays ‘ultimate gay role’ in “Walang Kawala”

Polo Ravales plays 'ultimate gay role' in "Walang Kawala"

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MILF accused of killing Army sergeant in ceasefire committee

The military has filed a formal complaint against the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) before a joint ceasefire monitoring body for the abduction and killing of a government representative to the ceasefire committee.
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Mark Herras talks of romance with Ryza Cenon and Katrina Halili

Mark Herras admits short-lived romance with Ryza Cenon and Katrina Halili

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No good news brings down Philippine share value

Share prices on Tuesday declined as investors stayed on the sidelines on lack of positive leads, analysts said.
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Mother Lily Monteverde: “I don’t like Angel’s manager because she is a liar.”

Mother Lily Monteverde: "I don't like Angel's manager because she is a liar."

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Cost of Mindanao fighting damage climbs to P121M

MANILA, Philippines - Damages wrought by the armed clashes between soldiers and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) in Mindanao has climbed further to almost P121.5 million, the National Disaster Coordinating Council said Tuesday.

In its 8 a.m. report, the NDCC said the figure includes P38.53-million damage to infrastructure and P82.95 million in agriculture.

Of the damage to infrastructure, almost P20 million accounted for private properties and P17.4 million for school properties. The livestock and farming sectors also lost more than P31 million and P45 million, respectively.

Lanao del Norte suffered the biggest damage, totaling to P64.64 million. Meanwhile, damages in North Cotabato were placed at P35.64 million, and in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao at P21.2 million.

A total of 199 houses have been damaged since suspected MILF rogue elements began their attack in Lanao del Norte and North Cotabato several weeks ago. The NDCC said that 64 of these houses were totally burned down by the MILF rebels.

Meanwhile, three houses were totally destroyed and 30 others were partially damaged in Tipo-Tipo town in Basilan province.

NDCC’s latest tally showed that the damages have almost doubled since Sunday when damages were reported to be around P63.189 million.

In the same report, the NDCC also said that Libungan town in North Cotabato has already been declared under a state of calamity. Earlier, Maguindanao province has been placed under a similar state of calamity.

The government said it has extended P60 million worth of assistance to affected residents in the form of sacks of rice, canned goods, blankets, and clothes among others. - Mark Merueñas, GMANews.TV

Dingdong Dantes: “Nice boy? I don’t believe I’m nice.”

Dingdong Dantes: "Nice boy? I don't believe I'm nice."

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Charice Pempengco to Return to The Oprah Winfrey Show


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Army rockets kill 3 children, 3 others in south

MANILA - At least six civilians, including a pregnant woman and three children, were killed on Monday when Philippine army planes strafed and bombed Muslim rebel positions in the south a week after a peace deal collapsed, officials said.

Army helicopters and planes attacked rebel positions near a marshland after renegade members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) had fired at helicopters searching for rebels on the southern island of Mindanao, army officials said.

Musib Uy Tan, a local official, told reporters the civilians had been on their way to a temporary shelter area when their boat was hit by rockets fired from helicopter gunships.

“The boat was a total wreck,” Tan said, adding that the bodies of a 53-year old farmer and his family, including a pregnant 17-year old girl, had been pulled from the water.

Colonel Marlou Salazar, an army brigade commander, said he was unaware of civilian casualties but reported that seven MILF rebels had been killed in the air strikes.

But army spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Julieto Ando said collateral damage in armed encounters was possible.

“We’re investigating that incident now,” Ando told reporters.

Earlier on Monday, a crude bomb went off in a public market in Mindanao’s Isulan town while another was defused near a hospital in nearby Tacurong City. Both are Catholic-dominated areas and thus potential MILF targets.

Identical bombs

“Our investigators believed it was supposed to go off at the same time as the second bomb because the two explosive devices were almost identical,” Major Armand Rico, another military spokesman, told reporters. “They were made from 81mm mortar rounds and remotely detonated by a cellphone.”

Military chief General Alexander Yano warned of more bombings in Catholic-dominated areas in Mindanao even as fighting subsided since Ramadan started last week. He said the rebels had broken into smaller groups to avoid head-on confrontations.

More than 200 people, including 21 soldiers, were killed in August in fighting between troops and renegade members of the MILF blamed for attacking Christian-majority southern towns after the peace deal fell apart.

The government has been in on-off talks with the MILF since 1997 to end a rebellion that has killed 120,000 people and stunted growth in a region said to be sitting on huge deposits of minerals, oil and natural gas.

About half a million people have been displaced by fighting since Aug. 18 as troops bombed and shelled rebel positions.

On Monday, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) asked for more donations so it could continue providing food to around 70,000 people at refugee camps on Mindanao, adding that there could be more uncertainty after the end of Ramadan.

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BF’s early election campaign for 2010 draws flak

Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) chair Bayani Fernando is being criticized by various camps for his “early campaigning” tactics for the 2010 national elections.

Fernando announced his intention of joining the presidential race in 2010 on Sunday, saying he is ready to become a candidate of the Lakas-National Union of Christian Democrats (Lakas-NUCD), though he admitted he has yet to receive the party’s blessing as its standard bearer.

One of the alleged “early campaigning” methods being criticized is the “BAYANI” stickers on passenger buses bound for the provinces.

Fernando has drawn flak after it was revealed that the MMDA reportedly shelled out money to distribute the said stickers to bus units at terminals along the main Metro Manila highway of EDSA.

According to drivers, MMDA traffic enforcers have become lenient on them whenever they see the stickers on their buses.

The Land Transportation Office (LTO) said there is nothing illegal in the use of the stickers, but the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) said the stickers should have a permit from them before being placed on the buses.

“Nakakuha lang kami ng statement sa LTFRB na wala yang permit kaya kami na mismo ang huhuli sa mga bus at magtatanggal ng sticker,” LTO Assistant Secretary Alberto Suansing said.

Fernando is also being accused of using MMDA funds for his campaigning activities.

“Mag-U-turn na siya sa balak niyang tumakbo sa pagkapangulo kung gagamitin lang niya ang pondo ng ahensya, na tingin ko ginagamit nga nya, o kaya naman mag-resign na siya sa MMDA,” Parañaque Rep. Roilo Golez said.

The Senate will also investigate whether Fernando is using public funds for politicking.

“Susuriin ng Senado kapag sumalang sa budget deliberations ang MMDA, bunga na rin daw ng sinasabing umanong lantarang pangangampanya ni Fernando,” Sen. Francis Escudero said.

The MMDA chief has also been criticized for putting up huge tarpaulin posters of him along major roads and highways in Metro Manila.

Bayani dismisses criticisms

Fernando, meanwhile, remained unperturbed by the criticisms.

“Bugbog na bugbog na ako sa batikos nitong mga nakaraang araw, pero alam ko na ako ang kukunin ng Lakas,” he told journalists during a tour of a squatters’ relocation site in Marikina City on Monday.

He also said Sen. Ramon “Bong” Revilla Jr. would be a good running mate.

“Okay sakin si Bong Revilla dahil Lakas din siya, kaya sama kaming lalaban,” he said.

Fernando said he is not affected by the criticisms against him, specifically about the stickers.

“Wala namang masama dun. Eh siguro, mga kaibigan ko ang naglalagay ng mga yan sa bus. Eh yung mga lapida nga may pangalan, ako pa kaya,” he said.

“Kapag mabunga, binabato talaga. Wala akong balak tanggalin ang mga sticker. Dadagdagan ko pa,” he added.

Earlier, Fernando, a former mayor of Marikina City, also said he does not mind being branded as “Hitler” because of the MMDA’s “Gestapo-like” tactics in clearing sidewalks of illegal vendors.

He said that despite the negative tag, people see that his projects, like the sidewalk clearing operations, bring order to the streets.

‘He will have a hard time’

Amid the criticisms and Fernando’s defense of his programs, political analyst Ramon Casiple said the MMDA chairman may have a hard time in selling himself as a presidential candidate.

Casiple said this is because the people do not see Fernando as a presidential material.

The political analyst added the public still do not know Fernando’s stand on national issues because his job as MMDA chief covers only local matters that affect the National Capital Region like traffic and dumpsites for Metro Manila’s garbage.

However, Casiple said that Fernando will definitely add color to the presidential race if and when he runs for president in 2010.

Fernando is the latest politician to declare his intention of running for president.

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