The Magellan's Cross

The Magellan's Cross
Ipinapakita ang mga post na may etiketa na Duterte. Ipakita ang lahat ng mga post
Ipinapakita ang mga post na may etiketa na Duterte. Ipakita ang lahat ng mga post

Linggo, Marso 4, 2018

P8B gikan sa BCDA ngadto sa AFP, labing taas nga tampo sa 25 ka tuig






Mas dakong pundo alang sa modernisasyon sa Armed Forces of the Philippines
(AFP)  ang nagahin sa Bases Conversion Development Authority (BCDA) ubos sa administrasyon ni Presidente Rodrigo Duterte.

Matod ni BCDA President ug Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Vivencio Dizon sa usa ka pamulong sa
mga public information officers, nga mihatag og P8B ang maong ahensya alang sa AFP sa miaging duha ka tuig.

Kini mao ang labing dako nga kantidad nga gitugyan ngadto sa AFP gikan sa BCDA sukad kini nahimo nga ahensya sa 1992.

Ang BCDA mao ang nagdumala sa mga katigayonan sa mga military sama sa ilang mga daan nga kampo o mga base ug gihimo kini nga mga premier economic centers.  Usa sa labing sikat nga property niini mao ang Bonifacio Global City.

Ang maong kantidad naglangkob sa 20 porsyento sa kinatibuk-ang P;40 bilyones nga nadawat sa mga men and women in uniform gikan sa BCDA sa 25 ka tuig.


“That just shows everyone how important the AFP is to this administration. We want this to just keep on growing and growing. We want that trend to keep on going up,” matod ni Dizon.

Ang Bonifacio Global City sa Taguig, Manila ang usa sa mga properties nga gidumala sa BCDA 


 Matod ni AFP Deputy of Staff for Plans and Programs Brig Gen Restituto Padilla Jr. ang dugang suporta alang sa mga kasundalohan nakapataas sa ilang moral labina human sa kagubot didto sa Marawi sa Mindanao.


Mipasalig ang Presidente sa hingusgangg suporta sa mga kasundalohan ug kapolisan ubos sa iyang administrasyon. (fcc/PIA7-Cebu)

Biyernes, Oktubre 28, 2016

Purlon gamiton sa kapolisan sa kampanya batok droga sa mga sam-ang

Pahimuslan sa mga kapolisan sakop sa Cebu City Police Office (CCPO) ang kahigayonan sa kampanya batok sa droga.


Tungod kay ang bagang duot adto man gayod sa mga sam-ang, nakadesider sila si PSSupt. Eric Noble, ang hepe sa CPPO, sa pagdala sa kampanya ngadto sa mga sam-ang.

Ug unsa ang ilang gamiton? Purlon!


"Adunay mando ang tanang kapolisan nga kinahanglan makita ilang presensya sa mga sam-ang ug magdala og purlon," matod ni Noble.


Siya nagkanayon nga hangyuon gihapon sa mga kapolisan ang mga gidudahang tigamit ug tigpayuhot og ginadiling droga sa paghunong na sa maong salaod.

Tan-awa ning Video sa Purlon og kapolisan
 
Adunay 152 ka mga menteryo ang probinsya sa Sugbo og kapin sa 900 ka mga polis ang gipakatap niini.

Carcar City Police on the move 





 



Aduna pa gyud mga mukabat og 1600 ka mga force multipliers aron pagsiguro nga hapsay ug luwas ang maong mga kalihokan.




Ang pagamit og mga purlon o funeral cars apil sa mga estratihiya sa "Oplan Taphang" (Tapok Hangyo) diin pahimuslan sa mga kapolisan nga makabuhat og mga adbokasiya kabahin sa paghunong ug pagdili sa ginadiling droga,(fcc)

Linggo, Agosto 7, 2016

CEBUANO NEWS: Pilipinas mudugang SAF, sundalo; modernong ekipo batok terorismo

Pilipinas mudugang og mga sundalo, elite force ug mga modernong kahimanan sa seguridad.



Gibutyag ni Presidente Rodrigo Roa Duterte sa iyang pagbisita sa kampo sa mga military dinhi sa dakbayan sa Sugbo nga pagaandaman ang nag ung ung nga dakong hulga sa nasod, mao kini ang terorismo.

Quatar Airways promo

“But I am warning you that five to 10 years from now the biggest problem will be terrorism, “ matod ni Duterte.

Tungod niani gikinahanglan nga dugangan ang kusog sa mga Special Action Forces sa Philippine National Police (PNP) ug ingon man ang mga anaa sa Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP).
Siya nagkanayon nga sa Department of National Defense (DND) Secretary Delfin Lorenzana misugyot nga adunay dugang 20,000 ka mga sundalo. Apan matod niya dili pa kini makaya sa sunood tuig.

“I’d be happy if we have about five battalions of SAF (Special Action Forces) and produce another 10,000 more soldiers next year, okay na tayo, okay na ang Pilipinas ,” matod sa Presidente.

Gawas niini, iya usab nga gipasalig nga mupalit og de kalidad nga mga armas og ubang mga modernong kahimanan alang sa seguridad sama sa mga drones ug mga intelligence apparatus.

Sports fashion and all

Dako siyang supak sa pagpalit sa mga armas pinaagi sa “bidding”.

Matod niya dili siya mutuo og “lowest bidding” tungod kay muresulta usab kini og “lowest quality”

“If there’s a question of quality then that is an issue for me.  Para sa akin issue ang quality lalo na sa (hand gesture of a firearm) buhay kasi ang pinag-uusapan dito eh,(for me, quality is an issue specially when it comes to firearms, we are talking about lives here),” matod ni Duterte.

Siya nagkanayon nga mupalit unya ang Pilipinas sa nasod sa Israel ug kini pinaagi sa negotiated purchase.
Si Duterte mibisita og duha ka kampo sa miaging Biernes ug ikaduha mao ang Camp Lapulapu sa Sugbo.

Mao kini ang labing unang pagbisita niya sukad nga siya nakadaog nga ug milingkod nga Presidente sa Hulyo 1.(fcc/PIA7-Cebu)


Lunes, Hulyo 4, 2016

CAOCAMPIO News bits - 230 drug personalities surrenders ; July 6 holiday

As of press time today, 225 drug personalities surrendered into the folds of the law from the reports gathered by the members of the Cebu Association of City and Municipal Public Information Officer (CAOCAMPIO).


Majority of those who surrendered were from the highly urbanized city of Mandaue.  According to its information officer Jeany Eve Necessario, as of 12 noon there were 160 who surrendered in the various police stations of the city.

In the southwestern town of Asturias, information officer Christian Maningo said there were 10 known pushers and users, including a minor, surrendered to the police.

Also in Naga City, 10 surrendered to new Mayor Kristine Chiong while another one surrendered to the city police, according to information officer Jessica Natad.

In the southern City of Carcar, information officer Candice Acuna reported 50 drug personalities who also returned to the folds of the law.

The campaign is in line with the campaign of the Philippine National Police "Operation Tukhang" or “Toktok, Hangyo” (knock and ask)

Carcar City also conducted its fifth Education Summit today, attended by teachers and parent representatives from the different private and public schools in the city.  This was the report of information officer Candice Acuna.  Photo below.


Carcar City Mayor Nicepuro Apura delivers his education thrusts in his term.


In the town northern town of San Remigio, Nino Ybanez reported the holding of the Municipal "Talakayan" of the "Kapit Bisig Laban sa Kahirapan - Comprehensive and Integrated Delivery of Social Services" (KALAHI-CIDSS).
"Talakayan talks about LGU Governance.... nag evaluate sila thru forum from the Barangay Captains sa mga projects implemented, programs and etc.," according to Ybanez.

KALAHI-CIDSS is a program of the Department of Social and Development (DSWD) which means linking hands to fight poverty.  It is a community-driven development project that aims to empower communities through their enhanced participation in community projects that reduce poverty.

Linggo, Hulyo 3, 2016

CEBUANO video - Pahimangno sa CSC sa bag ong administrasyon

Ania ang pahimangno sa Civil Service Commission (CSC) sa mga bag-ong milingkod sa pagtamod kanunay sa mandato sa pagtudlo og pagtangtang sa mga empleyado sa gobyerno.



Ginadili ang pagtudlo sa mga kapamilya o kaparyentihan, pagtangtang nga way basehanan og uban pa.

Mahimong musumbong sa CSC pinaagi sa pag click sa www.csc.gov.ph

Alang sa ubang iCebu..pangitaa lamang ang iCebu sa www.youtube.com 

Huwebes, Hunyo 30, 2016

FULL TEXT Inaugural Speech of Rodrigo Roa Dtuerte, President of the Republic of the Philippines


Incoming President Rodrigo Duterte and the outgoing President Benigno Aquino III 


Inaugural Address 

President Rodrigo Duterte

Oath-taking of the President of the Philippines
MalacaƱang Palace | June 30, 2016

President Fidel Ramos, sir, salamat po sa tulong mo (thank you for your help) making me President; President Joseph Ejercito Estrada; Senate President Franklin Drilon and the members of the Senate; Speaker Feliciano Belmonte and the members of the House of Representatives; Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno and Associate Justices of the Supreme Court; His Excellency Guiseppe Pinto and the members of the Diplomatic Corps; incoming members of the Cabinet; fellow workers in government; my fellow countrymen.

No leader, however strong, can succeed at anything of national importance or significance unless he has the support and cooperation of the people he is tasked to lead and sworn to serve.

It is the people from whom democratic governments draw strength and this administration is no exception. That is why we have to listen to the murmurings of the people, feel their pulse, supply their needs and fortify their faith and trust in us whom they elected to public office.

There are many amongst us who advance the assessment that the problems that bedevil our country today which need to be addressed with urgency, are corruption, both in the high and low echelons of government, criminality in the streets, and the rampant sale of illegal drugs in all strata of Philippine society and the breakdown of law and order. True, but not absolutely so.

For I see these ills as mere symptoms of a virulent social disease that creeps and cuts into the moral fiber of Philippine society. I sense a problem deeper and more serious than any of those mentioned or all of them put together. But of course, it is not to say that we will ignore them because they have to be stopped by all means that the law allows.

Erosion of faith and trust in government – that is the real problem that confronts us. Resulting therefrom, I see the erosion of the people’s trust in our country’s leaders; the erosion of faith in our judicial system; the erosion of confidence in the capacity of our public servants to make the people’s lives better, safer and healthier.

Indeed, ours is a problem that dampens the human spirit. But all is not lost.

I know that there are those who do not approve of my methods of fighting criminality, the sale and use of illegal drugs and corruption. They say that my methods are unorthodox and verge on the illegal.

In response let me say this:

I have seen how corruption bled the government of funds, which were allocated for the use in uplifting the poor from the mire that they are in.
I have seen how illegal drugs destroyed individuals and ruined family relationships.
I have seen how criminality, by means all foul, snatched from the innocent and the unsuspecting, the years and years of accumulated savings. Years of toil and then, suddenly, they are back to where they started.
Look at this from that perspective and tell me that I am wrong.
In this fight, I ask Congress and the Commission on Human Rights and all others who are similarly situated to allow us a level of governance that is consistent to our mandate. The fight will be relentless and it will be sustained.

As a lawyer and a former prosecutor, I know the limits of the power and authority of the president. I know what is legal and what is not.

I know that there are those who do not approve of my methods of fighting criminality. They say that my methods are unorthodox and verge on the illegal.

My adherence to due process and the rule of law is uncompromising.

Mind your work and I will mind mine.

“Malasakit. Tunay na Pagbabago. Tinud-anay nga Kausaban (Compassion. Real change.)” – these are words which catapulted me to the presidency. These slogans were conceptualized not for the sole purpose of securing the votes of the electorate. “Tinud-anay nga kabag-uhan. Mao kana ang tumong sa atong pang-gobyerno (Real change. This is the direction of our government).”

Far from that. These were battle cries articulated by me in behalf of the people hungry for genuine and meaningful change. But the change, if it is to be permanent and significant, must start with us and in us.

To borrow the language of F. Sionil Jose, we have become our own worst enemies. And we must have the courage and the will to change ourselves.

Love of country, subordination of personal interests to the common good, concern and care for the helpless and the impoverished – these are among the lost and faded values that we seek to recover and revitalize as we commence our journey towards a better Philippines. The ride will be rough. But come and join me just the same. Together, shoulder to shoulder, let us take the first wobbly steps in this quest.

There are two quotations from revered figures that shall serve as the foundation upon which this administration shall be built.

“The test of government is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide for those who have little.” – Franklin Delano Roosevelt

And from (Abraham) Lincoln I draw this expression: “You cannot strengthen the weak by weakening the strong; You cannot help the poor by discouraging the rich; You cannot help the wage earner by pulling down the wage payer; You cannot further the brotherhood by inciting class hatred among men.”

My economic and financial, political policies are contained in those quotations, though couched in general terms. Read between the lines. I need not go into specifics now. They shall be supplied to you in due time.

However, there are certain policies and specifics of which cannot wait for tomorrow to be announced.

Therefore, I direct all department secretaries and the heads of agencies to reduce requirements and the processing time of all applications, from the submission to the release. I order all department secretaries and heads of agencies to remove redundant requirements and compliance with one department or agency, shall be accepted as sufficient for all.

I order all department secretaries and heads of agencies to refrain from changing and bending the rules government contracts, transactions and projects already approved and awaiting implementation. Changing the rules when the game is on-going is wrong.

I abhor secrecy and instead advocate transparency in all government contracts, projects and business transactions from submission of proposals to negotiation to perfection and finally, to consummation.

Do them and we will work together. Do not do them, we will part sooner than later.

On the international front and community of nations, let me reiterate that the Republic of the Philippines will honor treaties and international obligations.

On the domestic front, my administration is committed to implement all signed peace agreements in step with constitutional and legal reforms.

I am elated by the expression of unity among our Moro brothers and leaders, and the response of everyone else to my call for peace.

I look forward to the participation of all other stakeholders, particularly our indigenous peoples, to ensure inclusivity in the peace process.

Let me remind in the end of this talk, that I was elected to the presidency to serve the entire country. I was not elected to serve the interests of any one person or any group or any one class. I serve every one and not only one.

That is why I have adapted as an article of faith, the following lines written by someone whose name I could no longer recall. He said: “I have no friends to serve, I have no enemies to harm.”

On the international front and community of nations, let me reiterate that the Republic of the Philippines will honor treaties and international obligations. On the domestic front, my administration is committed to implement all signed peace agreements in step with constitutional and legal reforms.
Prescinding there from, I now ask everyone, and I mean everyone, to join me as we embark on this crusade for a better and brighter tomorrow.

But before I end, let me express the nations, on behalf of the people, our condolences to the Republic of Turkey of what has happened in the place. We offer our deepest condolences.

Why am I here? Hindi kasali ito diyan (This is not part of my speech). The past tense was, I am here because I love my country and I love the people of the Philippines. I am here, why? Because I am ready to start my work for the nation.

Thank you and good afternoon.
Source: Presidential Communications Office