Bacolod City undergoes risk assessment for updating of geohazard map

BACOLOD CITY: A team from the Department of Environment and Natural Resources-Mines and Geosciences Bureau-Western Visayas (DENR-MGB Region 6) is conducting a vulnerability and risk assessment (VRA) here as part of the process to update the city’s geohazard map.

Ram Vera, chief of City Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office (CDRRMO) Research and Planning Section, said on Wednesday there is a need to update the city’s susceptibility status since its existing geohazard map is already 11 years old.

‘Our last susceptibility map was in 2013 yet. It’s now 2024, many developments have already taken place in the city,’ Vera said in a telephone interview.

On Wednesday, the assessment started in the first 10 barangays and the next 11 villages will be covered on Thursday.

Vera said the rest of the city’s 61 barangays will be assessed within two months.

Geologist II ER Ramos leads the DENR-MGB team in conducting the VRA, which involves a more expansive look at risk exposures of areas, to update Bacolod’s susc
eptibility map on a scale of 1:10,000, indicating the level of susceptibility of barangays and sitios to landslides and flooding.

According to the DENR-MGB, the VRA is an assessment of the degree of vulnerability and potential risks of an area given the exposure to three elements –population, built-up areas and roads.

With the available data, the VRA produces predictive information on the number of population, extent of built-up areas, and roads that would be affected given their exposure to the varying levels of vulnerability, in the occurrence of rain-induced landslides and floods.

The geohazard map provides information on how susceptible a particular location is to these natural hazards.

Local planners and managers have used the geohazard maps as guide in planning, identifying safe areas for building, evacuation sites, and development, and formulating mitigation and disaster management programs towards more resilient communities, it added.

Source: Philippines News Agency

HELICOPTER TRAGEDY: REMAINS OF TLDM PILOT WAN REZAUDEEN KAMAL LAID TO REST

KUALA LUMPUR, The remains of Royal Malaysian Navy (TLDM) pilot Lt Commander Wan Rezaudeen Kamal Zainal Abidin, 37, were safely laid to rest at about 10 pm today at the Raudhatul Sakinah Muslim Cemetery in Batu Muda here.

He was among the 10 personnel who were killed when two helicopters crashed at the TLDM base in Lumut, Perak at about 9.32 am yesterday.

Earlier, Wan Rezaudeen Kamal’s remains were taken to the Salahuddin Al-Ayubi Mosque in Taman Melati here at about 8.20 pm for prayer.

The burial ceremony was carried out according to TLDM tradition and a solemn atmosphere filled the cemetery when Defence Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin handed the naval ensign to Wan Rezaudeen Kamal’s wife, Alia Amalina Md Noor.

Others present at the cemetery were Navy deputy chief Vice-Admiral Datuk Zulhelmy Ithnain and about 200 individuals, comprising family members and friends of the victim.

Earlier, the funeral prayers and final respects for Wan Rezaudeen Kamal and the remains of seven other Muslim victims
were held at the 23rd Royal Malay Regiment (RAMD) Camp in Ipoh.

The remains of two others killed in the tragedy were taken to their respective residences in Sitiawan, Perak and Kuching, Sarawak.

In an incident at 9.32 am yesterday, 10 RMN personnel were killed when two helicopters crashed while conducting a rehearsal for a flypast in conjunction with the 90th TLDM Anniversary celebration.

VP Sara thanks PBBM for continued trust, support

MANILA: Vice President Sara Duterte expressed Wednesday her gratitude to President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. for his continued trust and support in her function as education chief.

“Maraming salamat, Pangulong Ferdinand ‘Bongbong’ Marcos Jr., sa patuloy na pagtitiwala sa akin bilang Kalihim ng Kagawaran ng Edukasyon (Thank you President Ferdinand ‘Bongbong’ Marcos Jr., for your unwavering trust in me as the Secretary of the Department of Education),” Duterte said in a statement.

She pledged to continue upholding the welfare of learners in the country.

“Makakaasa po kayo na ang DepEd, na binubuo ng ating mga guro at non-teaching personnel, ay patuloy na maglilingkod nang tapat para sa kinabukasan ng bawat mag-aaral (You can count on the DepEd, together with our teachers and non-teaching personnel, to continuously serve faithfully for the future of each learner),” she added.

On Wednesday, the President said there is no reason to replace Duterte as education secretary, noting that Cabinet members are replaced
based solely on their performance.

The country’s two highest officials are set to talk in private to thresh out various issues.

Source: Philippines News Agency

HELICOPTER CRASH: TWO VICTIMS FROM PERAK BURIED, SIVASUTAN’S REMAINS TO BE CREMATED TOMORROW

LUMUT, The burials of two victims of the helicopter crash at the Royal Malaysian Navy (RMN) Base Lumut in Perak were completed as of 9.25 pm.

Warrant Officer II TMK Mohd Shahrizan Mohd Termizi, 41, was buried at the Batu 10 Lekir Muslim Cemetery, near here.

Earlier, Mohd Shahrizan’s remains were brought to his father’s house in Taman Bunga Tanjung, Lekir, for family members to pay their last respects.

The body was then laid to rest at 9.25 pm after another prayer was held at Masjid Al-Khairiah Batu 10, Lekir led by Imam 2, Mohamad Nizam Mohamad.

More than 500 people comprising family members and local residents attended the ceremony.

Also present were Higher Education Minister Datuk Seri Dr Zambry Abd Kadir representing the Federal Government, and State Women Development, Family, Social Welfare and Entrepreneur Development Committee chairman Salbiah Mohamed.

Meanwhile, the body of Warrant Officer II TNL Noorfarahimi Mohd Saedy, 41, arrived at the Jalan Ulu Nor Muslim Cemetery in Sungai Bayor, Selama, a
t around 7.40 pm, and was buried at around 9 pm.

The funeral was attended by about 500 individuals consisting of family members, acquaintances of the victim and RMN personnel.

The body of another victim, Lt T. Sivasutan, 31, arrived at his family’s residence in Taman Serdang Jaya here at 5.52 pm.

The Strategic Communications Branch of the Naval Headquarters in a statement had said Sivasutan’s remains would be cremated tomorrow (April 25) at a cemetery in Sitiawan.

Earlier at 6 pm, the funeral prayers and final respects for Mohd Shahrizan and Noorfarahimi as well as the remains of six other Muslim victims were held at the 23rd Royal Malay Regiment (RAMD) Camp in Ipoh.

Gov’t urges doctors to stop collective action

SEOUL: Second Health Vice Minister Park Min-soo on Tuesday called on doctors to stop their collective action as medical school professors were considering taking a day off every week, a move that deepens concerns over further disruptions in the country’s health care system.

About 12,000 trainee doctors have left their worksites since Feb. 20 in protest of the government’s plan to boost the number of medical students, forcing major hospitals to delay or cancel surgeries and other public health services.

In support of the walkout by junior doctors, medical professors submitted their resignations.

“The medical community should stop collective action and join a special commission on medical reform set to be launched this week for productive discussions,” Park told a government response meeting.

Under the envisioned presidential commission, officials from the health ministry and other relevant ministries, as well as some 20 experts, will discuss how to reform the country’s medical system, including the possibl
e adjustment of medical school admissions and ways of raising investment in essential medical fields.

However, the Korea Medical Association and the Korea Intern Resident Association have vowed to boycott the initiative.

Upping the ante, medical professors were considering taking a day off every week as they have been stretched thin amid the prolonged walkout by trainee doctors.

The emergency committee for national medical professors will hold a general meeting later in the day and discuss the potential suspension of all surgeries and treatment for outpatients once a week, according to its officials.

Details, including when to begin the move, are expected to be decided in accordance with the situations of each hospital, though they are likely to continue operations of their emergency rooms and intensive care units, they added.

The professors, who serve as senior doctors in major hospitals, have been struggling to fill the void of junior doctors.

“Remaining professors have experienced heavy workloads and
have felt fatigued. So we are reviewing such an option,” a committee official said.

The move is also seen as a way of adding pressure by the medical community on the government to seek a breakthrough as the plan on the medical school admission quota for next year is supposed to be finalized by end-April.

Some hospitals, including the Chungnam National University Hospital in the central city of Daejeon, have already decided not to provide service for outpatients on Fridays starting this week, and many other hospitals are feared to follow suit.

Medical school professors at Seoul National University (SNU) will review the option during a meeting slated for Tuesday.

Adding to the woes is that medical professors began submitting their resignations on March 25, and the resignations could take legal effect after the elapse of one month even without approval from their employers.

The education ministry has said “not many” professors have tendered resignations, and no resignations have been accepted so far.

The g
overnment has proposed dialogue by setting up a special presidential commission on medical reform while allowing universities to decide their quotas by a range of 50 percent to 100 percent of what the government assigned for next year.

But doctors have rejected the proposals, calling for the government to revisit the issue from scratch.

The government has stressed the need to increase the medical school admission quota to address a shortage of doctors, particularly in rural areas and essential medical fields.

Given South Korea’s rapid population aging and other issues, the country is expected to fall short by 15,000 doctors by 2035, according to the health ministry.

Doctors, however, have said that the quota hike would compromise the quality of medical education and services and create a surplus of physicians, and the government must devise ways of encouraging more physicians to practice in such “unpopular” fields as high-risk surgeries, pediatrics, obstetrics, and emergency medicine.

Source: Philippine
s News Agency

491 LAWSUITS FILED AGAINST STATE GOVT – HAJIJI

KOTA KINABALU, A total of 491 lawsuits were filed against the Sabah government from 2019 to last year, the Sabah State Legislative Assembly was informed today.

Chief Minister Datuk Seri Hajiji Noor clarified that among these cases, the government won in 110 instances, which encompassed cases struck out and set aside by the court, while three cases resulted in defeat.

“Meanwhile, 378 cases fell under the category where the state government abided by the court’s decision, cases dismissed by the court, consent orders, and ongoing cases,” he said while winding up the debate on the motion of thanks for the Sabah Yang Dipertua Negeri Tun Juhar Mahiruddin’s policy speech at the sitting.

Hajiji noted that most of the cases were against the Sabah Land and Survey Department (JTU) and the Sabah State Water Department (JANS).

He stated that during the same period, 221 cases were filed against the JTU, mainly involving land acquisition for the Pan Borneo Highway project and land development by the state and federal g
overnments.

He said the JANS cases mostly revolved around completed works where payments could not be settled due to incomplete documentation.

He explained that these documents were seized by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission for the investigation of JANS cases, leading to payments owed to contractors being stalled.

“A total of 120 JANS cases were received involving claims of RM14.72 million. However, it is reported that all these cases have been successfully resolved and paid,” he added.

The motion of thanks was then passed unanimously and Speaker Datuk M. Kadzim Yahya adjourned the session until tomorrow.

8.9K jobs, P123.2-M TUPAD payouts in Caraga Labor Day fairs

BUTUAN CITY: At least 8,901 vacancies will be offered to jobseekers as the Department of Labor and Employment in the Caraga Region (DOLE-13) will spearhead different job fairs in the area to celebrate the 122nd Labor Day on May 1.

Data provided by DOLE-13 on Wednesday showed that 4,374 of the vacancies are for local jobs, while the 4,527 are overseas jobs.

‘There will be simultaneous jobs fair activities in different sites in Agusan del Norte, Agusan del Sur, Surigao del Norte, Surigao del Sur, and Dinagat Islands,’ DOLE-13 said.

Jobseekers from Agusan del Norte may proceed to Almont Inland Resort in Butuan City for the jobs fair; the Naligayan Grounds at the Provincial Capitol in Patin-ay, Prosperidad, Agusan del Sur; the Surigao City Cultural Center for Surigao del Norte; the Tandag City gymnasium for Surigao del Sur; and the Sta. Cruz covered court in San Jose town for Dinagat Islands.

In addition to the jobs fair, payout activities for the beneficiaries of the Tulong Panghanapbuhay sa Ating Disadvanta
ged/Displaced Workers (TUPAD) will also be held in various parts of the region.

During the activity, 27,732 beneficiaries will receive PHP123.2 million worth of TUPAD payments, while 873 beneficiaries of the DOLE Integrated Livelihood Program will also be awarded PHP21.1 million worth of livelihood packages.

Also, some 421 beneficiaries of the government internship program will receive their salaries, amounting to more than PHP1.7 million.

Moreover, some 131 sellers from 74 farmers’ organizations will join the celebration through the Kadiwa ng Pangulo program, where displays of agricultural products will be sold to the public. (

Source: Philippines News Agency