Rufus blinks, shutterbugs win

But advocates versus “anti-selfie” bill still wary

By Cong B. Corrales

THE WAY it stands, shutterbugs and freedom of expression advocates have won this round against the controversial “anti-selfie” bill.

Cagayan de Oro 2nd District Rep. Rufus Rodriguez told the PCIJ that he had already withdrawn his support for House Bill 4807 or “An Act to Provide Protection From Personal Intrusion for Commercial Purposes.”

“That bill is no more; I’m not pushing through with it anymore, we will not take that up in the third reading (in the plenary),” Rodriguez said.

CONGRESSMAN Rufus Rodriguez during the signing by President Benigno S. Aquino III of Republic Act No. 10349 or the New AFP Modernization Act at the Rizal Hall, Malacañan Palace last December 11, 2012 | Photo by: Lauro Montellano, Jr. / Malacañang Photo Bureau

CONGRESSMAN Rufus Rodriguez during the signing by President Benigno S. Aquino III of Republic Act No. 10349 or the New AFP Modernization Act at the Rizal Hall, Malacañan Palace last December 11, 2012 | Photo by: Lauro Montellano, Jr. / Malacañang Photo Bureau

HB 4807, according to the bill’s explanatory note, “aims to promote and protect the personal privacy of every person by preventing intrusion for commercial purposes, and enjoining everyone to respect the dignity, personality, privacy and peace of mind of every person.

It will be “unlawful to capture, or to trespass on private property in order to capture, any type of visual image, sound recording, or other physical impression of any individual, personal or family activity for commercial purposes and even if no physical trespass has occurred,” once the bill is passed into law.

The bill was originally filed by Rodriguez and his brother, Maximo, Abante Mindanao partylist representative, December 10 last year.

House Bill 03458, which we have uploaded on Scribd, is the original bill proposed by the Rodriguezes and was subsequently substituted by HB 4807.

House Bill 03548

When it was approved in the second reading in the Lower House last August 12, the bill listed the following as co-authors: Cebu 3rd District Rep. Gwendolyn Garcia, Buhay partylist Rep. Jose Atienza, Bulacan 4th District Rep. Linabelle Ruth Villarica, Pangasinan 2nd District Rep. Leopoldo Bataoil, and Misamis Occidental 1st district Rep. Jorge Almonte, who also chairs the committee on public information .

Rodriguez said his bill was misconstrued as “anti-selfie” but he has decided to withdraw it nevertheless from the plenary so it could be studied further at the committee level.

“I have asked the secretariat to invite (the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines and other groups who have expressed opposition to the bill so that it will be discussed in the committee,” he said.

CAMPAIGN POSTER of the PCP against HB 4807.

CAMPAIGN POSTER of the PCP against HB 4807.

National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) chairperson Rowena Paraan welcomed Rodriguez’ decision to withdraw his support but also enjoined journalists to continue monitoring bills that could affect the people’s right to free expression.

“It is good that the good congressman has seen the light. It should serve as a lesson to journalists to monitor closely the bills being churned out in the legislative mill so that nothing like this – a bill that tramples on the right to free expression – escapes public attention again,” Paraan said.

The NUJP has opposed the bill because the “measure’s intent is so broad it is likely to be used as another weapon for the criminal and the corrupt to escape accountability and that the measure “could end up stifling citizen journalism and even simply taking pictures or videos for personal pleasure.”

“In an era where technology is quickly breaking down the obstacles that hamper the flow of information and expression, which are the bedrock of democracy, HB 4807 could return us to the dark ages and worse, be used as a weapon of suppression and repression,” the NUJP statement on HB 4807 reads.

1271179_10202206025099892_1959172950_o

PHOTOJOURNALISTS on the field | Photo by Cong B. Corrales

While Rodriguez’ withdrawal of support to his own bill is a “good development,” Photojournalists’ Center of the Philippines (PCP) chairman Mike Alquinto said their planned mobilization at the South Gate of the House of Representatives on Tuesday will still push through.

“Even if he withdrew support, any lawmaker can still activate it in the future since it will still be pending in the Committee on Public Information,”Alquino said as he pointed out that their protest is not only against the bill but also for the passage of the Freedom of Information Bill.

“We invite Rodriguez to meet us at the rally to formally state his withdrawal of support to the bill and state his moves to convince the committee (on public information) to scrap the bill with finality,” Alquinto added.

In their statement, PCP reiterated that the right to privacy is already guaranteed in the Constitution and that HB 4807 could become a tool for “unwilling public figures” to suppress press freedom.”

HOUSE BILL 4807 is no longer in the online records of the House of Representatives | Screengrab from 16h Congress website

HOUSE BILL 4807 is no longer in the online records of the House of Representatives | Screengrab from 16h Congress website

For his part, NUJP Cagayan de Oro chair Froilan Gallardo said that the local media community was dishearted that Rodriguez did not consult them first before filing the bill.

“He should have consulted his constituents; he is not a senator, he is our district representative and he should have talked with his neighbors first. He should go back to his roots,” Gallardo said.

Gallardo, who is also vice president for print of the Cagayan de Oro Press Club, said that they have approved a board resolution asking Rodriguez to withdraw the bill from Congress.

“He should withdraw the bill entirely and not just revert it back to the committee level. He owes it to the people, more importantly to his neighbors here,” he said.

He added that they are organizing a broad alliance of freedom of expression advocates in Cagayan de Oro which will fight to scrap Rodriguez’ bill for good.

Rufus blinks, shutterbugs win

But advocates versus “anti-selfie” bill still wary

By Cong B. Corrales

THE WAY it stands, shutterbugs and freedom of expression advocates have won this round against the controversial “anti-selfie” bill.

Cagayan de Oro 2nd District Rep. Rufus Rodriguez told the PCIJ that he had already withdrawn his support for House Bill 4807 or “An Act to Provide Protection From Personal Intrusion for Commercial Purposes.”

“That bill is no more; I’m not pushing through with it anymore, we will not take that up in the third reading (in the plenary),” Rodriguez said.

CONGRESSMAN Rufus Rodriguez during the signing by President Benigno S. Aquino III of Republic Act No. 10349 or the New AFP Modernization Act at the Rizal Hall, Malacañan Palace last December 11, 2012 | Photo by: Lauro Montellano, Jr. / Malacañang Photo Bureau

CONGRESSMAN Rufus Rodriguez during the signing by President Benigno S. Aquino III of Republic Act No. 10349 or the New AFP Modernization Act at the Rizal Hall, Malacañan Palace last December 11, 2012 | Photo by: Lauro Montellano, Jr. / Malacañang Photo Bureau

HB 4807, according to the bill’s explanatory note, “aims to promote and protect the personal privacy of every person by preventing intrusion for commercial purposes, and enjoining everyone to respect the dignity, personality, privacy and peace of mind of every person.

It will be “unlawful to capture, or to trespass on private property in order to capture, any type of visual image, sound recording, or other physical impression of any individual, personal or family activity for commercial purposes and even if no physical trespass has occurred,” once the bill is passed into law.

The bill was originally filed by Rodriguez and his brother, Maximo, Abante Mindanao partylist representative, December 10 last year.

House Bill 03458, which we have uploaded on Scribd, is the original bill proposed by the Rodriguezes and was subsequently substituted by HB 4807.

House Bill 03548

When it was approved in the second reading in the Lower House last August 12, the bill listed the following as co-authors: Cebu 3rd District Rep. Gwendolyn Garcia, Buhay partylist Rep. Jose Atienza, Bulacan 4th District Rep. Linabelle Ruth Villarica, Pangasinan 2nd District Rep. Leopoldo Bataoil, and Misamis Occidental 1st district Rep. Jorge Almonte, who also chairs the committee on public information .

Rodriguez said his bill was misconstrued as “anti-selfie” but he has decided to withdraw it nevertheless from the plenary so it could be studied further at the committee level.

“I have asked the secretariat to invite (the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines and other groups who have expressed opposition to the bill so that it will be discussed in the committee,” he said.

CAMPAIGN POSTER of the PCP against HB 4807.

CAMPAIGN POSTER of the PCP against HB 4807.

National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) chairperson Rowena Paraan welcomed Rodriguez’ decision to withdraw his support but also enjoined journalists to continue monitoring bills that could affect the people’s right to free expression.

“It is good that the good congressman has seen the light. It should serve as a lesson to journalists to monitor closely the bills being churned out in the legislative mill so that nothing like this – a bill that tramples on the right to free expression – escapes public attention again,” Paraan said.

The NUJP has opposed the bill because the “measure’s intent is so broad it is likely to be used as another weapon for the criminal and the corrupt to escape accountability and that the measure “could end up stifling citizen journalism and even simply taking pictures or videos for personal pleasure.”

“In an era where technology is quickly breaking down the obstacles that hamper the flow of information and expression, which are the bedrock of democracy, HB 4807 could return us to the dark ages and worse, be used as a weapon of suppression and repression,” the NUJP statement on HB 4807 reads.

1271179_10202206025099892_1959172950_o

PHOTOJOURNALISTS on the field | Photo by Cong B. Corrales

While Rodriguez’ withdrawal of support to his own bill is a “good development,” Photojournalists’ Center of the Philippines (PCP) chairman Mike Alquinto said their planned mobilization at the South Gate of the House of Representatives on Tuesday will still push through.

“Even if he withdrew support, any lawmaker can still activate it in the future since it will still be pending in the Committee on Public Information,”Alquino said as he pointed out that their protest is not only against the bill but also for the passage of the Freedom of Information Bill.

“We invite Rodriguez to meet us at the rally to formally state his withdrawal of support to the bill and state his moves to convince the committee (on public information) to scrap the bill with finality,” Alquinto added.

In their statement, PCP reiterated that the right to privacy is already guaranteed in the Constitution and that HB 4807 could become a tool for “unwilling public figures” to suppress press freedom.”

HOUSE BILL 4807 is no longer in the online records of the House of Representatives | Screengrab from 16h Congress website

HOUSE BILL 4807 is no longer in the online records of the House of Representatives | Screengrab from 16h Congress website

For his part, NUJP Cagayan de Oro chair Froilan Gallardo said that the local media community was dishearted that Rodriguez did not consult them first before filing the bill.

“He should have consulted his constituents; he is not a senator, he is our district representative and he should have talked with his neighbors first. He should go back to his roots,” Gallardo said.

Gallardo, who is also vice president for print of the Cagayan de Oro Press Club, said that they have approved a board resolution asking Rodriguez to withdraw the bill from Congress.

“He should withdraw the bill entirely and not just revert it back to the committee level. He owes it to the people, more importantly to his neighbors here,” he said.

He added that they are organizing a broad alliance of freedom of expression advocates in Cagayan de Oro which will fight to scrap Rodriguez’ bill for good.

Rufus blinks, shutterbugs win

But advocates versus “anti-selfie” bill still wary

By Cong B. Corrales

THE WAY it stands, shutterbugs and freedom of expression advocates have won this round against the controversial “anti-selfie” bill.

Cagayan de Oro 2nd District Rep. Rufus Rodriguez told the PCIJ that he had already withdrawn his support for House Bill 4807 or “An Act to Provide Protection From Personal Intrusion for Commercial Purposes.”

“That bill is no more; I’m not pushing through with it anymore, we will not take that up in the third reading (in the plenary),” Rodriguez said.

CONGRESSMAN Rufus Rodriguez during the signing by President Benigno S. Aquino III of Republic Act No. 10349 or the New AFP Modernization Act at the Rizal Hall, Malacañan Palace last December 11, 2012 | Photo by: Lauro Montellano, Jr. / Malacañang Photo Bureau

CONGRESSMAN Rufus Rodriguez during the signing by President Benigno S. Aquino III of Republic Act No. 10349 or the New AFP Modernization Act at the Rizal Hall, Malacañan Palace last December 11, 2012 | Photo by: Lauro Montellano, Jr. / Malacañang Photo Bureau

HB 4807, according to the bill’s explanatory note, “aims to promote and protect the personal privacy of every person by preventing intrusion for commercial purposes, and enjoining everyone to respect the dignity, personality, privacy and peace of mind of every person.

It will be “unlawful to capture, or to trespass on private property in order to capture, any type of visual image, sound recording, or other physical impression of any individual, personal or family activity for commercial purposes and even if no physical trespass has occurred,” once the bill is passed into law.

The bill was originally filed by Rodriguez and his brother, Maximo, Abante Mindanao partylist representative, December 10 last year.

House Bill 03458, which we have uploaded on Scribd, is the original bill proposed by the Rodriguezes and was subsequently substituted by HB 4807.

House Bill 03548

When it was approved in the second reading in the Lower House last August 12, the bill listed the following as co-authors: Cebu 3rd District Rep. Gwendolyn Garcia, Buhay partylist Rep. Jose Atienza, Bulacan 4th District Rep. Linabelle Ruth Villarica, Pangasinan 2nd District Rep. Leopoldo Bataoil, and Misamis Occidental 1st district Rep. Jorge Almonte, who also chairs the committee on public information .

Rodriguez said his bill was misconstrued as “anti-selfie” but he has decided to withdraw it nevertheless from the plenary so it could be studied further at the committee level.

“I have asked the secretariat to invite (the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines and other groups who have expressed opposition to the bill so that it will be discussed in the committee,” he said.

CAMPAIGN POSTER of the PCP against HB 4807.

CAMPAIGN POSTER of the PCP against HB 4807.

National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) chairperson Rowena Paraan welcomed Rodriguez’ decision to withdraw his support but also enjoined journalists to continue monitoring bills that could affect the people’s right to free expression.

“It is good that the good congressman has seen the light. It should serve as a lesson to journalists to monitor closely the bills being churned out in the legislative mill so that nothing like this – a bill that tramples on the right to free expression – escapes public attention again,” Paraan said.

The NUJP has opposed the bill because the “measure’s intent is so broad it is likely to be used as another weapon for the criminal and the corrupt to escape accountability and that the measure “could end up stifling citizen journalism and even simply taking pictures or videos for personal pleasure.”

“In an era where technology is quickly breaking down the obstacles that hamper the flow of information and expression, which are the bedrock of democracy, HB 4807 could return us to the dark ages and worse, be used as a weapon of suppression and repression,” the NUJP statement on HB 4807 reads.

1271179_10202206025099892_1959172950_o

PHOTOJOURNALISTS on the field | Photo by Cong B. Corrales

While Rodriguez’ withdrawal of support to his own bill is a “good development,” Photojournalists’ Center of the Philippines (PCP) chairman Mike Alquinto said their planned mobilization at the South Gate of the House of Representatives on Tuesday will still push through.

“Even if he withdrew support, any lawmaker can still activate it in the future since it will still be pending in the Committee on Public Information,”Alquino said as he pointed out that their protest is not only against the bill but also for the passage of the Freedom of Information Bill.

“We invite Rodriguez to meet us at the rally to formally state his withdrawal of support to the bill and state his moves to convince the committee (on public information) to scrap the bill with finality,” Alquinto added.

In their statement, PCP reiterated that the right to privacy is already guaranteed in the Constitution and that HB 4807 could become a tool for “unwilling public figures” to suppress press freedom.”

HOUSE BILL 4807 is no longer in the online records of the House of Representatives | Screengrab from 16h Congress website

HOUSE BILL 4807 is no longer in the online records of the House of Representatives | Screengrab from 16h Congress website

For his part, NUJP Cagayan de Oro chair Froilan Gallardo said that the local media community was dishearted that Rodriguez did not consult them first before filing the bill.

“He should have consulted his constituents; he is not a senator, he is our district representative and he should have talked with his neighbors first. He should go back to his roots,” Gallardo said.

Gallardo, who is also vice president for print of the Cagayan de Oro Press Club, said that they have approved a board resolution asking Rodriguez to withdraw the bill from Congress.

“He should withdraw the bill entirely and not just revert it back to the committee level. He owes it to the people, more importantly to his neighbors here,” he said.

He added that they are organizing a broad alliance of freedom of expression advocates in Cagayan de Oro which will fight to scrap Rodriguez’ bill for good.

Rufus blinks, shutterbugs win

But advocates versus “anti-selfie” bill still wary

By Cong B. Corrales

THE WAY it stands, shutterbugs and freedom of expression advocates have won this round against the controversial “anti-selfie” bill.

Cagayan de Oro 2nd District Rep. Rufus Rodriguez told the PCIJ that he had already withdrawn his support for House Bill 4807 or “An Act to Provide Protection From Personal Intrusion for Commercial Purposes.”

“That bill is no more; I’m not pushing through with it anymore, we will not take that up in the third reading (in the plenary),” Rodriguez said.

CONGRESSMAN Rufus Rodriguez during the signing by President Benigno S. Aquino III of Republic Act No. 10349 or the New AFP Modernization Act at the Rizal Hall, Malacañan Palace last December 11, 2012 | Photo by: Lauro Montellano, Jr. / Malacañang Photo Bureau

CONGRESSMAN Rufus Rodriguez during the signing by President Benigno S. Aquino III of Republic Act No. 10349 or the New AFP Modernization Act at the Rizal Hall, Malacañan Palace last December 11, 2012 | Photo by: Lauro Montellano, Jr. / Malacañang Photo Bureau

HB 4807, according to the bill’s explanatory note, “aims to promote and protect the personal privacy of every person by preventing intrusion for commercial purposes, and enjoining everyone to respect the dignity, personality, privacy and peace of mind of every person.

It will be “unlawful to capture, or to trespass on private property in order to capture, any type of visual image, sound recording, or other physical impression of any individual, personal or family activity for commercial purposes and even if no physical trespass has occurred,” once the bill is passed into law.

The bill was originally filed by Rodriguez and his brother, Maximo, Abante Mindanao partylist representative, December 10 last year.

House Bill 03458, which we have uploaded on Scribd, is the original bill proposed by the Rodriguezes and was subsequently substituted by HB 4807.

House Bill 03548

When it was approved in the second reading in the Lower House last August 12, the bill listed the following as co-authors: Cebu 3rd District Rep. Gwendolyn Garcia, Buhay partylist Rep. Jose Atienza, Bulacan 4th District Rep. Linabelle Ruth Villarica, Pangasinan 2nd District Rep. Leopoldo Bataoil, and Misamis Occidental 1st district Rep. Jorge Almonte, who also chairs the committee on public information .

Rodriguez said his bill was misconstrued as “anti-selfie” but he has decided to withdraw it nevertheless from the plenary so it could be studied further at the committee level.

“I have asked the secretariat to invite (the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines and other groups who have expressed opposition to the bill so that it will be discussed in the committee,” he said.

CAMPAIGN POSTER of the PCP against HB 4807.

CAMPAIGN POSTER of the PCP against HB 4807.

National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) chairperson Rowena Paraan welcomed Rodriguez’ decision to withdraw his support but also enjoined journalists to continue monitoring bills that could affect the people’s right to free expression.

“It is good that the good congressman has seen the light. It should serve as a lesson to journalists to monitor closely the bills being churned out in the legislative mill so that nothing like this – a bill that tramples on the right to free expression – escapes public attention again,” Paraan said.

The NUJP has opposed the bill because the “measure’s intent is so broad it is likely to be used as another weapon for the criminal and the corrupt to escape accountability and that the measure “could end up stifling citizen journalism and even simply taking pictures or videos for personal pleasure.”

“In an era where technology is quickly breaking down the obstacles that hamper the flow of information and expression, which are the bedrock of democracy, HB 4807 could return us to the dark ages and worse, be used as a weapon of suppression and repression,” the NUJP statement on HB 4807 reads.

1271179_10202206025099892_1959172950_o

PHOTOJOURNALISTS on the field | Photo by Cong B. Corrales

While Rodriguez’ withdrawal of support to his own bill is a “good development,” Photojournalists’ Center of the Philippines (PCP) chairman Mike Alquinto said their planned mobilization at the South Gate of the House of Representatives on Tuesday will still push through.

“Even if he withdrew support, any lawmaker can still activate it in the future since it will still be pending in the Committee on Public Information,”Alquino said as he pointed out that their protest is not only against the bill but also for the passage of the Freedom of Information Bill.

“We invite Rodriguez to meet us at the rally to formally state his withdrawal of support to the bill and state his moves to convince the committee (on public information) to scrap the bill with finality,” Alquinto added.

In their statement, PCP reiterated that the right to privacy is already guaranteed in the Constitution and that HB 4807 could become a tool for “unwilling public figures” to suppress press freedom.”

HOUSE BILL 4807 is no longer in the online records of the House of Representatives | Screengrab from 16h Congress website

HOUSE BILL 4807 is no longer in the online records of the House of Representatives | Screengrab from 16h Congress website

For his part, NUJP Cagayan de Oro chair Froilan Gallardo said that the local media community was dishearted that Rodriguez did not consult them first before filing the bill.

“He should have consulted his constituents; he is not a senator, he is our district representative and he should have talked with his neighbors first. He should go back to his roots,” Gallardo said.

Gallardo, who is also vice president for print of the Cagayan de Oro Press Club, said that they have approved a board resolution asking Rodriguez to withdraw the bill from Congress.

“He should withdraw the bill entirely and not just revert it back to the committee level. He owes it to the people, more importantly to his neighbors here,” he said.

He added that they are organizing a broad alliance of freedom of expression advocates in Cagayan de Oro which will fight to scrap Rodriguez’ bill for good.

It’s the business of businesses to prepare for disaster: OCD official

By Cong B. Corrales

IS YOUR business ready for the “ber” months? With the onset of the typhoon season in the country, an official of the Office of the Civil Defense reminded businesses prepare for the oncoming typhoons.

“Natural hazards cannot ultimately be controlled and avoided; however, the underlying factors and pressures that cause the vulnerabilities can be managed so that the disaster risks can be reduced,” Romeo F. Fajardo, OCD administrator said.

TACLOBAN CITY AFTER THE  STORM. Photo taken a week after Typhoon Haiyan struck the Philippines | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

TACLOBAN CITY AFTER THE STORM | Photo taken a week after Typhoon Haiyan struck the Philippines | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

Drawing from the experience of typhoon Yolanda (international codename: Haiyan), Fajardo said businesses that were not fully prepared closed shop resulting to instant massive unemployment in the affected areas and making affected communities harder to recover and rebuild.

Fajardo pointed out that during typhoon Yolanda many private hospitals stopped operating, which in turn denied victims of the storm much-needed medical assistance. The reason: most, if not all, of the small to medium enterprises (SMEs) did not have continuity plans.

“Once businesses are affected the local economy of the affected area will also be affected,” he said. Had the privately-owned utilities – water, power, transport, and communications – drawn up their continuity plans before the storm, these basic lifelines could have less affected.

Business Continuity Plans include the concepts of recovery time objective (RTO), or a company-set deadline on how fast their company can recover.

AFTER THE STORM | Village 88 in Tacloban City in ruins a week after Typhoon Haiyan struck. This photo was taken a week after the storm hit the Philippines, killing close to 7,000 people according to the official count | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

AFTER THE STORM | Village 88 in Tacloban City in ruins a week after Typhoon Haiyan struck. This photo was taken a week after the storm hit the Philippines, killing close to 7,000 people according to the official count | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

A Business Continuity Plan does not end with the company’s employees and families but also the surrounding communities, Fajardo said.

Based on the data from the Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA), the typhoon season in the country usually begins in June and peaks in October with at least three tropical cyclones per month, on the average.

This slightly ebbs down by November with two tropical cyclones per month. According to the World Risk Report, last year, the country is ranked third in the world most exposed and at risk to natural hazards. The Philippines has been ranked ninth and sixth in the years 2009 and 2010, respectively.

“For the Philippines, the study’s findings are simply grim: Of the 173 countries surveyed, the Philippines ranked No. 3 in its ‘most high-risk’ list. It is also the country that is the most vulnerable to risks in Asia.”

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The country is vulnerable to almost all types of natural hazards since it is situated in the Pacific typhoon belt, volcanic ring of fire and the continuing climate change brought about by the greenhouse effect. “The private sector has to survive a calamity in the country, one way or the other; thus the need for a Business Continuity Plan. This is still a new concept,” Fajardo said.

In a study by Young Won Park entitled Supply Chain Lessons from the Catastrophic Natural Disaster in Japan, last year, even if diversifying the locations of business ventures would “increase flexibility and abates risk, information ‘portability’—or the ability to quickly disseminate design and operations data along the supply chain—is also crucial to bouncing back from an unexpected catastrophe.”

OLD MAN BY THE SEA in the village of Anibong. People were killed here after their houses were crushed by cargo ships dumped on the shore by the storm surges | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

OLD MAN BY THE SEA in the village of Anibong. People were killed here after their houses were crushed by cargo ships dumped on the shore by the storm surges | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

“One major lesson from Japan is that companies need to disperse the flow of information along with the physical location of production. Developing ways to capture and share information throughout an existing or expanding supply chain can benefit the overall manufacturing process in addition to mitigating risk,” the same study reads in part.

Takahiro Ono, a Business Continuity Plan manager of Mitsubishi Corporation, said that Business Continuity Plans ensure continuity of operations and services; businesses could restart operations quickly within a tolerable period and can avoid going bankrupt.