Half the world will be online by 2016; PHL scores so-so

HALF THE WORLD or nearly six billion people will have Internet access in the next three years. Two years hence by 2019, up to 7.8 billion people would be online.

Yet still, that is just half the story. Up to 80 percent of the citizens of the 48 poorest nations of the world have been left out by the Internet express.

This is the mixed prognosis of the United Nations’ Broadband Commission for Digital Development, which launched over the weekend a new report with country-by-country data on the state of broadband access worldwide.

How PHL scored:

The Philippines ranked No. 110 out of 190 nations in terms of fixed (wired) broadband subscriptions per 100 inhabitants of only 2.2 as of 2013.

Mobile broadband penetration per 100,000 population was rated at a higher 20.3 percent of all Filipinos, landing the Philippines at No. 79 out of 130 countries where this service was available.

In the league of developing nations, the Philippine was listed No. 57 out of 132 nations) with 22,2 percent of households using the Internet.

Overall, Internet user penetration (or percentage of individuals using the Internet) in the country was recorded at 37 percent, landing the Philippines at No. 106 in the list of 191 nations.

The UN report said that “over 50 percent of the global population will have Internet access” in the next 36 months, “with mobile broadband over smartphones and tablets now the fastest growing technology in human history.”

The Commission’s 2014 State of Broadband report was released in New York at the 10th meeting of the Broadband Commission for Digital Development on Sept. 21.

The report reveals that “more than 40 percent of the world’s people are already online, with the number of Internet users rising from 2.3 billion in 2013 to 2.9 billion by the end of this year.”

“Over 2.3 billion people will access mobile broadband by end-2014, climbing steeply to a predicted 7.6 billion within the next five years,” the report said. “There are now over three times as many mobile broadband connections as there are conventional fixed broadband subscriptions.”

In total, the Commission said, “there are now 77 countries where over 50 percent of the population is online, up from 70 in 2013.”

The top 10 countries for Internet use are all located in Europe, with Iceland ranked first in the world with 96.5% of people online.

The Republic of Korea continues to have the world’s highest household broadband penetration at over 98 percent, up from 97 percent last year, it said.

Monaco now surpasses last year’s champion, Switzerland, as the world leader in fixed broadband penetration, at over 44 percent of the population.

Four economies (Monaco, Switzerland, Denmark, Netherlands) have achieved Internet penetration rate in excess of 40 percent, up from just one (Switzerland) in 2013, the report said.

The US ranks 19th globally in terms of number of people online, ahead of other OECD countries like Germany (20th) and Australia (21st), but behind the United Kingdom (12th), Japan (15th) and Canada (16th). The US has slid from 20th to 24th place for fixed broadband subscriptions per capita, just behind Japan but ahead of Macao (China) and Estonia.

But the sad flip-side to this report is this: many others in the world’s least developed nations remain offline and unconnected.

The lowest levels of Internet access are mostly found in sub-Saharan Africa, with Internet available to less than 2% of the population in Ethiopia (1.9%), Niger (1.7%), Sierra Leone (1.7%), Guinea (1.6%), Somalia (1.5%), Burundi (1.3%), Eritrea (0.9%) and South Sudan (no data available). The list of the ten least-connected nations also includes Myanmar (1.2%) and Timor Leste (1.1%).

“As we look towards the post-2015 UN Sustainable Development Goals, it is imperative that we not forget those who are being left behind,” said ITU Secretary-General Dr Hamadoun I. Touré, who serves as co-Vice Chair of the Commission with UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova.

“Broadband uptake is accelerating, but it is unacceptable that 90 percent of people in the world’s 48 Least Developed Countries remain totally unconnected,” he said.

“With broadband Internet now universally recognized as a vital tool for social and economic development, we need to make connectively a key development priority, particularly in the world’s poorest nations. Connectivity is not a luxury for the rich — rather, it is the most powerful tool mankind has ever had at its disposal to bridge development gaps in areas like health, education, environmental management and gender empowerment,” Touré said.

“Despite the phenomenal growth of the Internet, despite its many benefits, there are still too many people who remain unconnected in the world’s developing countries,” said UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova.

“Providing Internet connectivity to everyone, everywhere, will take determined policy leadership and investment. As we focus on infrastructure and access, we must also promote the rights skills and diversity of content, to allow women and men to participate in building and participating in knowledge societies,” she added.

“As the new State of Broadband report shows, ICTs are making a significant contribution to social development, economic development and environmental protection, the three pillars that will underpin the post-2015 international development agenda and move us towards a more sustainable world,” Bokova said.

According to the Commission, “the popularity of broadband-enabled social media applications continues to soar, with 1.9 billion people now active on social networks.”

Produced annually by the Broadband Commission, The State of Broadband is a unique global snapshot of broadband network access and affordability, with country-by country data measuring broadband access against key advocacy targets set by the 54 members of the Broadband Commission.

The UN Broadband Commission says its “community” is composed of “a select group of top CEOs and industry leaders, senior policy-makers and government representatives, international agencies, academia and organizations concerned with development who offer diverse perspectives on why broadband matters to drive its deployment around the world and shape the global agenda.”

“It is this multi-stakeholder approach combining perspectives from both policy and industry that makes the Commission’s advocacy work unique, through a fresh approach to UN and business engagement,” the Commission web page stated. “Indeed, one of the Commission’s key strengths lies in forging consensus between its business partners and policy members in developing a joint approach promoting broadband for public benefit, whilst satisfying minimum commercial incentives.”

Binay’s accuser, by the numbers

From the PCIJ Files: MAKATI CITY

Ex-VICE MAYOR ERNESTO S. MERCADO

IN THIS series, we will share with you PCIJ’s databases on the wealth, campaign contributions and spending, and social network of elected government officials of the Philippines.

Former Makati City Vice Mayor Ernesto S. Mercado recently came to the limelight as witness to the alleged kickbacks from public contracts that supposedly went to Vice President Jejomar “Jojo” C. Binay when he was still mayor of Makati City.

Mercado was Binay’s political ally for 15 years before he switched to the Nacionalista Party in 2010. A former businessman, Mercado began his political career as councilor of Makati City in 1992 and was re-elected in 1995. He ran for vice mayor in 1998 but lost to actor Edu Manzano. He returned to public office in 2001 as vice mayor and won his 2004 and 2007 re-election bid. In 2010, Mercado ran for mayor but lost to Jejomar Erwin “JunJun” S. Binay Jr. who ran for mayor in lieu of his father, Jojo Binay, who ran and won as vice president.

How wealthy is Mercado?

Mercado’s Statements of Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth (SALN) available at the PCIJ library showed that his net worth marked a minimal increase from P62.83 million in 2000 to P63.92 million in 2004.

As of 2004, his total assets stood at P114 million and his liabilities, P50 million. Mercado declared owning P54.3 million worth of properties in Makati City, Pateros, Antipolo City, Bataan, Nueva Ecija, Laguna, Batangas.

His most expensive properties were a P12-million condominium unit in Makati City and P10-million land property in Pateros. He also declared stocks and business investments worth P52.9 million.

SULYAP: Protecting our world

ENVIRONMENTAL REPORTAGE has always been a point of pride for the PCIJ. After the Center was established in 1989, one of the first things that PCIJ Executive Director Sheila Coronel did was to establish an Environment Desk. It was a message powerful in its simplicity: Long before it became a trend, PCIJ had already made a commitment to environmental reporting.

The reason was simple: In the end, much of our lives are interconnected by and to the environment we live in. History, culture, politics, religion – many of these elements in our lives are rooted in the physical world we find ourselves in. And in dealing with the issues that color our world, we come across all sorts of characters – heroes, prophets, liars and thieves, and ordinary people in an extraordinary world.

Photos, text, and editing by PCIJ Multimedia Producer Julius D. Mariveles.


 

Rituals of Faith

AS THE NATION celebrates Easter Sunday, people are reminded of the timeless concepts of death and rebirth. One lonely voice made this point abundantly clear two thousand years ago – that only in failure do we find victory, only in death do we find renewal, and only in fear do we find courage.

The Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism’s multimedia producer, Julius D. Mariveles, produced this video/slideshow of the Good Friday commemoration in Barangay Cutud, San Fernando, Pampanga, where thousands of the faithful renew their spirituality in a passionate but highly controversial tradition of blood and pain as a test of faith.

Pasyon at Debosyon

CUTUD VILLAGE, San Fernando, Pampanga – The re-enactment here of the Pasyon, the life and death of Jesus Christ, is a curious mix of old and new, of the spiritual and the worldly. The iron smell of blood dripping from the backs of penitents hangs in the air along with the perfume of the well-heeled devotees and the not-so-pleasant smell of bodies sweating in the heat. In the background, the dramatized screams of agony blend with the not-so-perfect pitch of a villager singing “My Way” on the videoke as Hesus falls on the way to Calvary Hill.

At Golgotha, the penitents make their way to the three crosses on top of a hill, where, by tradition, three of them are crucified in remembrance of a man who gave his life for us two thousand years ago. Surrounding this scene of passion and intense spirituality are icons of a more modern era – merchandising tents of ion drinks and telecommunications companies. Some devotees close their eyes in prayer and wait for the start of Christ’s agony, while the giggling young ones take selfies, unmindful of the contemptuous stares of the old faithful who have come here to reflect.

Vendors also hawk their wares, from caps to hats, fresh coconuts to “ice scramble” and even the bulyos, the flogging instrument used by penitents to bleed themselves. As abundant as the prayers are the cameras – the big ones lugged by major cameramen of big TV networks or foreign correspondents to the ones on cellphones that almost every one whips out at the moment the five-inch stainless steels nails are hammered into the flesh of this year’s Kristo.

At the center of it all is Ruben Enaje who probably holds the record for coming back from the “dead” 27 times in a row. This could probably be the last year for the signboard maker already in his 50s to be Jesus Christ. Last year was supposed to be his last but he agreed to do it again this year after villagers failed to find an appropriate volunteer willing to portray Jesus Christ and agreeing to be nailed to the cross.

People here say there was one who volunteered last year but officials found him to be unfit, unlike Enaje who has no vices or extramarital affairs.

“It is not only a tradition, it carries deep meaning for us,” 57-year-old Cutud resident Rene Malonzo said in the vernacular. In fact for some Cutud residents, the Pasyon is more important than Christmas because “it really traces the life and sufferings of Christ and the valuable lessons that must be remembered by us,” Rene said.

His neighbor, Jun Flores, is not a Catholic. He is a member of the Iglesia Ni Kristo but to him, observing the Cutud rites is also important. “This is part of what we do in the community,” he said, while helping Malonzo point people to the Crucifixion Hill.

While this tradition is frowned upon even by the Roman Catholic hierarchy, it carries a special meaning for those who have been doing it for years, a panata or pledge to usher in blessings for them. One said his father had a stroke nine years ago. Since he started flogging himself during the Semana Santa, no member of his family ever had a serious case of illness.

Another, who brought his entire family to the Crucifixion, said his daughter died three years ago. He, too, was once a penitent but when his daughter died, he became a “tabas” or a person who wounds the back of a penitent.

Most of those who can actually witness the crucifixion within tents provided by the city government are officials and VIPs. Those outside can only hope to see a glimpse of it as they crane their necks or climb parked vehicles to see the driving of the nails into Enaje’s palm.