Baboying pork

Agri producers, hog raisers call for probe on smuggling of “expired” imported meat

Philippine agricultural producers and hog raisers called on national government officials to probe the alleged smuggling of at least six million kilos of “expired” imported meat that did not pass the country’s required quarantine tests and food safety examinations.

The Samahan ng Agrikulturang Industriya (SINAG) said conflicting data from two government agencies, the Bureau of Customs (BOC) and the Bureau of Animal Industry (BAI), point to the possibility that at least six million of “expired” imported pork are now in the Philippine market.

SINAG said data they have obtained from sources in the BOC showed that the agency released 121.6 million kilos of imported pork from January to June this year but official figures from the BAI showed that only 116 million kilos passed through quarantine inspection, pointing at the possibility that 5.6 million kilos are “unaccounted for.”

Vicente Mercado, chairman of the National Federation of Hog Farmers, Inc., said the director of the BIA and all meat imported should “come forward and disclose the amount of meat they imported this year.”

He added that they should also release other important data like the dates of arrival, quarantine inspection certificates, the places where the importations were brought, and the names of companies or restaurant chains that received the imports.

SINAG chairperson Rosendo So, on the other hand, called on Agriculture Sec. Proceso Alcala and BOC Commissioner John Philip Sevilla to probe the alleged missing imported pork. “Bakit nakakalabas sa BOC ng walang quarantine clearance at bakit walang quarantine officer to check on the imported meat?”

(“Why were these released by the BOC without quarantine clearance and why was there no quarantine officer to check on the imported meat?”)

Mercado said their discovery about the missing “expired” imported pork comes at “critical period” after a group of meat importers said that is alright for the public to eat expired meat as long as these are frozen.

“These meat importers have no business in the food industry as they pose the greatest threat to our public health security. Kung gusto nila, sila na lang ang kumain at ‘wag na idamay ang pamilya at mga anak natin,” So said.

He also pointed out that the meat importers’ position is alarming, coming as it is in the face of the recent expired meat scandal in China where the Shanghai Husi Company was found to be supplying expired meat to several fast-food chains.

Pork is one of the agricultural commodities that are being smuggled into the Philippines. A study funded by the Department of Agriculture and the results of which were released this year showed that agriculture produce being smuggled into the country is valued at $10 billion yearly.

The study, titled “An Assessment of Smuggling of Selected Agricultural Commodities in the Philippines,” also showed that agricultural smuggling evolved into a big-time illegal trade starting in the 1980s.

President Aquino, in a message delivered by Agriculture Sec. Alcala last April 2014, assured hog-raisers that the government is committed to ending meat smuggling.

“We have been directing our government offices especially the DA to intensify its efforts in impeding meat smuggling to give local hog raisers the opportunity to gain better incomes,” he said.

DATA A DAY: Declaring a calamity

EVERYONE SEEMS quite familiar by now with that sentence often heard in the news: So-and-so has declared a state of calamity…

Unfortunately, the implications of that sentence usually just pass over most people’s heads. When a state of calamity is declared, what happens next? Is it just a recognition that something is very wrong? Is it to tell people what they already know? Or is it a tool to remind insurance companies to start reconsidering their premiums?

For today’s Data a Day, we ask you the questions:

Who can declare a state of calamity? And, perhaps more importantly, what is the point of that declaration?

For the answer to those questions, just click here, or visit our MoneyPolitics Online site here.

 

DATA A DAY: PH in the world risk list

THE PHILIPPINES always seems to find its way into all sorts of lists, good or bad – from having the world’s largest bibingka (rice cake) to being one of the most dangerous places in the world for journalists.

In their recently released World Risk Report, the Alliance of Development Works and the United Nations University-Institute for Environment and Human Security ranked countries in terms of riskiness, according to vulnerability and exposure.

For today’s Data a Day:

How does the Philippines rank among other countries in the 2012 World Risk Report?

For the answer to that question, click this link, or go and visit the PCIJ’s MoneyPolitics Online website here.

 

DATA A DAY: Disaster Dos and Don’ts

THE TRAGEDIES brought about by the earthquake and the supertyphoon have shown us just how little we know about what is allowed and disallowed by law when it comes to disasters and crises.

Since the Philippines is such a disaster-prone country (and here we just talk about natural disasters), we already have a long list of prohibited acts during such emergencies – everything from dereliction of duty, to buying and selling relief goods, to diverting aid, to misrepresenting the source of the goods.

At the same time, we also have a long list of to-dos when a crisis erupts.

For today’s Data a Day:

Which of the following is prohibited during disaster and crisis situations under Republic Act No. 10121?

  1. Imposition of price ceilings on basic necessities and prime commodities by the President.
  2. Preventing the entry and distribution of relief goods in disaster-stricken areas.
  3. Government financing institutions granting no-interest loans to the affected victims.
  4. Reprogramming of funds for the repair and upgrading of public infrastructure and facilities.

For the answer to that question, and for a comprehensive list of dos and don’ts, just click this direct link, or visit the PCIJ’s MoneyPolitics Online website here.

 

 

Walk, run for Yolanda victims: Buhay at Bahay, Itindig Muli!

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YOLANDA RUN: Buhay at Bahay, Itindig Muli!

A partnership of government and non-government organizations, this fund-raising event is a first step to rolling out a project to help rebuild lives and reconstruct homes and communities in the provinces that Yolanda had devastated.

The three-kilometer run/walk for a cause around the Quezon Memorial Circle will be held on Sunday, Nov. 24, starting 5:30 am.

After the massive relief and rescue operations for those who suffered the wrath of super typhoon Yolanda, the more massive and more difficult tasks of rebuilding lives and communities beckon, a project that will require all citizens and civil servants to stay with the story of Yolanda’s victims.

The Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) is supporting this worthy project in part to help focus attention on the plight of journalists, media workers, and media agencies that had also been displaced by Yolanda.

Members of the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) have verified that at least four media workers had died; at least six others are still unaccounted for or remain missing, and a number of media agencies had been rendered inoperable in the affected provinces.

The co-organizers of this project are:

* The National Anti-Poverty Commission (NAPC) whose mandate in law is to encourage people’s participation and empowerment;

* The Alliance of Seven, which is composed of local government units in Metro Manila cities/towns that had been ravaged by typhoon Ondoy (Marikina, Quezon City, Pasig, Antipolo, San Mateo, Montalban, and Cainta);

* Habitat for Humanity, a non-government agency with a track record of rebuilding homes and communities with vigor and expertise;

* Operation Compassion Philippines, a non-government agency that attends to orphans and communities displaced by calamities and disasters; and

* Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism.

Join YOLANDA RUN!

To register:

* Visit #YolandaRun #YolandaPH #RebuildPH

* Call National Anti-Poverty Commission
3rd Floor ATI Bldg, Elliptical Road,
Quezon City Tel: 4265028
9 am to 6 pm (November 18-23, 2013)

* Call Operation Compassion – Philippines
88 Maningning St., Teachers’ Village, Quezon City
Contact: Susan Cucio Tel: 4331818
Room-M6 Yrreverre Square.
888 Mindanao Ave, Quezon City, Philippines
Contact: Ronald Cucio | Tel: 483-5589

Participants are strongly encouraged to register before 24 November 2013.

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