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Lanao Del Norte – Homosexual – Dimaporo Family – Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF)
Refugee Review Tribunal AUSTRALIA RRT RESEARCH RESPONSE Research Response Number: PHL33460 Country: Philippines Date: 2 July 2008 Keywords: Philippines – Manila – Lanao Del Norte – Homosexual – Dimaporo family – Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) This response was prepared by the Research & Information Services Section of the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT) after researching publicly accessible information currently available to the RRT within time constraints. This response is not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular claim to refugee status or asylum. This research response may not, under any circumstance, be cited in a decision or any other document. Anyone wishing to use this information may only cite the primary source material contained herein. Questions 1. Please provide references to any recent, reliable overviews on the treatment of homosexual men in the Philippines, in particular Manila. 2. Do any reports mention the situation for homosexual men in Lanao del Norte? 3. Are there any reports or references to the treatment of homosexual Muslim men in the Philippines (Lanao del Norte or Manila, in particular)? 4. Do any reports refer to Maranao attitudes to homosexuals? 5. The Dimaporo family have a profile as Muslims and community leaders, particularly in Mindanao. Do reports suggest that the family’s profile places expectations on all family members? 6. Are there public references to the Dimaporo’s having a political, property or other profile in Manila? 7. Is the Dimaporo family known to harm political opponents in areas outside Mindanao? 8. Do the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) recruit actively in and around Iligan City and/or Manila? Is there any information regarding their attitudes to homosexuals? 9. -
Mangrove Mapping for the Verde Island Passage
MANGROVE MAPPING FOR THE VERDE ISLAND PASSAGE This publication was prepared by Conservation International Philippines with funding from the United States Agency for International Development’s Coral Triangle Support Partnership (CTSP) (September 2011) Cover photo: This mangrove forest is part of a Marine Protected Area in Balibago, Verde Island Passage in the Philippines. Photo: © CTSP / Tory Read Mangrove Mapping for the Verde Island Passage, Philippines November 2011 USAID Project Number GCP LWA Award # LAG-A-00-99-00048-00 For more information on the six-nation Coral Triangle Initiative, please contact: Coral Triangle Initiative on Coral Reefs, Fisheries, and Food Security Interim Regional Secretariat Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries of the Republic of Indonesia Mina Bahari Building II, 17th Floor Jalan Medan Merdeka Timur No 16 Jakarta Pusat 10110 Indonesia www.thecoraltriangleintitiave.org This is a publication of the Coral Triangle Initiative on Coral Reefs, Fisheries, and Food Security (CTI- CFF). Funding for the preparation of this document was provided by the USAID-funded Coral Triangle Support Partnership (CTSP). CTSP is a consortium led by the World Wildlife Fund, The Nature Conservancy, and Conservation International with funding support from the United States Agency for International Development’s Regional Asia Program. © 2011 Coral Triangle Support Partnership. All rights reserved. Reproduction and dissemination of material in this report for educational or other non-commercial purposes are authorized without any prior written permission from the copyright holders provided the source is fully acknowledged. Reproduction of material in this information product for resale or other commercial purposes is prohibited wihout written permission of the copyright holders. -
07 Dilemma in National Integration the Tasaday As a Case in Point.Pdf
DILEMMA INNATIONAL INTEGRATION: THE TASADAY .- AS A CASE IN POINT Editor', note. The panel discussion on national integration opened with the showing of about 15 slides on the Tasaday, the small band of cave-dwelling food gatherers dis covered in South Cotabato in June 1971 (see PSR 20 [3]>. After this Dr. Robert B. Fox, Director of the Panamin Research Center, reviewed for the audience basic information • about the cultural minorities of the Philippines: how they are legally and socioculturally def'med; how many they are (69 groups in all); how they range in numbers (from 500,000 Maranao Muslims through 120,000 Ifugao to 811 Agta and 25 TasadaY)j and who works with them (for the smaller groups, misslonaries or Panamin). Dr. Fox was followed by Eric Casifto, Teodoro Llamzon, and William Henry Scott, whose papers are published below. National Integration and National Language TEODORO A. LLAMZON • March 17, 1972 • The language situation in the Philippines today is described in terms of total number of langu&8es, official languages, lingua francas, and medium of instruction. If language is a symbol of national unity, which language(s) is it important that the Tasaday should leam? Perhaps the solution of Fr. Antoon Postma, S.V.D., missionary to the Mindoro Hanunoo, should be considered. While seeing that they leam more and more about Hanunoo languase and culture, he also has them leam Pilipino and English. The problem of national integration is of great Pampanggo - are spoken by more than 95 per interest, especially from the point of view of cent of the total population; the so-called language. -
Bridges Across Oceans: Initial Impact Assessment of the Philippines Nautical Highway System and Lessons for Southeast Asia
Bridges across Oceans Initial Impact Assessment of the Philippines Nautical Highway System and Lessons for Southeast Asia April 2010 0 2010 Asian Development Bank All rights reserved. Published 2010. Printed in the Philippines ISBN 978-971-561-896-0 Publication Stock No. RPT101731 Cataloging-In-Publication Data Bridges across Oceans: Initial Impact Assessment of the Philippines Nautical Highway System and Lessons for Southeast Asia. Mandaluyong City, Philippines: Asian Development Bank, 2010. 1. Transport Infrastructure. 2. Southeast Asia. I. Asian Development Bank. The views expressed in this book are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) or its Board of Governors or the governments they represent. ADB does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this publication and accepts no responsibility for any consequence of their use. By making any designation of or reference to a particular territory or geographic area, or by using the term “country” in this document, ADB does not intend to make any judgments as to the legal or other status of any territory or area. ADB encourages printing or copying information exclusively for personal and noncommercial use with proper acknowledgment of ADB. Users are restricted from reselling, redistributing, or creating derivative works for commercial purposes without the express, written consent of ADB. Note: In this report, “$” refers to US dollars. 6 ADB Avenue, Mandaluyong City 1550 Metro Manila, Philippines Tel +63 2 632 -
Department of the Interior Us Geological Survey
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Introducing coal-water-mix fuels to the Philippines Assessment of project feasibility Volume 1 - The Philippine coal resource by !/ 2!/ 2/ E. R. Landis, M. D. Carter, and J. H. MedlTn Open-File Report Report prepared for National Economic and Development Authority, Republic of the Philippines on behalf of the National Power Corporation, Development Bank of the Philippines under the auspices of the Office of Energy, U.S. Agency for International Development. This report is preliminary and has not been reviewed for conformity with U.S. Geological Survey editorial standards and stratigraphic nomenclature, I/ U.S. Geological Survey, Denver, CO Jj U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, VA 1985 FRONTISPIECE _____ ito f 12 0 Treaty limits of the Philippines PHILIPPINES PHILIPPIC CATANDUANES ISLAND MIMDANAO MALAYSIA CELEBES SEA Treaty limits of the Philippines L»'.' 'ssi'S.c-.s A (lnden«*io 1 / Index map of the Philippine Islands CONTENTS PREFACE.................................................. iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS......................................... iv 1.0 SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS............................. 1 2.0 COAL RESOURCES OF THE PHILIPPINES................... 4 2.1 Introduction.............'...................... 4 2.2 Geologic Setting............................... 6 2.3 Quanti ty....................................... 7 2.4 Quality........................................ 13 2.4.1 Philippine coals........................ 13 2.4.2 Coal from Seinrirara..................... 15 2.4.3 Coals -
PHILIPPINES Manila GLT Site Profile
PHILIPPINES Manila GLT Site Profile AZUSA PACIFIC UNIVERSITY GLOBAL LEARNING TERM 626.857.2753 | www.apu.edu/glt 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION TO MANILA ................................................... 3 GENERAL INFORMATION ........................................................ 5 CLIMATE AND GEOGRAPHY .................................................... 5 DIET ............................................................................................ 5 MONEY ........................................................................................ 6 TRANSPORTATION ................................................................... 7 GETTING THERE ....................................................................... 7 VISA ............................................................................................. 8 IMMUNIZATIONS ...................................................................... 9 LANGUAGE LEARNING ............................................................. 9 HOST FAMILY .......................................................................... 10 EXCURSIONS ............................................................................ 10 VISITORS .................................................................................. 10 ACCOMODATIONS ................................................................... 11 SITE FACILITATOR- GLT PHILIPPINES ................................ 11 RESOURCES ............................................................................... 13 NOTE: Information is subject to -
4. Resources, Security and Livelihood
Violent Conflicts and Displacement in Central Mindanao 4. RESOURCES, SECURITY AND LIVELIHOOD This section examines households’ perceptions of their surrounding environment (e.g. security). It looks at their resources or capital (social, natural, economic) available to households, as well as how those resources were being used to shape livelihood strategies and livelihood outcomes such as food security. The results give insights into the complex interaction between, on the one hand, displacement and settlement options, and, on the other hand, access to basic needs, services and livelihood strategies. Services and Social Relations Access to Services Across the study strata, about one-third of the households ranked their access to services negatively, including access to education (22%), access to (35%) and quality of (32%) health care, and access to roads (37%). Respondents in Maguindanao ranked on average all services more negatively than any other strata. Disaggregated by settlement status, respondents who were displaced at the time of the survey were more likely to rank services negatively compared to others, with the exception of access to roads. Nearly the same percentage of households who were displaced at the time of survey and those returned home found the road to be bad of very bad (47% and 55%, respectively). Figure 11: Ranking of services (% bad - very bad) Two-thirds (67%) of the sampled households had children aged 6-12 years, and among them nearly all had children enrolled in primary school (97%). However, 36 percent of the households reported that their school-enrolled children missed school for at least a week within the 6 months prior to the survey. -
Chapter 3 Socio Economic Profile of the Study Area
CHAPTER 3 SOCIO ECONOMIC PROFILE OF THE STUDY AREA 3.1 SOCIAL CONDITIONS 3.1.1 Demographic Trend 1) Population Trends by Region Philippine population has been continuously increasing from 48.1million in 1980, 76.3 million in 2000 to 88.5million in 2007 with 2.15% of annual growth rate (2000-2007). Population of both Mindanao and ARMM also showed higher increases than national trend since 2000, from 18.1 in 2000 to 21.6 million in 2007 (AAGR: 2.52%), and 2.9 in 2000 to 4.1million in 2007 (AAGR: 5.27%), respectively. Population share of Mindanao to Philippines and of ARMM to Mindanao significantly increased from 23.8% to 24.4% and 15.9% to 24.4%, respectively. 100,000,000 90,000,000 Philippines Mindanao 80,000,000 ARMM 70,000,000 60,000,000 50,000,000 40,000,000 30,000,000 20,000,000 10,000,000 0 1980 1990 1995 2000 2007 Year Source: NSO, 2008 FIGURE 3.1.1-1 POPULATION TRENDS OF PHILIPPINES, MINDANAO AND ARMM Population trends of Mindanao by region are illustrated in Figure 3.1.1-2 and the growth in ARMM is significantly high in comparison with other regions since 1995, especially from 2000 to 2007. 3 - 1 4,500,000 IX 4,000,000 X XI 3,500,000 XII XIII ARMM 3,000,000 2,500,000 2,000,000 1,500,000 1,000,000 1980 1990 1995 2000 2007 year Source NSO, 2008 FIGURE 3.1.1-2 POPULATION TRENDS BY REGION IN MINDANAO As a result, the population composition within Mindanao indicates some different features from previous decade that ARMM occupies a certain amount of share (20%), almost same as Region XI in 2007. -
The Panay-Guimaras-Negros Bridge Project: an Assessment
TSSP 22nd Annual Conference o f the Transportation Science Society of the Philippines 201 4 Iloilo City, Philippines, 12 Sept 2014 The Panay-Guimaras-Negros Bridge Project: An Assessment Nicanor R. ROXAS, Jr. Alexis M. FILLONE Graduate Student Associate Professor Civil Engineering Department Civil Engineering Department De La Salle University De La Salle University 2401 Taft Avenue, Manila 2401 Taft Avenue, Manila E-mail: [email protected] E-mail: [email protected] Abstract: Studies have shown that enormous transportation infrastructure projects recurrently underperform when actual cost and benefits are compared to the forecasts utilized in project proposals. The projected costs have been shown to be commonly underestimated while forecasted demand, overestimated. In this research, an ambitious project in the Western Visayas Region is assessed. The Panay-Guimaras-Negros Bridge Project intends to connect the islands via inter-island bridges that span a length of approximately 23 km. In this study, the PGN project is placed in the distribution of previously completed projects of the same scale and lessons are drawn from their experience. Moreover, Reference Class Forecasting is tackled in order to improve risk assessment in transportation infrastructure project proposals. If project proponents wish to reduce the level of risk from 50% to 20%, then a 12.4 billion to 29.7 billion Peso increase in the proposed budget should be added in order to avoid cost overrun. Key words : Forecast Inaccuracies, Reference Class Forecasting, Cost Underestimation 1. INTRODUCTION The Philippines is a developing country which needs to make an efficient use of its resources. According to the Department of Budget and Management of the Philippine government, a total of 213.5 billion pesos or approximately 10% of the 2.265 trillion 2014 national budget is allocated to the Department of Public Works and Highways. -
Rapid Market Appraisal for Expanding Tilapia Culture Areas in Davao Del Sur (Brackishwater Areas)
Rapid Market Appraisal for Expanding Tilapia Culture Areas in Davao del Sur (brackishwater areas) AMC MINI PROJECT: TEAM TILAPIA Acuna, Thaddeus R., UP Mindanao Almazan, Cynthia V., DOST-PCAARRD Castillo, Monica, DOST-PCAARRD Romo, Glory Dee A., UP Mindanao Rosetes, Mercy A., Foodlink Advocacy Co-operative (FAC) RMA for Expanding Tilapia Culture Areas in Davao del Sur (brackishwater areas) OBJECTIVE To conduct a market assessment of expanding areas for tilapia culture production in costal and brackishwater areas in the province of Davao del Sur. RMA for Expanding Tilapia Culture Areas in Davao del Sur (brackishwater areas) RESEARCH QUESTIONS 1. Does consumption level of Tilapia a key contributing factor for potential expansion of Tilapia production in Davao del Sur? 2. Is the market potential of competitiveness of Tilapia substantial enough to revitalize tilapia production in Davao del Sur? RMA for Expanding Tilapia Culture Areas in Davao del Sur (brackishwater areas) METHODOLOGY RAPID APPRAISAL APPROACH Secondary data Encoding Market Areas for gathering Constraints Intervention Primary data Market gathering Competitiveness * KIs Market * Market Mapping Opportunities * Market Visits A Step-by step approach of Rapid Market Appraisal (Adapted from the RMA proposal for underutilized fruits) RMA for Expanding Tilapia Culture Areas in Davao del Sur (brackishwater areas) INDUSTRY SITUATION ✓ Tilapia is a major aquaculture product in the Philippines that is considered important to the country’s food security and nutrition (Perez, 2017) ✓ Most -
Philippines - Complex Emergency Fact Sheet #3, Fiscal Year (Fy) 2018 June 29, 2018
PHILIPPINES - COMPLEX EMERGENCY FACT SHEET #3, FISCAL YEAR (FY) 2018 JUNE 29, 2018 NUMBERS AT USAID/OFDA1 FUNDING HIGHLIGHTS A GLANCE BY SECTOR IN FY 2017–2018 Armed clashes in June displace more 2% 8% than 14,000 people 214,350 10% 33% USAID partners provide emergency Estimated Number of food, shelter, and WASH assistance People Who Remain Displaced by Conflict in 23% USAID/OFDA contributes additional Marawi $3 million to support conflict-affected OCHA – May 2018 24% IDPs and returnees Economic Recovery & Market Systems (33%) Shelter & Settlements (24%) 208,845 Water, Sanitation, & Hygiene (23%) HUMANITARIAN FUNDING Logistics Support & Relief Commodities (10%) FOR THE PHILIPPINES RESPONSE IN Estimated Number of Protection (8%) FY 2017–2018 People Returned to Humanitarian Coordination & Information Management (2%) Marawi and Surrounding USAID/OFDA $9,500,000 Areas OCHA – May 2018 USAID/FFP $2,000,000 USAID/FFP2 FUNDING BY MODALITY IN FY 2017–2018 100% $11,500,000 45 Local & Regional Procurement (100%) Government-Designated Evacuation Centers Sheltering IDPs KEY DEVELOPMENTS DSWD – April 2018 Internally displaced person (IDP) returns to areas of origin continue, following conflict between the Government of the Philippines (GPH) and armed groups that displaced more than 350,000 people from May–October 2017, according to the UN. More than 127,300 208,800 people had returned to areas of origin in Marawi—the capital city of Lanao del Estimated Number of Sur Province in the Philippines’ Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao—and IDPs From Heavily- surrounding areas as of May 30, the UN reports. Damaged Areas of Marawi Off-Limits for Mid-June clashes between the GPH and armed groups in Lanao del Sur’s Tubaran Returns municipality displaced nearly 14,900 people, according to the GPH Department of Social GPH – 2018 Welfare and Development. -
Provincial and Regional Institutions in the Philippines: an Essential Element in Coastal Resource Management and Marine Conservation
Provincial and Regional Institutions in the Philippines: An Essential Element in Coastal Resource Management and Marine Conservation Miriam C. Balgos* and Cesario R. Pagdilao** A Background Paper for the Workshop on Institutional Frameworks for Community Based-Coastal Resources Management and Marine Conservation in the Visayas Region, Leyte, Philippines March 14-15, 2002 URI Bay Campus, South Ferry Road, Narragansett, RI 02882 USA Phone: (401) 874-6224 Fax: (401) 789-4670 Website: http://crc.uri.edu * Graduate College of Marine Studies, University of Delaware ** Philippine Council for Aquatic and Marine Research and Development 1 I. Introduction A. Historical background and perspective The Philippines has more than two decades of experience in coastal resources management (CRM) and marine conservation, particularly in community-based initiatives, from which other countries in the region are drawing. However, a reservoir of lessons learned have not as yet been applied and translated significantly into improved environmental status nor to an uplifted socio-economic status of poor coastal communities. It has been reported that only 19% of community-based coastal resources management programs and projects implemented between 1984 and 1994 were successful (Pomeroy and Carlos 1997). These findings lead to the question of what is causing this low rate of success. Is there a need for a shift in the CRM model being followed? Or should these projects and programs simply need more time to mature and produce tangible results? A project implemented by the University of Rhode Island Coastal Resources Center looked at the contextual and intervention factors that affect the success of community-based marine protected areas (MPAs) in the Philippines which are a common or oftentimes the major intervention of coastal management programs.