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Welcome to Calauag, Quezon

Dito Sa Amin

Mapayapa, Masaya, at Maunlad!

Sa Calauag, Quezon, Pilipinas araw-araw sariwa ang mga organikong pagkain galing sa sarili nitong ani sa agrikultura at mga huli sa yamang tubig.

Narito ang pinakamasarap sa Pilipinas na klase ng alimango, tinatawag na “katang” naming mga taga-Calauag.

Marami rin sa mga pamilihan ang lokal na ani ng sugpo, suwahe o hipon, at bangus.

Napapalibutan ng mga Dagat ng Lamon at Ragay at Pacific Ocean, ang Calauag ang may pinakamalaking internasyunal na industriya ng aquaculture ng seaweeds sa buong rehiyon ng CaLaBaRZon (Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, Quezon).

Sa nakalipas na mahigit isang dekada, nagsulputan mga maliliit at malalaking pamilihan, mga sangay ng bangko na may atm, lokal at internasyunal na kainan, botika, mga nagpapautang, sanglaan, at kumpanya ng lohistika.

Ni REYNANTE DANSECO

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By: Bonn Erasmo
Published October 1, 2021
Philippine Panorama

Morning comes to BARANGAY KINALIN farm in a serene play of colors


The Kinalin barrio farm can be accessed by taking a 15-minute ride on a pedalled vehicle called iskits or skates in English, the other vehicle is a motorized one called trolley or de motor Start the day while it is still dark.

Listen to the call of the birds. From the quack-quacking of the wild ducks called mapan to the chuckling of the barred rail birds called tikling. From the twittering swallows to the chirping sparrows, from the warbling larks to the chirruping kingfishers.

The morning is calling, it is a new day in Barrio Kinalin, one of 81 barangays located in the municipality of Calauag in the province of Quezon.

Dawn is bursting from the hills filled with trees and coconuts. As the sun extends its rays into the green field intensifying its surrounding colors, the fuzzy white fog starts to disappear, leaving a net of sparkling dewdrops on every leaf of the palay planted by hardworking farmers.

The colors of the farm vary according to the seasons. The planting season paints a silvery white when water fills the rice field. This is when farmers prepare the soil until it softens, ready for planting—a great time to stroll around the farm, especially in the afternoon to catch the sight of water mirroring the hills. Weeks after broadcasting the seeds, the farm will eventually turn green, when all the palay leaves have grown.

Months will pass and the harvest season will follow. Behold the golden rice field, the palay grains ripe for harvesting. 

But the beauty of the rice field is not limited to its crops. Look closely at the rice paddy dike or pilapil, with its rich variety of green wild grasses growing—amazing! Tiny flowers, some as tiny as a fingernail, bloom in soft pastel colors waiting to be noticed.

The sounds made by the nocturnal birds like the Asian koel, which is locally called kuhaw, and the Philippine hawk cuckoo or tagkaro, along with the chirping crickets, remind you that it’s evening. The day is done. Night falls faster on the farm than on the city.

The green grass is a carabao’s favorite and of goats, too, but oftentimes it serves as a playground. Luksong baka (jumping over the cow) and luksong tinik (jumping over the thorns) are the games children play, a custom passed down to many generations.

But the fun doesn’t end there. A plunge into the cold water of the overflowing irrigation dam provides a relaxing exercise for the lungs and muscles of swimmers young and old in the Barrio. At no charge, it’s better than a resort for those who love picnics or dreaming of a getaway. In addition, locals can satisfy their cravings for seasonal wild fruits, like katmon, kalumpit, lipote, and mabolo (velvet apple) to name a few. Young ones who love to climb trees enjoy picking fruits off them.

The mesmerizing colors of sunset will complete your day. The sounds made by the nocturnal birds like the Asian koel, which is locally called kuhaw, and the Philippine hawk cuckoo or tagkaro, along with the chirping crickets, remind you that it’s evening. The day is done. Night falls faster on the farm than on the city. But as certainly as the sun rises in the east, the farm will bloom again tomorrow.

Atilab as Gaualac >>>

Maging Atribido, Alamin ang Balitang Bago!

CALAUAG MAY ISA SA 10 PASYENTENG MAY COVID-19 SA QUEZON NITONG PASKO

Ni REY DANSECO
Disyembre 2021

Mayroon na lang 10 pasyente na may Covid-19 ang tinututukan sa lalawigan ng Quezon.

Ayon sa  Integrated Provincial Health Office (IPHO), may tig-iisang pasyente ang mga bayan ng Calauag, Lopez, Buenavista, at Alabat habang may tig-tatlo naman ang Sariaya at Lucena City.

Idinagdag ng IPHO na patuloy na walang bagong kaso ng Covid-19 sa lalawigan ng Quezon sa buong buwan ng Disyembre hanggang nitong Pasko.

Iniulat ng IPHO mula Disyembre 1 hanggang 25, walang bagong kasong naitala ang kanilang tanggapan.

Ang magandang sitwasyon ngayon ay taliwas sa noong nakaraang tatlong buwan nang nagkaroon sa lalawigan ng 211 pasyente noong Nobyembre; 2,115 noong Oktubre; at 5,342 noong Setyembre.

Bumaba na lamang naman sa 10 ang pinagagaling mula sa pinakamataas na bilang ng may COVID-19 noong Setyembre 21.

Sa 41 bayan at lungsod sa Quezon, 35 lokal na pamahalaan ang nagrehistro ng mga kaso.

Umabot sa 27,831 ang nagka-Covid-19 sa Quezon mula nang pumutok ang pandemya noong Pebrero taong 2020.

Nabuhay ang 26,342 sa mga pasyente habang 1,479 ang namatay.

May pinakamaraming kaso ng Covid-19 sa Lucena City na 223.

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Farmer shot dead during drinking session in Barangay Marilag

By Delfin Mallari
November 07, 2021

A 30-year-old farmer was shot and killed in a drinking session in Calauag town in Quezon province on Saturday night, report said Sunday. The Calauag police said in a report that Jason Vera was having a drink with two others inside a house in Barangay (village) Marilag around 10 p.m. 

Suddenly, Rosalito Berido and Rodulfo Castro barged in and, without provocation, Berido assaulted the victim. Not contented, Berido reportedly ordered Castro to shoot Vera. Castro heeded and shot Vera using a firearm of still unknown caliber. Vera died on the spot. The suspects escaped after the shooting. Investigation is ongoing to establish the motive behind the incident.

Police launched a manhunt operation to arrest the suspect.

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Habang namimili sa Calauag ang ina, mga anak sa Guinayangan natusta

Ni PEEWEE C. BACUÑO

Nasawi ang isang 15-anyos na dalagita at isang apapt-na-taong gulang na batang babae matapos ma-trap sa nasunog nilang bahay sa Barangay Manggagawa, Guinayangan, Quezon.

Batay report ng Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP) Guinayangan, nangyari ang sunog pasado 1:00 ng madaling araw nitong Biyernes. Umabot sa 39 na mga bahay ang nasunog, at hindi naman bababa sa 50 pamilya ang apektado.

Itinaas sa ika-2 alarma ang sunog at kinailangan ang tulong ng pamatay ng sunog ng karatig bayan.

Kinilala ang nasawi na sina Melissa Joy Dela Cruz, 4-anyos, at Michaela Avellanosa, 15-anyos.

Ayon sa mga magulang ni Melissa, iniwan nila sa bahay si Melissa at Michaela upang kumuha ng isda sa bayan ng Calauag.

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Taunang budget ng Quezon, bakit nga ba hindi na-apruba?

Ni Dindeth Ditablan

Sentro ng atensyon hanggang ngayon sa lalawigan ng Quezon ang pangalan ng 8 bokal na bumubuo sa new majority ng Sangguniang Panlalawigan dahil sa hindi nila pag apruba sa mungkahing badyet sa taong kasalukuyan ng probinsya. Sa ekslusibong panayam ng Current PH kay Sonny Ubana, Majority Floor Leader ng Sanggunian, sinabi niya na halos 200 million ang sablay di umano sa proposed budget at inisa-isa niya ang mga pangunahing dahilan kung bakit hindi nila inaprubahan ang mungkahing budget para sa lalawigan.

Sa unang punto ay nakita ng lupon na binawasan ng Administrasyong Suarez ng 40% ang budget para sa COVID-19 response, partikular na sa MOOE ng lahat ng ospital sa probinsya liban sa dalawa. Kaakibat nito ay ang hindi pagkakatugma ng proposed budget sa budget message kung saan makikita na ngayong taon ay ang nakalagay sa executive message ay “This budget seeks to provide response and recovery for Covid-19 pandemic” subalit binawasan naman ang budget para sa Covid-19 response na hindi naman dapat sapagkat ito ay naka appropriate na sa proposed plan noong nakaraang taon pa lamang, ika niya dapat daw ay nadagdagan ang budget ng mga ospital sa lalawigan imbes na bawasan, isang paraan upang mag tugma ang executive message at ang proposed budget.

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Fishers, local officials free whale shark Butanding caught in net in Quezon

By Arnell Ozaeta - Philstar.com

QUEZON, Philippines — A whale shark, also known as a butanding, was sighted by residents in Lamon Bay, Atimonan, Quezon on Monday went it got trapped inside a fishing net near the seashore.

According to the report of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources in Calauag, the whale shark (Rhincodon typus) was around three meters long and had no visible injuries.

Around 30 fishermen, concerned residents, and local barangay officials helped release the whale shark into safer waters. 

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Naka-motor tinumbok ng van sa Lungib, dedbol

Ni REY DANSECO

Hindi umabot ng buhay sa pagamutan ang naka-motor na lalaki matapos banggain ng van sa kahabaaan ng Maharlika Highway sa Barangay Lungib, Calauag, Quezon nitong Miyerkules ng umaga. Kinilala ng Calauag PNP ang biktima na si Francisco Pago Jr. habang nasa kustodya ang suspek na si Rhey Veen Somera. Sa imbestigasyon lumitaw na kinain ng minamanehong Isuzu Elf ni Somera ang linya ng kasalubong nitong motosiklo ni Pago dakong alas-8:30 ng umaga ngayong Agosto 18 sa naturang lugar. Tinangkang dalahin sa St. Peter General Hospital sa bayan ng Calauag ang biktima ngunit nalagutan na rin ng hininga.

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Quezon hits 2,066 active COVID-19 cases

By: Delfin T. Mallari Jr. - Correspondent
September 6, 2021

The number of confirmed active COVID-19 cases in Quezon province has breached the 2,000 mark after health authorities recorded an additional 134 new virus carriers on Sunday.

Based on the Integrated Provincial Health Office (IPHO) latest bulletin on September at 5 p.m., the new COVID-19 cases raised the overall active case count to 2,066, the highest single-day tally since the pandemic began in March last year. 

The spike of COVID-19 cases started on July 23 when there were only 705 active virus carriers back then. Lucena City, the provincial capital which is under strict modified enhanced community quarantine until Sept. 7, topped the list with 516 active virus carriers. 

The COVID-19 death toll also rose to 1,006 as of Sept. 5 after the IPHO recorded nine more fatalities – two each in Candelaria, Lopez and Calauag towns, and one each in San Antonio, Jomalig and Tayabas City.

At least 50 of them died from Sept. 1 to 5 or an average of 10 fatalities daily. During the same period, the IPHO recorded a total of 828 new cases.

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Quezon province records 8 cases of COVID-19 Delta variant

By JAMIL SANTOS, GMA News
August 17, 2021

The province of Quezon has detected eight cases of the Delta variant of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), Governor Danilo Suarez said Tuesday.

Suarez said four of the Delta cases were recorded in the municipality of Dolores, where three have already recovered. Other Delta cases were in Sariaya, Tiaong, and Real.

Other Delta cases were in Sariaya, Tiaong, and Real. "The total cases of the [Delta] variant is only at eight in the whole province," Suarez said.

As of Tuesday, Suarez said the province has 1,262 active cases, making the total number of confirmed cases to 18,321.

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Former MTRCB, PCSO chair Manoling Morato dies

Calauag, Quezon native Manuel "Manoling" Morato, former chairman of the Movie and Television Review and Classification Board and the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office, has passed away July 30th, 2021. He was 87.

Morato, born November 17, 1933 and raised in Calauag, was son of former Calauag Mayor Tomas Morato, who also served as first Mayor of Quezon City.

In a Facebook post, the MTRCB expressed grief over his passing.

"The whole of the MTRCB family joins in mourning the loss of Manuel 'Manoling' Morato, Former Chairperson and legend of the Philippine entertainment industry. Your contributions to history, the national discourse and the lives of the Filipino people will remain ever large in our hearts. You will be missed Sir!" it said.

Senator Imee Marcos also conveyed condolences to Morato's family via Facebook.

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DTI to showcase chocolate products in ‘Kalakal Quezon’

by Bernie Cahiles-Magkilat

“Tangerine” of the Four K Kakao Farm in the province of Quezon, an emerging powerhouse for cacao production in the country, will showcase its recently launched range of chocolate products through the Department of Trade and Industry’s “Kalakal Quezon”. The fair, featuring cacao at SM City Lucena, Mall Atrium opened on May 25 until May 31, 2021.

Quezon’s 4th District Representative Angelina “Helen” Tan has spearheaded the development of cacao farming in Quezon Province, which was piloted in the nine towns in the 4th District of the province, namely: Atimonan, Plaridel, Lopez, Gumaca, Perez, Calauag, Tagkawayan, Guinayangan, and Quezon.

Tan’s efforts paved the way for the inauguration of the Department of Agriculture (DA) of a cacao facility in Gumaca, Quezon on November 30, 2020 led by Agriculture Secretary William Dar and DA Region 4A Director Arnel de Mesa.

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DILG warns Calauag, 19 other LGUs over 'illegal, unreported, unregulated' fishing

Twenty local government units have been warned by the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) for their failure to regulate commercial fishing in their localities last year, the agency said Saturday. The DILG, in partnership with environmental group Oceana Philippines, said they were able to detect illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing (IUUF) in these places through satellite technology.

The basis of the warning issued by the agency were the number of violations allegedly committed under the Philippine Fisheries Code of 1998, such as the commercial vessels' use of "super light" or artificial light to attract fish during nighttime and their "intrusion and encroachment" in municipal waters that remain unreported.

Using such artificial light sources for fishing is prohibited under the law.  

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2 NPA inaresto sa utos ng RTC Calauag

Ni Danny Estacio

Dalawang umano’y miyembro ng New People’s Army (NPA) ang inaresto ng militar at pulisya kasunod nang isinilbing warrant of arrest sa San Pablo City, nitong Biyernes.

Ayon kay Brig. Gen. Alex Rillera, commander ng 202nd Infantry Brigade, ipinatupad ng mga tropa ng gobyerno ang warrants of arrest na inilabas ng Regional Trial Court Branch 63 sa Calauag, Quezon sa kasong kidnapping at serious illegal detention  laban kina Christian Relao, alyas Adan, at Danna Mae Marcellana, alyas Isay, kapwa opisyal ng Platun Reymark-Sub-Regional Military Area 4B, sa Barangay San Diego sa nasabing lungsod.

Aniya, hawak din ng mga arresting team ang warrant of arrest sa kasong rebellion na inilabas ng Regional Trial Court, Branch 65 sa Infanta, Quezon laban sa dalawa.

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Quezon gov tightens border control vs COVID-19 Delta variant

Quezon Governor Danilo Suarez has started to impose strict border control and added safety measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19, particularly the highly transmissible Delta variant. Suarez has ordered the police to conduct strict monitoring of inbound travelers particularly from the National Capital Region.

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Fishermen of Calauag among top violators of Philippine Fisheries Code

Interior Secretary Eduardo Año warned and reminded local governments to strictly implement the Philippine Fisheries Code after citing recent report trawlers were using super bright lights.

Tongkil in Sulu has the greatest number of reports with 2,549 total detection while Calauag in Quezon with 1,009.

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Welcome to our website


Sama-Sama Tayo. Isang Bayan, Isang Pamayanang May Kaunlaran!

DITO BAGA 'YAN SA BAYAN...

Ang tanaw mula sa ibabaw. Asul na kalangitan at tubig ng Calauag Bay, busilak na ulap, makukulay na skyline ng kabayanan, at luntiang kapaligiran. (kuha ni Shai Abanto)

Ang Parokya ni San Pedro Apostol.

Ang Parokya ni San Pedro Apostol at ang Saint Peter's School

Hitsura ng Bayan ng Calauag mula sa kalawakan.

Orihinal na mapa ng Calauag kasama ang siyam na barangay na naagaw ng Sta. Elena, Camarines Norte sa atin sa panahon nina Gob. jhalmar Quintana at Eddie Rodriguez. (Kuha ni Reynante Danseco)

Ang GROTTO FATIMA CALAUAG sa Maharlika Highway, Villa Sarah, Calauag, Quezon ay proyekto ng Catholic Women’s League (CWL) Mary’s Woods (kuha ng Grottofatimacalauag)

Ang GROTTO FATIMA CALAUAG sa Maharlika Highway, Villa Sarah, Calauag, Quezon ay proyekto ng Catholic Women’s League (CWL) Mary’s Woods (kuha ng Grottofatimacalauag)

Ang GROTTO FATIMA CALAUAG sa Maharlika Highway, Villa Sarah, Calauag, Quezon ay proyekto ng Catholic Women’s League (CWL) Mary’s Woods (kuha ng Grottofatimacalauag)

(kuha ni Erwin Resorez Adupe)


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Manuel L. Quezon

During a career that spanned the length of America’s colonial rule in the Philippines, Manuel L. Quezon held an unrivaled grasp upon territorial politics that culminated with his service as the commonwealth’s first president. Although he once fought against the United States during its invasion of the islands in the early 1900s, Quezon quickly catapulted himself into a Resident Commissioner seat by the sheer force of his personality and natural political savvy. Young and brilliant, Quezon, according to a political rival, possessed “an ability and persistence rare and creditable to any representative in any parliament in the world.” Quezon was wary of immediate independence, but in the U.S. House of Representatives, he worked tirelessly to secure his nation a greater level of autonomy. He met privately with the President and powerful committee chairmen alike, gauging the issues and crafting legislative solutions, which culminated in perhaps his savviest political victory, the Jones Act of 1916. “Considering the time I have been here, the character of the subject, and the influences I had to fight, I feel inclined to say that I am almost surprised that I have secured so much,” he said. Long after he left Washington as a Resident Commissioner, he continued to shape the office by choosing and sometimes discarding his successors.

Manuel Luis Quezon was born on August 19, 1878, in Baler, a town on the island of Luzon in Tayabas Province, Philippines, to Lucio, a veteran of the Spanish Army and a small-business owner, and Maria Molina Quezon. The family lived in the remote “mountainous, typhoon-plagued” swath of the province that hugged much of the eastern coastline of Luzon. Quezon’s parents eventually became schoolteachers, which allowed the family to live comfortably in Baler. Manuel, the eldest of three sons, and his brothers, Pedro and Teodorico, were taught at home by a local parish priest. In 1888 Quezon left Baler to attend Colegio de San Juan de Letran in Manila, graduating in 1894. Shortly after, he matriculated to the University of Santo Tomas, also in Manila, to study law.

About a year later, however, Quezon left school and returned home during the Philippines’ revolution against Spain. He resumed his studies in 1897, but when hostilities began between the United States and the Philippines in February 1899, Quezon joined General Emilio Aguinaldo’s forces. Commissioned as a second lieutenant, he saw little action, but rose to captain and served on Aguinaldo’s staff. After surrendering to U.S. forces in 1901, Quezon spent six hard months in prison, where he contracted malaria and tuberculosis. He suffered from complications of the diseases for the rest of his life.

On his release, Quezon resumed his legal studies at Santo Tomas and earned a bachelor of laws degree in 1903 before returning to his home province. Only in his mid-20s, intelligent, and a natural “master of political intrigue,” Quezon caught the attention of American administrators, particularly Harry H. Bandholtz, the director of the local constabulary, and district judge Paul Linebarger. The two Americans soon adopted Quezon as a protégé.

As a result, Quezon routinely walked a fine line, balancing the colonial agenda of his powerful American associates, the interests of Philippine nationalists, and his own career ambitions. According to a recent study by Alfred W. McCoy, a leading historian of the Philippines, Quezon—in an arrangement that seemed equal parts quid pro quo and extortion—worked as an informant for American security officials who kept a detailed list of accusations against Quezon—ranging from corruption to murder—that they could use to destroy Quezon if he ever ceased being “a loyal constabulary asset,” McCoy wrote. Quezon reportedly had damaging information on his American connections as well, but he continued to spy for them, passing along information about Philippine radicals in exchange for political support and for help ascending the ranks of the insular government.

Quezon’s political career began in 1903, when Linebarger named him the provincial attorney, or fiscal, of Mindoro, an island province near Tayabas.8 Quezon was quickly promoted to serve as fiscal of his home province, where he famously prosecuted Francis J. Berry, who owned the Cablenews-American, one of the largest daily newspapers in the Philippines, on charges of illegal land transactions. He won the case, but had to defend himself against charges of corruption by Berry’s allies. Once the dust settled, Quezon resigned and returned to private practice.

In 1906 Quezon ran for governor of Tayabas Province, campaigning not only on his reputation as a lawyer, but on his connections with Bandholtz and other American officials. Belying his inexperience—he had been in politics less than two years—Quezon deftly maneuvered past two other candidates and overcame shifting alliances to win his seat.

As a local politician, Quezon had not yet aligned with any national political party. In fact, at the time, American administrators regulated much of the Philippines’ civil activity and very little formal political organization existed outside Manila.11 Following a trip to the capital for a convention of provincial governors in late 1906, Quezon, in the hopes of laying the groundwork for a shot at national office, joined the Partido Independista Immediatista, which pushed for immediate Philippine independence.12 In 1907 the opportunity came. He resigned from the governorship and ran for the Tayabas seat in the Philippines’ first national assembly, which would function much like the U.S. House and was created by a delayed provision in the Organic Act of 1902. On July 30, 1907, he won election decisively.

With the opening of the Philippine legislature, political parties and new coalitions “sprang up like mushrooms,” according to one historian of the era, catapulting Quezon into the national spotlight.14 His party, the Partido Independista Immediatista, was absorbed by the Partido Nacionalista (Nationalist Party), creating a majority in the territorial legislature. After throwing his support for speaker behind Sergio Osmeña, a powerful young assemblyman with a broad base of power, Quezon was rewarded with prestigious appointments as majority floor leader and chairman of the appropriations committee. From their first term in the assembly until Quezon’s death, Osmeña and Quezon went back and forth in one of the Philippines’ foremost political rivalries, vying for control over both the party and their country.

After serving just one term in the Philippine assembly, Quezon looked nearly 9,000 miles away for his next political challenge. In 1907 the Philippines began sending two Resident Commissioners to the U.S. Congress to lobby on behalf of the territory’s interests. The assembly and the commission selected one candidate each, which the opposite chamber then had to ratify. It is not entirely clear why Quezon wanted the position in Washington—one biographer has conjectured that Quezon wanted to be the hero who brought independence to the Philippines— but in 1909 he sought the Resident Commissioner seat occupied by Nacionalista Pablo Ocampo. Regardless of his motivations, Congress and the President controlled the fate of the islands, and the Resident Commissioners, despite not being able to vote in the House, were best positioned to influence the territory’s political future on Capitol Hill.

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HISTORY

Mayor Cabangon gunned down Feb. 3, 1982


MANILA, Philippines (UPI) -- Gunmen shot and killed the mayor of Calauag in the main square of the town, the government-owned Philippine News Agency said today.

The gunmen pumped six .45-caliber bullets into Mayor Edgardo S. Canbangon, 58, as he was returning to his office Wednesday night at Calauag, Quezon Province, 100 miles southeast of Manila, the news agency said.

The agency said police were tracking down the assassins who fled on foot.

Cabangon had been mayor of Calauag for 18 years and was named outstanding mayor of Quezon Province in 1966 and 1970.

Quezon is one of five provinces in the southeastern section of the main Luzon island, where guerrillas of the New People's Army, the military wing of the outlawed Communist Party, have stepped up operations in recent months.

Armed Forces Deputy Chief Lt. Gen. Fidel Ramos ordered the mobilization of a battalion stationed in the area to fight the growing NPA insurgency.

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HISTORY

Dahil sa pag-ibig: Ex-Mayor Entienza sentenced to jail for helping out ex-lover

Former Calauag, Quezon Mayor Eric Entienza has been sentenced to at least two years imprisonment for having issued a certification for his former live-in partner as an employee of the municipality even though she was not.

In a 20-page decision, the Sandiganbayan Third Division found Entienza guilty of falsification of public document for having issued in February 2009, when he was still mayor, a certification that Annaliza Prudente was employed as a property custodian of the municipality which was used as supporting document for her visa application.

Prudente had been in a relationship with Entienza who had two children with her. Apart from a P5,000 fine, the Third Division sentenced the respondent to imprisonment for two to eight years.

The court pointed out that the municipality’s Human Resource Management Office (HRMO) “testified that based on their records, Prudente was not an employee of the municipality of Calauag, Quezon”.

“Thus, the accused made untruthful statements which are absolutely false when he certified that Prudente ‘is employed in the Local Government of Calauag…’,” the court ruled.

Although he claimed that his signature was forged, the Sandiganbayan pointed out that he failed to show proof that he did not sign it.

“The rule is that he who disavows the authenticity of his signature on a public document bears the responsibility of presenting evidence to that effect,” said the court.

Sources:
www.sb.judiciary.gov.ph and www.southluzon.politics.com.ph

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HISTORY

Ex-NPA sentenced to 40 yrs for 1988 kidnap of military judge Major Cocadiz

A suspected member of the New People's Army (NPA) on Tuesday was sentenced to a maximum of 40 years imprisonment by a Quezon City court for the abduction of a former military judge eighteen years ago.

In an 8-page decision, QC regional trial court branch 81 Judge Ma. Theresa Yadao found the accused, Martin Villanueva, alias "Ka Bragat", guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of kidnapping and serious illegal detention.

Records showed that the accused together with 32 of his comrades abducted Major Hobart Cocadiz, former judge officer of the Judge Advocate General Services on October 21, 1988 in Barangay Tabugon, Calauag Quezon while waiting for a jeepney ride to his farm.

Cocadiz testified that the NPA rebels detained him in various places in the nearby municipality of Tagkawayan, Quezon and in Camarines Norte and Camarines Sur for 140 days.

Cocadiz was released from captivity on March 7, 1989 to his wife and brother who were accompanied by a Bishop Marquez and former Calauag mayor Roger Regala.

The victim stressed that during his captivity, he was neither hurt nor ransom money was demanded from his family.

The accused, on the other hand, admitted that he was a member of the NPA and was ordered by his superiors to “arrest" Cocadiz to ask him about the Geneva Convention.

Court records showed that the trial of the case started only on May 5, 2000 at the Calauag, Quezon RTC Branch 63. The accused was arrested only on February 14, 2000.

The case was transferred to the QCRTC after the Supreme Court granted the petition for change of venue filed by the Intelligence Service of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (ISAFP).

In her decision, Judge Yadao explained that after a careful and judicious review and scrutiny of the evidence of both the prosecution and the defense, the court found the prosecution has duly established the essential elements of kidnapping and serious illegal detention.

Major Cocadiz positively identified accused Villanueva as one of the kidnappers and even conveyed to the court that he had seen him from the time he was seized, transported and held captive by them," Judge Yadao added.

source: www.gmanetwork.com

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Gallery

Latest and best photos of our Kababayan

We love to take pictures and show them to the world.

Dr. José Rizal was executed by firing squad by the Spanish Catholic colonial government for the crime of rebellion, on Dec. 30, 1896, at Bagumbayan Field in Manila.

Tomorrow at seven, I shall be shot; but I am innocent of the crime of rebellion. I am going to die with a tranquil conscience --Dr. Jose Rizal                                            (from Teodoro Kalaw, Epistolario Rizalino)

I SAW
RIZAL DIE

There is one eyewitness to Rizal’s execution whose observation was told to a journalist in 1949, or 53 years after the event.

A man named Hilarion Martinez, then 72 years old, relayed to Alberto Mendoza of the Sunday Times Magazine what he witnessed during Rizal’s execution.

In 1896, a then 20-year old Martinez was a member of the Leales Voluntarios de Manila (Loyal Volunteers of Manila) and was assigned to the drum corps.

Martinez and his fellow drum corps members accompanied the condemned man from the time he left Fort Santiago until he reached Bagumbayan.

Because of his role in the drum corps, it is said that he occupied a good vantage point from which to observe the execution.

Martinez’ complete account is reproduced below:

"It was six o’clock in the morning of December 30, 1896, when we woke up at our quarters at the corner of Sta. Potenciana and Magallanes Streets, in Intramuros, to attend the execution of Jose Rizal, about which we had been briefed the day before. We were in the Leales Voluntarios de Manila, a semi-military organization under the command of Capt. Manuel Leaño. Our immediate officer was a youthful Spanish lieutenant named Juan Pereira. I was twenty years old then, and a member of the drum corps.

"We marched out of Intramuros through the Puerta Real, or where Nozaleda (now General Luna) Street out through the walls on the south, clad in our cañamo uniforms and with our cajas vivas strapped around our waists. We proceeded to what is now Padre Burgos Street, under an overcast sky and a biting December morn.

"Bagumbayan is not the Luneta now. The waters of Manila Bay still reached the other side of Malecon Drive (now Bonifacio Drive) where the new Luneta is located. The Luneta of those days was as far back as the site of the old Bagumbayan police station, near which lush bamboo thickets grew.

"As we rounded the corner of P. Burgos and General Luna Streets, we got a glimpse of the cuadro, a square formation of about ten companies of Filipino and Spanish soldiers. The former occupied the inner portion of the quadrangle, while the latter were at the rear. This formation was strategic because the Filipino soldiers’ position within the cuadro signified that the Spanish authorities wanted Rizal to die in the hands of the Filipino soldiers. If the latter disobeyed the command to fire upon Rizal, the Spanish soldiers positioned at the rear would fire upon them.

"There were civilian spectators, too. The side of the cuadro near the bay was open..

"As we approached the quadrangle, we saw some Spanish military officers earnestly talking in low voices. Rizal was nowhere to be seen – yet. Not having had a glimpse of the man before, I began to wonder what he looked like. I remembered how my mother told me Rizal was so learned, nobody could poison him as he always carried with him his own spoon and fork with which he could detect whether his food was poisoned or not. I heard too, of his fighting for our (Filipino) cause aside from legends that were beginning to be woven around him.

"Soon the small crowd heard the muffle sound of our approaching vivas draped with black cloth during execution ceremonies. A slight commotion broke out at the right end of the cuadro near the bay as some soldiers with fixed bayonets entered followed by a man in black, his arms tied at the elbows from the back, on his head, a derby hat or chistera, on his sides, a Spanish officer and a Jesuit priest.

"When I saw the man, I knew he was Rizal.

"A group of Spanish officers who were standing nearby opened into a semicircular formation or media luna. Then a Spaniard (we would learn later he was Lt. Luis Andrade, one of Rizal’s popular Spanish defenders and sympathizers) affectionately shook the latter’s hand. When Rizal was near the center of the quadrangle, the mayor de la plaza, a colonel, announced at the bandillo: “En el nombre del Rey, el que se levante la voz a favor del reo sera ejecutado.

”(In the name of the King, he who raises his voice in favor of the criminal will be executed.)

"A deep silence enshrouded the whole assembly.

"We in the drum corps were about seven paces behind Rizal who then faced the bay. Our commanding officer approached us and told us should Rizal attempt to speak aloud, we should beat our drums hard to drown out his voice. I looked at Rizal. He was of regular build, unshaven, quite pale, perhaps as a result of his confinement but he was visibly composed and serene. A Jesuit approached him, said a prayer and blessed him. Then a colonel approached him too, as our commanding officer ordered us to move two paces backwards, and the firing squad of six Filipinos came forward and took our former position behind Rizal. With visible effort, Rizal raised his right hand which was tied and took off his chistera or derby hat. My heart beat fast, as in all other executions I had witnessed before, I felt tense and nervous. Amidst the silence, Rizal moved his head very slowly up and down, his lips moving as if in prayer.

"Then the commanding officer by means of his saber, signaled the firing squad to aim. Then the saber dropped and there was a simultaneous crack of rifle fire that shattered the stillness of the morning. Jose Rizal wheeled in one last effort and toppled forward with a thud, his face towards the sky and his derby hat thrown ahead. He had fallen in the direction of the bay.

"Many of the reos [condemned criminals] had been caused to kneel and be hoodwinked before they were shot on the head. But Rizal was spared that humiliation.

"Suddenly, as if from nowhere, a small dog appeared and ran in circles around Rizal’s fallen body, barking and whimpering. This incident would much later be the subject of our talk in our quarters. Some of my comrades were quick to conclude that it was a premonition of a coming misfortune.

"Then the capitan militar de la sanidad (medical officer) stepped forward, knelt before the fallen man, and felt his pulse. Looking up, he beckoned to a member of the firing squad to come forward and give the final tiro de gracia, another shot done at close range. I thought I saw a faint haze rise from Rizal’s coat, but it might be a wisp of the morning mist. Seeing the body before me, I felt weak.

"The officers began to show animation again. They fell in formation and marched to the tune of the Spanish national air, the Paso Doble Marcha de Cadiz.

"As was customary in past executions, we filed past the body to view it for the last time. When we were commanded 'eyes left,' I did not shut my eyes as I did at the sight of the several reos whose heads were blown off by rifle fire. I wanted to see the face of the man for one last time. Rizal lay dead on the dewy grass. The day had started and I realized that I was gazing on the face of the great Malayan; that I was witnessing history in the making."

[Source: Alberto Mendoza, “I saw Rizal Die,” Sunday Times Magazine 29 December 1949, pp. 10-11.]

Joke La'ang... (ala Joe Arreuges)

Ang Uwak ni Juan

TEACHER: Juan e-englis mo ito!
JUAN: What po 'yun ma'm?
TEACHER: Ang uwak ay hinang-hina, naglalakad..
JUAN: The wak wak is weak-weak, wokwok.

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