Filipinos in South Korea

Hunger in the Philippines not FOOD but TECHY culture and wrong food Standard Satisfaction

Restaurant's name could make me FULL-TEXT could make me HAPPY

A United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization report this week shows the Philippine hunger is rising opposite from other ASEAN countries which are declining and David Daw described the Philippines as the worst-performing countries in the world which could be partially unrealistic.

The United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization report is only based on the survey counting how many people are hungry versus how many people are satisfied with the food they eat but not taking consideration of the culture and the  people's life style for them to call themselves are hungry.

The Philippine culture is very unique because many people believes that the food satisfaction will only happened if they will eat in any famous fast-food-chain like Jollibee, KFC, McDonalds, Mang Inasal, and other fast food chain around the country as the feeling of being satisfied is driven by the name and the fame of the restaurants and not the quality and nutritional value of the food they eat which could be made by a simple home cooking techniques with a right choice of ingredients.

Many Filipinos also are dependents of instant foods (noodles, canned foods, junk foods) opposite from the traditional way of cooking foods which fresh fish, meats and vegetables are among the main ingredients and fresh fruits are served in the table.

Many Filipinos also prioritized their TECHY Needs than their hunger. We interviewed many teens and most of the respondents said that they will save their money to buy a daily cell phone credits (load) for their unlimited internet and unlimited call and texts and for upgrading of their phone units to a latest model smart phone models than buying foods.

Many Filipinos also preferred to keep online in the internet whole day or texting and chatting in the social networks sitting aside the right time of eating habit. Right food and right eating habits are becoming less priority than their TECHY needs and hunger.

Even people in the shanty houses in Manila prioritized their phone credits and load than their foods. They could not afford to buy their foods but they could afford to buy phone credits (load)

In some provinces in the central and southern Philippines, an expression in their local terms "bahalag walay kaon basta maka text (mawala ra nang ka gutom)" (I don't care if I am hungry as it will just passed, the important is I could text) is very common. Teens will prefer to keep texting and they don't have time to cook for their meals.

Hunger issues in the country are not just about insufficient foods or inability to buy foods but the attitude of many Filipinos that prioritizes their TECHY needs over their hunger.

Many people also believes that living like the rich people who could afford to the most expensive foods is their desired satisfaction not the usual home cooked foods which feed their minds that they are still hungry even they eat many times a day.

Other factor also is the name of the restaurant where they eat and not the nutritional value of the food they eat.  Home cooking or "the Lutong Bahay" has becoming less valued than eating at the fast food chain restaurant.

Hunger Plunges Everywhere in Southeast Asia, Except the Philippines – UN Report

UN Hunger report published by the Wall Street Journal  

The total number of chronically hungry people in Southeast Asia has plunged by close to 70 million in the last two decades thanks to economic growth and policies to feed the poor, but the number of people that regularly go to sleep with their stomachs growling in the Philippines has actually grown.

A United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization report this week showed the number of undernourished people in Southeast Asia fell a whopping 51% in the period between 1990 and this year. That was the biggest improvement of any of the regions the report surveyed.

Globally, the number of hungry people fell by only 13% during the same period, to 868 million people, according to the report, jointly published by the FAO, the International Fund for Agricultural Development and the World Food Program Entitled the "State of Food Insecurity in the World 2012."

"Among the regions, undernourishment in the past two decades decreased nearly 30% in Asia and the Pacific from 739 million to 563 million largely due to socio-economic progress," the report said.  "Despite population growth, the prevalence of undernourishment in the region decreased from 23.7% to 13.9%."

The Philippines, however, saw the number of chronically hungry citizens rise. Back in the period between 1990 and 1992, the Philippines had around 15 million people considered undernourished.  In the period between 2010 and 2012 the hungry horde had expanded 5% to 16 million. The only other Asian countries in the report that saw an increase in hungry people were Pakistan, Nepal and North Korea. The report did not include data from Myanmar.

While the percentage of hungry people in the Philippines has fallen from 24% in 1992 to 17% last year, the country's high population growth rate has meant that even though a smaller slice of the populace doesn't have enough food, the total number of undernourished has risen. The Philippines has more than 92 million people.

"Southeast Asia is probably doing better than any other part of the world. But over this time period (the Philippines) is the worst-performing of the countries," said David Dawe, a Bangkok based senior economist for the FAO and one of the editors of the report. "The Philippines has one of the highest population growth rates in the region and that kind of amplifies the difference."

The country may have adopted the slogan "It's more Fun in the Philippines," but there is also more hunger there because for the last decade its birth rates have been higher while its growth rates have been lower than those rates at most of its neighbors.

Another structural problem that may lead to more empty stomachs in the Philippines could be that the benefits of economic growth do not trickle down to the masses.

"The Philippines has always been a nation where the fruits of growth tend to be shared less equally," said Mr. Dawe. "The poverty rates have just not gone down all that much for its rate of GDP growth, so you don't have as much impact on undernourishment."

At the current rate of hunger, the Philippines looks like it will be one of the few countries in Asia to fail to get close to the United Nation's Millennium Development Goals of halving the percentage of the populace which is hungry by 2015.  Whether the country's controversial reproductive health bill is passed or not, it will be too late to lower the birth rate to meet the target.

Ramon Carandang, secretary in President Benigno Aquino III's communications office, said that the Philippines had performed better on some anti-povery metrics such as per capita income, purchasing power parity and the wealth gap than some of its neighbors.

"Having said that, it's true that growth in the past tended to benefit a narrow segment of the population,'' Mr. Carandang said. "This is partly because growth tended to be limited to sectors that did not have a big impact on poverty. Areas like real estate development and financial services, for example.''

While the Philippines did badly relative to Asia, the report showed that there were much hungrier regions in the world. The number of undernourished people in Africa shot up 37% during the 20 year covered in the report and some Latin American countries, notably Guatemala and Paraguay, saw their number of hungry citizens rise.

Lebanon’s airline fired employee after broadcasting at the loudspeaker “Filipino passengers stop talking”

An Asian Nepalese talking traveler mistakenly recognized as Philippine National, humiliated by Lebanese Air Staff. Philippine's popularity for migrant workers from Asia serves as a trash basket for bad and good impression for other Asian people for the whole central and Southeast Asia.

In Lebanon, an official said Tuesday (October 09, 2012) that an employee of Lebanon's national airline MEA was fired after a passenger complained in a social media campaign that the worker humiliated travelers from the Philippines at the Beirut airport and told them over the loudspeaker, "Filipino people, stop talking."

The incident is part of what human rights groups say is widespread discrimination and abuse of foreign workers in Lebanon. More than 200,000 women from Asia and Africa work as maids in the country of 4 million people, said Nadim Houry, a researcher in Lebanon for the New York-based group Human Rights Watch.

In recent years, the foreign maids' work conditions — long hours, little pay and alleged physical abuse — have come under increasing scrutiny in Lebanon. Some private beaches in the country have barred foreign workers, and not all have complied with a Tourism Ministry directive earlier this year to halt such practices, Houry said.

He lauded the social media campaign protesting Saturday's airport incident, calling it a sign of change.

"The latest incident shows that more and more people in Lebanon are angry and tired of this racism that exists," Houry said, while urging the government to do more to protect foreign workers.

"What we have been missing are concrete new policies, a new enforcement mechanism to put an end to it," he said. "It is no longer the time for nice words."

Mr. Abed Shaheen, a Lebanese businessman based in Dubai, witnessed Saturday's incident while waiting to board a flight at Beirut's Rafik Hariri International Airport. The flight was delayed and passengers, including about two dozen domestic workers from Asia, were talking among themselves, he said.

At one point, a woman staffing the counter at the gate took a loudspeaker and announced, "Filipino people, stop talking," Shaheen said. He said the woman's male colleague corrected her, telling her the travelers were from Nepal, not the Philippines. The woman proceeded to admonish the group twice more, giggling as she did so.

Mr. Abed Shaheen said he was outraged and walked up to the counter to complain. He said he was brushed off by the two members of the ground staff and was told they would do as they please.

He later launched a protest campaign on Facebook and Twitter and sent an email to MEAG, an MEA subsidiary that handles ground services. Mr. Abed Shaheen said he received a call from a senior official in MEAG and was promised the company would investigate.

On Tuesday, MEA said on its Facebook page that it investigated Saturday's incident, which it portrayed it as an isolated case of "misbehavior" by an MEAG passenger service agent.

The airline said severe disciplinary action has been taken against an employee, but did not elaborate.

A MEA official said the woman was fired, and that disciplinary action was being considered against her male colleague. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the case with the media.

The Washington Post 

Sen. Osmeña Searching ODA ₱111 Billion Bridge project MISSING Since Ramos, Estrada & Arroyo Administration

Former government officials liable for graft in bridge program

Former government officials during the Ramos, Estrada and Arroyo administrations may be held liable for graft as they allegedly gave undue advantage to contractors involved in the 111-billion President's bridge program.

Senator Sergio Osmeña III, chairman of the Blue Ribbon committee, on Tuesday said the secretaries of the agencies involved in the bridge-building program failed to exercise due diligence in implementing the project.

"There were no valid computations, and due diligence done. They were pointing at each other," said the senator after a Senate hearing on the issue.

He said the Department of Finance also failed to properly check the loan agreements for the program.

"The ones who signed the contract [could be held liable], the secretaries who signed and the undersecretaries who made the studies [for the project], the secretaries of the implementing agencies," said Osmeña.

Official development assistance (ODA)

 The President's bridge program was conceptualized during the incumbency of then President Fidel Ramos after a peace agreement with the Moro National Liberation Front was concluded in 1996.

 The program was an Official Development Assistance (ODA) project. The Ramos administration was able to acquire grants from different governments to finance 30 to 45 percent of the project.

 "The first two years [of the project] were signed under Ramos. But under Ramos these were legitimate grants," Osmeña said.

 But some of the contractors were able to get around the project's safeguards during the last months of the Estrada administration.

 "Last two months of Erap's term, they were distracted kasi pinakasuhan na si Erap ng impeachment," the senator said.

 Arroyo administration

 The bridge program under the Arroyo administration consisted of 14 contracts many of which, according to Senator Panfilo Lacson, led to nowhere or could not be used by the public.

Osmeña alleged that this happened because the agencies involved in the project did not do their job of checking and verifying the bridge projects.

 He said this is because then President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo allegedly manipulated the program.

 Osmeña said he would produce evidence supporting his allegations during the Blue Ribbon committee's next hearing.

 "This was so complicated, I only wanted to explain with high degree of clarity kung paano nangyari ito," he said.

 Osmeña earlier said Mrs. Arroyo was guilty of 'serial plunder' for overpricing  the billion-peso bridge program.

 He said Mrs. Arroyo "misrepresented" the bridge program as an ODA project.

GMA News

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