Filipinos in South Korea

Philippines, Brazil inked initial air services agreement for Rion de Janeiro - Manila Direct Flight

(Top, left photo) Undersecretary Rafael E. Seguis (right) and Mr. Bruno Silva Dalcolmo, Superintendent of the National Civil Aviation Agency initial the Air Services Agreement (ASA) for the Philippines and Brazil, respectively. (Top, right photo) DOTC Undersecretary Jose Perpetuo M. Lotilla (right) and Mr. Dalcolmo sign the MOU between aeronautical authorities. (Photo below) Undersecretary Seguis shakes hands with Mr. Dalcolmo at the conclusion of the negotiations.

The Philippines and Brazil negotiated and initialed an Air Services Agreement on May 20 at the office of Brazil`s National Civil Aviation Agency (ANAC) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

The ASA would pave the way for the two countries' respective carriers to mount daily flights to and from each other's territory.

Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) Undersecretary Rafael E. Seguis headed the Philippine delegation, composed of officials from the DFA, Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC), Department of Tourism (DOT) and the Philippine Embassy in Brasilia, which successfully negotiated the country's first ASA in South America with the objective of opening new destinations for Philippine carriers  and boosting Philippine tourism.

In his welcome remarks, Mr. Bruno Silva Dalcolmo, Superintendent of International Relations of ANAC and head of the Brazilian delegation, said that Brazil considers the Philippines as the "perfect gateway to Asia."

In response, Undersecretary Seguis expressed optimism that the ASA will result to further increases in tourism figures and people-to-people exchanges between the two countries. Brazilian tourists comprise the largest tourist arrival in the Philippines from South America and are considered among the biggest tourism spenders accounting for $22 billion spent internationally in 2012. On the other hand, the Philippines could serve as another gateway to the ASEAN market of at least 600 million people.

Pending ratification of the ASA,  the aeronautical authorities of both countries signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) granting traffic rights and setting out other operational details for their  designated carriers.

The ASA is the 11th bilateral agreement between the Philippines and Brazil and a milestone in the two countries' 53 years of formal diplomatic relations.

Ms. Ma. Socorro R. Gonzaga, Philippine Airlines' (PAL's) Vice President for External Affairs, confirmed that with the signing of the MOU, PAL may fly to Brazil three times a week and up to seven flights a week.

dfa.gov.ph, Official Gazette of the Philippines

2013 QS World University Rankings TOP lists Philippine Universities

Shopping for a university? If you're looking to study abroad, check out the 2013 QS World University Rankings by Subject, which recognizes the top 200 universities in the world in 30 areas of study. If you're not going to stray too far, there is also a chart ranking higher education institutions (HEIs) within the country.

On top of the world this year is Harvard University, which ranks No. 1 in 10 disciplines, followed by Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), which topped seven areas of study; University of California (UC) Berkeley (4); Oxford (4); Cambridge (3); Imperial (1); and UC Davis (1) (see chart below).

The data may be interpreted in many ways, of course. For instance, although Harvard hogs more top spots than any other university, it is the University of Cambridge that makes it to the top 10 in most subjects with 27, leading Oxford and Berkeley (23), Stanford (22) and Harvard (21).

Three Philippine HEIs are among the top 200 universities in three of the 30 subjects ranked. They show a strong performance in English language and literature, with Ateneo de Manila University (ADMU) and the University of the Philippines (UP) both placing in the 51-100 range and De La Salle University (DLSU) in the 101-150 range.

UP is also among the top 200 HEIs for agriculture and forestry, while ADMU also figures in the top 200 for modern languages.

Now look at the country file (see chart for an overview of Philippine HEIs rankings by subject).

Here UP shines at No. 1 in 22 out of 30 disciplines and is in the top three in 27 out of 30 subjects. ADMU takes the topmost rank in five and is in the top three in 22 out of 30 areas of study. DLSU ranks first only in chemical engineering but is in the top three in 15 out of 30 disciplines.

QS limited its rankings in the country version to the first five. The other universities that are in the top tier here are the University of Santo Tomas (in 15 out of 30 disciplines); Mindanao State University-Iligan Institute of Technology (6); University of San Carlos (4); Ateneo de Davao University (4); Polytechnic University of the Philippines (4); Mapua Institute of Technology (3); Asian Institute of Management (2); and Mindanao State University, Xavier University, St. Louis University, Central Mindanao University and Silliman University (1).

For some reason, the Asian Institute of Management is ranked first under the heading "Engineering-Mechanical, Aeronautical and Manufacturing," when it offers no such programs, and No. 2 under "Accounting and Finance," when it offers only master's programs in Business Administration and in Development Management.

Back to the global evaluations. In the QS World Ranking of Universities, which is separate and apart from the 2013 study that ranks HEIs by subject, out of 873 institutions UP is at 348, ADMU is in the 451-500 ranking and DLSU is in the 601+ group.

In the 2012 QS University Rankings: Asia, which evaluated the top 300 universities in Asia, UP ranked No. 68 and ADMU ranked No. 86, while other local HEIs fared thus: DLSU (142), UST (148) and the University of Southern Philippines (251-300).

The recently released world rankings by subject evaluated 2,858 HEIs. As the official media release says: "It is the only international comparison that allows prospective students to compare universities in their particular area of interest."

QS tapped some 70,000 academic experts and graduate recruiters worldwide for input. It asked academics to name the leading universities within their field. Employers, on the other hand, identified the universities that they believed were responsible for the best graduates in a given area.

And how did the Asian universities fare overall? They shone in such disciplines as science, engineering and technology. In civil engineering, for instance, nine out of the top 20 HEIs are in Asia, with Japan's University of Tokyo ranking third and Kyoto University, seventh, along with three HEIs from Hong Kong and two from mainland China.

But it isn't just the ace Asian universities that are giving the US, UK and European HEIs a run for their money. Keenly competitive are the Australian universities that ranked among the global top 20 in 25 of the 30 areas of study.

Founded in 1990, QS is a British education and career networking company that has been ranking universities worldwide since 2004 based on research, teaching, employability and internationalization. In 2011, QS extended the study to cover a range of popular subjects.

The 2013 QS World University Rankings by Subjects evaluated the performance of HEIs in the arts and humanities, engineering and technology, life sciences and medicine, natural sciences, social sciences and management for specific subjects such as English language, modern languages, history, mathematics, accounting and finance, electrical engineering, chemical engineering and psychology, among others.

For the full methodology, log on to TopUniversities.com.

INQUIRER

Dan Brown calls Manila 'gates of hell' in novel “Inferno”; Upsets MMDA and DOT Departments

Dan Brown's Inferno

Philippines -- While travel magazines have recently been citing the Philippines as a tropical paradise, American author Dan Brown seems to think otherwise based on his much-anticipated new novel.

In "Inferno," the fourth part in Harvard art professor Robert Langdon's adventures, one of the characters goes through "the gates of hell" in Manila.

The description of the city is from the first-hand account of one of the fictional characters, the messianic Dr. Sienna Brooks.

One character from the novel, Sienna Brooks, joined a humanitarian mission to Manila only to be shocked by its poverty and then raped by local ruffians.

An excerpt from the book goes: "When the group settled in among the throngs in the city of Manila—the most densely populated city on earth—Sienna could only gape in horror. She had never seen poverty on this scale."

As written in a fictional novel of Dan Brown in his Book, Dr. Brooks, went to the Philippines for a mission to supposedly feed poor fishermen and farmers on the countryside.

She expected the Philippines to be a "wonderland of geological beauty, with vibrant seabeds and dazzling plains."

Upon setting foot in Manila, however, Brooks could only "gape in horror" as "she had never seen poverty on this scale."

She said her "dark depression" flooded back, with pictures of poverty and crime flashing through her eyes.

"For every one person Sienna fed, there were hundreds more who gazed at her with desolate eyes," the book read.

One after the other, the book described chaotic Manila: "six-hour traffic jams, suffocating pollution, horrifying sex trade."

The book described the sex industry as consisting mostly of young children "many of whom had been sold to pimps by parents who took solace in knowing that at least their children would be fed."

"All around her, she could see humanity overrun by its primal instinct for survival…When they face desperation…human beings become animals," the book read.

The book went on to detail a turning point in Brooks' life. "I've run through the gates of hell," she said.

Traumatized, Brooks "left the Philippines at once, without even saying goodbye to the other members of the group."

This is not the first time that the Philippines' so-called ugly side was described in novels and movies.

Hollywood actress Claire Danes got a lot of bad press when she shot her 1999 movie "Brokedown Palace" in the Philippines which settings is in the garbage area. She described Manila as smelling "of cockroaches. There's no sewage system in Manila, and people have nothing there. People with, like, no arms, no legs, no eyes, no teeth."

She was later declared persona non grata.

Last year, actor Taylor Kitsch created a controversy when he described his "airport nightmare" supposedly in the Philippines to TV talk show host David Letterman, claiming an immigration officer even tried to take his iPhone. It turned out that Kitsch was actually talking about Indonesia but did not bother to correct his statement despite the social media backlash.

Tourism officials have been trying to bring to boost the image of the Philippines with its catchy phrase, "More Fun in the Philippines." The Department of Tourism reported an increase in tourist arrivals last year.

The Philippines also had its fair share of praise from Hollywood when stars Jeremy Renner and Rachel Weisz spoke about their experiences shooting "The Bourne Legacy" in the country last year.

Just last week, Vin Diesel was seen roaming around town in a jeepney.

The impact of Dan Brown's "Inferno" remains to be seen. While a work of fiction, Brown again provides an introduction that confuses the ordinary reader about what's true and what's not -- just like in his popular novel "The Da Vinci Code."

"Inferno" is his take on Dante Alighieri's "The Divine Comedy."

MMDA to Dan Brown: Manila is portal to heaven not gates of hell

MMDA Chairman Francis Tolentino's letter to novelist Dan Brown. Ian Cruz

The Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) on Thursday wrote a letter to American best-selling novelist Dan Brown expressing "disappointment" over his "inaccurate" depiction of Manila in his latest novel Inferno.

"While we are aware that yours is a work of fiction, we are greatly disappointed by your inaccurate portrayal of our beloved metropolis," MMDA Chairman Francis Tolentino said in a letter. 

"We are displeased of how you have used Manila as a venue and source of character's breakdown and trauma, much more her disillusionment in humanity," read the letter dated May 23.

Tolentino told GMA News that rather than the "gates of hell" that Brown called Manila, the metropolis is more of a "portal to heaven" because of the residents' religiosity.

 "More than your portrayal of it, Metro Manila is the center of Filipino spirit, faith and hope… Manila citizens are more than capable of exemplifying good character and compassion towards each other, something your novel has failed to acknowledge," Tolentino stressed.

"Truly, our place is an entry to heaven," he added, reversing Brown's depiction of Manila as "gates of hell."

"We hope that this letter enlightens you and may it guide you the next time you cite Manila in any of your works," the MMDA chairman noted.,

Sources: ABS-CBN News and GMA News

Investment Recommendation: Bitcoin Investments

Live trading with Bitcoin through SimpleFX Trading platform would allow you to grow your $100 to $1,000 Dollars or more in just a day. Just learn how to trade and enjoy the windfall of profits. Take note, Bitcoin is more expensive than Gold now.


Where to buy Bitcoins?

For Philippine customers: You could buy Bitcoin Online at Coins.ph
For outside the Philippines customers  may buy Bitcoins online at Coinbase.com