Crime Rate in Cagayan de Oro City, What Happened?

From the news at Goldstar Daily Newspaper:

“ARMED men staged a daring broad daylight robbery in Barangay Gusa here yesterday and told their victims there was nothing the mayor of the city can do to stop them.”

“Ila kami nga giti-onan sa pusil ug gipatalikod, ug gilitok pa gani sa mga suspect ang ngalan ni (Mayor Vicente) Emano nga wala daw mahimo sa ilang gihimo,” Mrs. Cabusas said.

So unsay pasabot ana? aguy mag duda man sad ta ani nga naa sila’y protector…

COCPO – Cagayan de Oro City Police Office, unsa naman ning tulis ug patay sa syudad oi??! Safe pa ba ang mga tao ani? Murag wala man mi na feel nga naay operation or any move para ma stop na ning mga krimen nga gapanghitabo sa syudad. Ang mga tao mahadlok na bisan naa ra sa ilang balay specially during night time.

Dili ko gusto muingon nga inutil ang inyong office pero murag diha na jud paingon ang pagtoo sa mga tao sa inyo kung magpadayon japon ni nga panghitabo sa syudad. Pila ka kinabuhi pa ba ang mawala para ma stop ang krimen dinhi sa syudad? Bisan musakay lang sa jeep dili na comfortable ang mga pasahero kay hadlok sila basin kasakay lang nila ang tulisan. Everytime nga magbaklay sa dalan sa gabii mahadlok na ang mga tao specially kung naay naka motor kay basin mao na tong tulisan. In short dili na jud safe ang Cagayan de Oro City para sa mga nagpuyo dinhi.

Dili pud ko muingon nga political sabotage ni, but i think mag conclude na ang mga tao nga in-ana kay ang panggobyerno murag walay pakabana sa mga nahitabo. Wala’y ngipon ang mga statements sa mga official sa CDO. Unsa inyo gikabusyhan? Election? wala pa gani nag sugod ang election campaign for local pero murag napabiyaan naman ang mga katawhan tungod sa inyong pagpangandam sa election. Naa ko’y nadunggan pagsakay nako sa jeep few days ago nga kana daw mga tulis ug patay nga nahitabo naa daw nagpaluyo or protector sa mga tulisan nga dakong tao, para daw makahunahuna ang mga tao karun election ug dili na dayon sila mag ilis ug mga leader sa syudad.

Sayunan ka in just a week pila na ka tulis ug patay ang nahitabo ug wala pa nahatagan ug hustisya ang mga biktima hangtud karun. That is alarming and dili na gamay lang nga crime. Dapat operasyunan na ang mga kriminal, kung mahimo parihason sa Davao nga limyuhan jud ang syudad sa mga wala’y kasing-kasing nga mga kriminal.

With all the crimes happening in the city, could this be a sign that we need to change our leaders and officials in the government? I think so. We need to clean our city and we need to start it with them (City Officials and Leaders) and with ourselves. It’s as easy as waking up in the morning and our city will change instantly, of course we will encounter drawbacks and crisis towards a better change and that is why sacrifices are at stake but not lives. Sacrifices in the sense that we need to work hard for it and let’s start it with ourselves by voting wisely this coming election.

No! To Renaming of Montalvan Street! Oppose Councilor Alvin R. Calingin

No to Alvin Calingin

No! To Renaming of Montalvan Street!

YES to resignation of Alvin Calingin!


A Facebook Note from a certain user:

Why does this certain “City Councilour” needs to rename a street into “Felix Y. Manalo St.” in honor of the founder of Iglesia ni Cristo (INC) so eagerly? Is it because of the May 2013 election is just 10 months away? And he is so desperate enough to gather large number of votes, so he needs to win the hearts of the INC members in a hope that he will get their votes in bulk?

What a shameful political act! He will surrender the historical street names in replace to a religious institution’s leader to get votes? If I were an INC leader/member, I will disgust this politician and would campaign not to vote for him because I don’t want my church to get tainted with this politician’s dirty political agenda by trying to use the church/group. I don’t know a lot about politics but even a kid knows the formula he has been doing. Maybe he can see as early as now that his “mayor” won’t be able to help him get more votes because the people in CDO are fully aware how incompetent the current leaders in the city from Mayor, Congressman, Councilors and some DOGS! The people in Cagayan de Oro City disgust them and don’t want to re-elect those TRAPOs!

People in CDO must change their leader! Why keep on putting an incompetent leader in our City Hall when all we have seen are just plain and simple nothing! Yes, we have seen progress in our city but have you seen the dirty tricks under the table? I haven’t seen it personally but isn’t it what they have been doing all those years when they are holding an office?

Unending traffic jam around the city that cannot be resolved until this very day, I don’t know what they have been doing to solve this main problem in the city. Flooded city roads and dirty congested canals are still poking us everytime the rain comes. Problems like this should be their priority and not the renaming of some streets into ‘Who the hell are they?’

Kagay-anons, it is your call! Would you support a certain leader of the city like that or disgust him?

Dear Councilor Alvin R. Calingin:

When one’s political stench can already be so overpowering, any Shakespearean attempt to call ‘a rose by any other name,’ with the belief this would remain to ‘smell as sweet’, obnoxiously ‘infects the air whereon (the sponsor) rides’—or so the play Macbeth reminds. On Tuesday, July 10, 2012, you filed three resolutions, one of which is to rename Antonio Montalvan St. as “Felix Y. Manalo St.” in honor of the founder of Iglesia ni Cristo (INC). In the same vein, a second resolution seeks to rename the road from the junction of Concordio Diel St. and Villarin St. in Barangay Carmen to the landfill in upper Dagong up to the boundary of Barangay Canitoan as “Eraño V. Manalo St.” in honor of INC’s former executive minister. The third seeks to declare July 27, 2012, and every year thereafter, as INC Day in Cagayan de Oro City (Source: Mindanao Gold Star Daily, July 13, 2012).

In case our local Historical and Cultural Commission has failed to provide you lessons of local history, Antonio Montalvan St used to be Biak-na-Bato St. The late Antonio J. Montalvan was captured, tortured and beheaded by the Japanese Kempeitai for his espionage work during World War 2 and was part of the preparations for the eventual return of General Douglas MacArthur to the Philippines. For his intrepid feat, President Manuel Roxas recommended him to receive posthumously the Distinguished Service Star, to remind Filipinos that many of us continue to live today because of the gallantry of such men as Montalvan and those beheaded with him.

Your proposal to rename a street that strips our local hero of his honor adds to the disgusting series of historical carnage this current administration has committed over the years—from the desecration of the Huluga Archeological Site to the effortless surrender of CDO as a ‘carne norte’ brand. We deplore this pattern of wanton disrespect towards the preservation of local heritage, coming no less from a cabal of officials that takes no time to even consult with the community. Indeed, it has become easier for us to sniff and sieve through the mathematics of your motive: Felix Manalo was the founder of the Iglesia ni Kristo, which has their local church along Montalvan St. The Iglesia ni Kristo ensures candidates to win by way of their block voting. Any kindergarten can readily do the arithmetic for us.

We protest condemn your shameless intent to curry favor to a religious sect, and pander to your political machination well ahead of the 2013 electoral exercise.

WE VEHEMENTLY OPPOSE THE RENAMING OF ANTONIO MONTALVAN AND CORDOCIO DIEL STREETS AFTER THE MANALOS!

Signed 16 July 2012.

CONCERNED CITIZENS OF CAGAYAN DE ORO

You can read and sign the petition at http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/councilor-alvin-r-calingin/

City Government of Cagayan de Oro, a Failure!?

‘Typhoon Sendongkoy’


by Herbie Gomez on Tuesday, 3 January 2012 at 18:42

NONE of Mayor Dongkoy Emano’s political enemies ordered Typhoon Sendong to come and cause the floods. Neither did they tell the mayor to be caught with his pants down.

If we hear his politicial enemies making noise, it’s because they are citizens and have a right to vent just like many angry Cagayanons.

City hall was virtually non-existent. It did not respond the way it should right after the floods. It ceased to properly function and people were practically left on their own for days. Until now, city hall has not been functioning normally––the roads are still either muddy or dusty and there’s uncollected trash everywhere.

I understand why city hall malfunctioned. It has long been programmed to move only when the mayor says so. Without his go-ahead, no city hall office moves. The problem was, the mayor didn’t see it coming despite the warnings from the environment department and the government’s weather bureau, and when it finally did, he was struck dumb.

In fairness to the mayor, who wouldn’t be dumbfounded given the trail of death and destruction that Sendong left behind? Ex-mayor Tinnex Jaraula was correct in saying that Sendong was “one of a kind.”

Still, city hall needed a leader and a good crisis manager. Dongkoy Emano simply wasn’t the man.

The effects of Sendong were overwhelming that the mayor stopped thinking clearly. The s@#$ hit the fan, Sendong exploded in his face and all of a sudden, the mayor did not know what to do. So everyone down the line, while waiting for orders, stopped moving. Simply put, Sendong made city hall stop functioning like a government.

This became very evident when the mayor ordered bodies dumped at the landfill. No one who thinks clearly would ever do such a horrific thing. For a moment, he attempted to pass the blame on to the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI). He said the bodies were brought to the dumpsite because the NBI recommended it. The NBI, however, strongly denied it. But even then, assuming that the NBI had recommended something like that, the mayor could have said “No way!”

Realizing what he had done, he then said the bodies were not dumped but merely “transferred temporarily” to the landfill (what’s the difference?) because he was waiting for the National Power Corp. or the National Grid Corp. to agree into allowing its hangar at the Lumbia airport to be used to store all the unclaimed bodies. Mr. Mayor, do you really expect us to believe that it would take days for Napocor or the National Grid to decide on whether or not to allow the use of its hangar? In an emergency situation like that, all it takes is one phone call. But it looks like the mayor didn’t make that phone call the moment the funeral parlors stopped accepting more bodies. The Lumbia hangar, used in examining body parts retrieved from the Cebu Pacific Flight 387 crash site in February 1998, escaped Emano’s mind and no one who remembered had the courage to remind him about it. If Emano had thought about the Lumbia hangar, dogs and a flock of crows wouldn’t have waited for a chance to feed on human flesh at the city dump.

We-were-not-warned, my foot! Of course, you were warned, Mayor. City hall just didn’t listen (or refused to listen) when the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) told you and your ilk to get people out of harm’s way. In 2009, DENR sent a letter to city hall and identified the dangerous places: Cala-cala, Biasong, Upper Balulang, and portions of Tibasak and Consolacion. These are the areas hit hard by Sendong. What did city hall do? Nothing.

Last September, the DENR once again called city hall’s attention because of a warning from the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa). Emano was told that Pagasa was expecting “stronger typhoons” to make landfall from September to December 2011. Reads part of the letter addressed to Mayor Emano: “These typhoons will most likely bring about heavy precipitation with possible adverse impact on local population and private and public infrastructure.” What did Emano do? Nothing.

Where is Mayor Emano and exactly what is he doing now? I have seen photos of him striking poses on separate occasions with visiting celebrities like Willie Revillame and Shalani Soledad and her boyfriend who came to help. He seems to be enjoying all the attention he has been getting the past few days––and the photo opportunities, too.

Weeks after Sendong and the floods, city hall remains disorderly. Dr. Prospero de Vera, vice president for public affairs and director of the University of the Philippines’ National Center for Public Administration and Governance Center for Policy and Executive Development, hit the nail on the head when he said the efficiency of the Iligan government under Mayor Lawrence Cruz was a big contrast to Cagayan de Oro’s disorganized government that blocked efforts to help from concerned groups. De Vera said, “Cagayan de Oro is in shambles because of the local government.”

City hall failed even in the simple task of providing a center to ensure coordination of the relief operations by various groups. We are thankful to Cagayan de Oro Archbishop Antonio Ledesma for taking the initiative to set up this center last week. The bishop did what Mayor Emano should have done the morning after Sendong hit the city. City hall left the volunteers, like the survivors in evacuation centers, on their own. The volunteers filled the gap.

Akbayan Rep. Walden Bello writes in the Inquirer: “Local government makes a difference. The contrast is made between Dumaguete and Cagayan de Oro. In Dumaguete, one DILG official observed, community leaders and organizations were mobilized to meet the oncoming storm after Pagasa issued its warnings, while only few local officials were alerted for action in Cagayan de Oro City. Indeed, in the aftermath of the catastrophe, so hapless is the Cagayan de Oro city government that civil society organizations have filled the vacuum in the rescue and relief efforts. At the center of this effort is Xavier University, where we saw goods pouring in from other parts of the country as well as from international organizations being received and distributed by an impressive, well-organized effort involving hundreds of volunteers.”

It’s interesting to note that neither de Vera nor Bello are Emano’s political enemies. Therefore, their views are not tainted by partisan politics. De Vera and Bello have seen what many Cagayanons, including the mayor’s political enemies and political allies (even some relatives), are seeing. Everyone can see the truth that Emano has become irrelevant and is no longer fit to lead.

Can’t you see, Mayor? People, not just politicians from the other side of the fence, are mad. People are so mad that if the elections were held today, my pet dog (an askal) would probably have a chance of defeating Emano.

My friend Tito is not known to be actively involved in partisan politics in Cagayan de Oro. But since Sendong, he has been very vocal against the Emano administration. The following are excerpts from a post he shared with many of his friends:

  • “For failure to implement measures to keep Cagayanons out of harm’s way, Sendongkoy out!
  • “For abetting the settlement of Isla de Oro and other areas identified as flood-prone and unfit for human habitation, Sendongkoy out!
  • “For failure to warn flood-prone area residents when Pagasa issued a typhoon warning, Sendongkoy out!
  • “For failure to activate the city disaster management units on the first instance, Sendongkoy out!
  • “For failure to call the city council to declare a state of calamity on the first instance, Sendongkoy out!
  • “For failure to oversee the rescue, relief and rehabilitation of the affected residents, Sendongkoy out!
  • “For abrogating to the national government the role of the city chief executive, Sendongkoy out!
  • “For the decision to place the exposed bodies of the victims at the landfill, Sendongkoy out!
  • “For insisting on his ‘kapit sa patalim’ doctrine in the presence of the President and national officials which has resulted to hundreds of casualties, thousands of evacuees and billions in damages, Sendongkoy out!
  • “The list is endless… but having this kind of a mayor is the highest form of calamity our city has ever experienced… Sendongkoy out now!”

Partisan politics? I don’t think so. The reactions are spontaneous. People are empowering themselves to end the inutile Emano dynasty. This typhoon has been battering Cagayan de Oro since 1998!

Pastilan.

35th Milo Marathon Cagayan de Oro Leg Elimination

35th Milo Marathon

Hurray! Eliminations of the 35th National Milo Marathon will be held on October 16, 2011 here in Cagayan de Oro City as the first stop for Mindanao Regional leg. There will be more or less 12,000 expected participants for Cagayan de Oro City leg elimination.

Milo Marathon will be held in 18 provinces for the elimination legs and the Milo Marathon National Finals in December. The 18 elimination legs has been held in Laoag, Dagupan, Olongapo City, Tarlac, Manila, Batangas, Puerto Princessa, Naga, San Pablo, Iloilo and Bacolod. The following that will be held on this month of October are in Cebu, Tagbilaran, Cagayan de Oro, Butuan, General Santos, and Davao will be in November and the Finals will be in December 11, 2011 in Manila.

Registration for Cagayan de Oro is now going on so hurry up because I heard that 10K and 21K has limited slots only. I will register on Monday.

You can register on the following venues:

  • La Cabana Spa – CM Recto Avenue CDO City Tel. No’s: 088-856-4168
  • Swift Travel and Tours – Pelaez Sports Complex

Registration Fees:

  • 3K and 5K- Php100 includes Singlet & Bib Tag
  • 10K and 21K- Php500 includes New Balance Singlet, Bib Tag and Finisher’s Medal (21K only).

Please bring your MILO packs / sachets.

Here’s the Race map for Cagayan de Oro leg.

35th Milo Marathon Cagayan de Oro leg Elimination

or click here for a bigger picture of the race map.

Here’s the complete list of race map in all race leg.

The cause:
In the Philippines, thousands of Filipino children still run barefoot. So MILO® shall continue its advocacy of providing them with 10,000 more running shoes. Check more about the cause details here.

See you on the run!

Why We Need to Install Solar Energy Power Plant for Mindanao?

Solar Power for Mindanao

Last year we have experienced the scheduling blackouts all over Mindanao because of the effects of El Nino, that reduced the water levels in our dams and other water systems in Mindanao where hydro power plants were installed. It really gave us all such pain in the behind because the 4-5 hours daily scheduled black outs affects our jobs and daily lives. A year has passed and the people seems forgot about that time and we seems so lenient now thinking everything was just a history.

But HEY! don’t be so relax about it because we are still in the RED ALERT despite the heavy rains we are experiencing today, blackout can still happens, though maybe rarely but are we going to wait until we are in dire needs of energy for electricity? Don’t you think that our necessity for hydro electric power plant may used up and time will come that we need to seek other alternatives to compliment our hydro power plants? Continue reading