Archive - Top Stories Year 2012 all 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 Items per page 18 12 18 24 30 Top Stories JBC allows live media coverage for chief justice interviews By LALA ORDENES THE Judicial and Bar Council (JBC) in a historic move decided Monday to allow live coverage of the public interviews of candidates for judicial positions. This means that cameras and tape recorders are now allowed inside the room where the JBC panel interviews candidates for vacant posts in the judiciary and the office of the Ombudsman. By verafiles | Jun 18, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories Comelec cancels PWD voter registration for ARMM listing By ARTHA KIRA PAREDES THE special registration for persons with disabilities (PWDs) nationwide set for next month will be called off following the Commission on Elections’ decision to give priority to voter registration in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM). By verafiles | Jun 18, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories Italian foothold in historic Paco Text and photos by ELIZABETH LOLARGA BACK in the years when dynamic cultural administrators produced free outdoor performances, from poetry readings to full orchestra concerts,Paco Park was a destination for the culturati and the hoi polloi. By verafiles | Jun 18, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories God loves LGBTs, says ex-seminarian author By PATRICK KING PASCUAL Coming to terms with one’s self is not easy for homosexuals in a society where gender is limited to either male or female. Raymond Alikpala, 46, a lawyer and formerly a seminarian, knows very well the anguish of living in the shadows having done so in the first 38 years of his life. By verafiles | Jun 15, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories Farmers demand CARP completion By VINCENT GO Hundreds of farmers from Negros Occidental and Batangas marched to Manila to ask President Benigno Aquino III to immediately distribute land to farmer-beneficiaries before the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program ends in 2014. By verafiles | Jun 14, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories Civil society, international community against changes to juvenile justice law By CARLO FIGUEROA HUMAN rights groups continue to voice their opposition to moves to amend the country’s juvenile justice law. This comes even after the House of Representatives on June 4 passed on third and final reading House Bill 6052 proposing to lower the age of criminal liability from 15 to 12 years old. By verafiles | Jun 14, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories For better judiciary, reforms in appointment process needed BY VERA FILES Two decades after its creation by the Constitution, the Judicial and Bar Council remains an institution critics say is riddled with “systemic deficiencies” and even defects, and is badly in need of reforms. By verafiles | Jun 13, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories Commemorating independence It’s June 12, Independence Day, and for some Filipinos, it meant a trip to the birthplace of the Philippine Republic in Kawit, Cavite, a lesson in geography, and even photo opportunities with the country’s first president, Emilio Aguinaldo. By verafiles | Jun 12, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories Canadian boy on a mission to build schools for Filipinos By MARK PERE MADRONA ROMEO Berard II of Winnipeg, Canada may only be 16, but he already has a life mission --- i.e., to make sure that every Filipino child will be able to go to school. By verafiles | Jun 12, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories Few limits to president’s power of judicial appointment By VERA FILES The Judicial and Bar Council represents the first and crucial step in the judicial appointment process. Ultimately, however, the person responsible for appointments of all the country’s judges and justices is the President. By verafiles | Jun 12, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories JBC partly to blame for problems in judiciary By VERA FILES THE Judicial and Bar Council is now the focus of national attention as it begins the process of recommending a replacement for ousted Supreme Court Chief Justice Renato Corona. The process, if done right, is expected to help restore public confidence in the High Tribunal. By verafiles | Jun 11, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories Davao residents protest privatization of power; urge scrapping of EPIRA By KARLOS MANLUPIG HUNDREDS of environmentalists, activists and residents in Davao City staged a march protest to protest the proposed privatization of power plants in Mindanao and urged the scrapping of the Electric Power Reform Act which marked it’s eleventh year last Friday. By verafiles | Jun 10, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories LGB acceptance in US military: a war worth fighting for By PATRICK KING PASCUAL WASHINGTON D.C.-Maria (not her real name) is an officer in the United States Navy. She has been serving her country for more than 20 years. She comes from a family who has served the government for a number of generations. She's a lesbian. By verafiles | Jun 8, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories Philippine Judiciary: The dawning of a new era? By CAROLYN MERCADO and STEVEN ROOD THE Philippine Judiciary is on edge. Five months of rigorous scrutiny by the public and media as a result of the trial of impeached Chief Justice Renato Corona created a high degree of expectation that major reforms are forthcoming. Ensuring that Corona’s conviction and the appointment of a new chief justice will lead to a lasting improvement of the country’s judicial system is putting tremendous pressure on the high court. By verafiles | Jun 8, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories Corona conviction puts High Court, JBC in uncharted waters By LALA ORDENES THE conviction of Renato Corona, the first time in the country’s history a chief justice is removed from office by impeachment, has thrown the Supreme Court and even the Judicial and Bar Council into uncharted waters, forcing the High Tribunal to contradict itself and act against its own pronouncements. By verafiles | Jun 5, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories Few PWDs registering in Ilocos a ‘good sign,’ says COMELEC By LEILANIE ADRIANO LAOAG CITY— The Commission on Elections sees the low turnout in last month’s special voters registration for persons with disabilities (PWDs) in the Ilocos region as a “good sign.” By verafiles | Jun 4, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories Task force confirms ‘pawikan’ meat trade in Pasil market By NESTOR B. RAMIREZ The newly formed Task Force Pawikan has confirmed the illegal sale of pawikan or sea turtle meat during a covert operation at the province’s largest seafood market in Barangay Pasil in Cebu City. By verafiles | Jun 4, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Top Stories Gov’t rolls out K-12 system By YVONNE T. CHUA WHEN classes open on Monday, the country is finally giving up the distinction of being the only country in Asia that has a pre-university education of just 10 years. The Department of Education is rolling out in all 45,619 public elementary and high schools the “K to 12 curriculum,” beginning with Grades and 1 and 7, also called the “new high school.” By verafiles | Jun 2, 2012 | -minute read KEEP READING Posts pagination Newer posts 1 … 5 6 7 8 9 … 14 Older posts