Mindoro Oriental News

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Mindoro Oriental - Archived News

Dietary supplement is a product that contains vitamins, minerals, herbs or other botanicals, amino acids, enzymes, and/or other ingredients intended to supplement the diet. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has special labeling requirements for dietary supplements and treats them as foods, not drugs.



Manufacturers and distributors of dietary supplements and dietary ingredients are prohibited from marketing products that are adulterated or misbranded. That means that these firms are responsible for evaluating the safety and labeling of their products before marketing to ensure that they meet all the requirements of DSHEA and FDA regulations.

Wars of ancient history were about possessions, territory, power, control, family, betrayal, lover's quarrel, politics and sometimes religion.

But we are in the Modern era and supposedly more educated and enlightened .

Think about this. Don't just brush off these questions.

  • Why is RELIGION still involved in WARS? Isn't religion supposed to be about PEACE?
  • Ask yourself; What religion always campaign to have its religious laws be accepted as government laws, always involved in wars and consistently causing WARS, yet insists that it's a religion of peace?

WHY??

There are only two kinds of people who teach tolerance:
  1. The Bullies. They want you to tolerate them so they can continue to maliciously deprive you. Do not believe these bullies teaching tolerance, saying that it’s the path to prevent hatred and prejudice.
  2. The victims who are waiting for the right moment to retaliate. They can’t win yet, so they tolerate.

BJMP, DepEd sign MOA on the provision of educational materials

by Louie T. Cueto


CALAPAN CITY, Oriental Mindoro, September 15 (PIA) -- The Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) headed by Insp. Denver S. Tirao signed a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) on the provision of reading materials for the inmates with the Department of Education (DepEd), Calapan City Division Supt. Araceli R. Salmorin last September 12. In an interview with Tirao at PIA Office yesterday, he said that he (Tirao) and his staff JO1 Carie Mae Q. Aficionado went to DepEd Office at Adriatico Memorial School where said signing of agreement was made. The said agreement between BJMP and DepEd Calapan City Library Hub primarily aims to help inmates reduce recidivism through the delivery of educational materials like books and other reading materials for the inmates’ personal growth and development. Likewise, the books will be used as reading materials in support for DepEd’s Alternative Learning System (ALS) and these will be placed at the mini library of BJMP located at the second floor of its building in Osmeña St., Calapan City. (LTC/PIA-4B)




Road trip to Mindoro

By THELMA DUMPIT-MURILLO


ANY public relations practitioner worth his salt necessarily must know his “product” before he can start selling it. And so off we went to Oriental Mindoro as part of a fam tour of Region 4B or MIMAROPA for a look-see and to talk to a couple of SMEs. With my photographer and staff writer in tow, our road trip started at the BOI building in Makati at 6:30 in the morning with the first stop at a gas station on SLEX for breakfast. After a brief repast, we were on our way to Batangas Pier where we would take a Supercat ferry to Calapan City. The roads were good all the way and wished it was like this to all our tourist destinations.

Oriental Mindoro opens its doors to everyone, from the regular travelers and tourists to the businessmen and investors, so says their official website. A visit to Oriental Mindoro accords visitors a peaceful retreat from the complexities of city life. The serene and rejuvenating atmosphere of its white sand beaches and clear blue waters, and the fascinating view of its majestic mountains embellished with lush green forests are wondrous sights to behold. As attested by local and multi-national investors, the island–province is regarded as the new gateway to the south — the Visayas and Mindanao — which paves the way to better business opportunities and exciting tourist destinations. It has now the capacity to be one of our country’s economic centers presently attributed to Subic, Cebu and Davao. Soon, it will be known as a tourism Mecca comparative to Boracay, Palawan and the likes.

You will find a number of hotel resorts to accommodate your travel and tour requirements in the province, as well as links to several lists of ideal tourism sites to complement one’s stay in the island. Through the nautical mile, you can take a ro-ro up to Boracay or Iloilo. Mindoro is the 7th largest island in the Philippine archipelago. It was on November 15, 1950 thru Republic Act 505 that this island was divided into two separate provinces, the province of Oriental Mindoro on the eastern half and Occidental Mindoro on the western part of the province.

Oriental Mindoro measures 4,364.72 square kilometers. It has 14 municipalities and one component city, namely: Puerto Galera, San Teodoro, Baco, Calapan City (the provincial capital), Naujan, Victoria, Pola, Socorro, Pinamalayan, Gloria, Bansud, Bongabong, Roxas, Mansalay,and Bulalacao. Oriental Mindoro is also known as the “Rice Granary” and “Fruit Basket” of Southern Tagalog. It still is the Banana King and Calamansi King of the region. Its total agricultural area is 169, 603.34 hectares. Based on agricultural statistics, 85, 244 hectares are devoted to palay production while 21, 671 hectares to coconut plantation. The province, for the past years, registered an average of 1 to 2 million cavans as surplus in rice production. Oriental Mindoro, with all these potentials, has become a premium destination for tourists and a fine ground for both local and foreign investors.

We were met by DTI Region 4B Director Joel Valera at Calapan City. After freshening up, we then proceeded to our first SME – Merl’s Suman sa Lihiya factory. Merl’s has been in business for ten years now but like any success story, hers was a product of many years of kitchen testing. Today, she supplies not just local distribution outlets like SM supermarkets and Tiendesitas but her product has already gone across the globe. Merl’s is a perfect example of a social enterprise that is profitable at the same time sustainable. Who would have thought that her business will be able to earn as high as 25 thousand pesos a day on holidays and a low of 10,000 pesos on regular days. You can taste Merl’s Suman sa Lihiya at the OTOP National Trade Fair at the SM Megatrade hall from Sept 22-25, 2011.

Oriental Mindoro is touted as the country’s “emerging eco-tourism destination”. It evokes images of a genuine tropical paradise — white sands, crystal clear water, lush green forests covering majestic mountains and splendid waterfalls. Tamaraw, an indigenous specie of the water buffalo, various flora and fauna found on slopes of Mount Halcon and the native Mangyans, all together add to the richness of nature and culture of the province.

In an article, Minina Servano writes: “When the Spaniards arrived in the 16th century, they discovered islanders who had their own script and even women who could read and write.

“Eventually the conquerors identified about a dozen different scripts in the archipelago, all originating from India and related to the writing modes of their Southeast Asian neighbors. By the 19th century most Filipinos had replaced their indigenous syllabic writing system or baybayin script with the Roman alphabet of the colonizers. Due to their relative mountain isolation the Hanunuo-Mangyan of Mindoro have managed to retain this indigenous way of writing until the present day, engraving it on bamboo joints or slats with a small knife.

“Out of all the regions in the Philippines and around 110 indigenous peoples (IP) groups in the country, only the Hanunuo and Buhid Mangyan, together with the Palawan and Tagbanwa of Palawan, have retained their original syllabary. The syllabic writing systems of these four IP groups were declared as National Cultural Treasures in 1997, and inscribed in the Memory of the World Registers of UNESCO in 1998.”

Mt. Halcon hike moratorium: Who really benefited?

Jommell Estillore Romero


CALAPAN CITY, Philippines—One rainy morning on the 27th of August this year, a group of outdoor enthusiasts from Calapan City went to Paitan, a barangay in Naujan, Oriental Mindoro. They biked their way to the village before embarking on a trek in the hills of Sitio Bugnay.

Away from the hustle and bustle of city life, they could not wait to see the pristine sceneries this side of Mount Halcon is famous for. It was supposed to be a relaxing journey despite the ruggedness and steepness of the terrain. A brief rest—a pause perhaps.. “taking nothing but pictures, leaving nothing but footprints” while regaining lost energy amid a refreshing beauty of the surroundings. But something caught their attention—felled trees, big and small. A few meters away, a group of indigenous Mangyans could be seen approaching. They were carrying huge sacks of charcoal on their back, crossing a makeshift bridge. The scene looked surreal. A brief chat with the natives revealed that the charcoal were to be sold to lowland markets. One of the hikers asked how much money they make from a sack of charcoal. The Mangyan smiled and answered, “One hundred 10 pesos.” The natives also warned them not to go further, saying they were not allowed to explore the area.

They just ignored the warning. It was a disquieting realization about the threats to Mount Halcon. Amidst global environmental changes, and the many laws, programs, protocols, moratoriums, etc. made to protect the environment, activities like this still occur. In 2005, a five-year ban on climbing Mt. Halcon was imposed. The moratorium was supposedly meant to allow this already ecologically fragile mountain a time to regenerate. But was it able to do so? Or the years that the mountaineers were barred from exploring Mt. Halcon could have been the time that destructive activities went unchecked? Mt. Halcon is a precious wealth of Oriental Mindoro. It is an important natural resource and watershed for the province. It needs special protection.

AFP conducts free medical, dental services for Mangyans

Pia Press Release


CALAPAN CITY, Oriental Mindoro, August 31 (PIA) – After the Philippine National Police (PNP)-Calapan created a “Mangyan desk” or a special unit tasked of handling criminal and other cases involving Mindoro’s indigenous people, the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), through the Philippine Army’s 203rd Brigade, gave free medical services to some 239 Mangyans. According to a report by Capt. Simplicio R. Guyong, Jr., civil military operations officer, a total of 239 Mangyan residents of Brgy. Dulangan III,Baco, Oriental Mindoro, had been given free medical and dental services, circumcision, and foods under the AFP’s Food Feeding Program last weekend. The said activity was also supported by Mangyan Kalakbay Mission Director Danilo F. Besoro, and MCKS Caring Heart Foundation Inc, Manila headed by Ma. Donna Bagsic. Provincial Health Dentist Dr. Juanita A. Lalia, local police officers of Baco town, and local officials of Brgy. Dulangan III also took part in the said event. Of the 239 Mangyan beneficiaries, 10 boys had undergone circumcision, 80 people were given free dental services, and 149 have availed of medical treatment. Free medicine and vitamins were also given to the undernourished indigenous children. Last week, the Oriental Mindoro PNP Command, under Police Sr. Supt. Anthony Alcañeses, formally created the Mangyan Desk in their camp to monitor and handle crimes against and involving the said ethnic groups in the province. (J.R. Mahusay/Louie T. Cueto/PIA-4B)

Oriental Mindoro continues bloodletting activities

Pia Press Release


CALAPAN CITY, Oriental Mindoro, August 30 (PIA) -- In an effort to augment the supply and stock of bloods needed by sick people especially those suffering from dengue nowadays, Oriental Mindoro, through its Oriental Mindoro Blood Council (OMBC), is continuously conducting mobile blood donation activities in different parts of the province. From January to July 2011, there were already 1,652 people who voluntarily donated their own blood through the said mobile blood donation activities by the OMBC that were conducted in different places through the support and help from the local government units and private organizations and institutions in Oriental Mindoro. In the most recent bloodletting activity conducted this month in Bongabong town in Oriental Mindoro, a total of 106 people voluntarily donated blood, while in Bulalacao municipality, some 57 gave blood donations. Last week, the Municipal Blood Council (MBC) of Victoria town, led by Mayor Alfredo Ortega, Jr., undertook their own bloodletting act in the municipal compound there with the support of men and women from the Philippine Army’s 203rd Infantry Brigade, under Col. Carlos F. Quita and 1st Lt. Michael T. Geniston, and members of the Philippine Guardians Brotherhood, Inc. (PGBI). Some 100 people donated blood there, which aggregated to a total of 14,750 cc. OMBC was ably supported in the bloodletting activities in Bongabong and Bulalacao by local officials there, led by Mayors Hercules Umali and Ernilo C. Villas, respectively. In Bongabong, among those who joined and donated bloods there are reservists from Philippine Air Force (PAF), members of 1 Guardians Nationalist of the Philippines (1 GANAP-Guardians) led by Sgt. Arnold Vargas, and local folks from 36 barangays of the said municipality. They were assisted by personnel from the municipal government, Bongabong Community Hospital, Philippine Medical Association-Oriental Mindoro Medical Society, and staff from the Mindoro State College of Agriculture and Technology (MinSCAT)- Bongabong campus. OMBC is headed by Governor Alfonso V. Umali, Jr. as its honorary chairman, Vice-Governor Humerlito A. Dolor as chairman, Provincial Board Member Romeo G. Infantado as vice-chairman and Dr. Jojo Leviste, a pathologist of Oriental Mindoro Provincial Hospital (OMPH). (J.R. Mahusay/Louie T. Cueto/PIA-4B)