Thursday, May 09, 2024

Free medical mission sa eye problems gilan-aw sa Bukidnon

Isa ka free medical mission nga maghatag sa kasolbaran sa depektibong panan-aw ang pagahatagan sa pagtagad sa dili madugay

Ang provincial government sa Bukidnon sa isa ka kasayoran, mibutyag nga nangandam na kini alang sa pakigtimbayayong sa kaabag nga grupo.

Ang Fred Hollows Foundation nga gipangunahan sa ilang Country Manager nga si Dr. Maria Victoria Rondaris, isa ka International Non-Government Organization pormal nga nakigtagbo kang Gov. Rogelio Neil P. Roque sa Provincial Governor’s Office Conference Room, Kaamulan Park, Malaybalay City, Bukidnon kaniadtong Enero 22, 2024.

Ang Fred Hollows Foundation nakatakdang muhatag og serbisyo sa katawhan nga adunay problema sa panan-aw.

Pinaagi sa gihan-ay nga free medical mission, mapahimuslan sa katawhan nga nagkinahanglan niini nga serbisyo; ang libre nga antipara ug financial assistance alang sa optometrists nga mag-assist sa maong kalihukan alang sa libre nga opera.

Kini isa ka 4-year project nga gititulohan og “Eye Health System Strengthening Project” nga nakalinya sa DOH-National Prevention of Blindness Program.

Sumala sa kasayoran, kung masugdan sa Bukidnon, mao kini ang pinaka-una sa Mindanao.

Sa pagkakaron, giplanohan pa kung asa ang mamahimong venue sa nasangpit nga Fred Hollows Foundation Medical Mission. (melbmadera)

Tawo gipatay sa pinyahan sa Sumilao

Isa ka tawo ang napalgang patay sa Pineapple Plantation sa Field 70, Section Charlie 2, Zone 4, Sitio Kilabong, Vista Villa, Sumilao, Bukidnon niadtong Disyembre 15, 2023

Sumala sa report ni Police Major Larry Enciso, acting chief of police sa Sumilao Municipal Police Station (MPS), ang biktima isa ka 59 anyos nga lalaki.

Ang biktima nakaangkon sa daghang samad dinunggaban sa dughan, tiyan, bukton, ug mga samad tinigbasan sa tiil ug liog.

Sa inisyal nga imbestigasyon, nasayran nga sa wala pa ang insidente, nakig-inom ang biktima uban sa mga higala sa maong adlaw.

Ang Sumilao MPS nagpahigayon og imbestigasyon aron matigom ang mga pamahayag sa saksi ug mangolekta og dugang ebidensiya nga mahimong mahinungdanon sa pagpasaka og kaso batok sa (mga) suspek. (Omar Rashid Z. Abdullah)

Kanhi OFW napalgang patay sa isa ka apartment sa Maramag

Napalgan ang patay’ng lawas sa isa ka kanhi OFW sulod sa isa ka apartment sa Munisipyo sa Maramag

Si Police Major Erwin Naelga, OIC sa Maramag Municipal Police Station (MMPS) miingon sa iyang report nga nadiskubri ang patay’ng lawas pasado alas 10:00 sa gabii sa Disyembre 6, 2023.

Partikularminte nga napalgan ang biktima sa Khrista M. Jaca Apartment sa Purok 1, Tuban Village, North Poblacion.

Ang lawas sa hingkod nga lalaki kinsa giingon nga bulag sa asawa nakit-an nga nagbuy-od sa sawog nga adunay gisuka.

Base sa inisyal nga ocular inspection sa patay’ng lawas sa biktima, nasuta nga walay timailhan sa physical injuries, walay samad pinusilan, walay samad dinunggaban, ug walay timailhan sa foul play.

Ang anak nga babaye sa biktima mitug-an atol sa pakighinabi sa kapolisan nga ang biktima isa ka kanhi OFW, ug isa sa rason sa iyang pagbalik sa Pilipinas ang iyang health issues (high blood).

Ang biktima gidala pa sa BPH Maramag alang sa physical examination.

Ang attending Physician nga si Dr. Reina mi-classify niini nga natural nga kamatayon ang nasinati sa lalaki. (Omar Rashid Z. Abdullah)

Pagpangawat natala sa Valencia

Ang Happy Feet Shoes and Apparel nga nahimutang sa atubangan sa Valencia City Gym,
Sa Aguilar St., Purok 16, Poblacion, Valencia City ang gikatahong giransak sa wala mailing suspek

Sumala sa report ni Police Lt. Col. Mitchel Clemencio, OIC sa Valencia City Police Station (VCPS), ang insidente nahitabo niadtong Disyembre 12, 2023.

Giingon nga nalimas sa suspek ang Php400,000.00 cash lakip ang transparent cellophane bag nga sulod ang mga sinsilyo nga mobalor sa PhP4,000.00 nga gibutang sa cashier’s table.

Sa inisyal nga imbestigasyon nagpakita nga ang suspek nakasaka sa ilang konkretong firewall nga koral nga nahimutang sa luyo nga bahin sa ilang establisemento ug giguba ang ilang plywood wall.

Human sa insidente, temporaryo lang kining gitabunan sa isa ka piraso sa hardy flex board.

Dugang pa, ang pag-abli sa maong bungbong nagpadulong sa ilawom sa kitchen sink cabinet sa ilang tindahan, ug sa dihang nakasulod na, ang suspek nakahigayon sa pagkawat sa mga halin nga gibutang sa ilang cashier’s cabinet.

Sa pagtan-aw sa CCTV footage sa nasangpit nga establisemento, nasayran nga isa ka lalaki nga suspek ang nakit-an nga misulod sa nasangpit nga edipisyo ug gikuha ang maong cash ug sinsilyo.

Human sa hitabo, nakaikyas ang suspek gamit ang samang lungag ilawom sa lababo nga iyang gihimo, diin siya nisulod kaniadto.

Dugang pa, ang Valencia CPS nagpahigayon og hot pursuit operation alang sa pagkasikop sa suspek alang sa posibleng pagpasaka og kaso. (melbmadera)

3 suspek sa pagpangawat nakorner

Tingkagol sa selda sa kapolisan sa dakbayan sa Malaybalay ang tulo ka mga suspek sa pagpangawat sa Bides residence sa San Isidro St. Ext., Purok 2, Brgy. 9, Malaybalay City, Bukidnon

Sila giingon nga nasapon sa biktima uban sa mga silingan pasado alas 8:00 sa gabii niadtong Nobyembre 16.

Sumala sa report sa kapolisan, ang mga nasikop tanan mga lalaki. Sila kasamtangan ubos sa kustodya sa kapolisan sa Malaybalay.

Apan ang duha ka mga kauban sa nasikop ang hingpit nga nakasibat ug gipangita pa sila sa kapolisan.

Nasayran nga namatikdan sa mga silingan nga milayat ang mga suspek sa sementong kural sa Bides Residence. Gumikan niini, nirespondi ang biktima kinsa nagpuyo kilid lang sa ilang ancestral house uban sa pipila ka mga silingan ug nasikop ang tulo ka mga suspek. (Omar Rashid Z. Abdullah)

FIRST PERSON: In Honor of Datu Makapukaw, Bukidnon’s “Bantay hu Buntod, hu Batasan daw hu Banuwa” (guardian of the forests, Talaandig culture and society)

By Mary Ann Manahan

GHENT, Belgium (BukidnonNews.net/24 November 2023) “Ang Kalambuan maisip nga tawhanon nga pag-uswag. Ang kalambuan alang sa tribu mao ang padayun pagtuman sa balaod sa kinaiyahan (law of nature). Ang pag-uswag ngadtu sa pagkamahadlokon sa Labaw Makagagahom. Mao kini ang gikahiusahan sa katigulangan ug mga tumanod”. (Development is human progress, a Western term. But the tribe’s ‘development’ has to do with implementing our own culture (and good values). It is progress for the Supreme Being. It is about an agreement with the elders and the spirits.)

That was emphatically mentioned by Datu Makapukaw during our last conversation on February 17, 2023, in Brgy. Songco, Lantapan. We were talking about the foreign concept of ‘development’ and how Talaandig’s vision of a ‘good life’ had to do with what he calls “total harmonization between humans, Nature, and spirits”. He was referring to the spirits, the kadiwatahan that inhabit their sacred mountain, Mt. Kitanglad.

Little did I know that it would be my last conversation with Datu Makapukaw. On November 11, he passed away due to lung failure. Datu Makapukaw, which translates to the one who awakens the conscience and imparts wisdom, was one of the well-beloved and well-known datus in Bukidnon. As the eldest son of the late Datu Kinulintang Saway and Bae Pilar Linsahay, Datu Makapukaw Adolino Saway, was born in the forest of Maagnaw in 1949. His birth is as enchanted as the messages and stories he often shares in various gatherings.

From our last kwentuhan, he told me the origins of Mt. Kitanglad, that before there used to be abundant tanglad or lemongrass that grew in the mountains. That Mt. Kitanglad is sacred because it does not only encompass their yutang kabilin (ancestral domains), but equally important, it is the home of various diwatas, the mountains’ guardian spirits. His narrative around the sacredness of the mountain is deeply connected to his understanding of the self-determination of the Talaandig tribe and how they derive their identity, knowledge, and practices to the lands and forests. Sacredness is about achieving balance and embodied relations with the forests and the more-than-human.

Datu Makapukaw also often spoke about the centrality of Kilalaha ha Batasan (mutual recognition), of following the cultural protocols or batasan of their indigenous community and doing actions that will not anger the spirits and plunder the mountains. His life’s work revolved around advocating for indigenous peoples’ knowledge, culture, and belief system— how intimately woven and central these are in the protection of Mt. Kitanglad. He was a local historian who can give a full lecture on the history of the Spanish colonization and forced slavery of the indigenous peoples. For someone who never graduated from high school, Datu Makapukaw’s knowledge about his people’s history stemmed from decades of self-study, community dialogues, intense debates, and collective reflection.

This is, perhaps, why I saw him as a man of navigation. He navigated the halls of power, critically engaging with the state, while asserting their right to self-determination. In his many roles, as a former barangay captain, elected president of the municipal association of barangay councils, and hereditary chieftain of his tribe, Datu Makapukaw’s leadership was about fostering dialogue, harmony, and finding common grounds. Such navigation entailed building horizontal alliance, linking multiple datus from different indigenous communities as in the case of the Mt. Kitanglad Council of Elders, a grassroots collegial body of different datus and baes advocating for indigenous cultural conservation and forest protection.

Datu Makapukaw’s critical engagement and collaboration with state institutions bring with it a set of contradictions that one has to grapple with: his aspiration to make the government understand the life and culture of indigenous peoples, especially their role in forest protection and biodiversity conservation meant that they had to accept and support the protected area management program of the government, for fear that they may lose their rights and connections to the Kitanglad mountain ranges: “Ang maong bukid sa nahimo na nga usa ka national park, nagkaproblima ug nabalaka kami na basin mawad-an na kami og katungod niini. Lakip na unya mawala ang among kaalam, patakaran sa kultura, pagtulun-an, ug tinu-ohan.

(When the mountain became a national park, at the beginning we worried that we will lose our rights there. We will lose our wisdom, the rules, and the beliefs that we follow, practice, and teach.)

When I met Datu Makapukaw two years ago at the 59th Protected Area Management Board-Mt. Kitanglad Range Natural Park en banc meeting, he took a stance that indigenous peoples must be at the front and center of the protected area governance. That accepting the idea of a national park should not exclude and displace indigenous peoples from their ancestral lands. Co-existence, is perhaps, Datu Makapukaw’s subtler message.

I have only known him for a short period, but I knew that in his passing, Bukidnon’s indigenous communities lost a great man.

As a cultural expert and wisdom keeper, I will fondly remember Datu Makapukaw’s wit, humor, never-ending stories, and love for his tribe. Perhaps, one can never measure the full extent, depth, and vitality of one’s legacy and footprints on this earth. After all, death for the Talaandig is not the end. The departed join their ancestors in the spiritual world, in their sacred forests, praying for, guiding, and watching the people and the world they left behind.

Datu Makapukaw’s hope for his tribe still reverberates in my head: “Ang amo lang sa tribu- nga makabaton sa kinabuhing’dayun. Ang among kaliwat nga mokayab sa langit nga buhi, dili mo-agi sa kamatayon. (My aspiration for the tribe— eternal life. The descendants of the tribe [have access] to a heaven full of life.)

Padayon, Datu! Your memory and legacy will live on.

The author is a Filipina feminist, activist, researcher, and teacher. She is currently connected with the Ghent University’s Department of Conflict and Development Studies in Belgium.

FIRST PERSON is a sub-section of BUKIDNON VIEWS, the opinion section of the BukidnonNews.Net website dedicated to select statements, speeches, tributes, comments, and other views on public matters. If you want to contribute to FIRST PERSON, email your piece, contact details, and bio profile to [email protected].) (BukidnonNews.Net)

Lalaki naligsan sa Kalilangan

Isa ka lalaki ang naligsan og truck sa Purok 6, Malinao, Kalilangan, Bukidnon kaniadtong Nobyembre 6, 2023

Ang biktima isa ka 41-anyos, minyo, trabahante sa NIA UWA, ug residente sa Malinao, Kalilangan, Bukidnon.

Samtang ang nakaligis sa biktima isa ka 66-anyos nga lalako, minyo, ug residente sa Purok 4, Malinao, Kalilangan, Bukidnon.

Gitaho nga panaog ang biktima ug pasaka sab ang dagan sa drayber sa truck.

Tungod sa kusog nga dagan sa motorsiklo nga gisakyan sa biktima, nadigyas kini sa dalan ug napadulong sa likod nga ligid sa truck nga adunay karga nga tubo.

Wala kini mabantaye sa drayber sa truck hinungdan nga naligsan ang biktima ug nalatayan kini og ligid sa ulo hinungdan sa daling kamatayon niini.

Si Police Maj. Christian D. Serdeňa sa Kalilangan Municipal Police Station mitaho nga ang drayber sa truck gidala na sa Kalilangan MPS alang sa dugang nga imbestigasyon. (MG Mayumi B. Madera)

Outreach program for PDLs during Lung Month celebration in August

MALAYBALAY CITY – An outreach program targeting Persons Deprived of Liberty (PDLs) was held at the Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Center (PDRC) in Natid-asan, Barangay Casisang during the Lung Month celebration

The event held on August 22-25, 2023 was a collaborative effort between the Provincial Health Office (PHO) NTP, City Health Office (CHO) NTP, Malaybalay, various Non-Government Organizations (NGOs), and the Philippine Business for Social Progress (PBSP).

The program’s primary focus was to provide essential health services to PDLs and to raise awareness about lung health. To achieve this, a Mobile X-ray truck was utilized to offer free Chest X-rays to 847 out of 865 PDLs detained at PDRC. The remaining 18 PDLs have already undergone X-rays within the last three months.

This initiative was meticulously organized by PBSP, in conjunction with PHO and CHO, ensuring that the Mobile X-ray unit could operate effectively within the jail premises.

Additionally, PDLs received free medical check-ups and necessary medicines courtesy of Dr. Susan Marie Punongbayan, the Infectious Disease and Control Medical Coordinator of CHO Malaybalay.

The outreach program’s goal was to address the vulnerability of PDLs to the deadly lung disease called tuberculosis and to prevent its spread within the prison compound.

By providing critical health services and raising awareness, the organizers aimed to enhance the overall well-being of the PDLs and contribute to the containment of lung-related illnesses within the correctional facility.

Report: Lianne Jones T. Cajegas, PTRP, CHO-NADA

Ex-Bukidnon solon, cohort face 70 years in jail for PDAF scam

A former congressman from Bukidnon and a private individual face up to 70 years in prison for misuse of the politician’s pork barrel in 2007 and 2008

The Sandiganbayan affirmed the conviction of former Bukidnon Rep. Candido P. Pancrudo Jr. and private individual Johanne Edward Labay for the misuse of Pancrudo’s P36.9 million Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF).

In a resolution issued on July 10, 2023, the anti-graft court denied the motions for reconsideration filed by Pancrudo on April 28 and Labay on April 29.

Both asked the anti-graft court to reverse its April 14, 2023 decision that found them guilty of eight counts of graft, four counts of malversation of public funds, and four counts of malversation through falsification of public documents.

Pancrudo and Labay were meted out imprisonment ranging from six to 10 years for each graft count, banned perpetually from holding public office, and ordered to pay P36.9 million as civil liability.

For the four counts of malversation of public funds, they were sentenced to a total prison term of 48 to 70 years with a fine of P32.8 million each.

In the malversation of public funds through falsifying public documents, jail terms ranging from six to 13 years for each count and a fine of P4.1 million each were imposed by the anti-graft court.

Pancrudo and Labay, in their motions for reconsideration, said that the prosecution failed to prove their guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

But the Sandiganbayan said it found no valid reason to reconsider or modify its decision, saying, “The arguments raised by the accused have already been considered and passed upon by the court when it rendered the decision mentioned above.”

The criminal cases against Pancrudo and Labay arose from releasing the former’s PDAF to the non-government organization (NGO) FarmerBusiness Development Corporation (FDC) to implement livelihood projects in Pancrudo’s district.

However, the prosecutors said there were several anomalies, such as the failure to conduct public bidding and that FDC needed to be an accredited foundation and had no legal authority to implement the livelihood projects.

Second Division Chairperson Oscar C. Herrera Jr. wrote the eight-page resolution. Associate Justices Arthur O. Malabaguio, Rafael R. Lagos, and Lorifel L. Pahimna concurred, while Associate Justice Michael Frederick L.

Musngi dissented. (Manila Standard)