USAID-funded students will be among first Muslim women mining engineers in Philippines

These INVESTS scholars waiting to board their plane on their way to Palawan State University are (l-r): Jamil Matanog, Samer Makalilay, Haiza Pigkaulan and Musarapa Insiang. The two women will be among the first Mindanao Muslim women mining engineers in the Philippines.

COTABATO CITY—Two Muslim women are among the fifteen students from conflict-affected areas of Mindanao being provided with financial support to enable them to complete college degrees in mining engineering, through USAID’s Growth with Equity in Mindanao (GEM) Program. Once they pass the licensure examination, the two women, Musarapa Insiang and Haiza Pigkaulan, will be among the first Mindanao Muslim women mining engineers in the Philippines. Both women will graduate in 2012. “This scholarship will give me the chance to have a good career in a growing industry, and in my home region,” said Insiang, who grew up in a rural community in Datu Paglas, Maguindanao. The financial support is provided through the Investments in Vocational / Elementary / Secondary and Tertiary Studies (INVESTS) project being implemented by USAID’s GEM Program, through its workforce preparation component. Through INVESTS, the GEM Program is helping to provide selected students—all of whom are all from under-represented communities in conflict-affected areas of Mindanao–with the qualifications to secure professional employment in selected rapidly expanding industry subsectors, such as computer-based animation and mining. The INVESTS mining students are enrolled in Palawan State University, the University of the Philippines in Diliman, and the Cebu Institute of Technology, nine of whose graduates were among the top 10 performers on the 2008 government licensure examinations for mining engineers. “We have taken courses in environmental science and mining law, in addition to mineralogy and principles of mining,” said Haiza Pigkaulan, a scholar from Columbio, Sultan Kudarat, now studying in Palawan State University.

L-r: Jamil Matanog, Samer Makalilay, Musarapa Insiang and Haiza Pigkaula are among the Mindanao college students receiving financial support from INVESTS to complete mining engineering degrees.

“There are mining operations in our community, and I want to work in Mindanao rather than abroad, and with an environmentally responsible company,” Pigkaulan said. Mining is a relatively unknown academic field in the Philippines, and the few colleges that offer the subject produce approximately two dozen licensed mining engineers annually, while the rapidly expanding industry requires at least a hundred per year. Other workforce preparation projects that have provided vital career skills and opportunities to Muslim women and other young people in Mindanao include USAID-GEM’s Job Enabling English Proficiency (JEEP) Project, which enhances industry-related English language skills of college students in 26 partner universities, to help them compete successfully for jobs in high-growth sectors. Another related USAID-GEM initiative is the Productive Internships in Dynamic Enterprises (PRIDE) project, which partners with corporations to provide managerial and technical internships, of three to six months’ duration, for qualified recent college graduates from conflict-affected areas, including the Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao. GEM

SK holds 1st Summer Sports Festival in Sarangani

ALABEL, Sarangani (April 28, 2011) – Three weeks before the Sarangani Bay Festival on May 19-21, Sarangani Sangguniang Kabataan Federation President Victor James Yap Jr. kicked-off on Wednesday (April 27) the first Summer Sports Festival in this province. The four-day summer sports event holds basketball and volleyball competitions participated in by municipal contingents. Yap said the sports festival would “enhance the talents and skills of youths in sports.” He said it will also provide them the venue “to establish strong bonding of relationship as they develop camaraderie among themselves.” “Engaging in sports can (also) help youths divert their attention from the use of prohibited drugs,” Yap added. The Sarangani Bay Festival 2011, on the other hand, targets as market the sports enthusiasts, young professionals, students and businessmen. SarBayFest aims to raise awareness on protecting and preserving the bay that is a source of livelihood and harbor to thousands of Sarangans. It also promotes sports tourism as one of the attractions of Sarangani, in addition to the promotion of Sarangani as an eco-tourism destination. For his part, Board Member Eugene Alzate said it was good for youths to involve themselves in sports and community activities to develop their potentials to be the “future leaders Sarangani.” He dared the youth not to be just a “hope” but real leaders whom he challenged “to do their share” in showing they are worth of what Dr. Jose Rizal said to be the hope of the future. He said it is high time for them to prove the importance of the federation in the development of the youths by participating and giving opinions on local and national issues which they can later benefit from like employment and environmental issues. He said the SK has a big contribution to the barangays and to the province. The SK is the youth legislature in every community which is tasked to initiate policies, programs and projects for the development of youth in their respective political territories. Alzate then encouraged the SK to utilize properly their 10 percent budget allocation from the regular income per barangay for youth development projects and activities like this sports festival. “Let not other officials dictate you on the disbursement of your funds,” he said. (Beverly Paoyon/SARANGANI INFORMATION OFFICE)

BM Alzate challenges Sarangani youth

vALABEL, Sarangani (April 27, 2011) – Board Member Eugene Alzate challenges the youth to prove their worth for being said as the “hope of the future” during the opening of Summer Sports Festival Wednesday morning, April 27, at Capitol gym. Youth participants from seven municipalities of Sarangani joined the 4-day sports fest. (Romina Rabina/SARANGANI INFORMATION OFFICE)

The 6th Sarangani Bay Festival and Bombo Radyo’s bancarera

GENERAL SANTOS CITY (April 27, 2011) – One of the most exciting and breathtaking events in the yearly Sarangani Bay Festival is the bancarera organized by Bombo Radyo-General Santos. Bancarera is a motorized small boat racing competition manned by a single racer dazzling an oval-shaped track race about a hundred meters away from the coastline. “The oval track race gives total excitement to the spectators because they can see the whole race from start to finish unlike the straight race,” Bombo Radyo General Santos station manager Dan Caliosan said. “It’s an exciting race by the sea with colorful bancas speeding up to 100 kph (kilometer per hour),” Caliosan said. “Racers’ maneuvering abilities at the oval track race curvatures show their expertise in handling their modified racing machines,” Caliosan said. Racers are required to use a 13 to 16 horsepower marine engine. Last year, 30 racers joined the race held at White Haven Resort in Gumasa, Glan. This year, the bancarera will be held at Coco Beach, also a white sand beach resort next to White Haven and Rosal. Bombo Radyo started the bancarera competition in General Santos in 1998 as a project. “It’s not just a competition. We try to value the source of livelihood of marginalized fishermen in the city which is the Sarangani Bay, adding recognition to General Santos as the tuna capital of the Philippines,” Caliosan said. “It’s a tribute to both the bay and our fishing communities which later turned out to be a tourism event.” Last year’s Sarangani Bay Festival bancarera was won by a racer from Maasim town against 29 other racers from General Santos City, Sarangani and Compostela Valley province. This year’s prizes are P15,000 first prize, P10,000 second prize, P5,000 third prize, and P1,000 consolation prize for each racer who qualified the screening. “For Sarangani Bay Festival next year, we are planning to include special prizes like the most attractive or best designed banca,” Caliosan said. Bombo Radyo will conduct a pre-screening for the open competition on Sunday (May 1). Registration is for free. (Russtum G. Pelima/SARANGANI INFORMATION OFFICE)

The 5th Indigenous Peoples’ Visual Art Exhibit

MANILA (April 26, 2011) – Kalinawa Art Foundation announces the 5th Annual SocSKSargen (South Cotabato, Sultan Kudarat, Sarangani, General Santos City) Indigenous Peoples’ Visual Art Exhibit at the Notre Dame of Dadiangas University (NDDU). The Foundation calls on all visual artists in the region so that “the event will have a wide selection of art for the appreciation of patrons throughout the world”. The week-long exhibit from April 28 to May 6 is in partnership with NDDU and General Santos City government. Kalinawa Art Foundation’s mission is to build on the inherent talents of the Indigenous Peoples of the Philippines by supporting institutional mechanisms that will assist in the development of a visual fine arts sector. Further, this sector aims to celebrate culture, promote talent, develop skills, facilitate training and build cross-cultural awareness. Founder David Gilinsky established two important commitments to guide the Kalinawa, first is to build sustainable relationships through a commitment to undertake ongoing and recurring events, and second as a learning organization not only in terms of the opportunities it presents and its transfer of knowledge to others, but also within the organization itself. Opening ceremony for the exhibit is scheduled on April 30 at 5:00 pm. The Exhibit will open for public viewing with curator Al Nezzar Ali, a Moro visual artist and vice president of the Kalimudan Culture and Arts, and community sale from May 1 to May 5 at the NDDU lobby. For the competition element of the event, awards are divided into three categories – Traditional which is based on indigenous traditional knowledge and/or materials, Open Two Dimensional on any two-dimensional medium excluding photography, which includes but not limited to paintings, drawings, tapestries and etchings, and Open Three Dimensional on any three-dimensional medium, including but not limited to sculpture and pottery. A total of P27,000 prizes will be given away at the awards ceremony on May 6. Registration of participants will be on April 28 and 29 at the NDDU lobby. Other activity scheduled during the Indigenous Peoples’ visual art exhibition includes workshop on painting (May 2) and workshop on clay molding (May 3). (KALINAWA ART FOUNDATION/ SARANGANI INFORMATION OFFICE)

Sarangani reverses educational trend with SBB

Russtum G. Pelima, MA Ed ALABEL, Sarangani (April 26, 2011) – Sarangani Big Brother (SBB) “Reading is Fun” started its 4th season Monday (April 25) among elementary schools in the province. SBB, a summer reading program, is implemented by the Department of Education (DepEd), Quality Education for Sarangani Today (QUEST), Alcantara Foundation, Sangguniang Kabataan and youth volunteers. QUEST pre-test and post-test results show a 55 percent increase of the pupils’ reading level from “frustration readers” (36%) to the right reading level (91%) and are ready to enter Grade III last year. “We are very happy to inform you that every year, we are improving the reading skills of our pupils because of our intervention,” Kawas Elementary School teacher Grace Labustro said. Labustro teaches Grade III in her school. In Malungon, Alkikan Elementary School teacher Patrick Neil Eresma said among his 30 Grade III pupils who were “frustration readers”, three received honors at the end of the school year after finishing the SBB last year. Teacher Mary Jane Amar of P. H. Millona Elementary School in Malapatan said even without looking at the post-test results, she can testify on the improvement of the pupils during the school year. SBB this year has 537 youth volunteers who are the big brothers and big sisters, and 224 province-paid teachers and 107 DepEd teachers. “We required our provincial school board (PSB) teachers to participate in the program to maximize the learning process of the pupils,” QUEST program manager Annalie Eday said. The 15-day remedial reading program from April 25 to May 13 was designed to assist the DepEd in improving the reading skills of the incoming Grade II and Grade III learners identified as frustration readers. (SARANGANI INFORMATION OFFICE)

Sarangani Bay Festival 2011: Catch The Biggest Beach Party In The South

By Russtum G. Pelima GUMASA, Glan, Sarangani (April 26, 2011) – With the number of guests and visitors tripling in the past three years, from 5,700 in 2007 to 17,500 in 2009, Sarangani Bay Festival is becoming the biggest beach party in Southern Philippines. Usually held in the last week of May, SarBayFest is one of the two provincial festivals celebrating the province’s chartered anniversary which is on May 19. The other one is the MunaTo Festival and Sarangani Foundation Anniversary in November. Remarkably last year, the province launched its tourism brand “Sarangani: Your Adventure” tagging the adventure tourism circuit throughout the province’s seven municipalities. Some of these are the white water tubing in Maitum, snorkeling in Kiamba, diving in Maasim, and trekking in Malungon. Sarangani Bay Festival this year is on May 19 to 21. “Each year we are improving our celebration [of the festival],” said Vic Camacho, executive committee chair. Among journalists flooding to Gumasa white sand beaches to cover SarBayFest, the most challenging yet fulfilling event is covering the Swim-across-the-Bay from start to finish, a 15-kilometer swim relay contest from Tinoto Point in Maasim to Tango village in Glan participated in by professional groups of swimmers from Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao. The first-ever swim across Sarangani Bay on May 18, 2006, the 1st SarBayFest, was participated by six teams. Then, Dadiangas Torpedoes team of General Santos City (official time – 04:05:18 hours) won by just two minutes over MJ Powerpines of Maasim (04:07:12 hours). The Maasim Swimming Team clocked in with 4:57:26 for 3rd place. Then swim manager Guiseppe Chew described the race as “the longest open ocean marathon swimming competition in the country and probably in Asia.” The Swim-across-the-Bay is a brainchild of Chew who now lives abroad. Related swimming competitions have been staged in Guimaras Strait (approximately 5km.), the body of water separating Guimaras and Panay islands. Also in Samal Strait (5km.), separating Samal Island and mainland Davao, Chew said. For his part, Dr. Tranquilino Ruiz said what is more important about the celebration is to know the history and oral literature about Sarangani Bay. Ruiz is a known local historian of Glan, Sarangani’s oldest town. “Sarangani is as old as our very own race, Malay. When Ruy Lopez de Villalobos happened to reach this part of the ocean in their search for provision in 1543, his chroniclers wrote Sarangani to mean ‘This is our territory’ or ‘We stop here’ according to the Indonesian language,” Ruiz said. Sarangani Province was established in 1992 by then Rep. James L. Chiongbian, spurring the former sleepy third district of South Cotabato to development. The province was named after Sarangani Bay. The bay was believed to have been named from Saranganing, a famous Sangil voyager who came from the coast of Indonesia and traded with the great Sultanate of Buayan, now General Santos City. Sarangani Bay hosts rich marine resources including marine wildlife and the tuna capital of the Philippines – General Santos City. Today, Sarangani has at least 18 resorts accredited by the Department of Tourism. Most of these resorts are the white sand beaches in Gumasa such as White Haven, Rosal, Coco Beach (09195330408), and the new Isla Jardin del Mar (09107073479). These resorts host the beach sports activities of SarBayFest. Last year, SarBayFest kicked off in Maasim town’s Lemlunay Dive Resort with a reggae party in the evening. The opening day is usually followed in the next two days with lumba bugsay, skimboarding, beach football, beach frisbee exhibition games, sepak takraw, beach fair, sand sculpture competition, bay bodies bikini open, and summer night beach party, bancarera, fun bike ride, beach volleyball, cheerdancing competition and concert by the bay. Sarangani is becoming the ultimate destination for the entire Region XII and SocSarGen area in terms of tourism. It has triggered the development of beach resorts across the province particularly in Gumasa, the Boracay-like destination in Mindanao. “The objective of this festival is to merge our efforts in promoting tourism,” Gov. Migs Dominguez said. “Second, is to use that as a vehicle to increase awareness especially in the mainstream market in terms of looking at the riches and the resources of Sarangani Bay.” Local government units, non-government organizations and the business sector come together to celebrate and to increase community awareness in environmental conservation during the SarBayFest. “We are celebrating the beauty and the goodness of the bay,” said Vice Governor Steve Chiongbian Solon. “Every year people will be reminded of how beautiful and how generous the bay has become for us that we should continue to preserve it.” Last year, SarBayFest preludes with a cetaceans awareness training. Volunteer experts in marine mammals from World Wildlife Fund (WWF) conducted a weekend marine mammals awareness seminar among local officials, employees and private representatives. “The sightings of marine wildlife in Sarangani Bay such as pygmy sperm whale, whale shark, seacow, lemon-headed whale, fraiser dolphin and marine turtles signify that the bay has a rich biodiversity,” said Jo Marie Acebes. Acebes works with the WWF and a doctorate candidate in Murdoch University in Western Australia. Sarangani’s ECPC has documented sightings of the said marine mammals at the 215,950-hectare Sarangani Bay, a protected seascape through Presidential Decree 756. “These cetaceans should remain in the wild. We see them all over the world’s wildlife. That includes Sarangani Bay,” Jose Marie Tan, WWF Chief Executive Officer said. Cetacean is the term applied to species of dolphins and whales. Maitum and Kiamba had both passed municipal ordinances declaring barangays Old Poblacion and Suli as nesting grounds for marine turtles respectively. In 2006, then Board Member Rommel Tomas Falgui passed a resolution at the Sangguniang Panlalawigan institutionalizing the celebration of the Sarangani Bay Festival each May. (SARANGANI INFORMATION OFFICE)

SBB season 4 launching day

SBB season 4 launching dayMALAPATAN, Sarangani (April 25, 2011) – Provincial School Board teacher Rosemarie Abrea from Lun Padidu Elementary School teaches consonant and vowel sounds to incoming Grade 2 pupils of PH Millona Elementary School on its first day of classes for Sarangani Big Brother (SBB) season 4. SBB “summer reading program” opened Monday, April 25, and will continue until May 13 simultaneously in the whole province of Sarangani. (Photo by Romina Rabina/SARANGANI INFORMATION OFFICE)

Sarangani, PNP launch police enhancement training program

ALABEL, Sarangani (April 25, 2011) – The Sarangani Police Provincial Office, General Santos City Police Office, and the provincial government have forged partnership to enhance crime investigation proficiency with the signing of a memorandum of agreement on April 18. The program that includes two batches of investigation trainings aims to enhance the investigation skills of police investigators, introduce appropriate forms for proper documentation of events in crime scenes, and revisit the duties, responsibilities and authority of police officers during the conduct of investigations. “This program came about during our last meeting we had during the provincial peace and order council meeting where we saw the need to increase the competency and capability of our personnel on the ground,” Governor Migs Dominguez said. “We recognize the partnerships of the provincial government and city government in establishing not only for the development but also for ensuring security and stability in the area,” Dominguez said. Dominguez said the province wished to assist and intervene towards common objectives of ensuring stability and to make sure that the work of each police man and woman does not go to waste once arrests are made. “However sometimes these initiatives go to waste because of the lack of competency especially in putting together good cases,” the governor said. The Provincial Peace and Order Council identified peace and order as a priority problem in Sarangani. The Provincial Legal Office under Atty. Arnel Zapatos crafted the Police Investigation Proficiency Enhancement course outline which include Basic Concepts and Criminal Procedure; Ethics, Laws and Crimes; 5 Pillars of Criminal Justice; Investigations; Inquest; Search and Seizure; Arbitrary Detention; Delay in the delivery of persons to proper judicial authorities; Delaying release; workshop on investigation forms; police documentation; Dangerous Drugs Act; Illegal Possession of Firearms; and Illegal betting or gambling. “We find many new investigators who definitely need an improvement,” Provincial Prosecutor Felipe Velasco said. “Our goal here is to separate the criminal offender from the people and law abiding citizen so that we will have a peaceful and progressive society,” Velasco said. “Our commitment is to serve and protect the people of Sarangani,” Sarangani police provincial director PSSUPT Florendo Quidilla, Jr. said. At the change of command at the Police Regional Office Tuesday last week, guest of honor and Deputy Chief PNP for Operations Benjamin Belarmino said the region’s police transformation program includes training and retraining of the men in uniform and going back to the basics to remind them the duties and responsibilities which they have been trained for. (Russtum G. Pelima/SARANGANI INFORMATION OFFICE)

Top JEEP Achievers

Top JEEP AchieversThe three best students of the 400 who recently completed the two-year Job Enabling English Proficiency Project (JEEP) in Western Mindanao State University (WMSU) in Zamboanga City are (l-r): Kent Jestoni Gabo, Joe James Alob, and Evanessa Villacrusis. With them is Economic Growth Advisor Robert Barnes of the U.S. Agency for International Development. USAID’s Growth with Equity in Mindanao (GEM) Program has assisted WMSU and 26 other colleges and universities in Mindanao to introduce and implement JEEP, an intensive English Language course that assists college students to compete successfully for jobs in high demand sectors, such as nursing and allied health services, travel and tourism, and merchant marine. The colleges currently implementing JEEP instruction are expected to turn out some 12,000 “JEEP Completers” each year. The USAID/GEM Program is implemented under the oversight of the Mindanao Development Authority. GEM