Monday, April 30, 2012

PPI, US Embassy to lead World Press Freedom Day celebrations





For the first time, the Embassy of the United States in Manila has partnered with the Philippine Press Institute in conducting simultaneous programs in seven areas for the World Press Freedom Day.

On May 4, various programs will be conducted in Manila, Cebu, Davao, Bulacan, Gen. Santos, Baguio, and Cagayan de Oro with PPI members in said areas at the helm. The main focus of each program is decriminalizing libel which is an offshoot of the two forums on the subject conducted at the University of the Philippines College of Law and Orchid Garden Suites organized by the PPI and the Philippine Press Council. The third leg should build on initiatives from the two forums in providing venues to further discuss libel and other topics that affect the media industry.

Other topics such as the freedom of information act, killings of journalists, ethics, media accountability, right of reply, and press freedom are a host of media-related subjects that can be chosen by each area as attendant or accompanying segment for its own program.

The World Press Freedom Day activity is the first regional initiative following the 16th National Press Forum from April 23 to 24 at Traders Hotel Manila, which among other topics, also discussed libel in the industry forum.

The U.S. Embassy found it an advantage to be conducting the programs in the areas that have American Corners in De La Salle University-Manila, St. Louis University in Baguio, University of San Carlos in Cebu, Xavier University in Cagayan de Oro, and Ateneo de Davao University which are venues for the simultaneous celebrations. Bulacan will have Bulacan State University and Notre Dame University in Gen. Santos as partner-universities.

In Manila, U.S. Embassy press and information officer Tina Malone will give the opening remarks.

On January 31 this year, the United Nations Human Rights Committee (UNHRC) released a resolution declaring the country’s libel law discordant with the provision in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights that upholds free expression as a right. The Philippine is the lone signatory of the international protocol in Southeast Asia. The Committee holds the country’s dated and draconian criminal libel law “incompatible with Article 19, paragraph 3 of the ICCPR” or freedom of expression.

( First posted at www.philpressintitute.com)

DOST confers 2012 environmental science award to Virginia Castillo-Cuevas



By: Allan Mauro V.Marfal, S&T Media Service

The Department of Science and Technology’s advisory body, the National Academy of Science and Technology (DOST-NAST) conferred the 2012 Hugh Greenwood Environmental Science Award to Dr. Virgina Castillo-Cuevas for her significant contributions in the development of technologies leading to agricultural sustainability that contributed to environmental conservation and protection.

Dr. Cuevas, professor and scientist at University of the Philippines- Los Banos (UPLB), was awarded last April 23, 2012 at the Hyatt Hotel and Casino, Ermita, Manila.

Dr. Cuevas was recognized by the Academy for developing composting technology using Trichoderma harzianum Rifai Activator, which was specifically used as an inoculant in the in-situ composting technology that significantly improved growth performance of the biofuel crop Jatropha curcas.

The composting technology, which can also decontaminate copper-contaminated soils with mine tailings, was used in the rehabilitation of the agricultural lands damaged by mine tailings in Mankayan, Benguet and Cervantes, Ilocos Sur.

The technology also develops Trichoderma microbial inoculants (TMI) for vegetables and other upland crops as biofertilizer, biological control agent, crop promoter, and as activator for composting which not only raised productivity but also of great benefit to the environment.

Dr. Cuevas received a plaque of recognition from the Academy and US$ 1,000 from Dr. Hugh Greenwood himself through the NAST Foundation and former NAST President, Academician Perla D. Santos Ocampo.

This annual Hugh Greenwood award  honors outstanding scientific and technological researches that contribute to environmental protection and conservation.  Accordingg to DOST-NAST, the rapid pace of environmental degradation and the eventual depletion of natural resources made it necessary that the remaining resources be used wisely and that pollution and contaminations be prevented for the benefit of the present and future generations.