BREAKING

Sunday, August 31, 2025

The Rise and Fall of PNP Chief Torre: Power, Politics, and the Flooded Truths Beneath


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The abrupt dismissal of Police General Nicolas Torre III from his post as Chief of the Philippine National Police (PNP) has left the nation reeling, not least because Torre had become the very face of a police force willing to execute orders many considered unthinkable. In his brief yet meteoric ascent, Torre carried out missions that others dared not: the arrest of the once-untouchable Rodrigo Duterte, delivered to face charges before the International Criminal Court, and the pursuit of the elusive preacher Apollo Quiboloy, whose Kingdom of Jesus Christ had long evaded accountability.


For these alone, Torre’s promotions—from brigadier general to four-star general—were seen not as gifts but as wages earned in fire and blood. His tenure shortened the path to Camp Crame and gave the PNP a rare moment of decisive muscle. And yet, just as suddenly, he was gone.


The Torre Puzzle: Why Now, Why Him?

What led President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to remove a man who executed his most politically sensitive orders? The explanations offered so far ring hollow. The talk of a “new assignment” is wrapped in a haze of vagueness; Torre himself has neither confirmed nor denied any such offer, and days after his ouster, the supposed post remains phantasmal. Official spokesmen insist it was the President’s decision—personal, final, unassailable.


But whispers in the corridors of power suggest more turbulent undercurrents.


Observers point to the tense relationship between Torre and Cavite Governor Jonvic Remulla. During Duterte’s dramatic arrest, insiders noted the absence of chemistry, replaced by the polite frost of two men too proud to bend to each other. That friction grew sharper when the question of appointments—always the sore nerve of political influence—emerged. Enter Ralph Calinisan, vice chair and executive officer of the National Police Commission, a man aligned with Remulla’s orbit. Civilian oversight was the official justification. But the deeper story, as always, seems to be one of power, pride, and egos clashing in smoke-filled rooms.


Optics and Betrayal

To Duterte loyalists, Torre’s sacking is nothing short of betrayal. Was this not the man who risked curses, bruises, and even the flung cellphone of an enraged ex-president, all in the line of duty? And this is his reward?


To Marcos critics, the removal confirms their thesis: one cannot trust a Marcos. “You don’t discard a good soldier who obeyed the dirtiest of orders,” they argue. The optics, indeed, are damning.


Meanwhile, cynics strip the issue bare: this is about power and money, and sooner rather than later, the true motives will crawl into the light.


Torre’s Quiet Exit, Nartatez’s Uneasy Entrance

For his part, Torre offered no drama. “No hard feelings,” he said, his four stars still glinting on his shoulders. He remains a general until retirement—set for 2027 unless he takes another assignment earlier. His successor, General Jose Melencio Nartatez Jr., steps into the command with the blessing of being Ilocano like the President, but also with the burden of leading in Torre’s long shadow. After all, there can only be one four-star general at a time, and Torre’s lingering presence will haunt the PNP for years to come.


Distraction or Design?

For journalists, the Torre episode is both scandal and smokescreen. While headlines whirl around Camp Crame, other stories risk being buried: the questionable flood control projects, the PrimeWater controversies tied to the Villars, and the Supreme Court’s critical rulings in the impeachment saga of Sara Duterte.


But make no mistake—these threads are not forgotten. On the contrary, Torre’s fall has only sharpened the appetite for truth.


The Flooded Truths

Because beneath the uniformed drama lies a more insidious story: the flood control racket.


The trail begins with Senator Chiz Escudero, linked to contractor Lawrence Lubiano of Centerways Construction and Development Inc.—a firm curiously ranking seventh in the Marcos administration’s list of flood control contractors with the biggest slices of the pie. But Centerways is only one cog in a machinery of rot.


Party-list Representative Edwin Gardiola of Construction Workers Solidarity provides another cautionary tale. By navigating the labyrinth of Congress with precision, he has transformed public contracts into private luxury, flaunting an opulent lifestyle while his constituents wade through waist-deep floods.


The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), perpetually in the crosshairs of corruption, stands once again accused of collusion. The narrative is depressingly familiar: politicians, contractors, and projects bound together not by service to the public, but by the greed of those willing to bleed the nation’s coffers dry.


What Comes Next

The fall of Torre is not an isolated event—it is a signal. It tells us that power in the Philippines remains transactional, fragile, and ruthless. It warns us that today’s enforcer can be tomorrow’s scapegoat. It reminds us that behind the pageantry of stars and uniforms lies a deeper rot that floodwaters, both literal and metaphorical, cannot conceal.


As Torre contemplates his future and Nartatez carries his new burden, the real story is still unfolding—not just in the PNP, but in the halls of power where contracts are carved, loyalties traded, and ordinary Filipinos are left to drown.


And so, we dig deeper. Because the floods are rising, and the truth, however buried, cannot be dammed forever.

From Southeast Asia to Japan: The Bold New Frontier in the Global Race for Talent


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For decades, Japan was known as a nation of closed borders when it came to foreign workers—proud of its domestic workforce, wary of outside labor, and slow to embrace global diversity. Yet today, a remarkable transformation is underway. Faced with an unprecedented demographic crisis and economic stagnation, Japan is turning toward its neighbors in Southeast Asia to secure what it now calls kodo gaikokujinzai—highly skilled international talent.


This pivot is more than a strategy to fill gaps. It is a recognition that the future of Asia—and Japan itself—rests on shared talent, shared innovation, and a shared destiny.


A South Korean CEO in Tokyo Leading the Way

In the bustling tech hub of Shibuya, Tomato Co., Ltd. is rewriting the rulebook. Founded in 1988 by South Korean entrepreneur Bae Han-Tae, the app development firm has built a workforce where 70% of its 175 employees hail from overseas—South Korea, China, Vietnam, and Indonesia among them.


For Bae, this is not just about numbers; it’s about values. “Overseas talents are not only highly skilled but also bring a passion to succeed,” he explains. “Having come all the way to Japan, they are exceptionally committed.”


Bae’s recruitment journeys to Indonesia and Vietnam underscore a growing reality: Southeast Asia is no longer just a partner in trade—it is the beating heart of Japan’s future workforce. And Tomato doesn’t simply hire; it nurtures. The company arranges visas, greets new hires at the airport, provides furnished dormitories, and adapts workplace culture. When Indonesian Muslim programmer Muhammad Aljundi joined in February 2024, Tomato immediately introduced prayer breaks and adjusted schedules to accommodate religious practices.


It is this robust support system—personal, cultural, and professional—that makes Tomato a magnet for Southeast Asia’s best and brightest.


The Corporate Shift: From Eyewear to Engineering

Tomato is not alone. Major eyewear chain OWNDAYS Inc., with 1,200 employees, now counts international staff across 10% of its workforce. Every year, 20 to 30 of its new hires are global recruits, many from Southeast Asia. With outlets in Singapore, Malaysia, Vietnam, and beyond, OWNDAYS knows that international talent does more than bridge labor shortages—it enriches customer service, sparks innovation, and creates a workplace alive with different perspectives.


To ensure smooth integration, the company even acts as guarantor for foreign recruits seeking housing—an often daunting barrier in Japan’s rental market. For OWNDAYS, global hiring is not an experiment; it is a necessity for survival and growth in a world where customers demand multilingual service and multicultural awareness.


From “Labor-Closed” Nation to Open Competition

Japan’s demographic decline is severe. In 2024, births plummeted to just 686,061—an all-time low. The fertility rate fell to 1.15, far below the replacement level. With an aging society and shrinking workforce, Japan can no longer sustain economic growth without opening its doors.


Government policy is finally catching up. Since the 2012 introduction of a points-based system for highly skilled professionals, certifications have skyrocketed from just 313 to over 55,000 by 2024. The 2023 launch of J-Skip made the system even more attractive, offering perks like spousal work rights and the ability to bring parents to Japan.


And yet, despite these moves, foreign-born residents still make up only 2% of Japan’s population—far below the OECD average of 11%. If Japan is to truly compete with South Korea, Taiwan, and even Europe and the Middle East, it must go beyond paperwork and incentives. It must reinvent its workplace culture.


Beyond Tokyo: The Provinces Compete for Global Talent

The challenge is even sharper outside Japan’s major cities. In Mie Prefecture, 500 kilometers from Tokyo, securing international workers requires active outreach. With no Shinkansen access and little history of foreign integration, Mie leaders realized they could not simply wait.


In 2024, they held their first joint recruitment session in Vietnam, connecting local SMEs with engineering and design graduates. By January 2025, Governor Katsuyuki Ichimi personally signed agreements in Hanoi to ensure a pipeline of skilled professionals. “Our industries—from semiconductors to petrochemicals—require talent. Without it, our economy cannot thrive,” he declared.


Mie’s efforts are a glimpse of the future. More regional prefectures are planning similar missions in Southeast Asia, recognizing that Japan’s survival depends on a nationwide—not just metropolitan—embrace of global hiring.


The Challenge Ahead: Work Culture Versus Global Standards

For all its progress, Japan still faces an uncomfortable truth: foreign professionals often complain of long working hours, endless meetings, and slow promotions. These entrenched practices, once symbols of dedication, now serve as barriers to innovation and deterrents to global talent.


If Japan is serious about being a destination of choice, it must evolve. Diversity is not just about numbers—it’s about voice, opportunity, and empowerment. Southeast Asia offers a young, dynamic, and ambitious pool of professionals in IT, engineering, and construction. But to keep them, Japan must prove it can be more than a temporary stop.


Toward a Shared Asian Future

The race for global talent is no longer abstract—it is urgent. Japan, once a “labor-closed” country, is now in open competition with the world. Southeast Asia stands at the center of this transformation, its young professionals shaping the destiny of Asia’s most advanced economy.


What is emerging is not a one-way street but a partnership: Japanese firms offering stability, resources, and opportunity, while Southeast Asian talent contributes energy, creativity, and global perspective.


The question is no longer whether Japan will open its doors. It already has. The real test is whether it can create an environment where global talent not only comes—but stays, thrives, and calls Japan home.


Because in this shared future of Asia, the nations that win the race for talent will also win the race for tomorrow.

PHLPost PR - ISCC Marks 50th Anniversary with Issuance of Commemorative Stamp


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In a celebration of history, education, and community, the Philippine Postal Corporation (PHLPost) is exploring the issuance of a special commemorative stamp to mark the 50th anniversary of the Ilocos Sur Community College (ISCC). This initiative, which was formally proposed by ISCC Administrator Dr. Roel Palo Anicas, aims to honor an institution that has become a vital center for higher learning in the Ilocos region.



A Legacy of Service

Founded in 1975 by former Governor of Ilocos Sur, Luis "Chavit" C. Singson, ISCC was established to provide educational opportunities for marginalized youth in the Ilocos province. The college, which started with a single midwifery program, has since expanded its course offerings and grown into an important educational hub.



ISCC officially celebrated its golden anniversary in May 2025, marking a half-century of dedication to its students and the wider community. The proposed commemorative stamp is intended to be a lasting tribute to this significant milestone.



More Than Just a Stamp

During the meeting with PHLPost Area 2 officials on August 20, 2025, Dr. Anicas highlighted the profound significance of commemorative stamps. He explained that they are not merely symbols of postage but powerful tools for preserving history, celebrating accomplishments, and fostering a sense of pride and unity among students, alumni, faculty, and the Ilocano community.



Representing PHLPost, Area Director II Merma Lea R. Abalos expressed strong support for the proposal. She emphasized that stamps serve as enduring reminders of history, values, and culture. "Through this commemorative stamp, PHLPost is honored to highlight the enduring legacy of ISCC and to share it with the entire nation and the world," she stated.



This initiative aligns with PHLPost's mission of using postage stamps as historical and cultural markers to celebrate Filipino achievements and inspire future generations.


The commemorative stamp for ISCC's 50th Anniversary is scheduled to be issued in the last quarter of the year. Its release will coincide with another notable event: Dr. Anicas's 100th day as College Administrator.


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