Friday, December 6, 2013

Legarda Pays Tribute to Mandela

MANILA-“The world grieves over the death of the man whose courage inspired the dawning of a new South Africa and empowered victims of social injustice in other parts of the world,” said Senator Loren Legarda as she paid tribute to former President Nelson Mandela of South Africa.

Mandela died late Thursday (Friday, PHL time) at his home in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Legarda recalls the time she met Mandela when she was still a journalist. It was during the South African President’s state visit to the Philippines in 1997.

“It was a great honor to have met President Nelson Mandela. He was a leader who earned your respect with his presence alone because even with his power and influence, he remained kindly and unassuming. His humility was his true greatness,” said Legarda.

“He was a humble leader who gave credit to the effort of the people around him. He never gave the impression that the leadership was all about him, but that he was a man who was tasked to execute the ideals and ideas of his organization. He even told me during my interview that he did not see the need to run for reelection because he believed in the tradition of collective leadership,” she added.

A lawyer by profession, Mandela joined the African National Congress in 1944 to fight the apartheid policy of the South African government. He was sentenced to life imprisonment for sabotage and treason in 1962, which gained him international attention as a symbol of resistance against social injustice. In 1994, Mandela became the first black President of the Republic of South Africa, ending generations of apartheid.

International school to rise in Palayan City

PALAYAN CITY, Nueva Ecija–An international college - which has campuses in the United States and three other foreign countries and with a student population of at least 15,000 - is setting up a satellite campus in this city to bring 21st century e-learning as well as international students in this Nueva Ecija capital.

          Mayor Adrianne Mae Cuevas told reporters that the city government has forged a partnership with Concordia International College-Philippines (CICP) for the establishment of its first campus in the province in 2014.

          “This partnership will help bring computer education to the grassroots and afford the people of Palayan the opportunity to avail of world-class  education. It will thus put our city in the international map insofar as computer education is concerned,” Cuevas said.

          Cuevas signed a memorandum of agreement with  officials of CICP led by its president Violeta Jerusalem and David Kang, chief executive officer of its international partner Concordia International University, for the planned campus here which will initially operate at the Palayan City Industrial Technology (PCIT) school.

          Kang, a Canadian-Korean, is deeply involved in research and development projects on organic products such as oil extracts from moringa and oregano. He is planning to put up a pilot research facility in the city which has vast hectares of lands for agricultural production.

          Jerusalem said CIC has a global student population of 15,000, some 7,000 of whom are in its Canada campus which started operating in 2001. In the country, CICP, which started operating in 2011, has 5,000 students.

          Jerusalem said the plan to put up a campus in this city was conceived when she and Kang were invited by Cuevas and her husband, businessman Vince Cuevas to visit the city and explore the possibility of expanding further their institution’s reach.

          After the visit, she said they approved the proposal after noting the city’s potentials. “Palayan has very strong potentials that’s why we considered it in our expansion plans,” she said.

          Jerusalem said the Cuevas couple has very strong commitment to push forward the development of the city.

“Mayor Cuevas, for one, is a very committed person. But she has noticed that the community is not that involved. She wants it involved in education,” she said, adding they share the vision of the Cuevas administration to help the community in delivering e-learning.

Jerusalem said that the college - which has satellite campuses in Metro Manila, Pampanga and Baguio City - will bring to the city a mix of traditional classroom instruction and distance learning.

CICP, Jerusalem said, has academic partners abroad and could bring in international students. Aside from the US and Canada, it also operates in Australia and South Korea.

          Jerusalem said in this city, CICP will be constructing world-class facilities, including dormitories.

          Cuevas said facilities similar to those set up at the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice) central experiment station in the Science City of Muñoz are being eyed in the site. She said they are eyeing at least 2,000 square meters of land for the campus and the research complex.

Jerusalem added that they will train qualified teachers in Palayan to become part of their team. “We believe in the capability of the Filipino human resource and together with our overseas faculty, we will support the dream of CICP and Mayor Cuevas in delivering 21st century e-learning,” she stressed.

          The city government and CICP are eyeing to offer community scholarships for main course offerings, such as English proficiency, hotel and tourism, translation and interpretation and technical and vocational courses for culinary and hospitality business.

          Initially, 10 scholarship slots had been allocated for the school next year.

          Graduates of international courses will be issued certificates and accreditation for jobs in Canada.

The establishment of a CICP campus is expected to further enhance this city’s gradual transformation into an education center in the province next to Cabanatuan City, the center of trade and commerce.

Linked to other regions by a well-paved road network, this city, located 132 kilometers northeast of Manila, plays hosts to other institutions of higher learning such as a branch of the Nueva Ecija University of Science and Technology and the Eduardo L. Joson College.

          The city government operates its own school, the PCIT, which was accredited by the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority. (Manny Galvez) 

STATEMENT OF EDGARDO J. ANGARA ON THE PASSING OF NELSON MANDELA

MANILA-I join the world in mourning the passing of Nelson Mandela, a true icon of peace and freedom.  

Although faced with adversity, Mandela personified temperance and compassion, the same virtues that would propel him to become the father of modern South Africa.  

Even behind bars, he sought to see his people freed from the fetters not just of racism, but also of poverty, unemployment, and social discord, the other trappings of apartheid.     

As South Africa’s first black President, Mandela ensured that reconciliation, not retribution, was the tone of the reparation efforts, a path littered with significant challenges.  

Mandela once said, “There is no easy walk to freedom anywhere and many of us will have to pass through the valley of the shadow of death again and again before we reach the mountain tops of our desires.”

His life exemplifies how patience, hard work and unwavering commitment are essential to achieving one’s utmost vision.

This is the greatest legacy he leaves the world, a lesson which our newly elected officials must imbibe into their public service.   

Mandela's death marks a truly sad moment in the history of the world, one definitely made better because of his example.

Legarda Pays Tribute to Mandela

MANILA-“The world grieves over the death of the man whose courage inspired the dawning of a new South Africa and empowered victims of social injustice in other parts of the world,” said Senator Loren Legarda as she paid tribute to former President Nelson Mandela of South Africa.

Mandela died late Thursday (Friday, PHL time) at his home in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Legarda recalls the time she met Mandela when she was still a journalist. It was during the South African President’s state visit to the Philippines in 1997.

“It was a great honor to have met President Nelson Mandela. He was a leader who earned your respect with his presence alone because even with his power and influence, he remained kindly and unassuming. His humility was his true greatness,” said Legarda.

“He was a humble leader who gave credit to the effort of the people around him. He never gave the impression that the leadership was all about him, but that he was a man who was tasked to execute the ideals and ideas of his organization. He even told me during my interview that he did not see the need to run for reelection because he believed in the tradition of collective leadership,” she added.

A lawyer by profession, Mandela joined the African National Congress in 1944 to fight the apartheid policy of the South African government. He was sentenced to life imprisonment for sabotage and treason in 1962, which gained him international attention as a symbol of resistance against social injustice. In 1994, Mandela became the first black President of the Republic of South Africa, ending generations of apartheid.

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