
Poor Melvin Matibag. Imagine the entire Alan Peter problem happened by accident.

What should alarm us is not a digital gun on a screen but the real-world failures surrounding our children.

Sen. Alan Cayetano on Thursday proposed an “ex-deal” with the administration to let the minority revive the stalled…

The case against Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) Secretary Vince Dizon concerning alleged anomalies in…

The Department of Justice (DOJ) on Thursday defended the timing of the National Bureau of Investigation's (NBI) probe…
Philippine organizers of the Southeast Asian (SEA) Games fired back af ter days of critical coverage of the messy build-up to Saturday’s opening ceremony. Reports of unfinished construction, transport delays and complaints about food have surfaced as competitors have poured in for the regional competition. In response, lawmakers and the spokesman of President Rodrigo Duterte called for a probe into the preparations. Alan Peter Cayetano, chairman of the organizing committee, told journalists that “95 percent” of the controversies to be investigated were in fact false media reports. “I do know that during the digital age we need to report immediately, but that doesn’t take out the responsibility to check if it’s true or not,” Cayetano said. It comes just days af ter the committee apologized to arriving athletes, who said they were forced to wait for hours at the airport or were taken to the wrong hotel, vowing to “to better.” Philippine media groups expressed strong disapproval of Cayetano’s latest statement. “Attempting to dictate how the media should report the news has no place in a democracy,” the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines said. In one example cited by Cayetano, he denied claims by football players that they were served unhealthy fried fish — a common street food snack in Manila — insisting they were offered chicken sausage. Meanwhile, a picture shared by a news outlet purporting to be an unfinished stadium for the Games was taken down after it was found that it was taken in another country. The organizing committee issued a separate statement calling for a probe into the alleged false information that it said “put the organizing committee, the Games, and the country in a bad light.” Thousands of athletes from 11 countries are taking part in a Games-record of 56 sports across dozens of venues in and around Manila, with some hours apart — a logistical challenge. Duterte’s spokesman Salvador Panelo also weighed in, urging the media Thursday to be “more prudent in its reporting and avoid publishing information without verification.” However, he urged the committee to “perform better,” pointing towards “an array of criticisms.” “The critics have a point,” his statement said. “There is indeed something wrong with the preparations.” The president’s spokesman said a probe would be launched once the Games are over looking into the “aberrations and irregularities.”