Cora Aquino – to remain in hospital

No Gravatar

This is our previous president and she has cancer – this article was taken from The PhilNews.com; she remain in hospital indefinitely. It is sad to hear this as all you know that I just lost my Mom recently to same illness Cancer of the Colon – this is really a wake up call for all women not just men, but ALL of us to seriously take care of ourselves now!…See story below.

CANCER-STRICKEN former President Corazon Aquino is no longer in pain after being rushed to hospital two weeks ago, but will remain there for an indefinite period, her daughter said yesterday.

The 76-year-old Aquino, who led the Philippines from 1986 to 1992 after the downfall of dictator Ferdinand Marcos, was hospitalized with complications arising from colon cancer.

She has refused further chemotherapy and her family had issued a statement that said they were leaving her fate to God.

“She is comfortable, she is not in pain, and to this day, she makes us feel loved and appreciated,” Aquino’s celebrity daughter Kristina Bernadette Aquino told ABS-CBN television.

The 38-year-old added that her mother would have to stay in hospital indefinitely, saying her mother was grateful for the public’s show of support, including hundreds of e-mail sent to her official Web site since last week.

“You have never made our family love being Filipinos as much as you have made us love being Filipinos now,” Aquino said.

The murder of Aquino’s husband, Benigno Aquino Jr., in 1983 led to widespread street protests that culminated three years later in the toppling of Marcos, who had ruled the Philippines for 20 years with an iron hand.

Aquino was installed as president shortly thereafter.

She is credited for reintroducing democracy after a 20-year Marcos regime mired in corruption and human rights abuses.

Aquino is known as a moral crusader. After her term ended in 1992, she continued to fight for various causes, including anti-corruption efforts.

She helped mobilize street protests against ex-president Joseph Estrada, who was toppled in a military-backed popular revolt in 2001.

Aquino reconciled with Estrada last year, and both of them joined street protests against current President Gloria Arroyo, whose family they accused of massive corruption. AFP

2nd Anniversary ~ Palmetto Acoustic ~ July 9th ~

No Gravatar

Come help celebrate the 2nd anniversary of Palmetto Acoustic! Please join in welcoming David Berkeley from Atlanta and White Rhino from Charleston , Thursday July 9th @ 7:30pm. Check out their tunes at www.myspace.com/palmettoacoustic Also join our community on Facebook

This will be a standing room only show, so come early to get a seat and a beverage (coffee, beer, wine) as the show will start promptly at 7:30pm. Muddy Waters also serves light snacks (sandwiches, pastries, cookies). If the parking lot is full, there are plenty of available spaces, in the lot adjacent to Muddy Waters.

Thanks again for your continued support, see you at the show!  REMEMBER most of the Palmetto Acoustic artist are on NAB Radio!

Palmetto Acoustic Series @
Muddy Waters Coffee Bar
1331 Ashley River Road
Charleston, SC 29407
(843) 225-3683
Shows 7:30pm-9:30pm

Bombing in the Philippines

No Gravatar

I found this article from the Christian Science Monitor and it was written by Huma Yusuf – I know that certain parts of the island are Muslim and as other parts of the Muslim world, three are extremists that makes all the noise while others just want a quiet life.  These bombings are jeopardizing the peace talks and no group has come forward claiming the surge of violence in the island chain where there is a separatist group and an Al-Queda linked militant group are both active. Here is the story…

[ad]

A daily summary of global reports on security issues.

At least six people were killed and dozens injured Tuesday in two separate bomb blasts in the southern Philippines. There have now been three attacks in as many days in a region where Muslim separatist groups are actively pursuing an independent Islamic homeland and Abu Sayyaf, a militant outfit with ties to Al Qaeda, is active.

The attacks threaten to undermine peace talks between the Philippine government and the separatist Moro Islamic Liberation Front, which were expected to resume in July or August. No group has taken responsibility for the bombings. The government, separatists, media and everyone in between has assigned blame, with the culprit variously identified as the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, Abu Sayyaf, Al Qaeda-linked group Jemaa Islamiyah, and even at the government itself.

According to Bloomberg, the first bomb exploded on Tuesday morning near a gas station in the southern island of Jolo, leaving six dead and about 40 injured. Two hours later, a bomb blast in Iligan on Mindanao Island left six injured. (Click here to see a map of the country.) The attacks came two days after a bomb exploded outside a cathedral in Cotabato City, Mindanao, killing six and wounding 55, reports The Philippine Star, a leading English-language Filipino daily.

On Monday, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front denied responsibility for Sunday’s blast in Cotabato and instead blamed the military for stoking unrest in the region, reports The Philippine Star.

MILF spokesman Eid Kabalu said it is convenient for the government to point to the separatist group as the perpetrator of such bomb attacks.

“They see the MILF as insurgents so when something happens, they point to the MILF,” Kabalu said in a radio interview yesterday morning.

Kabalu said the military perpetrated the bombing and an independent investigation should be conducted.

Ricardo Blancaflor, the executive director of the Filipino anti-terrorism council, has pointed fingers at Muslim separatist group Abu Sayyaf, reports Reuters. The Manila Times, the oldest Philippine daily, reports that the military is investigating whether foreign Islamic militants could also be responsible for the attacks.

Major Randolph Cabangbang said investigators were probing whether Jemaah Islamiah (JI), the group behind the Bali bombings, may have been involved in the blast outside the Immaculate Conception Roman Catholic cathedral [in Cotabato]….

Cabangbang told reporters a number of JI militants are “here in the country.”

Known members of the group

… were thought to be operating in the southern Philippines, he said, but added that there was no proof as yet they were involved.

An editorial in The Philippine Star suggests that the attacks could be the work of both the Moro Islamic Liberation Front and Jemaa Islamiyah, but does not rule out the possibility of military intervention in southern Philippines as well.

A decade ago, JI militants trained recruits in bomb making at MILF camps…. Those ties have not been severed, even as the MILF has pursued peace with the government. These days the MILF dismisses any of its members tagged in deadly attacks as renegades. But the separatists, along with the Abu Sayyaf, are widely suspected to be providing safe haven to the handful of JI militants operating in the country. If JI is responsible for the attack near the Cotabato cathedral, the involvement of MILF members cannot be ruled out.

In The Philippine Star, columnist William Esposo also suggests that the attacks could have been plotted by the military to help President Gloria Arroyo stay in power.

Despite all the finger-pointing, government officials have stated that they believe in the “sincerity” of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front in pursuing peace talks, reports GMA News. Formal talks between the government and separatists, aimed at resolving the decades-old conflict and bringing development to the region, are expected to resume in the near future.