Saturday, January 16, 2016

Mindanao Revisited

US Soldiers in the Philippines

The article I penned here back in September last year certainly provoked some comments.


Some of you asked for further information, and one of you, Mitchell, wrote in with a longish comment that was converted into an article. Mitchell used a young Canadian, Kyle, as an illustration of the safety of living in and traveling around Mindanao.


Let me make three things clear.


Firstly, there is no mileage in this subject becoming a saga. Everyone is entitled to their opinion.


Second, the sole purpose of my article was to make folks aware of the travel advisories issued by the U.S., U.K. and Canadian governments about travel in Mindanao.


Third, there are many foreigners either living in, or have traveled around Mindanao who have never encountered any threats.


That’s great news! The same is true for foreigners all over the Philippines. Great news, or even good news, rarely gets reported in the media as we are all aware. Can you sense a ‘but’ coming here?


Negative Image of Mindanao


It was a coincidence that the timing of my article was preceded by the kidnapping of foreigners at the resort in Samal Island in Davao del Norte.


Kyle mentions similar travel advisories on his blog Becoming Filipino –


He says,


At first they definitely put a little bit of fear into my life. I was a little more cautious and fearful then my usual self. There are so many negative thoughts thrown around about Mindanao on a daily basis, through media, internet and in general chit-chat that it would be hard not to have a little fear when you hear that word.


“That word” he was referring to was “Mindanao.” I agree with him. It’s ludicrous to label the whole island as some kind of lawless wild-west frontier.


However, the ‘but’ you may have sensed coming is that terrorists do operate in Mindanao and some of them specialize in the ‘kidnap for ransom’ of foreigners.


Since the Samal kidnappings another foreigner was kidnapped in Dipolog. The victim was an Italian, a former priest and a pizza parlour owner at the time of the kidnapping. Clearly, the kidnappers believed that he was wealthy and someone would pay a ransom.


He has never been heard of since.


The British and Australian governments state clearly on their websites that they will not negotiate with terrorists. It is my understanding that the U.S. Government has a similar policy. It seems that if you are foreigner and kidnapped here in the Philippines no one in authority gives a flying fig! ‘You were warned’ is probably the unofficial government view.


No Room for Complacency


It’s abundantly clear that Kyle and Mitchell make a valid case for over-hype of the Mindanao ‘problem’.


Life carries on. It may carry on for you as a foreigner living or traveling in Mindanao, but there ought to be no room for complacency.


Despite the picture painted by Mitchell and Kyle, a kidnap for ransom could happen to any foreigner. It is foolish not to accept that risk exists as a fact even if you are in Iligan or CDO, or even further afield.


The latest intelligence warnings from western governments spell out that certain groups plan to extend their kidnap operations further away from their base in southern Mindanao.


Kidnap for Ransom Groups Operating in North Mindanao


This is what the U.K. government is currently advising:


[I]t appears that the information as of late October 2015 indicates that kidnap for ransom groups may be planning operations in North Mindanao including the islands off the coast.


That advice stood as of 1/2/15. Indeed, it has been suggested that these kidnap raids could extend to the coastal areas of southern Negros Island and Siquijor.


It matters not one iota how much you smile or mingle. If a terrorist group sees you, a foreigner, as an easy target for kidnap, then no amount of smiley faces will prevent that happening.


The editorial preamble to Mitchell’s article included a reference to high and moderate risk assessments throughout the Philippines. It correctly pointed out that the official Philippines intelligence agency had rated Boracay as a higher risk than much of Mindanao. There was good reason for that which is beyond the scope of this article.


Before that Philippines government assessment lulls anyone into a false sense of “security”, I must point out that Samal Island near Davao, was the scene of the recent kidnapping of a group of foreigners on 21 September, 2015. Yet, Davao del Norte and Samal Island are in the “moderate” classification and Boracay rated under “high” risk. Go figure!


This Samal kidnapping was the one referred to in my original article. To all intents and purposes those foreigners have disappeared just like most of the other kidnapped foreigners over the past five or six years.


Lightning Can Strike Anywhere Anytime


I stress once more I accept that you guys who know and live in certain parts of Mindanao feel safe.

Surely the operative word is “feel”. The comments section of both articles on this site contain sentiments to the effect that, “there are plenty of foreigners now living in X, Y or Z” (therefore all is fine).


Of course, that is the case, but entirely misses the point of the warnings. The unspoken part of the warnings surely is, “lightning can strike anywhere, anytime.”


Response to Comments


In answer to Jay Alexander’s questions in his comment following my original article, I would say this as general advice based on my 30 years’ experience in law enforcement (these views are entirely my own opinion).


The advice applies wherever you live or choose to live in the Philippines –


  • Find a house to live in a secure sub-division in an urban environment. The more remote and isolated your home is, the more likely you will be targeted by criminals.

  • Keep a low profile.

  • As a foreigner, you are not legally permitted to own a firearm. There is nothing to stop you having access to one owned by say your wife, in the event of a life-threatening situation. The consequences of you using that gun are impossible to predict.

  • The notion of fostering good relations with a PNP officer is not a bad idea, but, can you trust him?

  • The guard/attack dog is a great plan.

  • No matter how ‘native’ you intend to go, you will always be a foreigner!

  • Your valid question about the victims’ lifestyles is difficult to answer in full as I simply do not have the facts at my disposal. The reports of the kidnappings of the foreigners in Samal Island in September 2015, Canadians, Norwegian and a Filipina, say they were simply doing their normal thing at the holiday resort.

The most recent government travel advisories are to be found here:


If any of you are interested in a full and detailed current account and history of insurgency in the Philippines then I thoroughly recommend further reading:



Mindanao Revisited

Friday, January 1, 2016

Nose Bleed! Nose Bleed!

nose-bleed-meaning-philippines

‘Nose bleed’ is an expression you soon hear as an expat when mixing with Filipino friends or the family of your spouse or girlfriend.


Many of your Filipino acquaintances will make an effort to speak in English with you, assuming you as the foreigner, are from an English speaking nation. However, don’t be at all surprised after thirty minutes or so if they revert to speaking in their regional or national tongue. Occasionally, the odd Filipino will make zero effort to speak in English in your company.


I noticed this within a few short weeks of arriving on the shores of the archipelago. Every time I was socializing surrounded by Filipinos all would speak in English for a time before reverting to Ilonggo; the language of Negros Island also known as Hiligaynon. Except for one guy, who flat refused to talk in English.


After a few months I decided to query this phenomenon in a most pleasant way. Laughing and joking with a smile on my face, I asked two of the family group about this. They laughed and simply said, “Nose bleed”.


Essentially the expression is used whenever Filipinos encounter somebody that speaks English fluently. Alternatively, it is used by Filipinos when they encounter something difficult like an exam, an interview, when trying to solve complex problems, or when reading a document containing technical words. Examples of those types of documents would be those found in the medical or legal professions where English is the lingua franca.


Personally, it does not faze me when experiencing the sudden switch from English to the native tongue. I know of one expat who finds it annoying and even interprets it as a sign of rudeness. I don’t agree with that – it’s simply a Filipino thing just like surfing Facebook on their cell phones even during a meal! Vive la difference!


Filipino or Tagalog?


The use of language in the Philippines is an interesting subject. For example, from my own reading I am still uncertain whether Filipino or Tagalog is the official language of the country. It depends on the source of your information.


And, did you know that there are some 120 to 175 languages in the Philippines, depending on the method of classification?


It also appears that the subject of language is capable of causing spleens to vent. A recent article in the Inquirer titled “Filipino is no longer Tagalog” by Marne Kilates, deals with the evolution of Filipino, the national language, since it was proclaimed as the basis for the development of the national language in 1937. Much of this piece is about a misconception among Filipinos that the national language is “out to kill [off] the native and regional languages”.


Living Language


In the same article, Almario, one of the prominent defenders of the national language extolled its virtues owing to it being a “living language”. The article then goes on to explain in detail about the history of the Filipino alphabet (abakada) with its addition of consonants such as F and V. Then later as Rizal added the vowels E and O to the native 3-vowel, 17-sound vocabulary the argument runs that abakada was “no longer ‘pure’ Tagalog”.


It was the 1987 Constitution of the Republic that first called the national language Filipino. It also added 8 letters to the abakada so it became more “inclusive of the sounds occurring in the Philippines’ other native languages”. This marked the change from the Tagalog/Pilipino abakada to the Filipino “alpabeto”. Almario concludes with the proposition “[T]hat’s why the Filipino language is no longer Tagalog”.


Venting of Spleens


The venting of spleens was to be found in the comments section of the article –


Bull! Filipino is still Tagalog, pure and simple, not this kind of stupidity fostered by Almario and his gang. What are the sounds this megalomaniac is talking about? KWF has no strategy/program for developing Filipino. The F and V sounds and the orthographies they are developing for the other languages do not make Filipino. But the structure, the syntax, the vocabulary of Filipino should define the national language. What words, idiomatic expressions, phrases in the other languages have been incorporated in Filipino? For one, where is balay that is common to Ilokano and other Visayan languages?


Followed by –


Listen to UKG or TV Patrol for a minute or two and you’ll be amazed at the words they have introduced into Pilipino, new words like “problemado”, “tensionado”, “inorderan”, “klnumpirmahan”, etc. I suggest the anchors and support personnel take some time to read “Florante at Laura”, “Banaag at Sikat” or “Ibong Mandaaragit”. It’s a shame.


It all reminds me firstly of why Latin is now a ‘dead language’; secondly it is also harking back to the days when the ‘language police’ in England used to wring their collective hands at such Americanisms as “alphabetize”.


It’s what people who collect records do to their collection. Until relatively recently, British people would have just called that putting the records in alphabetical order, or having a tidy-up, but now many of them use this apt expression for it, even if it does come with that troublesome z on the end.


Anyway (if you are British, anyways if American) a living language, whether Filipino or English, has to be better than a dead one, even if it all gives us nose bleed!


If you would like to read the full article that inspired this post you can find it here.



Nose Bleed! Nose Bleed!