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Families mourn Thai nursery dead ahead of king’s visit

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Photo by AP/Sakchai Lalit

NA KLANG, Thailand — Weeping, grief-stricken families gathered Friday outside a Thai nursery where an ex-policeman murdered nearly two dozen children in one of the kingdom’s worst mass killings.

Thai King Maha Vajiralongkorn and Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha will later visit survivors of the attack that left at least 37 people dead, including the attacker’s wife and child.

Around the small low-slung building, where only 2 days ago scores of preschool children played, officials in white uniforms with black armbands laid a red carpet for the king’s visit.

A line of heartbroken parents placed white roses on the steps of the nursery as the baking sun bore down on them Friday morning.

Buarai Tanontong’s two 3-year-old grandsons were among those killed at the nursery when the attacker burst through the door.

“I couldn’t sleep. I didn’t think that it would be my 2 grandsons,” she said, clutching her inconsolable daughter’s shoulder.

Earlier a palace representative laid a wreath from the royal family at the entrance of the nursery.

Overnight, coffins carrying the bodies of the victims — who include 23 children — arrived at a morgue in Udon Thani, the closest city to the rural district ripped apart by Thursday’s three-hour rampage.

Armed with a 9mm pistol and a knife, sacked police sergeant Panya Khamrab opened fire on the childcare centre in the northeastern Nong Bua Lam Phu province at about 12:30 p.m. 

Following the attack, 34-year-old Panya fled the scene in a pickup truck to head home and murder his wife and child before taking his own life, police said, ending the killing spree around 3:00 pm. 

Flags on government buildings flew at half-mast on Friday in a gesture of mourning for one of the deadliest days in recent Thai history.

Nanthicha Punchum, acting chief of the nursery, described harrowing scenes as the attacker barged into the building in the rural Na Klang district.

“There were some staff eating lunch outside the nursery and the attacker parked his car and shot four of them dead,” she told AFP.

“The shooter smashed down the door with his leg and then came inside and started slashing the children’s heads with a knife.”

Local media reported that the dead included a school teacher who was 8 months pregnant, and that one child survived because they were sleeping hidden by a blanket when the attacker struck.

National Police Chief Damrongsak Kittiprapat told reporters that Panya, a former police sergeant, was suspended in January and sacked in June for drug use.

He said the attacker — who used a legally purchased pistol — had been due in court on a drugs charge, adding that Panya was in a manic state but it was unknown whether it was drug-related.

Witness Paweena Purichan, 31, said the attacker was well-known in the area as a drug addict.

She told AFP she encountered Panya driving erratically as he fled the scene.

“The attacker rammed a motorbike into 2 people who were injured. I sped off to get away from him,” she said.

“There was blood everywhere.”

Video footage that Paweena posted online showed a woman lying injured in a roadside bush after apparently being knocked off her motorbike by Panya.

Thai PM Prayut has ordered a rapid probe into the attack, which came less than 3 years after a soldier gunned down 29 people in a 17-hour rampage and wounded scores more before he was shot dead by commandos.

And less than a month ago an army officer shot dead two colleagues at a military training base in the capital Bangkok.

But while Thailand has high rates of gun ownership, mass shootings such as Thursday’s are rare.



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LNG Power Plant will increase Power Rates in Negros

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NEGROS, Philippines — SMC Global Power Holdings Corp., the power unit of diversified conglomerate San Miguel Corp. (SMC), plans to invest P18.5 billion for a 300-megawatt (MW) liquefied natural gas (LNG) combined cycle power plant in Negros Occidental.

In a filing with the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), SMC Global’s wholly owned unit Reliance Energy Development Inc. (REDI) is proposing a 4×75-MW LNG Combined Cycle Power Plant within the San Carlos City Ecozone in San Carlos City, Negros Occidental.

The proposed project, which has an estimated project cost of P18.5 billion, will be constructed inside the 49-hectare leased property from Grand Planters International Inc.

An on-shore LNG terminal facility will be constructed adjacent to the power plant to store and re-gasify the LNG that will be delivered through barging.

REDI is targeting to start constructing the power project in the third quarter with completion eyed in the third quarter of 2024. It is in the process of pre-feasibility study and environmental compliance certificate (ECC) application.

The company considered different technologies for the project, such as natural gas, coal, wind and solar, but chose natural gas since it is more flexible, secured, environmental-friendly and cost-effective.

Moreover, the Department of Energy issued a moratorium on new coal-fired power plants in 2020 to support the government’s direction towards clean energy, removing coal from REDI’s list of considerations.

REDI said its proposed power plant would help augment the demand for reliable and affordable power supply.

“The proposed power plant will not only supply enough electricity to Filipino households and businesses, but will also contribute to national development. The proposed project will also support DOE’s advocacy to shift to cleaner source of energy to reduce the GHG emissions from the energy sector,” it said.

However, for consumer welfare group, Koryente Konsumers Alliance, an LNG power plant will only lead to increase power rates in the area. 

“We have not explored indigenous fuel sources so the country will have to import LNG. LNG is a fossil fuel like oil, diesel and gas. The world market price is just as high and it is hard to secure supply due to the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine. Although, we have Malampaya in the country, the well is set to dry up very soon and the country has not explored new areas to replace it.

Especially for Negros Island let us explore other sources of power like Mini-Hydro, Wind, Solar, and most especially Bagasse cogerneration with the Sugar Mills.

Negros being the sugar capital of the country with numerous sugar mills, let us increase the congeneration capacity of all sugar mills to create power.”

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ISANG MATANDANG BABAE, NATAGPUANG PATAY SA BRGY ILIHAN, MACROHON, SOUTHERN LEYTE

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August 13, 2022
By Janna Mae Lambo
SOUTHERN LEYTE – Isang matandang babae ang natagpuang patay kahapon, pasado alas-5 ng hapon, sa brgy Ilihan, lungsod ng Macrohon, Southern Leyte.
Ayon sa Brgy Ilihan Councilor, Ronil Miole, isang babae ang nakita sa kanal ng nasabing lugar.
Agad namang rumesponde ang puwersa ng pulisya at ang Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP) rescuer.
Kinilala ng mga awtoridad ang biktima na si Pacita Vasquez Lastosa, 64 taong gulang, biyuda, at residente ng lugar.
Nakita kahapon ang bangkay ni Lastosa ng isang dump truck driver na dumaan sa lugar kahapon .
Ayon naman sa case investigator na si PMSg Richie Selencio, hindi sinadyang mahulog ang lola sa bangin na may lalim na 15 metro habang nagtatapon umano ito ng mga binunot na damo.
Samantala, ayon sa findings ng post mortem examination na isinagawa ni Municipal Health Officer Dra Pilar Bitos Abaday, intracerebral hemorrhage ang sanhi ng pagkamatay ng biktima.
Nilinaw din ng opisyal na walang foul play sa insidente.

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EDC explains high power rate in Leyte

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ORMOC CITY, Leyte – The ineligibility of the Energy Development Corp. (EDC) to participate in the competitive selection process (CSP) is the primary reason why consumers in host communities do not enjoy lower rates, an official said on Friday.

“We really wanted to supply power in the region, but we are ineligible to participate in the CSP due to one requirement,” said Erwin Magallanes, head of the corporate relations department of EDC’s Leyte geothermal facility.

Magallanes said he was disappointed that the EDC was disqualified to participate in the CSP in 2015 in which the Federation of Rural Electric Cooperatives (Frecor) 8 (Eastern Visayas) required a power generator to possess a “new power plant or a power plant expansion to supply its power requirements.”

He noted that because of this prerequisite, the EDC does not qualify to participate in the bidding process, considering that all the company’s power plants have already been existing for years.

The EDC clarified this after rumors spread in various communities that the power rate went up this month in Leyte even if the province hosts the geothermal power plant.

Currently, only the Leyte II Electric Cooperative (Leyeco) based in Tacloban City, and Leyeco III based in Tunga, Leyte maintain a Power Supply Agreement with EDC, which emanated from the energy generator’s amended offer to all-electric cooperatives (ECs) in the region in 2014.

“Because of this, out of 11 ECs in Eastern Visayas, only Leyeco II and Leyeco III have the present contracts from EDC through its Green Core Geothermal, Inc. geothermal facility,” Magallanes added.

It was during the reprising term of every five years when these two ECs signed up with EDC for 16 megawatts (MW) or about 50 percent of Leyeco II’s power demand, and 2.5 MW or about 80 percent of Leyeco III’s energy requirement.

The rest of their power demands are sourced from other suppliers.

Electric consumers of Leyeco II, which charges the lowest rate among the 11 electric cooperatives in Eastern Visayas, are paying PHP11.95 per kilowatt-hour (kWh), slightly lower than the PHP12.0991 per kWh in June.

The Don Orestes Romualdez Electric Cooperative, with a franchise area in the central part of Leyte, charges consumers PHP16.92 per kWh. The rate was PHP15.16 per kWh in June.

“Geothermal power prices are not volatile because they are not tied to oil and coal prices. Unlike imported and carbon-intensive coal, geothermal is the most ideal source of power not only because it supplies a clean, stable, and renewable baseload power but also because of its relatively stable price,” Magallanes said.

Coal and oil prices in recent months have been increasing due to world market prices.

This costly supply chain logistics has been causing the increase in electricity rates as 58 percent of the power in the country is supplied by coal and 2 percent from oil as of 2021, according to the Department of Energy’s website.

With the rising cost of fuel and commodities, the EDC is prepared to help reduce the power cost by participating in Frecor-8’s Emergency Power Sales Agreement bid process for the good of its customers.

“While members of Frecor-8 have signed long-term contracts, we can supply from our limited uncontracted capacity. We are prepared to offer energy from geothermal to help lower the average electricity cost of their consumers,” Magallanes added.

The EDC is First Gen’s 100 percent renewable energy subsidiary and has more than 1,480 MW total installed capacity accounting for 20 percent of the country’s total installed renewable capacity.

Unified Leyte and Green Core Geothermal, Inc. are EDC’s power supply subsidiaries. (PNA)

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