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New standards, leisure infrastructure as Philippines taps into Muslim travel market

Special New standards, leisure infrastructure as Philippines taps into Muslim travel market
A view of a beach at Boracay in Philippines, April 9, 2018. (REUTERS)
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Updated 15 February 2025

New standards, leisure infrastructure as Philippines taps into Muslim travel market

New standards, leisure infrastructure as Philippines taps into Muslim travel market
  • Govt plans special halal tourism packages, tourism undersecretary says
  • To draw more visitors, Philippines tries to improve air connectivity with Gulf states

MANILA: Recognizing the growing significance of the global halal travel market, the Philippines is adapting its tourist infrastructure and introducing new standards to receive more visitors from Muslim countries.

Although the Philippines is predominantly Catholic, it is home to a sizable Muslim minority. Islam, the oldest monotheistic religion in the region, has more than 600 years of history that is reflected in the country’s cultural heritage.

The government has been working to combine this rich history with the Philippines’ famous white sandy beaches, diving spots and warm hospitality to expand its tourism markets, particularly targeting visitors from the Middle East.

“It has only been recently that Muslim-friendly initiatives and efforts have gone full throttle. However, the DOT already has a number of programs in place to attract Muslim travelers, to include the Middle East market,” Department of Tourism Undersecretary Myra Paz Abubakar told Arab News.

“Most of our efforts focus on developing and institutionalizing standards that will protect the interests of Muslim travelers, ensuring that their travels to the Philippines will be enjoyable without compromising their faith.”

One of the key steps taken by the DOT is the introduction of the Muslim-friendly accommodation establishments program, which encourages hotels and resorts to meet specific standards that cater to Muslim travelers.

“From the reception areas to the guest rooms, to the availability of prayer rooms . . . we want our Muslim visitors to feel at home,” Abubakar said.

“The Department of Tourism has a training module on understanding Muslim travelers, as well as on halal and Muslim-friendly tourism. Beyond this, the DOT also developed standards for Muslim-friendly accommodation establishments ... currently, there are 17 accommodation establishments officially recognized as DOT Muslim-friendly.”

Thirteen of the properties are operated by the Megaworld Group, the largest hospitality chain in the Philippines, which last year also opened Marhaba Boracay, a cove area dedicated to Muslim women travelers in Boracay, the country’s top resort island.

“Beyond this, we are also exploring the creation of tailored halal tourism packages for Muslim travelers, including ֱns. This is in coordination with the different tour operators and travel agencies in the Philippines,” Abubakar said.

“Since the Philippines has a rich history in Islam, there are a number of destinations, activities, and offerings that align with the cultural and religious values of Arab visitors, and Muslims in general.”

One of the most iconic sites is the Sheikh Karimul Makdum Mosque in Tawi-Tawi province. Sitting on the island of Simunul, the mosque is surrounded by coastal waters. Constructed in 1380 by the Arab trader and missionary Makhdum Karimul, it is the oldest mosque in the Philippines.

Besides the mosque, there are also numerous sites throughout Tawi-Tawi related to the Sulu Sultanate, whose rulers played a key role in the spread of Islam in the southern Philippines. Established in the 15th century, the sultanate played an important role in regional trade networks and was a center of resistance to Spanish and later American colonial powers.

While DOT records show steady growth in tourist arrivals from ֱ, the UAE, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, Jordan and Bahrain, one of the major challenges in expanding the Philippines’ appeal in the region is increasing air connectivity to key cities such as Dubai and Riyadh.

Warren Palacio, chief of the DOT’s Routes Department, said that negotiations with airlines from the Gulf states were underway to address these issues.

“There is a pending request from the UAE to hold air service agreement negotiation talks,” he told Arab News.

“Maybe within the next two or three months, I think we will have the air negotiation, the air service agreement to be scheduled. Then that’s where we’ll move forward when the flights will be increased and more seat capacity will be in place.”


91 people possibly still under collapsed Indonesian school: official

91 people possibly still under collapsed Indonesian school: official
Updated 11 sec ago

91 people possibly still under collapsed Indonesian school: official

91 people possibly still under collapsed Indonesian school: official
  • The multi-story Islamic boarding school suddenly gave way on Monday as students were gathered for afternoon prayers

SIDOARJO, Indonesia: Around 91 people are believed to be still trapped under the ruins of a collapsed school on Indonesia’s main island of Java, authorities said as rescue teams searched for survivors.

The multi-story Islamic boarding school in the town of Sidoarjo suddenly gave way on Monday as students were gathered for afternoon prayers, according to local reports.

“Based on student attendance data, 91 people are suspected to be buried under building materials,” National Disaster and Mitigation Agency spokesperson Abdul Muhari said in a statement late Tuesday.

It earlier said three people died and 38 people were still unaccounted for.

Officials said Wednesday they were still trying to confirm the number of missing when asked at a news conference in Sidoarjo.

Rescue teams were focusing on supplying life support to survivors trapped under the rubble, said Emi Freezer, the National Search and Rescue Agency’s head of operations.

They were concentrating on seven areas were signs of life had been detected, he said.

“The main structure has totally collapsed … We prioritized saving victims who were still responsive.”

Dozens of parents waited Wednesday near the collapsed school building as rescue teams searched for survivors under the rubble.


Pacific islands youth group wins prize for climate legal action

Pacific islands youth group wins prize for climate legal action
Updated 8 min 40 sec ago

Pacific islands youth group wins prize for climate legal action

Pacific islands youth group wins prize for climate legal action
  • Prize also honored Sudan’s humanitarian aid network Emergency Response Rooms
  • Burmese anti-corruption group and a Taiwanese champion of digital democracy was feted as well

STOCKHOLM: A youth-led student group and a human-rights lawyer that took the issue of climate to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) received the Right Livelihood prize on Wednesday, dubbed an “alternative Nobel.”
The prize also honored Sudan’s humanitarian aid network Emergency Response Rooms, as well as a Burmese anti-corruption group and a Taiwanese champion of digital democracy.
Frustrated by slow global efforts to tackle climate change, 27 law students at the University of the South Pacific in Vanuatu in 2019 decided to, in their words, “get the world’s biggest problem before the world’s highest court.”
The Pacific Islands Students Fighting Climate Change’s (PISFCC) campaigning culminated in the ICJ in July this year delivering an advisory opinion that states have legal obligations to address climate change.
While not legally binding, advisory opinions carry political and legal weight.
The prize jury hailed the group “for carrying the call for climate justice to the world’s highest court, turning survival into a matter of rights and climate action into a legal responsibility.”
Faced with the threat of rising sea levels and harsher weather patterns in places like the Pacific Ocean, island nations are particularly at risk from climate change.
“It’s an existential problem for young people in countries like Kiribati, in Tuvalu, in Marshall Islands. They’re witnessing the effects of climate change every high tide,” Vishal Prasad, director of PISFCC, said in July.
The group shared the prize with Julian Aguon, a human-rights lawyer from Guam, whose law firm, Blue Ocean Law, developed the legal strategy to carry the case.
The Sweden-based Right Livelihood Foundation also honored Emergency Response Rooms, a community-led grassroots network, for distributing aid during Sudan’s civil war.
The network was described as “the backbone of the country’s humanitarian response amid war, displacement and state collapse.”
Justice For Myanmar (JFM), a covert group of Burmese activists working to expose companies profiting from and propping up the country’s military junta, was also honored.
Taiwanese programmer and cyber ambassador Audrey Tang also received the award for “advancing the social use of digital technology to empower citizens, renew democracy and heal divides,” the jury said in a statement.
The Right Livelihood award was established in 1980, when Swedish-German stamp collector Jakob von Uexkull sold part of his collection to found it, after the foundation behind the Nobel Prizes refused to create new honors in the fields of environment and international development.


Torrential downpours kill nine in Ukraine’s Odesa

Torrential downpours kill nine in Ukraine’s Odesa
Updated 15 min 44 sec ago

Torrential downpours kill nine in Ukraine’s Odesa

Torrential downpours kill nine in Ukraine’s Odesa
  • Hundreds of rescuers worked overnight to evacuate people from flooded areas, remove cars and pump water out of buildings
  • A total of 362 people have been rescued so far, the service said

KYIV: A severe rainstorm killed at least nine people in Ukraine’s Odesa, emergency services said early on Wednesday.
“In seven hours, Odesa received almost a two-month norm of rainfall. No storm sewer system can withstand such a load,” the mayor of Odesa Gennadiy Trukhanov said on Telegram.
“Currently, nine people are known to have died, including one child,” the State Emergency Service said in a separate post.
Hundreds of rescuers worked overnight to evacuate people from flooded areas, remove cars and pump water out of buildings.
A total of 362 people have been rescued so far, the service said.
Mayor Trukhanov acknowledged the situation was challenging but said it was “under control.”
More bad weather is forecast for tomorrow.
“Work continues without a break — both day and night,” Trukhanov said.
The deadly weather adds to the challenges facing emergency services as Ukraine endures daily attacks by Russia, which controls about 20 percent of its territory three-and-a-half years after Moscow launched its large-scale invasion.
A man died Wednesday morning in a Russian attack on the southern city of Kherson, according to the local military administration.
Six people, including a policeman, were wounded in overnight strikes in the northeast region of Kharkiv, according to the national police.


As outrage over the war in Gaza grows, Europe’s relationship with Israel falters

As outrage over the war in Gaza grows, Europe’s relationship with Israel falters
Updated 33 min 50 sec ago

As outrage over the war in Gaza grows, Europe’s relationship with Israel falters

As outrage over the war in Gaza grows, Europe’s relationship with Israel falters
  • As outrage over the humanitarian catastrophe grows, more European leaders, sometimes driven by pressure from their populations, have openly condemned Israel’s war conduct and sought to push PM Netanyahu’s government to agree to a ceasesfire

BRUSSELS: Pro-Palestinian protests are shaking major European cities, and calls are growing to ban Israel from sporting and cultural events. European navies have been deployed to protect activists trying to get aid into Gaza — and a wave of countries have done the once-unthinkable and recognized a Palestinian state.
As outrage over the humanitarian catastrophe grows, more European leaders, sometimes driven by pressure from their populations, have openly condemned Israel’s war conduct and sought to push Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to agree to a ceasefire and allow in aid.
“There has been a ground-breaking shift in Europe where somewhere over the last year populations have been putting more pressure on their governments, which has helped break taboos at the top over criticism of Israel,” said Sanam Vakil, director of the Chatham House think tank’s Middle East and North Africa program.
Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni, one of Israel’s closest EU allies, said last week that she would support European Union sanctions against Israel. It was her toughest position yet, and followed a nationwide strike in Italy and pro-Palestinian protests from Palermo to Milan.
Speaking at the UN General Assembly in New York, Meloni said: “Israel ended up violating humanitarian norms, causing a massacre among civilians.”
Since Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas-led militants launched air and ground attacks on Israel, killing some 1,200 people and taking more than 250 hostages, Israel’s military campaign in Gaza has killed more than 66,000 people, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry. The ministry, part of the Hamas-run government and staffed by medical professionals, doesn’t differentiate between civilians and combatants, but says women and children make up around half.
The war has also destroyed vast areas of Gaza, killed 289 journalists, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, displaced around 90 percent of Gaza’s population, and caused a catastrophic humanitarian crisis, including an outbreak of famine in Gaza City.
Pro-Palestinian protests have grown, according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, or ACLED, which monitors worldwide conflicts. From December to April there were 780 protests across Europe. That has grown to 2,066 in the last five months, an average of at least 15 a day, said researcher Ciro Murillo.
The protests cut across parties and include members of Europe’s large Muslim communities, an important voting bloc in countries like France and Germany.
In the past six months there were only 51 pro-Israel protests in Europe, about half of them in Germany. ACLED data showed a steep drop in public support for Israel starting a few months after the war began.
Speaking at the UN two days after Meloni, Netanyahu seemed to acknowledge the turn.
“Sure, in the days immediately following Oct. 7, many ... supported Israel. But that support quickly evaporated when Israel did what any self-respecting nation would do in the wake of such a savage attack,” he told world leaders.
Israel’s deep ties with Europe
With a shared birth in the aftermath of World War II, Israel and the European Union are intricately interwoven.
Almost all Jewish Israelis trace their heritage to either the broader Middle East or the Jewish communities of Europe laid waste to by pogroms in the Russian empire and the genocidal Third Reich of Germany.
“Israel is from Europe, and anyone who fails to admit it or understand it doesn’t really understand this country,” said Sharon Pardo, a professor at Ben-Gurion University and author of a book on European-Israeli relations, “Uneasy Neighbors.”
Strategic practicality drove Israel toward Europe, even if many considered it “a continent of murderers,” Pardo said. Israel’s first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, began building long-standing economic, political and cultural ties with Europe. Today the EU is Israel’s top trading partner.
“These were the immediate markets for Israeli agriculture, this was the market for weapons for Israel,” Pardo said.
But the embrace by Netanyahu, Israel’s longest-serving prime minister, of far-right European parties has antagonized the European political establishment.
“Netanyahu’s Israel is an anti-European Union country, a Euro-skeptic country that does its utmost to harm the European integration project,” Pardo said.
Criticism of Israel rises as war in Gaza grinds on
The shocking violence of Oct. 7, 2023, ignited an outpouring of support from European leaders.
Ursula von der Leyen, the EU’s political chief, visited a still-smoldering kibbutz days later and met with Netanyahu. She pledged EU support for Israel.
But nearly two years later, Israel’s foreign minister, Gideon Saar, accused her of “empowering a terrorist organization” with her surprise call for the EU to increase pressure on Israel to halt the war.
Von der Leyen said there’s been “a more systematic shift in the last months that is simply unacceptable” in the conflict and that “Europe needs to do more.”
She was likely influenced by growing protests and by EU staff critical of her policies, said Lisa Musiol, head of EU Affairs for the International Crisis Group. She pointed to open letters criticizing the EU’s Gaza policy signed by more than 2,000 current EU staffers and 390 former European ambassadors and officials.
Von der Leyen proposed increasing EU tariffs on some Israeli goods and sanctioning some Israeli settlers and two members of Netanyahu’s Cabinet. She would also sanction 10 Hamas leaders. EU leaders were to discuss the proposals Wednesday in Copenhagen.
Major EU measures require unanimity — a likely impossibility in the 27-nation bloc — but some can be passed with a vote weighted by population. That would require Italy or Germany to join nations critical of Israel.
All eyes on Merz and Meloni
Germany’s support for Israel is second only to the United States. But Germany’s ruling coalition is split on Gaza, with Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s center-right Christian Democrats supporting Israel and the smaller Social Democrats more critical of the war.
Merz has spoken to Netanyahu about his growing concerns and has curbed arms sales to Israel, but said he is not considering sanctions.
Germany’s historical responsibility for the Holocaust has shaped its postwar support for insuring Israel’s security and combating antisemitism. Still, tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets of Berlin on Saturday calling for the war’s end.
More likely to swing the vote would be Meloni, who has said she supports Italy joining recent moves to recognize a Palestinian state by European neighbors France, Andorra, Belgium, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, the United Kingdom and Portugal, as well as Commonwealth nations Canada and Australia.
In contrast to Germany, Italy has a different historical relationship to Israel, said Elisabetta Brighi, a University of Westminster professor. Deeply influenced by the country’s strong trade unions and the Vatican, Italy could switch and join European efforts to pressure Israel over Gaza.
“Italy has not translated the trauma of fascism the same way that Germany has,” she said.
Italy has joined Spain in sending navy ships to protect a flotilla of boats carrying activists seeking to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza after the activists said they were attacked by drones near Greece.
Calls have also grown to ban Israel from some sporting and cultural events, with Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez saying after protesters disrupted the Spanish Vuelta cycling race last month that Israel should be excluded until the “barbarity” in Gaza ends. Some countries have also threatened to boycott the Eurovision Song Contest — hugely popular in Israel and Europe — if Israel is allowed to compete.


Munich police say no danger to public after major road cordoned off

Munich police say no danger to public after major road cordoned off
Updated 43 min 50 sec ago

Munich police say no danger to public after major road cordoned off

Munich police say no danger to public after major road cordoned off
  • The road has been widely cordoned off due to the major police and firefighter operations

BERLIN: Police and firefighters were out in large numbers along Munich’s Lerchenauer Strasse arterial road on Wednesday morning, but there is currently no danger to the public in the city known for Oktoberfest, according to a police spokesperson.
The road has been widely cordoned off due to the major police and firefighter operations, said the spokesperson.
The Bild newspaper reported that explosions and gunshots had been heard, and one body had been found and one person had gunshot wounds, but the circumstances were unclear.