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In Manila, Filipinos turn to urban farming as food prices soar

Special Manila-based journalist and urban farmer Mer Layson tends to his plants at his home in Metro Manila on Oct. 7, 2025. (AN Photo)
Manila-based journalist and urban farmer Mer Layson tends to his plants at his home in Metro Manila on Oct. 7, 2025. (AN Photo)
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Updated 17 sec ago

In Manila, Filipinos turn to urban farming as food prices soar

In Manila, Filipinos turn to urban farming as food prices soar
  • In the Philippine capital, people are transforming balconies and rooftops into gardens to grow their own vegetables
  • More than half of Filipinos say that lowering food prices should be the president’s priority, recent survey shows

MANILA: When Louie Gutierrez started learning how to farm in 2020, it became one of his ways to feed his family during the COVID-19 pandemic. Little did he know that a few years later, he would be developing a community farm in the heart of Manila, joining a growing number of Filipinos who are turning to urban farming to fight rising food prices.

Many Filipinos have struggled to afford basic food, as prices for essential food items, such as rice and vegetables, have been skyrocketing in recent years, fueled by high energy costs and increasingly extreme weather events.

In the Manila capital region, food inflation rose to 3.9 percent as of August 2025, almost double the 2 percent recorded in August last year. The rate was much higher for specific food items, such as vegetables and cooking bananas, which increased at a rate of 26.5 percent, according to data from the Philippine Statistics Authority.

“One of the big problems that we have here in the city is because of the high prices. Inflation has really gone up so high. Food prices, vegetables, especially during this rainy season, are so expensive,” he told Arab News.

“So a lot of people don’t have any funds left to buy vegetables. They eat probably instant noodles. Honestly, there’s not too much nutrition there.”

With such concerns being top of mind for many Filipinos, more than half said lowering food prices should be the priority of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., according to a survey published this month by independent Philippine polling group Social Weather Stations.

As food prices continue to soar across the Philippines, Manila residents are turning to urban farming to ensure their own food security, transforming their backyards, balconies and rooftops into green pockets of harvest.

The same was true for Gutierrez, whose open-air garden grows tomatoes, lettuce and herbs against the backdrop of high-rise buildings and concrete sidewalks of the Bonifacio Global City district. It is a project he hopes will inspire more Filipinos to take up urban farming.

“So what we offer here in the urban farm is fresh, no-pesticide vegetables so that people can augment it with their meals … There should be a farm in every city here in the Philippines. So, no one will go hungry,” he said.

Gutierrez, who holds the “farmer-in-chief” title at advocacy group Urban Farmers PH, started his own city farming journey also as a way to survive during the global coronavirus outbreak, which had forced the closure of his jewelry stores across the Philippines.

“I have 70 stores in the malls, and they all closed because of the pandemic … I have 400 employees and they didn’t have jobs, and this was one thing that I thought of, (that) maybe we all could learn how to farm,” he said.

With guidance from an agriculture expert he found online, Gutierrez, who previously never farmed a day in his life, began his farming journey, which has since turned into a movement.

When it caught the attention of Ayala, a major Philippine conglomerate, he was offered a space in Bonifacio to build a community farm, which has attracted thousands of visitors.

“We have actually around 40,000 people already visited here in the farm within the last few years. And we hear a lot of success stories of them planting in their communities, planting in their homes … We realized that a lot of people are really interested in eating healthy and growing their own food,” he said.

“There’s a lot of people who don’t have enough food. But there’s so much empty space here in the city. What if we convert them into temporary farms like this? No one will get hungry in Manila.”

Urban farming was also relatively affordable, he added, as it does not require big land or expensive equipment.

“Urban farming, you see, it’s not going to be expensive because even if you look at the farm that we have here, 80 percent of the materials that we use are recycled and upcycled. So it’s something that anybody can do. You don’t have space, you can use your own containers. Many also have started rooftop gardening. So there’s really no excuse not to plant,” Gutierrez said.

For Manila-based journalist and farmer Mer Layson, the practice has been a lifelong journey.

“I am the son of a farmer. I grew different kinds of vegetables in used bottles of mineral water … I started planting because I kind of foresaw that there might come a time of hunger. So when that happens, you won’t be too affected. And true enough, the pandemic came, so I was able to rely on the vegetables I planted in bottles,” he told Arab News.

“That’s why I also started giving free seminars for those who want to learn how to grow their own food through urban gardening … People always say there’s not enough space to plant in Metro Manila. But really, you can grow your own food even in small containers.”

For Layson, the benefits of urban farming are multifold. Not only do people get to save money, they also gain from better nutrition while helping preserve nature, he said.

“I encourage people — let’s keep planting. Prices of vegetables in the market are very high, but why buy when you can grow your own? I always say, food security starts at home. Even if market prices go up, you won’t be affected if you are growing your own.”


Croatia reintroduces conscription to boost defense

Updated 11 sec ago

Croatia reintroduces conscription to boost defense

Croatia reintroduces conscription to boost defense
“We are seeing a rise in various types of threats ... that demand swift and effective action from the broader community,” said Anusic
“In the face of any threat, defending the country is crucial“

ZAGREB: Croatian lawmakers on Friday voted to reintroduce mandatory military service to boost the Balkan nation’s defense amid unrest across the globe including Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Zagreb abolished military conscription in 2008, a year before joining NATO, in an effort to professionalize its military.
But top officials have since argued that international tensions require the restoration of basic military training to bolster Croatia’s defense forces.
“We are seeing a rise in various types of threats ... that demand swift and effective action from the broader community,” Defense Minister Ivan Anusic, from the ruling conservative HDZ party, told the lawmakers this week.
“In the face of any threat, defending the country is crucial,” he stressed.
Around 18,000 men would be enlisted annually as they turn 18 to take two months of training. The initiative is expected to start next year.
Women will be exempt, while conscientious objectors will be able to serve three or four months in civil service roles, including disaster response teams.
Deputies amended two laws to allow the change. A total of 84 deputies of those present in the 151-seat assembly backed amendments to the defense law, while 110 voted to amend the law on service in the armed forces.
Regular conscripts will be paid 1,100 euros ($1,280) per month, while the amount for those serving in the alternative civil service has yet to be determined, amid reports it could be “considerably lower.”
Military conscripts will also have an advantage when applying for jobs at public and state-run institutions after their service.
Left-wing opponents said the law discriminated against women and those who chose civil protection, as they would receive a lower wage and not be afforded preferential treatment for government jobs.
The NATO member nation of 3.8 million people joined the European Union in 2013.

UK seizes record haul of illegal weight-loss drugs in factory raid

UK seizes record haul of illegal weight-loss drugs in factory raid
Updated 22 min 34 sec ago

UK seizes record haul of illegal weight-loss drugs in factory raid

UK seizes record haul of illegal weight-loss drugs in factory raid
  • MHRA said it had seized 2,000 pens labelled as containing tirzepatide and retatrutide
  • The agency said the factory in central England was the first of its kind discovered in Britain

LONDON: Britain’s medicines regulator on Friday said it had made the largest single seizure of trafficked weight loss medicines recorded globally, dismantling a factory making thousands of unlicensed weight-loss jabs.
The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) said it had seized 2,000 pens labelled as containing tirzepatide and retatrutide — drugs not approved for weight loss in the UK — tens of thousands of empty pens, and raw chemicals.

The agency said the factory in central England was the first of its kind discovered in Britain.
“This is a victory in the fight against the shameless criminals who are putting lives at risk by peddling dangerous and illegal weight loss jabs to make a quick buck,” health minister Wes Streeting said in a statement.
“These unregulated products, made with no regard for safety or quality, posed a major risk to unwitting customers.”


Roadside bombing kills 3 police officers in northwest Pakistan

Roadside bombing kills 3 police officers in northwest Pakistan
Updated 24 October 2025

Roadside bombing kills 3 police officers in northwest Pakistan

Roadside bombing kills 3 police officers in northwest Pakistan
  • The bombing took place in the city of Hangu in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province
  • Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi condemned the attacks and blamed the Pakistani Taliban for the violence

PESHAWAR: A powerful roadside bomb struck a police vehicle Friday in a former stronghold of the Pakistani Taliban in the country’s northwest near the Afghan border, killing a city police chief and two junior officers, officials said.
The bombing took place in the city of Hangu in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province as the officers were heading to a police station that had been attacked less than an hour earlier, local police chief Adam Khan said. He gave no further details.
Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi condemned the attacks and blamed the Pakistani Taliban for the violence.


The latest assaults came a day before Pakistan and Afghanistan are scheduled to hold a second round of peace talks in Istanbul, following an initial meeting in Qatari capital Doha on Oct. 19. Those talks, brokered by Qatar and Turkiye, followed deadly border clashes that left dozens dead on both sides and led to a temporary ceasefire that remains in place.
The Pakistani Taliban, known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan or TTP, is a separate group but a close ally of Afghanistan’s Taliban, which returned to power in Kabul in August 2021 after the withdrawal of US and NATO forces.
Since then, many TTP fighters and leaders have found refuge in Afghanistan, some living openly under Taliban rule — a situation that has emboldened the group and strained ties between Pakistan and Afghanistan. The TTP frequently targets security forces and civilians inside Pakistan.
All border crossings between Pakistan and Afghanistan have been closed since Oct. 13 following deadly clashes between the two sides.
Pakistan and Afghanistan share a 2,611-kilometer (1,622-mile) border known as the Durand Line, which Afghanistan has never formally recognized.


Four dead, 12 wounded in blast at Ukraine train station

Four dead, 12 wounded in blast at Ukraine train station
Updated 24 October 2025

Four dead, 12 wounded in blast at Ukraine train station

Four dead, 12 wounded in blast at Ukraine train station
  • Three women — a border guard and two civilians — were killed in the blast
  • The explosion was carried out by a man during a document check in a controlled border area

KYIV: A man detonated an explosive device at a railway station in northern Ukraine on Friday, killing three other people and dying of wounds he sustained, officials said.
Three women — a border guard and two civilians — were killed in the blast, which happened during a document check on a platform next to a train, Ukraine’s border guard said in a statement.
“The explosion was carried out by a man during a document check in a controlled border area at the Ovruch railway station,” the border service said on social media.
The man, 23, also died while being treated in an ambulance after the blast, it added.
Ukrainian media reported that he detonated a grenade, but a spokesperson for Ukraine’s interior ministry told AFP they could not confirm the type of device.
An image from the scene posted on Telegram by the Ukrainian border guard service showed rescuers helping casualties from the blast on the platform.
The man “had recently been detained for attempting to violate the state border in the western section of the state border,” it said.


Missing Picasso painting found in Madrid weeks after vanishing

Missing Picasso painting found in Madrid weeks after vanishing
Updated 24 October 2025

Missing Picasso painting found in Madrid weeks after vanishing

Missing Picasso painting found in Madrid weeks after vanishing
  • The small framed “Still Life with Guitar” was part of a larger shipment of artworks moved to Granada
  • Police said the painting may not have been loaded onto the transport truck

MADRID: Spanish police said on Friday they had recovered a 1919 Pablo Picasso painting that went missing earlier this month ahead of its planned display at a temporary exhibition in southern Spain.
The small framed “Still Life with Guitar” was part of a larger shipment of artworks moved from Madrid to Granada. The exhibit’s organizers filed a police complaint on October 10 once they noticed it missing after the crates were unpacked.
In a post on X, police said the painting may not have been loaded onto the transport truck before the shipment left Madrid. The historical heritage brigade was continuing its investigation, the statement said, without indicating whether police believed any crime had been committed.
Police released pictures of forensic experts examining the painting while wearing full sterile bodysuits and masks.
The police had registered the painting, which is owned by a private collector, in Interpol’s global database of Stolen Works of Art containing nearly 57,000 items.
The CajaGranada Foundation holding the exhibition said its security camera footage showed only 57 works being unloaded from the vehicle when it arrived, instead of the 58 expected.