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Impoverished Filipinos forge a life among the tombstones

Impoverished Filipinos forge a  life among the tombstones
A child is seen entering his makeshift home beside the tombs at Manila North Cemetery in Manila. (AFP)
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Updated 1 min 43 sec ago

Impoverished Filipinos forge a life among the tombstones

Impoverished Filipinos forge a  life among the tombstones
  • Manila North Cemetery is a sprawling 54-hectare public graveyard that is home to about 6,000 informal settlers and at least a million deceased Filipinos

MANILA: In teeming Manila, where poverty runs deep and millions lack adequate shelter, some of the living have found refuge among the dead.
Laileah Cuetara’s shanty sits atop a pair of raised tombs inside the Philippine capital’s Manila North Cemetery, a sprawling 54-hectare public graveyard that is home to about 6,000 informal settlers and at least a million deceased Filipinos.
The tiny wood structure where she lives with her partner and two children is filled from side to side with a foam mattress, shelves, a television and picture frames. In the doorway, a statue of an angel stands on an infant’s crypt that doubles as a table.
The 36-year-old makes around 3,000 pesos ($51) a month selling sweets, drinks and biscuits to cemetery visitors.
Over All Saints’ Day and All Souls’ Day, when millions of Filipinos visit the graves of departed loved ones, she and her partner receive up to 1,700 pesos for each of the 30 tombs they clean and tend to throughout the year.
But the money they earn is far too little to move, she said ahead of the November 1-2 holidays.
“With the high prices of basic goods nowadays, it’s very difficult to improve our living conditions,” said Cuetara, who moved into the cemetery in 2008 after a family conflict forced her from her home in the Manila suburbs.
A former Filipino congressman this year estimated 3 million people lacked adequate housing in Metro Manila, while a 2023 United Nations report predicted as many as 22 million across the archipelago nation could face that predicament by 2040.
For 51-year-old Priscilla Buan, who was born inside the graveyard and has raised her children among the tombs, nothing is more terrifying than the demolition orders that follow occasional complaints from visitors.
“Whenever we hear about demolition orders, we remove our belongings ... We hide (the appliances) in a different mausoleum so they won’t be seen,” the third-generation dweller said, saying demolitions happen at least once a year.

Buan and her family of four sleep atop two crypts in a mausoleum. The remaining area has been repurposed into a living room complete with a sofa, cabinet and appliances. She sells snacks and small goods from the tomb’s grilled window.
“Even if I wanted to, we don’t have money to buy a house,” Buan said.
But there has been a “concerning” increase in the number of cemetery dwellers, said Vicente Eliver of the Kapatiran-Kaunlaran Foundation, which has been providing livelihood and educational programs to the graveyard residents since 2010.
Only the grave caretakers and their families once lived there, Eliver said.
“But their children got married, had kids and grandkids who also decided to live inside the cemetery,” he said.
Most of those living inside the cemetery say they have permission to occupy mausoleums or build shanties on top of graves in exchange for keeping them clean.
They tap into existing power lines for electricity and pay 3 pesos per gallon of water from nearby wells.
But the cemetery director, Daniel Tan, said the informal arrangement was not meant to be a long-term one.
“This is a cemetery, it’s for the dead and not for the living, so people are really not allowed to live here,” he said.
“We allow (the caretakers) because of the mausoleums that they have to maintain. We just regulate them,” said Tan, adding the city was attempting to find permanent homes elsewhere but offering no specifics.
Cuetara, who showed a permission letter from the owner of the tomb where she resides, said living inside the cemetery was no one’s first choice.
Her 11-year-old son has faced bullying at school over the family’s address, while her six-year-old daughter is forever drawing houses that adorn the inside of their makeshift dwelling.
“I also want to live outside (the cemetery) ... who doesn’t?” Cuetara said.
“All of us here dream of having a house outside, but ... it’s hard, very hard.”


Revealed: UK defense officials’ litany of data breaches on Afghans fleeing Taliban

Revealed: UK defense officials’ litany of data breaches on Afghans fleeing Taliban
Updated 28 sec ago

Revealed: UK defense officials’ litany of data breaches on Afghans fleeing Taliban

Revealed: UK defense officials’ litany of data breaches on Afghans fleeing Taliban
  • Sensitive data from scheme to relocate Afghans exposed through laptop on train and email to social club
  • Details from 49 breaches emerge amid fallout from leak of spreadsheet containing information about thousands of people who worked with the UK against Taliban

LONDON: A UK defense official revealed sensitive personal information related to Afghans fleeing the Taliban when he left his laptop screen in public view on a train.

The incident was among dozens of data security breaches involving the Ministry of Defence unit handling the relocation of people who had worked alongside British forces during the war in Afghanistan.

In another blunder, an email containing sensitive data from the program was accidentally sent to a civil service sports and social club.

The breaches are among 49 incidents that have come to light in the fallout from a massive MoD data breach in 2022 when a spreadsheet containing details of almost 19,000 Afghans fleeing the Taliban was inadvertently leaked.

Those listed were applying under the Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy set up just a few months before the Taliban captured Kabul.

Dozens of Afghans whose identities were contained in the leak said they have had family members or colleagues killed as a result of the data breach, according to research published this week.

The BBC reported in August that the leak was far from an isolated data security failure at the unit, revealing that there had been 49 separate incidents over four years.

Details of each of those incidents were revealed in a letter sent from a ministry civil servant to the parliament’s public accounts committee this month and reported by The Independent on Thursday.

The train incident in March 2023 involved an official ministry laptop screen displaying personal data being left in view of other passengers.

A decision letter about a personal data incident was sent to the wrong person in May 2024 and the following month, a letter meant to welcome an Afghan family after reaching safety in the UK was sent to the wrong email address.

Other incidents included insecure systems being used and sensitive information being accessed by the wrong employees.

Only five of the incidents were considered serious enough to be reported to the Information Commissioner’s Office, the UK’s data privacy watchdog.

The ICO decided not to launch a formal investigation into the February 2022 leak.

John Edwards, the UK information commissioner, told the science, innovation and technology committee last week that the ICO had relied on the “honesty” of the MoD when choosing not to investigate.

Dame Chi Onwurah, the committee’s chair, told The Independent: “Last week, my committee heard from the information commissioner about the data protection implications of the Afghan data breach. It was dismaying to hear that the ICO and successive administrations could have done more to ensure that government data practices were of a high enough standard to stop repeated data breaches from happening.”

In the letter to the public accounts committee revealing the details of the 49 breaches, Defense Ministry civil servant David Williams described how the department had moved to improve data protection practices since the February 2022 leak.

He said the leak happened “as a result of the lack of appropriate systems and the pressure of an ongoing evacuation operation.”


King Charles III is stripping Prince Andrew of titles and evicting him from royal residence

King Charles III is stripping Prince Andrew of titles and evicting him from royal residence
Updated 50 min 36 sec ago

King Charles III is stripping Prince Andrew of titles and evicting him from royal residence

King Charles III is stripping Prince Andrew of titles and evicting him from royal residence
  • Buckingham Palace said Thursday that the king has “initiated a formal process to remove the Style, Titles and Honours of Prince Andrew”
  • Andrew will be known as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor and not as a prince

LONDON: King Charles III is stripping his disgraced brother Prince Andrew of his remaining titles and evicting him from his royal residence after weeks of pressure to act over Andrew’s relationship with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Buckingham Palace said Thursday that the king has “initiated a formal process to remove the Style, Titles and Honours of Prince Andrew.”
Andrew will be known as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor and not as a prince, and he will move from his Royal Lodge residence into “private accommodation.”

Pressure had been growing on the palace to oust the prince from Royal Lodge after he surrendered his use of the title Duke of York earlier this month over his friendship with Epstein and allegations by one of Epstein’s victims, Virginia Roberts Giuffre.
But the king went even further, stripping him of the title of prince that he has had since birth as a child of a monarch, the late Queen Elizabeth II.
“These censures are deemed necessary, notwithstanding the fact that he continues to deny the allegations against him,” the palace said. “Their Majesties wish to make clear that their thoughts and utmost sympathies have been, and will remain with, the victims and survivors of any and all forms of abuse.”
Andrew faced a new round of public opprobrium after emails emerged earlier this month showing he had remained in contact with Epstein longer than he previously admitted.
That news was followed by publication of a posthumous memoir by Epstein accuser Giuffre, who alleged she had sex with Andrew when she was 17. “Nobody’s Girl” detailed three alleged sexual encounters with Andrew, who she said acted as if he believed “having sex with me was his birthright.”
Andrew, 65, has long denied Giuffre’s claims, but stepped down from royal duties after a disastrous November 2019 BBC interview in which he attempted to rebut her allegations.
Andrew paid millions in an out-of-court settlement in 2022 after Giuffre filed a civil suit against him in New York. While he didn’t admit wrongdoing, he acknowledged Giuffre’s suffering as a victim of sex trafficking.
Giuffre died by suicide in April at the age of 41.


Families cluster at Rio morgue looking for answers after deadly police raids

Families cluster at Rio morgue looking for answers after deadly police raids
Updated 30 October 2025

Families cluster at Rio morgue looking for answers after deadly police raids

Families cluster at Rio morgue looking for answers after deadly police raids
  • Authorities have said at least 121 people, including the officers, died in the Tuesday raids
  • Many of the corpses of those killed were retrieved by locals from the forested area near the Penha favela on Tuesday night

RIO DE JANEIRO: Families lined up at a morgue on Thursday in Rio de Janeiro to identify relatives killed in Brazil’s deadliest ever police raids, and funerals began to take place for four police officers who died taking part in the operation.
Authorities have said at least 121 people, including the officers, died in the Tuesday raids targeting the Comando Vermelho gang that controls the drug trade in several favelas — poor, densely populated neighborhoods woven through the city’s hilly terrain.
Many of the corpses of those killed were retrieved by locals from the forested area near the Penha favela on Tuesday night.
On Thursday morning, more than 100 bodies were still awaiting autopsies or identification at a local morgue. Relatives stood outside, gazing through the fence and waiting for updates.
Some locals said they had found corpses with bound limbs and signs of torture, stirring protests and political backlash in a country where police killed over 6,000 people last year, according to government data.
Victor Santos, Rio state security secretary, said on Thursday that “any misconduct that may have occurred, which I believe did not happen, will be investigated.”
Rio de Janeiro Governor Claudio Castro called the operation a success and said the “only real victims” were the slain officers. All the others killed were criminals, he said.
Castro was scheduled to meet on Thursday with several right-leaning state governors, who traveled to Rio to show support.

LULA VOWS TO COMBAT ORGANIZED CRIME
A group of left-wing lawmakers led by Congresswoman Taliria Petrone visited the Penha neighborhood to meet and talk to locals.
“We will closely monitor the situation after yet another massacre in the favelas,” Petrone said on social media, calling for “truth, justice and accountability in the face of another operation marked by human rights violations.”
United Nations officials have criticized the heavy casualties of the military-style operation and said there should be an investigation.
Santos said there was no connection between the raids and the global events Rio will host next week tied to the UN’s COP30 climate negotiations, including the C40 summit of mayors addressing global warming and Prince William’s Earthshot Prize.
Brazil’s federal government was caught offguard by the operation by Rio state police, Justice Ricardo Lewandowski told journalists on Wednesday.
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva called for coordinated work that targets the gangs without putting police and innocent families at risk.
On Thursday, he signed into law a bill aimed at increasing protection for public officials involved in fighting organized crime.
“The Brazilian government does not tolerate criminal organizations and acts to combat them with ever greater vigor,” he wrote on social media.


India says US grants six-month waiver for Iran’s Chabahar, Afghan trade route bypassing Pakistan

India says US grants six-month waiver for Iran’s Chabahar, Afghan trade route bypassing Pakistan
Updated 30 October 2025

India says US grants six-month waiver for Iran’s Chabahar, Afghan trade route bypassing Pakistan

India says US grants six-month waiver for Iran’s Chabahar, Afghan trade route bypassing Pakistan
  • India seeks to link the Iranian port with Afghanistan and Central Asia, reducing Kabul’s reliance on Karachi
  • Move marks a thaw in Washington-New Delhi ties after months of trade tensions and Russian oil disputes

NEW DELHI: The US has granted India a six-month sanctions waiver to operate the Iranian port of Chabahar, India said on Thursday, boosting New Delhi’s effort to enhance trade with Afghanistan and Central Asian countries bypassing its rival Pakistan.

India signed a 10-year contract with Iran last year to develop and operate the port and this month stepped up its ties with Taliban-run Afghanistan by reopening its embassy in Kabul that was shut after the Afghan group seized power in 2021 following the withdrawal of US-led NATO forces.

The port on Iran’s southeastern Gulf of Oman coast was initially planned with a rail link to Afghanistan for building the landlocked country’s economy through trade and reducing Kabul’s dependence on the Pakistani port of Karachi.

The waiver move followed word by US President Donald Trump this week that he wanted to reach a trade deal with India — signalling a thaw in relations that soured to their lowest point in decades after he doubled tariffs on Indian imports to 50 percent as punishment for Indian purchases of Russian oil.

Indian refiners are now cutting Russian oil imports following Washington’s imposition last week of sanctions on Moscow’s top two crude exporters, Rosneft and Lukoil.

“I can confirm that we have been granted an exemption for a six-month period,” Indian foreign ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal told a weekly news briefing, referring to the port.

He also said India was continuing talks with the Trump administration on a bilateral trade deal.

Washington had last month revoked the sanctions waiver for Chabahar, initially granted in 2018, as part of its effort to put “maximum pressure” on Iran to counter what it called the Islamic Republic’s destabilizing activities in support of its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

An Indian official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the US sanctions waiver had taken effect on Wednesday.

The US embassy in New Delhi did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Italy court stalls Sicily bridge, triggers PM fury

Italy court stalls Sicily bridge, triggers PM fury
Updated 30 October 2025

Italy court stalls Sicily bridge, triggers PM fury

Italy court stalls Sicily bridge, triggers PM fury
  • In a ruling late Wednesday, the Court of Auditors, which oversees public spending, refused to approve the decision
  • Meloni condemned Wednesday’s ruling as “yet another encroachment on the jurisdiction of the government and parliament“

ROME: Italy’s government said Thursday it would address concerns over a new bridge to Sicily, after Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni condemned a court ruling against the project as an “intolerable intrusion.”
Meloni’s government in August approved the 13.5-billion-euro ($15.6-billion) project to build what would be the world’s longest suspension bridge connecting the island of Sicily to the mainland.
But in a ruling late Wednesday, the Court of Auditors, which oversees public spending, refused to approve the decision.
It said it would give its reasons within 30 days, but last month it had requested clarification about documentation used on the project, and on costs.
Meloni, leader of the far-right Brothers of Italy party, condemned Wednesday’s ruling as “yet another encroachment on the jurisdiction of the government and parliament.”
“The constitutional reform of the justice system and the reform of the Court of Auditors, both under discussion in the Senate and close to approval, represent the most appropriate response to this intolerable intrusion, which will not stop the government’s action,” she said in a statement.
At the same time, Matteo Salvini, head of the far-right League party who as deputy prime minister and transport minister has championed the bridge, said the ruling appeared to be a “political choice.”
Yet on Thursday, after Meloni called an emergency meeting with her ministers, the government adopted a more conciliatory tone.
“We await with extreme calm the Court of Auditors’ findings, to which we are confident we can respond point by point, because we have complied with the requirements,” Salvini told reporters.
In a statement, Meloni’s office confirmed the government would respond to each complaint, adding that “the objective... to proceed with the project remains firm.”
Italian politicians have for decades debated a bridge over the Strait of Messina, a narrow strip of water between the Sicily and the region of Calabria, at the toe of Italy’s boot.
“We have waited a century, and we will wait a century and two months,” Salvini added.

- ‘Respect for magistrates’ -

The approval in August by a government committee, CIPESS, is the furthest the project has ever got.
Advocates say the state-funded project will provide an economic boost for the impoverished south of Italy.
The government also hopes the bridge can be classified as a strategic asset, with its costs counting toward the money Italy has committed to spend on defense as part of the NATO military alliance.
However, critics warn that the project risks turning into a financial black hole.
It has also sparked local protests over the environmental impact, and complaints that the money could be better spent elsewhere.
The Court of Auditors on Thursday said its decision was based on legal aspects of the approval of the bridge, not on the merits of the project.
In a strongly worded decision, it added that any criticism of its decisions “must be conducted in a context of respect for the work of the magistrates.”
In three years in office, Meloni and her ministers have repeatedly taken aim at the judiciary for decisions they assert are political.
Parliament on Thursday approved a reform to separate the training, careers and status of judges and prosecutors, whom right-leaning governments in Italy have long accused of colluding to the detriment of the defense.
The reform must now go to a referendum.