70’s jazz singer Louie Reyes dies

Louie Reyes, a popular jazz singer of the 70’s, has died, her husband Cesar dela Fuente confirmed in a comment on a social media post made by fellow singer Ivy Violan.

‘Today I lost the love of my life,’ said dela Fuente, who just three days ago celebrated his birthday and even posted a new photo of him and Reyes on Facebook.

Reyes’ cause of death has not been disclosed, but she appeared to have died on Sunday.

Violan’s post appeared to have preceded the announcement of Reyes’ death, saying she has been praying for her friend’s complete healing.

‘I am with you in your journey and with love and fervent prayers I have asked JESUS to give you the BEST COMFORT and heal you completely. JESUS is so good to you and I believe HE is with you 24/7. I love you and keep singing as you hear every beautiful note. I love you,’ she said.

After a while, Violan added to her post: ‘The Philippine Music Industry celebrates the life of our dear Ms. LOUIE REYES. No good-byes just the best hello to a very very dear friend and colleague.’

Aside from Violan, other celebrities who condoled with Reyes’ family are Louie Heredia, Richard and Merk. On Instagram, former actress Bunny Paras posted a tribute for the late singer.

Reyes was a pillar of the original Filipino music (OPM) and was known for her rendition of jazz hits, such as Pauline Wilson’s ‘Follow Your Road.’ Los Angeles-based entertainment journalist Ruben Nepales, previously writing for INQUIRER described her voice as ‘crystal clear’ that resonated well with her audiences.

A music graduate from the College of the Holy Spirit Manila, Reyes was discovered by her now husband, dela Fuente, who founded The New Minstrels, a highly-popular group that brought Filipino music all over the world, which counted as members Joey Albert, Ray-An Fuentes, Eugene Villaluz, and Chad Borja.

Dela Fuente and Reyes reportedly migrated to the United States in the 90s where their music took them.

Luzon to have fair weather; LPA, ITCZ to drench Visayas, Mindanao

Fair weather is forecast in Metro Manila and most of Luzon, while two weather systems are set to bring rains in Visayas and Mindanao on Sunday, the state weather bureau said.

According to the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa), the combination of a low-pressure area (LPA) and the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) will cause cloudy and rainy weather over Visayas, Mindanao, and Palawan.

The LPA was located around 210 kilometers east of General Santos City ’embedded along the ITCZ,’ Pagasa reported.

Due to the LPA, 50 to 100 millimeters of rain is expected to fall on Sunday in the following areas:

Surigao del Norte

Surigao del Sur

Dinagat Islands

Southern Leyte

Agusan del Norte

Misamis Oriental

Camiguin

Meanwhile, the shear line, an area where cool and warm winds intersect, will bring ‘cloudy skies and scattered rains’ in extreme Northern Luzon, Pagasa added.

The rest of Luzon, including Metro Manila will have ‘generally fair weather,’ but isolated rains are still possible, Pagasa Weather Specialist Daniel Villamil said at 5 a.m. on Sunday.

Palace: Marcos, Cabinet execs to release SALN to ‘proper authorities’

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and members of his Cabinet will release their statements of assets, liabilities and net worth (SALNs) only to ‘proper authorities’ in compliance with the guidelines set by the Office of the Ombudsman.

The clarification was issued by Palace press officer Claire Castro when asked by reporters here to clarify the statement made by Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin rejecting the ‘indiscriminate freedom’ for the public to access SALNs of public officers.

‘First of all, the President has already spoken and said that he is willing to submit and show his SALN to the proper authorities. There are existing rules and procedures set by the Office of the Ombudsman,’ she told reporters on Sunday at the sidelines of the 47th Asean Summit.

Castro said Bersamin’s statement should not be misconstrued as the Malacañang withholding the SALNs of executive officials.

‘The President already said that all requests for SALNs will be granted. But there are certain guidelines provided by the Ombudsman. The executive will comply with these,’ she added.

Castro also confirmed that Cabinet members had an ‘informal meeting’ on Saturday and they agreed to comply with the Ombudsman’s memorandum to disclose their SALNs.

Bersamin earlier said journalists and other interested individuals must have a justified and legitimate reason before they can have a redacted copy of the SALNs of the President and his Cabinet secretaries.

‘We must all take note that the SALN contains many details that might compromise the security, safety of the public officials concerned. So our existing rules require any person who wants to access the SALN of any official should give a good reason,’ he added.

Lawmakers criticized Bersamin’s remarks, stressing that if the Marcos administration was serious in its campaign against corruption, it should start with itself by making the SALN of the President and his alter-egos accessible for public scrutiny.

‘All-out means no cover-ups, no sacred cows, and no stone left unturned. And the administration should not exempt itself from scrutiny,’ House Deputy Minority Leader Leila de Lima said in a statement.

‘The President should demonstrate his sincerity and commitment to transparency and accountability by disclosing his SALN and encouraging his Cabinet to do the same,’ she added.

Kamanggagawa Partylist Rep. Elijah ‘Eli’ San Fernando, who had voluntarily released his SALN to the public last week, called out Bersamin’s ”hypocritical and evasive’ statement.

‘That’s simple: if you have nothing to hide, why are you afraid to let the public see and scrutinize your SALN?’ he said in a statement on Sunday ‘They talk about transparency, yet can’t show their SALN-that’s the real security threat to the country. If they’re truly clean, then why not just make it public?’ he added.

Taal Volcano logs 3 minor eruptions on Sunday morning – Phivolcs

Taal Volcano recorded three minor eruptions at its main crater on Sunday morning, the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs).

At 2:55 a.m. a minor phreatic eruption occurred, lasting only one minute, Phivolcs said.

Then, from 8:13 a.m to 8:15 a.m., a minor phreatomagmatic eruption produced plumes that rose to 1,200 meters above the main crater.

Shortly after, another minor phreatomagmatic eruption occurred from 8:20 a.m. to 8:24 a.m., generating plumes that soared 2,100 meters above the crater.

The volcano also logged a phreatomagmatic eruption that lasted for three minutes on Saturday, October 25, and a phreatomagmatic eruption that lasted for one minute on October 20.

A phreatomagmatic eruption occurs when magma interacts with water, resulting in explosive events that produce a mixture of steam, ash, and fragmented volcanic materials.

Phivolcs explained that a phreatic eruption, locally called ‘pusngat,’ occurs when ‘water beneath the ground or on the surface is heated by magma, lava, hot rocks, or new volcanic deposits.’

In its Sunday morning bulletin, Phivolcs reported that the volcano logged nine volcanic earthquakes in the past 24 hours.

The series of earthquakes were accompanied by two volcanic tremors that lasted 47 to 96 minutes.

The volcano has been recording almost daily earthquakes this month. No seismic activities were recorded on October 1, 5, 20, and 23, the Phivolcs data showed.

From October 1 to 26, a total of 229 volcanic earthquakes and 13 tremor episodes were recorded. In comparison, Phivolcs documented 189 volcanic earthquakes and 129 tremors in September.

Volcanic earthquakes are those ‘generated by magmatic processes or magma-related processes beneath or near an active volcano.’

Volcanic tremors, meanwhile, are ‘continuous seismic signals with regular or irregular sine wave appearance and low frequencies (0.5-5 Hz),’ the Phivolcs explained.

In its latest update, Phivolcs reported the emission of 436 metric tons (MT) of sulfur dioxide, which rose 600 meters tall.

During the latest observation period, no upwelling of hot volcanic fluids was reported in the main crater lake of Taal Volcano Island, which sits at the center of Taal Lake.

No volcanic smog, or ‘vog,’ was also observed.

Taal Volcano is still under alert level 1 (low level of volcanic unrest), Phivolcs said.

‘At Alert Level 1, sudden steam-driven or phreatic or minor phreatomagmatic eruptions, minor ashfall and lethal accumulations or expulsions of volcanic gas can occur and threaten areas within Taal Volcano Island,’ the agency warned.

Palace rejects Cayetano proposal to add opposition members to ICI

There is no need to include members of the political opposition in the fact-finding body created by President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to investigate corruption in government infrastructure, according to Malacañang.

Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin said the three members of the Independent Commission for Infrastructure (ICI) handpicked by the President himself were already nonpartisan to ensure checks and balances.

‘The President chose the people that he believes to be independent from anyone, including the executive,’ Bersamin told reporters on Saturday after Marcos departed for Kuala Lumpur to attend the 47th Asean Summit.

‘That independence is the number one criterion for appointment to that body,’ he added.

The ICI is headed by former Supreme Court Justice Andres Reyes, who was appointed to the high court by former President Rodrigo Duterte. Its other members are Rogelio ‘Babes’ Singson, a Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) secretary during the term of former President Benigno Aquino III; and Rossana Fajardo, country managing partner of SGV and Co. auditing and consulting firm.

‘We want fairness’

Senate Minority Leader Alan Peter Cayetano earlier called for the ICI to add people coming from the political opposition and religious leaders to be part of the super body.

‘We are not asking for a Cabinet post. What we are demanding is for the government to be fair,’ he had said.

While Bersamin called the proposal of Cayetano ‘laudable,’ he said it would be an unnecessary disruption in the current form of ICI.

‘We cannot put on there [on the executive order that created the ICI] that its members should be from the opposition,’ he said. ‘Does that mean that if the members are not part of the opposition, they are no longer objective? That’s not right.’

Already ideal

For ICI executive director Brian Hosaka, the current composition of the ICI was already ideal.

‘If you look at the current composition of the ICI, no politician is a member. This is ideal since the ICI will be shielded from any political agenda or motive,’ he said.

Hosaka added that maintaining this non-political structure is necessary for the commission to effectively fulfill its mandate.

Malacañang would also not compel the ICI to expedite the crafting of its rules to livestream its hearings.

‘It’s up to them. We are not influencing them at all in this matter. They should adopt the rules when they will livestream,’ Bersamin said.

While the ICI already agreed to livestream its hearings, Reyes said it would take some time for the commission to study and draft the rules of procedure and parameters before it goes on livestreaming its hearings.

Reyes cited the meager number of its lawyers – currently only 13, of whom eight were borrowed from the also undermanned Public Attorney’s Office – for the slow pace of the rules crafting.

In his personal opinion, Bersamin said livestreaming the hearings of the ICI ‘does not work very well in favor of its objective.’

‘There are many things that are revealed there that may not be true, that may not be verifiable,’ he explained.

‘When you livestream, you hear so many things that may not even be considered evidence. And yet, viewers might be given false expectations or false hopes that someone actually did those things. That’s not acceptable – and it wouldn’t be fair,’ he added.

The ‘Quezon’ question: Descendant’s ire vs director’s vision

Following his viral confrontation with the creators of the historical biopic ‘Quezon’ this week, Ricky Avanceña, a direct descendant of former President Manuel L. Quezon, said he ‘has outperformed seasoned performers’ and ‘disrupted the so-called disruptors of the movie industry.’

‘In the process, I have sparked a national debate-one that is long overdue, but not dominated only by those who have the money to produce a movie for purely selfish and pecuniary interests,’ he told the Inquirer.

A joke?

On Oct. 23, a post-screening discussion got heated when Avanceña-in an expletive-laden tirade-accused filmmaker Jerrold Tarog of misrepresenting his grandfather’s legacy and tarnishing the family memory for financial gain.

‘Quezon’ lead star Jericho Rosales intervened and tried pacifying Avanceña, but only ended up fueling his ire.

In an earlier Facebook post, Avanceña wrote that he went to watch the film expecting something ‘feel-good and upbeat,’ only to a see his grandfather portrayed as a ‘a man driven to attaining power at any and all cost’ and as ‘the root of social and systemic ills currently plaguing the country due to excessive and incessant politicking.’

Avanceña’s bone of contention also included the film’s use of satire, which he equated to ‘a joke’ and therefore ‘not to be believed.’

In a TV interview with One News, he described it as ‘the art of making someone or something look ridiculous, raising laughter to embarrass, humble, and discredit its targets’-a definition seemingly drawn from an Oregon State University essay on the different types of satirical literature.

Tarog, who had previously deemed satire as the most effective way to tell the story, argued that ‘serious stories can be told through laughter.’

Producer TBA Studios also stressed that the movie ‘is grounded in verified historical accounts and other reputable sources.’

‘While the film includes fictional elements for thematic purposes, the facts and details presented in the film are easily verifiable through public records, online research, or library resources,’ the company’s statement read. (Requests for additional comments have not been answered by the filmmakers as of this writing.) ‘The Good Fight’

Avanceña-the son of Zenaida ‘Nini’ Quezon Avanceña (one of MLQ’s children with former first lady Aurora Quezon)-is waging a campaign to highlight the noble qualities of his grandfather that he said the film failed to appreciate, like the ‘goodness of his heart, his care for the poor and oppressed, his hatred of corruption, his love of country and its people.’

He dubbed his cause ‘The Good Fight’-a homage to his grandfather’s autobiography of the same title.

‘I stand on the truth as conveyed to me not only by MLQ’s children-my mother and Tio Nonong (MLQ Jr.)-but also by countless people from across the country and around the world,’ he said. ‘My inbox is overflowing [with messages] from people I don’t know, professing deep admiration-and even love-for Lolo because of anecdotes and stories passed down from their parents or grandparents.’

‘I’m confident that we shall prevail,’ added Avanceña, who likewise claimed that relatives of Antonio Luna and Gregorio del Pilar-subjects of the first two installments of Tarog’s ‘Bayaniverse’ trilogy, ‘Heneral Luna’ and ‘Goyo,’ respectively-had reached out to him, lamenting the director’s ‘unfair treatment of their ancestors.’

Interrogating legacy

Avanceña’s critiques of the film weren’t as strong on his initial viewing, as he called it technically quite good and even commended Rosales’ performance. And despite MLQ’s depiction as ‘a corrupt, power-hungry, narcissistic megalomaniac,’ he did say he ‘quite liked the movie.’

His tone changed, however, apparently upon seeing public online commentary-all the comments and all the bashing.

Contrasting perspectives and spirited discussions can be expected when it comes to tackling important historical figures. In its statement, TBA Studios encouraged viewers to watch the film and form their own assessments of it.

‘We hope that ‘Quezon’ can continue to inspire meaningful dialogue, reflection, and a deeper appreciation of our nation’s past,’ it said.

Writing on Facebook, multiawarded writer and history professor Jose Victor Torres offered a sharp but measured reminder that heroes are humans-‘afflicted by weaknesses and strengthened by their will.’ After all, he noted, the pedestals on which they stand now weren’t demanded, but given by the generations that followed.

‘In spite of their physical and spiritual frailties, they stood by their beliefs and crowned it with achievements that made them famous. We have looked beyond their human side. We placed them on pedestals. But let us not go beyond and make them supermen. It is the very essence that they lived and died for-the love of their country -that we should praise and honor,’ he said.

For his part, scriptwriter and creative consultant Hyro Aguinaldo pointed out that a film about MLQ ‘doesn’t have to serve his bloodline,’ but ‘should serve discourse.’

‘The point of art, especially political cinema, is to interrogate legacy, not preserve it in a glass case,’ he said in a Facebook post.

‘If a portrayal feels uncomfortable, maybe that discomfort says more about the nation’s unresolved relationship with its ‘heroes’ than it does about the filmmakers,’ he added.

’Mamba’ fan Carlos Yulo clinches world championships vault gold

Carlos Yulo missed out on a gold in a previous final. He wasn’t going to miss again on Saturday.

He launched into a piked handspring double front half before sticking his landing. The judges rewarded him with a 15.20, including a 0.20 stick bonus, for the vault, which Yulo capped by putting a finger to his lips, as if to silence doubters.

‘That was unconscious and spontaneous,’ the two-gold winner in the Paris Olympics said of the gesture he made after landing. ‘I am truly a fan of Kobe [Bryant, the late basketball legend] and I like his ‘Black Mamba’ mentality, his mental strength. I think I saw him doing that to silence the crowd at an Olympic basketball game.’

The day before, Yulo had settled for bronze in the floor exercise. On this final day of the 53rd FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Championships, he was determined not to leave empty-handed again. His second vault, a 14.533, brought his average to 14.886. With five contenders left, the Filipino had to watch and wait.

Veteran Armenian Artur Davtyan-Olympic silver medalist behind Yulo-posted a strong 14.800 on his first vault and a 14.866 on his second. But his average of 14.833 fell short by the slimmest of margins: just 0.033 points.

Only then did Yulo allow himself to pump his fists in triumph.

‘I am just grateful that I am here,’ Yulo said quietly. ‘To win the gold in the vault and bronze in the floor is still satisfying and I owe it all to God.’

The win marked Yulo’s second vault gold after topping the event in 2021 in Kitakyushu and his third world title overall, including the floor gold in 2019 in Stuttgart. It was a strong return from last year’s world championships in Antwerp, where he left medal-less.

‘I was really crying when I finally saw that Carlos had won,’ said Gymnastics Association of the Philippines president Cynthia Carrion. ‘His hard work all paid off.’

Coach Nadel Alyousef, who joined the Philippine team in April, saw more than just redemption.

‘I believe Yulo was eyeing revenge from the previous day’s loss and he went all out,’ Alyousef said. ‘His next challenge is to become a world-class all-around gymnast.’

In Manila, Philippine Sports Commission chairman Patrick Gregorio called Yulo a ‘national treasure.’

‘He continues to excite our countrymen on the world stage,’ he said. ‘With the nations’ full support, I’m sure our two-time Olympic champion will make us proud over and over.’

FDCP chair Joey Reyes ‘greatly disturbed’ after watching ‘Quezon’

Film Development Council of the Philippines (FDCP) chairman and CEO Jose ‘Joey’ Javier Reyes admitted that he was ‘greatly disturbed’ after watching ‘Quezon,’ a film that was based on the life of former president Manuel L. Quezon.

The film has been making headlines after Quezon’s grandson Ricky Avanceña called out its director Jerrold Tarog and lead star Jericho Rosales for allegedly profiting from a ‘misinterpretation’ of the former president at a post-question-and-answer screening last week.

Amid the ongoing discussions about the film, Reyes took to his Facebook page on Friday, Oct. 24, to share that the film made him ‘greatly disturbed’ due to its portrayal of the former chief of state.

‘I have just watched QUEZON and I left the moviehouse greatly disturbed. This is because I wanted to find out: (1) In a biographical movie such as this, where does the FACT end and the FICTION begin?’ he said.

‘(2) Being the concluding episode of the BAYANIVERSE, what is the filmmaker trying to say about a trio of Filipino heroes?’ he continued.

The director also expressed his concern about filmgoers opting to go for CineSilip entries instead of the Tarog-helmed film in his post.

‘(3) Why are there more people watching the SINESILIP movies than an ambitious epic of historical note like QUEZON? I shall not sleep well tonight thinking about this,’ he said.

Reyes was referring to the inaugural CineSilip Film Festival, an initiative of Viva Films, running until Oct. 28, which features seven daring films by emerging filmmakers, including ‘Dreamboi,’ ‘Babae sa Butas,’ ‘Pagdaong,’ ‘Maria Azama,’ ‘Haplos sa Hangin,’ Ang Lihim ni Maria Makinang,’ and ‘Salikmata.’

Following the now-viral exchange with Tarrog and Rosales, Avanceña told the Inquirer that he is happy that his call-out ‘sparked a national debate’ when it comes to the portrayal of films revolving around historical figures.

‘In the process, I have sparked a national debate – one that is long overdue, but not dominated only by those who have the money to produce a movie for purely selfish and pecuniary interests,’ he said.

‘Quezon’ is the third and final film of Tarrog’s ‘Bayaniverse’ film series following ‘Heneral Luna’ and ‘Goyo.’

From pride to humility, from corruption to conversion

Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Readings: Sirach 35:12-14, 16-18; Psalm 34, R. The Lord hears the cry of the poor.; 2 Timothy 4:6-8, 16-18; Gospel – Luke 18: 9-14

Today’s Gospel is about us. We are the tax collector and the Pharisee, and this gives us important lessons to learn.

First is the lesson of irony. How many of us start with good intentions, but end up like the Pharisee? Or how many of us are tax collectors who start off living life immersed in the ways of the world, only to undergo an experience of conversion?

We can choose one or the other, but at different times we were one or the other, alternating, as in going through a boom-and-bust cycle. We all struggle with this. To deny this is what could be our downfall. All of us have our positives and negatives.

When we deny the former, we can end up shortchanging not just ourselves, but others, too, with whom we could have shared our blessings or talents. This is false modesty on the one hand.

On the other hand, you have the latter, who is a person so full of himself. The joke about this Gospel parable was the prayer, ‘Lord, I thank you for making me humble and better than all the proud and sinful people.’

Breaking the cycle of irony

Learn from these ironies in our life that move from Pharisee to repentant tax collector, and back, from sinner to saint, and back. How do we break the cycle of irony? That’s where the second and third learnings come in.

We begin with good intentions, then we end up corrupt or somewhere on the dark side of the spectrum. What causes this? This is the second learning. To better appreciate it, let us look at the third learning also and reflect on it together.

The third learning is from the conversion of the tax collector. Basing it on Zacchaeus’ story, he might have cheated or defrauded someone, stolen, etc. He was more immersed in material things, accumulating wealth through corrupt and sinful ways. Yet, he was the one who went through conversion and prayed for God’s mercy.

We can conclude that the irony was the money acquired through corruption, not the culprit. The tax collector begged for God’s mercy to rid himself, not just of his wealth, but more importantly, because he had the desire to be embraced by God’s mercy and forgiveness.

Now we can better understand the Pharisee. For him, it was not about the money, yet he did not ask for God’s mercy. Here we see the greater evil. We see the devil incarnate in pride, the ego.

Did we not witness this in the past weeks? The flaunting of wealth-ill-gotten wealth acquired through the most despicable means-in the ridiculous number of the most expensive vehicles, the scandalously priced jewelry, dinners that put the bacchanalian feast to shame.

It was no longer the money that was the culprit here, but pride and ego. The Pharisee did not have as much money as the tax collector, but his ego was worse, more bloated. Remember how they loved places of honor, being greeted, and wearing widened phylacteries, etc. It was not about the money anymore. It was all about ego and pride.

Dung of the devil

If I may reflect, with your kind indulgence, on the corruption in our government. First, the corruption was about the money. Tons of money, literally and figuratively. Then it spiraled into flaunting a scandalous lifestyle. This was when the ego took over. It dictated greater stealing-from the tens, hundreds of millions in the Napoles days, it descended into the abyss of billions in the Pharmally et al controversy.

As Pope Francis pointed out: ‘And behind all this pain, death, and destruction, there is the stench of what Basil of Caesarea-one of the first theologians of the Church-called ‘the dung of the devil.”

An unfettered pursuit of money rules. This is the ‘dung of the devil’. The service of the common good is left behind. (Pope Francis, address at the Second World Meeting of Popular Movements, 9 July 2015)

With this ‘dung of the devil,’ the corruption spiraled into trillions, and pride ruled, no longer just money. Pride is the filthiest dung of the devil.

”O God, be merciful to me a sinner.’ I tell you, the latter went home justified, not the former; for whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and the one who humbles himself will be exalted.’ (cf. Luke 18: 9-14)

The exalted will be humbled. The humble will be exalted. This is God’s promise. Jesus himself testified to this. This is the synthesis irony. Do not lose hope, for when we are down and out, God’s power is greatest. Hope. We shall overcome and come out better.

Undas 2025: Road closures in Manila from Oct. 30 to Nov. 3

In preparation for Undas next weekend, the Manila Police District (MPD) announced road closures and alternative routes in Manila from 10 p.m. of October 30 to 7 p.m. of November 3.

Listed below are the road closures:

Stretch of Blumentritt St. from A. Bonifacio to Aurora Blvd.

Stretch of Dimasalang from Retiro St. to Calavite St.

Stretch of Maceda from Makiling St. to Dimasalang St.

Southbound Lane of Dimasalang Bridge

Aurora Blvd. from Felix Huertas Rd to Matandang Sora (Chinese Cemetery South Gate)

The MPD also released the following alternative routes:

Vehicles coming from Dimasalang Road heading for Blumentritt Road shall turn right to Makiling Street

Vehicles coming from Quezon City taking A. Bonifacio Ave. shall turn Left to Labo St.

Vehicles coming from Maceda St. intending to go to Dimasalang St. or Retiro St, shall turn right to Makiling St.

It also announced the parking areas in the vicinity of the Manila Northern Cemetery.

The parking areas are as follow:

P. Guevarra St. from Blumentritt Rd. to Aurora Blvd.

F Huertas St. from Blumentritt Rd. to Aurora Blvd.

Oroquieta St. from Blumentritt Rd. to Aurora Blvd.

The Manila local government announced that the Manila North Cemetery will be open from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. starting October 29 until November 2, and will return to its regular services afterward.

It also reminded the public that guns, sharp objects, alcoholic beverages, pets, musical instruments, sound systems, and flammable liquids are prohibited inside the cemetery.