Jumat, 17 Februari 2012

The White and the Green Van



Legend

[Taken from Internet:]

3 cases in San Pedro, Laguna already. Girls of any age getting kidnapped then returned dead with body organs missing like the heart, kidney, eyes. At pag binalik yung body, may pera sa loob ng katawan or tiyan, parang bayad sa nakuhang organ. (And by the return of the body, there was a sum of money inserted in it (the body or tummy), as if it was the payment for the organs taken.) My friend’s neighbor was a victim. Mag ingat sa mga walang pusong gumagawa nito (Beware of those people with no heart who done this), here’s the friendster bulletin of my friend:

I just a talk to a reliable source that said that there this men dressed in doctor suits, driving a closed van, that would kidnap young girls, and lately any person of any age, and take their organs. And leave the dead body somewhere leaving money inside the victim’s body–as thank you payment for the organ.

Meron na pong namatay sa San Pedro, grade 5 girl student, nakitang patay missing her kidney. (There had been a victim already at San Pedro, a grade 5 girl student, seen dead with missing kidney.)

Meron naman po last week lang, nakaburol ngayon, grade 3 student sa Pacita, nakitang patay na kinuhaan ng mata at puso, at nag-iwan ng 50K sa loob ng katawan ng bata. Meron isang case sa Chrysanthemum Village, may nakuha silang isang batang babae pero natunugan ng isang tricycle driver, hinabol niya ang van, at sa huli, itinapon na lang ang bata sa bintana ng van. Naagapan. (There was another last week, she's now lying in state, a grade 3 student of Pacita, found dead without eyes and heart, and left 50k (fifty thousand) inside her body. Another case at the Chrysanthemum Village, they abducted a young girl but a trycicle driver heard them, he chased the van, at the end, the child was thrown from the window of the van. Punctualed.)

At last week lang, meron dapat makukuhang dalawang babae sa may Reysal Supermarket, pero may nakakitang mga tambay, natulungan ang dalawa at hindi sila nakuha..Napag-alaman ko rin ho na may case na ganito sa Batangas at Manila. Konting ingat na lang ho san man kayo pumunta. (And just last week, there should be two girls kidnapped in Reysal Supermarket, but some people saw them, the two were helped and not been caught. I also heard that there are same cases in Batangas and Manila. So be careful to wherever you go.)

Vehicle:
1. VXE 351 – Green Van
2. VMM 507 – White Van



Kidnapping is rampant nowadays. Kidnappers usually asked ransom money from the parents of their victims. But lately, I was disturbed of the news about the kidnap victims whose internal organs were missing after they were found.

In Ibaan, Batangas four children were abducted. One of them were found with the pair of eyes missing and with Php 30,000 pesos on his/her mouth. Three were found with missing internal organs. There was also report in Tanauan, Batangas with a missing heart and Php 8,000 pesos on the hole of the victim’s chest. It’s really creepy.

Lately, there have been reports that the kidnappings is not only happening in Batangas. There were also similar incidents in Cavite and Laguna. Last Wednesday, March 5, my friend told me that there was a third year high school student (from a school in San Pedro, Laguna) was abducted on her way home. I still haven’t heard about what happened to the victim.

I heard that a syndicate is behind this kidnapping and they are selling the organs to the black market. Text messages and email messages has been circulating saying that a white van with plate no. VMM 507 is said to be the kidnappers van. In our place the cartographic sketch of the kidnapper and the plate no. of the vehicle used by the kidnapper were posted everywhere.

Residents in our area in Laguna were already afraid. Students going to school were now accompanied by their parents and yayas. It has been reported that the kidnappers where luring children going to and from school. Our school management even released a letter to parents to watch for their children when going to school and while playing outside their houses.

I appeal to our police to do something about this. This kind of horrific deeds should be taken seriously and investigate this matter.



Corpses of children, their organs carved out of their bodies, dumped by the roadside. Two schools on red alert. A province caught in a wave of panic.

This is not Mexico or Latin America, where organ harvesting has been a practice for decades now. This is right here.

Residents of Nueva Ecija are gripped by fear after five children who were allegedly snatched and reported missing later turned up dead, their internal organs and eyes missing.

Ranging in age from three to 12 years old, the victims were dumped in separate incidents in Gapan, Sto. Niño, San Lorenzo, Sta. Rosa and San Leonardo towns in Nueva Ecija — their bodies “harvested” of their heart, kidneys, and liver. In one case, the eyes were gouged.

Cash in opened stomach

In another, P7,000 in cold, hard cash was inserted in the stomach cavity, slit wide open. Pampalibing (for funeral expenses), opined the stunned finders of the body.

Aniceto Fabito, a concerned parent, said school authorities at Divina Pastora College and San Nicolas Elementary School in Gapan, summoned parents to an emergency conference last Sept. 15 to warn the parents about organ-harvesting body snatchers stalking their communities.

“We were told not to leave our children unattended or to allow them to go to school unaccompanied,” he said.

Internal organs fetch astronomical prices in the international black market and are a lucrative trade for criminal syndicates.

“The syndicate was bold enough to leave money inside the empty stomach for the burial of the child they snatched,” Fabito said. “We are asking the police to get to the bottom of these grisly crimes.”

According to Fabito, the kid-snatching began last week of August, a few days after the bodies were dumped one by one along busy roads for the parents to find.

Modus operandi

Last Friday, an unsuccessful attempt was made on a one-year-old child. It was unsuccessful because the community was alerted to the suspected kidnapper, identified as Ricardo Yumson, whom they pounced on.

Gapan authorities later released Yumson, claiming he was demented and not responsible for his actions.

“The police did not even bother to interrogate Yumson,” said a frustrated Fabito. “We were told that this is the modus operandi of members of the syndicate if caught — they either feign ignorance or act crazy so that lawmen would believe they are not responsible.”

Fabito cited the case of one mother who tried to fight off the kidnappers and was likewise taken away by the body snatchers. Both mother and child have been missing since August.

As a result, residents feel the police are not to be trusted.

“We cannot rely on the police, so we decided to go straight to media,” Fabito said.

According to Philippine National Police spokesperson Leopoldo Bataoil, provincial director Louie Palmera did not receive any such report.

Later, Bataoil — in a txt message — said he directed Palmera to order his chiefs of police and police community relations officer to join the school officials who will meet parents to allay fears on this report.

Residents have assigned foot patrols composed of barangay officials and youth volunteers.

About

This incidents happened in Manila, Batangas, Cavite, Laguna, Nueva Ecija, Malabon and anywhere. It caused a massive panic to the people who heard this story, as well as the known viral picture spreading in social networking sites. (I didn't get the picture and posted it her because of its very gruesome image.) The ages which they are interested to abduct ranges from 3 to 16 years old, (including both genders) as told in some articles in websites. Every story recounts the same thing, that there was a white (and a green) van strolling anywhere with a plate number VMM 507 (and VXE 351 for the green) searching for victims. I don't know how this kind of thing went here in the Philippines from the Latin countries in Americas.

ABS-CBN, GMA, and TV5 featured this kind of story, but all answered similarly, THERE IS NO VAN WANDERING ANYWHERE TO KIDNAPPED CHILDREN. But whatever they say, people still believe that this exists. FOAF tale is obviously present here, influencing one person and another.

Below is the ABS-CBN article, explaining this kind of story.

ABS-CBN (SOCO) Report

There is a picture depicting gruesome state of a young boy’s body placed inside a green tub that has been circulating in social networking sites. The photo became so viral that a concerned citizen even tagged ABS-CBN SOCO’s Facebook account on the image.

The photo, allegedly, was a warning to all children who went out at night. Because rumor has it that this was done by a syndicate who kidnap children, take out their organs, and sell them to people needing organ transplants.

Because of the ghastly state of the boy in the said photo, it raised a climate of fear among the public particularly among the residents of Valenzuela and Malabon. Because almost around the same time that the photo has been circulating, reports of kidnapping in the area piled up.

11-year old Ian, whose identity shall be concealed for security reasons, was one of those who were almost victimized. According to Ian’s mother, Gladys Rojas, on the afternoon of March 4, 2011, she received news that her son has been kidnapped.

“’Yong mga bali-balita dati dito na tungkol sa mga kidney na ibinibenta nga raw ‘pag natanggalan ng lamang loob, ‘yon po ‘yong nasa isip ko,” Gladys says. “Naisip ko baka hinati na ‘yong katawan niya.”

Fortunately, Ian survived.

According to the 11-year-old, he was walking in Karuhatan, Valenzuela when two men wearing bonnets grabbed him and hauled him into a white van. When they reached Caloocan, the men parked the van and left him alone. That’s when he saw the opportunity to escape.

“Noong bumaba po sila, may nakita po akong bote sa baba tapos po binasag ko po ‘yong salamin,” Ian tells ABS-CBN SOCO. “Binuksan ko po tapos tumakbo na ako. Sumakay po ako ng jeep tapos bumaba po ako sa may overpass.” He then ran to his school and told his teachers what happened.

Ten days later, on March 14, 2011, a similar incident occurred in Panghulo, Malabon. Airah, not her real name, was on her way home when it all happened.

“Galing po kasi ako noon ng palengke,” Airah tells ABS-CBN SOCO. “Tapos noong malapit na po ako sa school, ‘yong van po, ‘pag mahina ‘yong lakad ko, mahina din po ‘yong takbo. ‘Pag tumakbo na po ako ng isang beses, bumilis na [rin] po ‘yong takbo.”

“Tapos noong huminto po ako, may tumalon pong lalaki,” she further adds. “Tumakbo na po ako tapos ‘yong lalaki pumasok po ulit sa van.”

When Airah’s sister, Irene Mandadaro, found out about this, panic engulfed her. “Natakot po ako,” she says. “Kasi balitang-balita na po ‘yong tungkol sa nangunguha ng bata.”

Ian and Airah were lucky. They escaped the attempted kidnapping. But the boy in the picture wasn’t as fortunate.

With all the kidnapping reports and the photo of the boy circulating in cyberspace, questions remained—who are the people behind the kidnappings? And what’s the real story behind the picture?

In order to find out the identity of the boy in the picture, ABS-CBN SOCO tried to gather information from various police stations all around Metro Manila—Navotas, Caloocan, Rizal, and Tondo. The team even coordinated with the Laguna, Batangas, and Bulacan PNP.

But none of them had any information about the boy in the photo. In fact, there was no record of a child dying because of organ smuggling.

“During conferences, may time kami na nag-uusap-usap kung ano ‘yung mga crime trends na nangyayari sa area namin para kung ganun, kung may nangyayari talaga dun, eh di magawan namin agad ng plano dun sa area namin para hindi mangyari,” Malabon City chief of police Superintendent Cornelio Barrios tells ABS-CBN SOCO. “Meron bang nireport? Wala.”

“Ating inisa-isa ‘yung sinasabing nawala sa ganitong lugar o batang nakaburol sa ganitong area at siya nga ba ay biktima ng sabi nila—natagpuang wala nang mata at wala nang lamang loob,” he further adds. “Wala pong napatunayan na ganung insidente.”

ABS-CBN SOCO also showed the photo to a medico-legal expert and according to Superintendent. Emmanuel Aranas of the Camp Crame Crime Laboratory, it was possible that the photo was fake.

“Parang mahirap paniwalaan ang larawang ito,” he says. “Kasi may proseso para sa medical procedures sa pagtanggal o pag-transplant sa mga internal organ. Maselan kasi ang mga organ na ito. Kapag na-expose nang matagal, maaaring ma-contaminate at hindi na mapakikinabangan ng pagbibigyan. Sa litratong ito, very obvious na walang proseso at mali ang paraan.”

ABS-CBN SOCO also consulted a photo expert who concurred the picture was manipulated.

But if this was the case, what then was the motive of the men driving the white van who tried to kidnap Ian and Airah?

Urban legend

The authorities continued their investigation on the syndicate behind the alleged organ trafficking. They traced the areas where stories about a white van and men in bonnets were circulating but could not find any evidence that they existed.

“Hanggang ngayon, wala namang cited na grupo na gumagamit ng white van,” Supt. Barrios says.

Until finally, they were able to trace the origin of the stories—Tarlac province.

“Bumiyahe ako doon,” Supt. Barrios recalls. “Nagtataka ako bakit ang mga tao, alas sais pa lang gusto nang umuwi. Pati adult hindi lang mga bata. So tinanong ko kung bakit. Sabi nila, may kulto raw na nangunguha ng mga tao at iaaalay bilang sacrifice.”

And, according to the authorities, this story passed on until it eventually evolved into the story of a syndicate kidnapping children for their organs.

“Ang nakikita ko po dito, because of the previous urban legend that we call it sometimes, people overreact to the situation before studying it,” Supt. Barrios says.

What then was the explanation behind Ian and Airah’s very similar experience—men in bonnets, white van, and attempts at kidnapping them?

Paranoia?

Aside from Ian and Airah, according to the authorities, there were 12 reported cases of kidnapping in Malabon and 6 in Valenzuela. But in all cases, every one of the victims escaped.

“Ngayon, sabi ko, if I were the kidnapper and I had 12 chances to kidnap different individuals and I’m in my prime youth, I could overpower a child and get him,” Supt. Barrios says. “Pero bakit doon sa 12 or 11 incidents na ‘yong, wala siyang nakuha?”

The authorities believed that there might be a group of men using the urban legend to create a climate of fear among the public.

But social worker Ma. Kristina Jayme has a different explanation. “Noong unang-unang lumabas itong urban legend, actually paulit-ulit na lang ‘tong urban legend na ito, nagkaroon ng mass hysteria,” she says. “Paranoid ‘yong mga parents as well as ‘yong mga bata.”

Kristina says the story was repeated so often that it created an impression on the children leading them to believe that it was actually happening. “Na-inject na sa kanya ‘yong trauma,” she says. “Psychologically, malaki ang magiging epekto nito sa bata lalo na kung walang nagpapaliwanag sa kanya na adult.”

Meanwhile, the authorities appealed to the public that whoever had proof that these kidnappings and organ smuggling are real should go to them in order for them to be able to take action.

They also have a message for the parents. “Be responsible parents. Educate your children, sabihin ninyo ‘yong totoo,” Supt. Barrios says. “Huwag nating gamitin ‘yong mga kwento para takutin ‘yong mga anak natin. Ang mga bata ngayon, matatalino at dapat magabay sila sa tamang landas.” April 13, 2011


Documentary



This documentary by Jay Taruc of GMA Channel 7, tells the story of children kidnapped and killed.




Sources:
http://www.manilastandardtoday.com/mnlastd/?page=news01_sept27_2004
http://jhoyimperial.wordpress.com/2008/03/11/be-warned-fellow-filipino-kidnapping-for-organs-rampant/
http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/current-affairs-programs/05/17/11/organs-sale

A jellyfish attack causes a Luzon-wide blackout

Jellyfish is not actually a fish but a soft-bodied, stinging sea animal. Well, I think, explanation about what jellyfish is is not needed anymore.

By the way, the event really happened. It is true that jellyfishes caused a massive black out in the Philippines. What brought it here is the rumors.

The Story



On the night of December 10, 1999, most of Luzon's lights went out, especially NCR (National Capital Region) or more commonly known as Metro Manila. Some 40 million people abruptly lost power. Malls full of Christmas shoppers plunged into darkness. Holiday parties ground to a halt. President Joseph Estrada, meeting with senators at the time, endured a tense ten minutes before a generator restored the lights, while the public remained in the dark until the cause of the crisis was announced, and dealt with, the next day.

The reason of the black out is a large number of jellyfish (50 truck loads of jellyfishes) which was sucked in a cooling pipes of a coal-fired power plant, causing a cascading power failure.

The Rumor


  • Rumor has it that the jellyfish were giant mutant ones.

  • It was the height of President Joseph "Erap" Estrada's notoriety so a lot of people thought that another coup d' etat was brewing.

  • Some also thought it was the early manifestation of the Y2K Bug.

  • Sources:
    http://www.smithsonianmag.com/specialsections/40th-anniversary/Jellyfish-The-Next-Kings-of-the-Sea.html?c=y&page=1
    http://www.spot.ph/newsfeatures/41192/urban-legends-that-drove-pinoys-crazy

    Tide is the devil's detergent



    Proctor and Gamble (P&G) was one of the largest multinational company that has business in the Philippines until now. They are the manufacturer of Tide, Ariel, Safeguard, Pantene, Head & Shoulders, and many others.

    Despite their good image in the public, someone would still put stain on their name. There was this urban legend that circulated in 1980s that somehow made a great impact to the people. It was said that the Proctor and Gamble was a profit-generating ar of a Satanist group. People were told that the moon-and-stars logo found on the boxes of P&G products was the symbol of the Anti-Christ. The number of the Beast, "666," was supposed to be hidden in the logo.

    Legend


    Legend has it, that the earnings of Procter and Gamble were supposed to be used for the world domination of demon worshippers, or to support a Church of Satan. There were also emails asserting that the so-called "owner" of P&G had appeared in a US talk show (Oprah Winfrey's, Sally Jesse Raphael, Phil Donahue, or Merv Griffin's) and admitted that "a large portion of his profits from Procter & Gamble Products goes to support [the] Satanic Church." The email even gives details on how one could obtain a transcript of the said show. The catch? There was no such episode in any of the shows mentioned. Moreover, P&G is a publicly help entity. Thus, it's not owned by a single person.

    Here's one of the e-mails:

    PLEASE MAKE A DIFFERENCE


    The President of Procter & gamble appeared on the Phil Donahue Show on March 1, 1994. He announced that due to the openness of our society, he was coming out of the closet about his association with the church of Satan. He stated that a large portion of his profits from Procter & Gamble Products goes to support this satanic church. When asked by Donahue if stating this on t.v. would hurt his business, he replied, "THERE ARE NOT ENOUGH CHRISTIANS IN THE UNITED STATES TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE."


    Fact


    First of all, the president of the Proctor and Gamble is NOT a Satanist NOR his company a supporter of the Church of Satan. Aside of that, the Phil Donahue Show was aired 1994, which is 14 years later than 1980 when the urban legend rose. The president of P&G never had been in the said show nor did he say such thing.

    The company has a lot of competitors in the first place. Some of these competitors or one of them fought for market share unethically. They create such demonic and scandalous rumor just to disparage the goodwill of the company. However, they didn't won the fight.

    In an August 1, 1990 Chicago Sun Times article, it was revealed that P&G sued a Kansas-based couple, James and Linda Newton of Parsons, "for allegedly making statements and distributing literature stating that P&G supported the Church of Satan." Then, in 2007, P&G was awarded $19 million in its lawsuit against Amway (a company that manufactures consumer products) distributors who allegedly spread the story.


    Actually, there were also other urban legends with similar subject that came up from no where. One example is Liz Claiborne (in 1990) - a designer, who, according to rumor, admitted in Oprah show that 40% of her company's profit is given to the Church of Satan. This rumor was wholly false.

    Sources:
    http://www.spot.ph/newsfeatures/41192/urban-legends-that-drove-pinoys-crazy
    Snopes.com

    Cortal + Coke = Abortion

    Story

    Some people think that taking Cortal (a local brand of aspirin) and washing it down with Coke would induce abortions. More often than not, people will retell a story that they had heard from a friend of a friend's other friend about a young woman who could not face the fact that she had gotten knocked up. The said young woman allegedly used the Cortal-Coke combo to solve her problem.

    Legend

    Information about the young girl would vary. The name of her school or dormitory would change. In some stories, she got away with her so-called "self-medication." In others, she was rushed to an emergency room of some hospital and pronounced dead on arrival. Of course, the young woman in question never had a name and it was never revealed who the father of her unborn child was.

    Fact

    This is either a twisted cautionary tale that's told to young girls who are out on their own or a campaign against Cortal and Coke. Nevertheless, somebody posed a question related to the combo online

    Sources:
    http://www.spot.ph/newsfeatures/41192/urban-legends-that-drove-pinoys-crazy

    Cat - As the Main Ingredient of Siopao

    Fact

    Cat meat is eaten as part of uncommon cuisines of Cantonese in China, Vietnam, and some rural Swiss cultures. In desperate times, people of other areas have been known to resort to cooking and eating cats. Cat meat was eaten, for example, during the famine in the Siege of Leningrad. In 1996, a place that served cat meat was supposedly discovered by the Argentine press in a shanty town in Rosario, but in fact the meal had been set up by media from Buenos Aires.

    Legend

    In the Philippines, there is an urban legend (and also considered a joke) that some vendors use cat meat to make siopao (steamed bun), leading some Filipinos to name their pet cats "Siopao". The story tells that one of the restaurants in Quiapo, Manila City was caught throwing cut heads and body parts of street cats at the back. Some versions also said that they actually saw them cooking it. This urban legend began way back during the Japanese time when there was a scarcity of meat and lots of cats on the street.

    Interpretation

    The urban legend is just a kind of business technique of winning customers' favor over the said restaurant above, thus they told false stories circulated in the city.

    Sources:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taboo_food_and_drink#Cats
    http://ph.news.yahoo.com/philippine-urban-legends-093005285.html

    Senin, 13 Februari 2012

    How Valentine's Day Began With Naked People and Dead Dogs

    My favorite thing about holidays are their bizarre origins.  Most of our modern celebrations have roots in old pagan traditions.  Valantine's Day is no different.  Its pagan roots are just more bizarre than most. They are so strange I like to write about them every year.  I know it is slightly off topic, but naked people being flogged with animal hides is worth discussing in any forum. Apparently the ancient roots of Valentine's Day begins with the Romans. The Romans celebrated Lupercalia from Feb. 13 to 15. In Roman mythology Lupercus was the equivalent of the Greek god Pan who was known to be a sexy sort of fellow who promoted fertility. His holiday was a somewhat romantic kind of celebration. During Lupercalia the men would sacrifice a goat and a dog and then whip women with the hides of the dead animals. The women would line up naked in order to be whipped. They did this because they believed this ritual would make them more fertile. Afterwards, there would be lottery in which men and women would be paired up for a night of naked fun.


    I know, you are now wishing we still celebrated Valentine's day this way. Enough with the cheesy cards. Where are the dead animals, whippings, and naked people? It was the Catholic Church that ruined the fun. Emperor Claudius II killed two Valentine's in different years of February 14th. Both men were martyred and the day derives its name from these two martyred saints. In the 5th century, Pope Gelasius I got confused and merged the two martyrs into one person and named February 14th after them. He also absorbed the romantic traditions of Lupercalia into the day in order to soften the pagan debauchery and retake the day for Christianity. Christianity has a long history of doing this type of thing. Christmas was taken from Roman Saturnalia traditions and Norse Yule traditions. By absorbing pagan holidays rather than forbidding them, ancient Christians were able to gain new followers rather than lose them.

    Chaucer and Shakespeare can be credited with further romanticizing St. Valentine's day and turning it into the romantic, kissy holiday it is today, but I will always think back to better days when women ran naked through the streets being beaten with dead animals.

    Sabtu, 11 Februari 2012

    Those Pesky Kids Again

    The college rang me up last week asking me to return to my job as general supervisor until the exams start in May. Since the January exams finished things have got a bit boisterous again and they think it's better to have three of us during the middle part of the day instead of the usual two. Nothing serious has gone on, just horseplay and high spirits. I was delighted to return and relished the challenge. I haven't been able to use any of my experiences in my writing yet but I'm collecting the little incidents and hoping that one day something will come together.

    The other day I was walking along the corridor towards the theatre when I saw a youth coming towards me wearing grey trousers and matching jacket. As our paths crossed I did a double take when I noticed his swastika armband. I suddenly remembered there were drama exams going on and soon saw lots of others in costume. For a split second there though, I thought that the extracurricular activities had gone too far.

    Back in December the Art Department installed a Wish Tree in the reception area. This is a piece of artwork on the wall with a number of lengths of twine stretched down it from top to bottom. Staff and students are encouraged to write a wish on one of the tags provided and tie them onto the twine. Some have expressed personal desires for family health and wealth and to pass their exams while others have sent out wider prayers for global peace and the end of world poverty. Here are two that made me chuckle:

    “I wish I was a size 12.”

    “I wish my mum would let my dad out of the cellar.”

    On a different subject – have you heard about the uproar concerning the Woman's Own writing competition? It's all explained in Helen Yendall's blog. However, many competitions do treat the writers with respect and I'd like to mention one here. A few months ago estate agents Peter Barry launched a short story competition on the theme Moving Home. This was judged by writer Anne Aylor and the results were promised for January. As often happens, many more submissions were received than had been expected. However, instead of making us wait longer, the shortlist of twelve was revealed bit by bit as the entries were sifted through so that we were given something to look forward to each day. I didn't make the list but I enjoyed reading the winners and still have a story that I might be able to recycle. It was nice to feel that an effort was being made to keep us informed on the progress of the judging.