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“The recent exposé of the unfinished Mega Health Center Building at Sitio Macanhan, amounting to P65 million worth of public funds, has left us in question: where did our taxes go?”

CAGAYAN DE ORO — With the nation still grappling with the anomalies in flood control projects, another issue of irregularity, this time with the Department of Health (DOH) began to surface. About 300 super health centers (SHCs) in the country were reportedly non-operational despite completion.

SHCs are enhanced versions of rural health units, providing a wider array of services. These include outpatient care, birthing facilities, isolation rooms, pharmacy services, and ambulatory service units. They also offer diagnostic services, such as laboratory tests, x-rays, and ultrasounds.

These facilities, if they were only operational, would be beneficial to Filipinos amid long-standing issues of congestion in public hospitals.

In a report by Inquirer.net, citing DOH data, only 196 SHCs were operational and 17 were partially operational nationwide as of October 17. Meanwhile, 365 others remain under construction—these are on top of the non-operational ones.

Health Secretary Ted Herbosa said the establishment of these semi-hospitals started in 2021 through the DOH’s Health Facilities Enhancement Program (HFEP) in partnership with the local government units. It aims to bring improved health centers closer to communities.

Bulatlat checked the approved General Appropriations Act from the past years, and it showed that at least eight SHCs were proposed in 2021 under the said DOH program, but the number skyrocketed in the succeeding years. The highest was recorded in 2023, with the combined total of 322 proposed SHCs amounting to P3.2 billion.

What are the reasons?

In Cagayan de Oro, the P10-million San Simon Super Health Center remains non-operational despite the completion of the building because it still has no electricity and water connections, as confirmed by San Simon village chief Fernando Edrolin. The project broke ground on March 7, 2024.

The Super Health Center in Barangay San Simon, a hinterland village in Cagayan de Oro. It is still non-operational. Photo by iFM Cagayan de Oro

According to the Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) between the DOH Northern Mindanao and the city government pertaining to the project, the latter was responsible for the application of permanent electric and water utilities, but only after the completion and turnover. The project has yet to be turned over.

It is also the responsibility of the local government to assign an engineer to monitor the project’s progress.

For days, Bulatlat had been reaching out to Engineer Joel Momongan, department manager of the Cagayan de Oro City Engineering Office, for comment, but he has yet to respond as of this writing.

Barangay San Simon is one of the hinterland villages in Cagayan de Oro, with a travel time of approximately more or less 40 minutes from the city proper. Hence, this SHC would be serviceable, including to the residents in neighboring rural areas.

In addition, it was brought up during a Senate committee hearing on DOH’s 2026 proposed budget that the lack of health workers was a contributing factor to this issue.

Herbosa said they can extend help through the DOH’s National Health Workforce Support System. But local chief executives, especially in cities, were reminded of their obligations, as they needed to hire health professionals to man these facilities as stipulated in the agreement.

Citing the MOA of the San Simon Super Health Center here as an example, it is the responsibility of the local government to provide health personnel.

Meanwhile, based on the General Appropriations Act, DOH’s National Health Workforce Support System has priority areas. These include 5th- and 6th-class municipalities, geographically isolated and disadvantaged areas (GIDA), Indigenous peoples’ communities, areas where poverty incidence is high based on the Philippine Statistics Authority, and municipalities that are unable to achieve Human Resources for Health standards.

The Alliance of Health Workers (AHW) noted that severe personnel shortages were one of the major problems in the health sector, saying that many were compelled to work abroad for better opportunities, while others abandoned their profession entirely “due to the government’s continued neglect.”

In a recent statement, the group called out the Marcos Jr. administration after health workers were excluded when it granted a 15-percent increase in the salary of military and uniformed personnel (MUP) in the next three years.

“… health workers and other civilian government employees, who likewise serve the public under difficult and hazardous conditions, are once again excluded and continue to be neglected by this government,” AHW said.

Mega health center

Teresita Tenson, 85, a resident of Sitio Macanhan, Barangay Carmen in Cagayan de Oro, told Bulatlat that she was happy upon hearing that a mega health center will be established a few steps from her residence. This is for better access to healthcare services, she said.

This two-story mega health center amounting to P65 million is an improved version of an SHC that will have a hemodialysis area, although this is funded by the local government and not through DOH’s HFEP.

This project, however, remains unfinished. In fact, only steel beams have been built at the project site to this day. It was supposed to be finished in January 2025.

Only steel beams have been built at the project site of the Mega Health Center in Sitio Macanhan, Barangay Carmen, Cagayan de Oro. Photo by Franck Dick Rosete/Bulatlat

This issue became a discussion by the locals after it was featured in the Kapuso Mo, Jessica Sojo program.

In a statement, the Youth Act Now against Tyranny – Cagayan de Oro expressed concern about this unfinished project. “The recent exposé of the unfinished Mega Health Center Building at Sitio Macanhan, amounting to P65 million worth of public funds, has left us in question: where did our taxes go?”

Contradictory statements were thrown by concerned parties, which brought confusion to many.

In an interview with iFM Cagayan de Oro, the Nurben Engineering and Building Contractor claimed that it never received a payment from the city government for its first billing. Hence, it stopped. It said it only received the 15 percent mobilization fund.

The latter, on the other hand, published a certification saying that the City Accounting Office released another payment for the contractor for the 15 percent work accomplishment on July 18, 2024.

Reporters had asked the City Information Office if it could release a document confirming that the contractor received the payment, but it has yet to issue it as of this writing.

“I hope that the completion will be hastened,” the 85-year-old Tenson told Bulatlat in the vernacular, as they still need to go to Barangay Carmen Health Center when the services they need are not available at the Macanhan Health Station, especially the free medicines.

Alleged misuse of funds

DOH’s unfinished and non-operational healthcare facility projects were flagged by both the House and the Senate during deliberations of the department’s proposed budget for 2026.

On October 8, 2025, Mamamayang Liberal Party-list Representative Leila de Lima filed a resolution directing concerned House committees to launch a congressional inquiry in aid of legislation into alleged “misuse and abuse of public funds” for the implementation of these SHCs.

Data showed that the region of Calabarzon had the highest number of these proposed projects in 2022, 2024, and 2025, with the combined total of 84 proposed SHCs totalling over P760.5 million. In 2023, meanwhile, the Western Visayas region had the most with 48, amounting to P480 million.

Ordinary Filipinos can also participate in the investigation after the launching of the Citizen Participatory Audit, as part of the probe on these unfinished and non-operational SHCs. On top of these, concerned locals may also send reports to DOH, which will be confidential, if SHCs in their areas lack services.

“But above all else, this must spark our collective discontent to build stronger and sustained collective actions toward addressing systemic issues of national to local corruption,” said the Youth Act Now against Tyranny – Cagayan de Oro. (RVO)

The post Super health centers that should serve Filipinos, but they’re non-operational appeared first on Bulatlat.


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By WBAI Pacifica Radio, December 20, 2025

https://worldbeyondwar.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/Kathy-Kelly.mp3

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China has objected to India’s efforts to celebrate a 17th-century Dalai Lama well known for his love of poetry, seeing it as an attempt to challenge Beijing’s territorial claims in the region and its control over Tibetan Buddhism, according to experts. India hosted an international symposium on the 6th Dalai Lama in Tawang, his birthplace, from December 3 to 6. Pema Khandu, the chief minister of Arunachal Pradesh, inaugurated the event, which was attended by local officials and scholars of...


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Doctors Without Borders (MSF) warns of a rise in child deaths in the Gaza Strip due to the severe cold weather, amid ongoing restrictions imposed by Israeli authorities on the entry of humanitarian aid.


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Cuba is participating in CITM 2025 with a delegation headed by the First Deputy Minister of Tourism, Jorge Alberto Garcia. More than a thousand tour operators and representatives from 101 countries and regions have gathered in Hainan province for Asia’s largest and most influential tourism trade show.

This is the first time the event has been held on Hainan Island since its inception in 2001, having previously taken place alternately in the cities of Shanghai and Kunming, according to the Xinhua news agency.

The organizers specified that this year’s edition has the theme “Hello China” and the exhibition covers an area of ​​65,000 square meters and features five thematic areas.

The event includes national and international pavilions, the Hainan Sun area, the inbound tourism consumption zone, and the culture-tourism integration area.

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The presentation will take place at 11:00 a.m. local time on Calle de Madera, on one side of Plaza de Armas, across from the City Museum in Old Havana.

This work is a collection of “short stories in which poetry, absurdity, and strangeness combine with a surprising economy of means to showcase the craft of a storyteller,” according to the ICL.

The author began writing this book in the 1980s—it took him about thirteen years to complete—and “in a way, he sets it up as a small tribute to Franz Kafka and Julio Cortazar, his two cult writers,” the press release states.

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Powerful, targeted jamming caused a temporary blackout of satellite navigation systems, including GPS and BeiDou, in a major Chinese city on Wednesday, an industry association said on Friday. The disruption affected users in Nanjing, a city of nearly 10 million people and capital of the eastern province of Jiangsu, between 4pm and 10pm on Wednesday. Car navigation, food delivery, ride-hailing, and drone control apps relying on satellite positioning experienced a “systemic anomaly” during the...


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When Oregon music teacher Susan Lewis logged onto a Zoom meeting with her boss one afternoon in August 2024, she thought she would be preparing for a sixth year teaching at Valley Catholic School. Instead, she lost her job.

Lewis was shocked, she recalled in an interview with The Intercept, as were her colleagues and students. The school did not give any explanation for why they did not renew her contract. Unbeknownst to Lewis, the pro-Israel blacklist organization StopAntisemitism had recently launched an online campaign against her, framing her social media posts about the genocide in Gaza as “using her platform to spread vile antisemitic hate online.”

Lewis is one of at least 400 people StopAntisemitism has taken credit for getting ousted from their jobs in its online crusade, which has drawn widespread attention for targeting more prominent figures — including right-wing pundit Tucker Carlson, progressive actor-turned-activist Cynthia Nixon, and the popular children’s educator Rachel Accurso, known by her stage name Ms. Rachel. Lewis, without her own platform or mass audience, is one of only two recent StopAntisemitism targets pursuing active federal lawsuits against the blacklist organization.

“I really thought we had free speech and this wouldn’t be a problem — that’s what social media is for, is that you can vent,” Lewis told The Intercept. “It wasn’t like I was saying anything above and beyond what other critics of Israel were saying.”

She sued StopAntisemitism for defamation in an Oregon state court over the summer, and the case was elevated to federal court last month. Her suit faces long odds, legal experts told The Intercept, but serves as a rare chance to register public dissent in the courts against the group’s targeting.

Founded in 2018 by social media influencer Liora Reznichenko and funded by the California-based real estate millionaire Adam Milstein’s foundation, StopAntisemitism targets public figures and private individuals over their criticism of Israel or advocacy for Palestinian human rights — forming a single-issue Rolodex similar to Canary Mission. The blacklists supplement the fierce crackdowns and censorship against Palestine solidarity activism increasingly seen at schools across the U.S. since the outbreak of Israel’s war on Gaza.

StopAntisemitism elevated its own profile by targeting Accurso, who has used her platform to advocate for Palestinian children who have been killed, wounded, or starved by the Israeli military in Gaza, especially after she posted videos with a Palestinian 3-year-old who had lost her leg. In April, StopAntisemitism requested that the Department of Justice investigate her for alleged ties to Hamas, despite no evidence of such connections, and this month named her a finalist for “Antisemite of the Year,” on a list that also included Carlson and Nixon.

Accurso has faced an increase in online harassment, including physical threatening letters to her and her family members, she said in an Instagram post after StopAntisemitism released the “Antisemite” list. Her audience of nearly 5 million on Instagram and more than 18 million on YouTube has largely rallied around her — offering backing that hundreds of people like Lewis don’t have.

Reznichenko said that since October 7, 2023, her group has profiled 1,000 employees and students, often sharing their work or school information, encouraging their followers to contact their employers and at times calling for their firing, according to an October interview with the right-leaning Zionist media outlet Jewish News Syndicate.

When StopAntisemitism shared screenshots from Lewis’s personal Facebook page last August, it amplified the posts to a far larger audience than Lewis’s 2,000 Facebook friends. Lewis had criticized Israel’s apartheid rule over Palestinians, its genocide in Gaza, and Western support for the war. StopAntisemitism listed an email address for Valley Catholic School and encouraged its followers, who currently number more than 300,000 on X, to contact Lewis’s employer. “Warning to parents of students in Beaverton,” the post read. “Students at [Valley Catholic] are in grave danger under Sue Lewis.”

What followed was a flood of messages demanding her firing and a slew of personal attacks. “Their phones are ringing off the hook,” one user commented below the post, sharing the school’s phone number and listing school administrators’ names. “Keep trying.”

In one post highlighted by StopAntisemitism, Lewis reshared a statement pointing out the false reports of “babies beheaded” by Hamas and exaggerated claims of systemic rape to “mobilize Western support for the Palestinian genocide.” She had quipped in a separate post that Hamas would “wipe out Israel with their homemade bombs, small arms, hang gliders, grenades and sling shots,” and later clarified the post was sarcastic, given Israel’s clear military advantage thanks to billions of dollars’ worth of military aid each year from the U.S. and allied nations.

The following month, StopAntisemitism posted again: “Update: antisemite Sue Lewis is thankfully no longer teaching at Valley Catholic High School.”

In her lawsuit, Lewis is alleging that StopAntisemitism and Reznichenko defamed her, invaded her privacy, interfered with her work contract, and inflicted emotional distress.

Valley Catholic School did not respond to The Intercept’s request for comment.

In court filings seeking an immediate dismissal, the organization has claimed its statements are true and protected by the First Amendment as opinion.

Groups like StopAntisemitism have free speech rights too, said Aaron Terr, an attorney with the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, “even when it’s harsh, unfair, or deeply offensive.”

StopAntisemitism declined to comment on Lewis’s lawsuit and instead doubled down on its criticism of Accurso.

“Regarding Ms. Rachel, it is disturbing that the media continues to pretend she merely advocates for Palestinian children,” Reznichenko said in a statement to The Intercept, claiming that she attempted “to pass off pictures of children with birth defects as victims of Israeli aggression” and had inspired “an army of antisemitic lunatics” to make threats against the group.

A spokesperson for Accurso called Reznichenko’s accusations false and dangerous. In a statement, Accurso said that her “compassion and care for children doesn’t stop at any border” and that her advocacy for children in Gaza is no exception.

“I want every child to be fed, safe and able to attend school,” Accurso said. “I know that everyone benefits when we help children reach their full potential and grow into thriving, healthy adults. I also know that it’s not right for children to suffer like they are currently in Gaza, Sudan, the Congo and beyond.”

While her project’s main currency lies in the mass ire of social media, Reznichenko has also been a recurring guest on broadcast TV, including Jake Tapper’s CNN show, Fox News, and NewsNation. In a recent segment on Fox, she blamed the recent Bondi Beach mass shooting on the Palestinian liberation movement, calling for the deportation of “radicals” who want to “globalize the intifada,” a historical reference to Palestinian resistance against Israeli occupation, often framed by pro-Israel advocates as a call for violence against Jews.

The Encino, California-based nonprofit Merona Leadership Foundation, of which Adam Milstein is president, paid Reznichenko $142,722 in 2023 while she worked for StopAntisemitism, according to the group’s tax filing. The foundation, which helps cover StopAntisemitism’s operating costs, serves as one vehicle for Milstein to support efforts to crush Palestinian solidarity work, as first reported by the Washington Post.

The Milstein Family Foundation, which Milstein operates with his wife Gila, helps fund the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC, and its offshoot, Democratic Majority for Israel, as well as the right-wing think tank Heritage Foundation. Milstein, who pleaded guilty to tax evasion in 2008, has also been tied to blacklist group Canary Mission and has praised their work, but rejected claims that he funds the group. StopAntisemitism, however, is listed as among the Milstein foundation’s supported groups.

The Milsteins sit on the board of Impact Forum Foundation, a network of dozens of pro-Israel philanthropists who support nonprofits that include StopAntisemitism. The supported companies include media organizations such as Jewish News Syndicate, pro-Israel think tanks like Middle East Forum and Jewish Institute for National Security of America, and advocacy groups such as Students Supporting Israel, Parents Defending Education, and ELNET, which has described itself as the AIPAC of Europe. The network’s website said the coalition’s aims are to “fight antisemitism, strengthen the State of Israel, and advance the U.S. – Israel alliance.”

The Milsteins did not respond to a request for comment.

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Lewis’s lawsuit against StopAntisemitism represents a rare legal challenge against pro-Israel doxxing groups, and it faces long odds because of First Amendment protections. Former Cabrini University professor Kareem Tannous, a Palestinian American who lost his job in 2022 after StopAntisemitism blacklisted him over social media posts critical of Israel, sued the group for defamation but had his case dismissed when a federal judge in Pennsylvania found that StopAntisemitism’s statements were protected opinion.

A federal judge in Michigan made a similar free speech ruling in a lawsuit filed against StopAntisemitism in 2024 by a former University of Michigan hockey player, John Druskinis, who the group had falsely accused of painting a swastika on the sidewalk in front of the Jewish Resource Center when he had instead painted a male genitalia and a homophobic slur. Although the court upheld Druskinis’s defamation claim, he dropped his suit earlier this year.

Aside from Lewis’s suit, the only other active lawsuit against StopAntisemitism was filed by Abeer AbouYabis, a physician and former professor at Emory’s medical school, who was fired after the group doxxed her over a social media post expressing “hope” in a free Palestine and praising the “glory” of Palestinian “resistance fighters” on October 7.

Unlike previous lawsuits, AbouYabis, who is an Arab Palestinian and Muslim, alleges discrimination based on race, religion, and nationality, as well as retaliation allegations under the American Disabilities Act. In a 213-page complaint, AbouYabis alleged Emory fired her while she was on medical leave for post-traumatic stress disorder after 37 members of her family were killed in the first month of Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza. The suit, originally filed in May, names the school, the Milsteins, StopAntisemitism, and Canary Mission, accusing Emory of collaborating with the latter two to silence AbouYabis’s protected speech. In a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, attorneys for the Milsteins did not deny its financial support for StopAntisemitism, but said the couple cannot be held liable “for the acts of these third party websites.”

Central to Lewis’s complaint against StopAntisemitism is the group’s email campaign against Lewis as part of a series targeting educators called “Corrupting the Classroom,” in which they labeled her “a raging antisemite.” A link on the campaign’s site, which remains active, leads directly to a pre-written email message addressed to Valley Catholic School’s principal. The email calls Lewis “a grave threat to the safety and well-being of your students” whose “presence in the classroom cannot be tolerated” and called on the principal “to take immediate and decisive action to address this situation.” Lewis’s lawsuit frames the campaign’s message as “false and malicious statements” about her personal views on the Israeli government’s policies. The campaign, the suit alleges, is full of “mischaracterizations and distortions” of her social media posts.

In a motion to dismiss Lewis’s case, attorneys for the Reznichenko and the organization defended the “Corrupting the Classroom” campaign as having used Lewis’s own “quotes and screenshots from Plaintiff’s publicly available social media profile,” arguing that the group “simply framed them as an example of dangerous antisemitism, a conclusion StopAntisemitism is entitled to reach and express under the First Amendment” and Oregon law.

FIRE’s Terr, who is familiar with cases involving StopAntisemitism, said he agreed with the court’s previous decisions in other cases where judges ruled to protect StopAntisemitism’s free speech rights, even if he disagreed with the group’s tactics. It would be worse, he said, if the government could decide what speech is or is not acceptable.

The second Trump administration, however, has tested the limits of such constitutional protections by passing executive orders inspired by the Heritage Foundation’s Project Esther, which aims to target the pro-Palestinian movement by accusing them of being Hamas supporters. The orders have only emboldened groups like StopAntisemitism.

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Earlier this year, the administration began detaining and attempting to deport high profile pro-Palestinian activists Mohsen Mahdawi, Rümeysa Öztürk, and Mahmoud Khalil — the latter of whom Reznichenko regularly attacks online. The right-wing Zionist group Betar has openly collaborated with the Trump administration, providing lists of pro-Palestine activists in the U.S. for deportation. StopAntisemitism has cheered on such deportation efforts. A Palestinian woman who joined a pro-Palestine protest in New York, Leqaa Kordia, has been in immigration detention since early March despite a judge twice ordering her release. The Trump administration and groups like StopAntisemitism have accused her of being a “pro-Hamas extremist” while failing to present evidence.

While Terr said StopAntisemitism is protected by the First Amendment, he criticized blacklist groups like StopAntisemitism for punishing people who say things the group disagrees with by “trying to inflict devastating consequences on people, like depriving them of their livelihoods,” which he said chills further speech.

“When an organization like Stop Anti-Semitism not only amplifies someone else’s social media posts to criticize their views, but also organizes a campaign to get them fired, it’s right to call that out as illiberal,” Terr said.

Calling out StopAntisemitism is perhaps the best recourse people have in seeking accountability, said Dylan Saba, an attorney at Palestine Legal, which has supported students and faculty who have been censored by schools due to their advocacy for Palestine.

“Because the speech protections are so strong, it’s really a situation in which sunlight is the best disinfectant,” Saba said. “The more that people understand who and what these organizations are, that there is this mass campaign to propagate smears and to stamp out any criticism of Zionism or criticism of U.S. support for Israel, the less effective those smears will be — especially as more people are becoming familiar with the issue of Palestine.”

“The more people understand that there is this mass campaign to propagate smears and to stamp out any criticism of Zionism or criticism of U.S. support for Israel, the less effective those smears will be.”

Hundreds of comments by supporters of StopAntisemitism were leveled at Lewis, some of which her attorney described as as “violent and threatening” in court filings. They ranged from misogynist attacks to others calling for her to get a pager, referencing an attack in Lebanon in which the Israeli military detonated thousands of pagers and handheld walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah members, killing 42 people, including 12 civilians, and injuring more than 4,000 others. Another user suggested Lewis should be “teached” by Mossad, according to a police report she filed with the Portland Police Department last year, a reference to Israel’s intelligence agency, which has a long history of assassinating its political enemies.

Lewis said the attacks strained her marriage and her livelihood. She said she has retained some of her students for private lessons, teaching from her home studio, but she misses the camaraderie with her co-workers and helping build the school’s music program.

Lewis, who is self-funding her case through her savings and a GoFundMe, said she is motivated by the many students who have been blacklisted by the group and whose lives have been interrupted because of StopAntisemitism’s blacklist.

“I’m a teacher, that’s what I do — I try to help my students reach their full potential,” she said. “Their whole career could be just snuffed out, you know? They may never be able to work in their chosen field. They got student loan debt, they got to pay the rent.”

The post StopAntisemitism Takes Credit for Getting Hundreds Fired. A Music Teacher Is Suing. appeared first on The Intercept.


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Jordanian authorities detain pro-Hezbollah journalist Mohammed Faraj, without providing any official clarification on the reasons for his arrest and his whereabouts.


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After drones were flown in China at heights above 8,000 metres (26,247 feet) – approaching that of Mount Everest – the authorities are moving to crack down on illegal flights that threaten the safety of commercial aviation. The controversy highlights the regulatory dilemma China faces as it pushes to develop a low-altitude economy while ensuring aviation safety. Industry insiders say that with technological progress and upgraded oversight, China may eventually allow drones to fly as high as...


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