— witsandnuts

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May, 2008 Monthly archive

I got a call this morning from a friend based in Dubai. She was confirming how to prepare a chilled mango cake as she was reading that moment the recipe that I blogged last year. I reiterated that the type of mangoes she will use would be vital. The last time I did one was when I gave it as birthday gift to another friend. That was more than 7 months ago and what hinders me to prepare that again since I got here is the absence of ripe mangoes according to my specification. If only I could find one as neat and reasonably sweet as Philippine mangoes.

As I went to my favorite hypermarket this afternoon to do my groceries (fridays and saturdays as our weekend), I chanced on this sort of Mangoes Festival which started on May 21 and will run until the end of this month. I had high hopes that finally I was going to meet the ideal mangoes for my recipe. After all, there are at least 100 varieties of mangoes I can choose from.


The most expensive varieties came from Ivory Coast, Bazil and Costa Rica.

I was amused and surprised at the same time as it felt like being in a science class. Listed were the countries and the name (variety) of the mangoes in each shelf, minus the scientific names and it could have exactly felt like a Botany class in my highschool. Interesting, isn’t it? What surprised me was knowing that some mangoes actually never looked like ones and some varieties’ names don’t fit them. It was like naming someone “Lovely” where as matter of fact she is not. It was also surprising (or maybe I was sort of a little disoriented and failed to realize that it has the oldest civilization) that India has the most number of variety of mangoes.

In the Philippines, the indian mangoes that I remember are those from the trees of our neighbor which we used to claim as ours (and “stole” when there was a chance when I was still a kid) since its branches have been trespassing our roof.  Those green little mangoes which are not sour enough.  Sooner our neighbor cut the “trespassers-branches”. But today at the hypermarket, the indian mangoes ala Filipino did not exist.  There are too many though and prices significantly differed for each variety.  It would be interesting and challenging to taste all but that would be costly and tummy-troubler if I will decide to get stubborn to satisfy my curiousity.

After more than an hour of peeking, it was frustrating not to find any mangoes from the Philippines.  I am wondering why.  The only Southeast Asian mangoes in this “gathering” are those from Thailand.  These Pimsan mangoes looked like manggang kalabaw (hmm, mouthwatering)!


Hardly anyone did pick this.

But to satisfy my curiousity, I bought two.  The first one I picked because that is the biggest mango I saw in the festival.  While the other one looks like a hybrid of achesa and apple is the most expensive,  almost half the price of the biggest piece.  (Rajapuri Mango (India), PhP69/kg and Kent Mango (Ivory Coast), PhP356/kg).

And it took me another 15 minutes to look for a bagoong (shrimp paste). Luckily I got one.

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Though eastern and western influences came in, still, the common meal of majority of the Filipinos would be incomplete without the rice.  With the rice crisis in the Philippines (or should it happen in the other side of the world), the advertisement shown by Spaghetti house would always be clever.

“Save rice, eat spaghetti”. – The Old Spaghetti House :)

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My friend cum former officemate/clustermate in RCBC and I chatted today to exchange random thoughts about the complete RCBC Cabuyao Branch robbery photos that he sent me. At first I was hesitant to look at any of the photos because they are literally bloody. Lucky me I am not generally fainthearted. I actually chickened out looking at it at first because it (would) had brought back memory lanes. It felt like I (we) was at the branch, the vault, the steel cabinet, the FMS reports with droplets of blood, the tellers area, all the corners of the branch, and the people who used to be there that gave life to the branch.

An email sent to me which originated from one of the employees of the Bank is doing a fund raising campaign for the families of the victims.  This is of course a cause independent of the help that the management would be extending to the victims.  One part of the email says,

Amid the frenzy of the investigation and preparations for a decent burial for all the victims, we focus on the people they left behind. One left an unemployed wife, a special child and a 5 year old son. Another will have to deprive her 8 month old baby a mother’s kiss forever. Most of the people who were taken away were bread winners’ their families’ only source of resource and strength.  We have opened a savings account for the families of the victims to help them source some means to get started with life anew. By simply donating any amount to SA Number 4-001-97908-1, you will be able to extend your love and support for these very unfortunate families.

Here are some of the cherished memories of the victims’ families before that fateful day, 16th May 2008:

Wife of the Customer Service Head (the highest branch officer for operations)

Louella Lapaan, 40, a housewife and a mother to two boys and a girl, summed up best what happened to the men in their lives: “He didn’t deserve this.”  Her husband, Bernard Lapaan Jr, worked as a Customer Service Head and was so dedicated to his job that he avoided being absent as much as possible.  “He tried not to miss work as much as he can. He was that dedicated to his work,” She described Bernard as a loving husband and family member who preferred to go vegetarian, being a health conscious person.

Despite his busy schedule, he never forgot to tell his wife and children how much he loved them in text messages. Bernard had just graduated from law school last month and was preparing for this year’s bar exams.  “I hope this kind of bloody robbery won’t happen again, won’t happen to families. My husband did not deserve this to happen to him,”

Wife of one of the tellers

On the morning of May 16, bank teller Benjamin Nicdao, 41, looked at his white barong uniform as if he wanted to wear it to work.  Knowing that employees of the Rizal Commercial Banking Corp in Cabuyao, Laguna, could dress down on Fridays, his wife Sheila asked him: “Are you going to wear your uniform today?” Nicdao returned the barong to the closet, put on a striped white-and-orange shirt and by 7:30 a.m. off he was to drive Sheila to the Bank of the Philippine Islands branch in Calamba City on his way to work.  Little did 41-year-old Sheila knowit was the last time she would see him alive.  “He wasn’t acting strangely, save for that moment when he stared at his uniform. He was his usual self. He wasn’t even able to text me about what was happening at the bank,” the mother of two kids said. 

Sheila could not help but worry about her own vulnerability, as she too worked in a bank.  “We are the same industry, of course I am afraid not only for myself but also for the entire banking industry after this kind of brutal incident,” she said.  The couple planned to celebrate 13 years of marriage and of doing everything together on June 25. The Nicdaos had been college sweethearts for eight years and were used to being inseparable.  “He was my best friend. We did everything together — going to the market or the grocery.. The only time we were apart was when we were at our separate banks,” Sheila added.

Wife and Daughter of the Janitor/Messenger

The daughter of janitor/messenger Juan Leyva is accustomed to being awakened by her father’s hug every morning before he went to work.  “His morning hug is gone now,” said Carla May Leyva, 11, the youngest in Leyva’s brood of six.  Leyva had promised Carla a new pair of shoes after her graduation from grade school.  “Ma, what will happen? Papa is gone, and so are the new shoes,” Carla kept telling her mother Gloria after Leyva’s body arrived at the family home in Barangay Real, Calamba City.  “It’s painful to lose a father,” said the crying child.  She said she was very angry at her father’s killers: “He did not commit any crime.”

Leyva’s youngest sister, Lucia Abaca, said: “We had no idea he would die on that day. That day seemed to be an ordinary day.  “He was just a messenger. Robbers are usually not interested in messengers.”  Leyva, 39, had been working at RCBC Cabuyao for 14 years.  He usually arrived at the bank at 7:30 a.m. to clean up and then travel to Manila to deliver letters and messages.  When the news reached her, Gloria Leyva said she hoped her husband was in Manila.  She said she had a strong feeling that he was one of those killed, but that she kept on telling her children and relatives that he was not at his office.  “But he was there. He was killed,” she said, weeping.  Gloria said her husband behaved oddly on Friday morning.”

Wife of the depositor

Thirty-three-year-old Maria Ela Antonio, meanwhile, clung to a tiny shred of hope that her husband, Ferdinand, was not among the dead — until she saw his body late Friday night.  “I was still in a state of shock. I was hoping that he didn’t go to the bank that day, that he wasn’t among the dead. He was unable to say good-bye to me when he left our office,” Ela said.

The couple both worked in a dental supplies company, Ivoclar Vivadent, which is also based in Cabuyao, Laguna. They also lived in the same town.  Ela met Ferdinand eight years ago at work and had two young children.  “He was very affectionate, not just to me but to everybody else. He would give me little trinkets and chocolates on Valentine’s Day,” the widow said.

In between idle work hours, Ferdinand would suddenly pop up in her cubicle and do crazy dances and crack jokes to make her laugh.  On Friday morning, Ela was scheduled for their company’s annual physical exam when 31-year-old Ferdinand, a liaison officer, left for the bank.  “He didn’t pass by my work station anymore. I had no idea or inkling that something bad would happen,” Ela recalled, adding that she proceeded to line up for an X-ray.

She only got wind of the bank robbery a little after lunch from officemates who kept worrying about “Tongdec,” who spent a lot of time dealing with the RCBC Cabuyao branch.  “I was still hoping that he was alive. It was already 2 p.m. when I got there, but the policemen wouldn’t let us in,” she added. 

For those who might want to know, here is the schedule of final rites for the victims. Click the photo to enlarge. 

The names of the dead bear mentioning, as a way of mourning, remembrance and sharing in the grief of those they left behind: Branch manager Roberto Panganiban Castro, tellers Benjamin Nicdao and Olga Gonzalez, operations assistant Noel Miranda, new accounts officer Teresa Umayam, cashier service head Bernardo Lapaan Jr., janitor Juan Leyva, security guard Baltazar Aguilando and a depositor’s representative Ferdinand Antonio and the Relationship Manager, Isagani Pastor.

Let’s pray for their souls and for justice to come.

I am inviting everyone to attend the daily 12 noon to 1pm mass at the TGY chapel, Podium 4 of RCBC Plaza.  The daily mass will be dedicated to the employees of RCBC Cabuyao (Science Park) Branch until such time that the case is solved.

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The almost perfect and most unhuman bank robbery  in Philippine history has been bugging me for two days now.  Primarily because that bank is so dear to me and I happened to know (and probably personally met) at least two of the victims who were head shot dead.  I had bumps the first time I catched the news in TV Patrol World.  The sight of the tellers cage, the branch’s back door, etc. 

I practically spent (and enjoyed life) a number of years as a bank auditor.  Hence, I vividly remember the set up at the branches.  I knew how it was like in and out, its flaws and strengths, the beauty and challenge of a banker’s life, and many other things that made my reasoning in this field worthwhile.  It is now that I think how effective and verifiable were the Team’s recommendations on an untoward incident that a bank may face.

My dear bank has taken all the necessary preacutions and contingency planning for the branch in particular.  But it is at this point that I can see my auditee/s arguing with me (and finally proven his point) that whatever precaution has been placed – alarms, closed circuit cameras, insurance, training, etc. , there would always be occurrences that are beyond the branch personnel’s control.  I always insisted on mitigating controls.  But, what the heck can I recommend more when the roberry is perfectly planned!  Whether it was an inside job or not, it is too good to be true for the robbers to have known how to get rid off the closed circuit televisions and alarms automatically linked to police stations, etc.  Knock, knock, mitigating controls.  What about? and not who.  Too good as an execution, to horrible to kill someone, to unhuman to take the lives of all the branch personnel and a depositor’s representative.

A special audit related to this would be (is being) conducted soon.  I just can imagine what my friends cum seasoned auditors previous officemates are going through right now.  Not to mention the eerie environment that the branch has.  That is absolutely surpassing my Cotabato branch assignment in 2003 – each waking moment then I thanked God more that there were no bullets that came our way.  Well, that’s another story.

Scary, it is.  All branch personnel (plus a depositor’s representative), head shot dead.  What a morbid revamp.  I am hoping that justice would grace the scenario soon.  Let’s pray for the victims and their beloved families to be at their strongest and most forgiving state (though it is in its most impossible stage right now).   It would be unbearable to shiver during cash count and audit fieldwork sooner or later as the auditors see and feel traces of them.  Lucky you if you don’t have a third eye.   Scary.

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I took the CIA exams in November 2005 and incidentally a Filipino (Duchess) topped the exams worldwide.  Duchess was my sectionmate/classmate during the CIA review held in PLDT Towers during saturdays.  Aside from her, my sectionmates that time included the Internal Audit Head of GMA Network, a Finance Officer from ABS CBN, department heads from different private and government institutions in the Philippines, etc.  As I recall now, I was among the younger reviewees in our block.

Duchess is 3rd from left.

My review then (and exams package actually) was company sponsored, together with my other previous officemates.  It was much fun going back to school every saturdays, though I was absent for  four consecutive weeks when I was assigned for work in Naga and Tabaco (in Bicol) the whole month of August.  Our facilitators/lecturers were all dedicated, and I will never forget when the facilitator for Part 1 said, “To be an internal auditor is a calling”.  That day a lot of realizations came.

I also enjoyed the lectures as the elder/seasoned reviewees shared their views in some points.  It was funny when our classmates from ABS CBN and GMA Network would kid on some stuff, including the rivalry on primetime shows.  Until we had our mock exams and the actual exams in RCBC Plaza.  I was in an-out-of-town assignment again when the results were released in last week of January 2006.  My heart was stumping when my result was sent through fax.  Gladly, I made it.

It was during the testimonial dinner at the Intercon that I met my review classmates again.  A few of them I am still in close touch till now and we even became friends.

Until I decided to take CFSA exams in November 2007 and I was already in my second day here in Abu Dhabi when the results were announced.  The scanned copy of my result was emailed to me and gladly I cleared it.  Again, a Filipino topped the exams worldwide.

It is interesting to note that coincidentally or not, the first names of the Filipino topnotchers resemble or are associated with royal origin:

Ryan (of Gaelic origin, and its meaning is “King”)

Duke (of Old German and Old English origin, and it is a title of nobility, along the lines of Earl and Duke)

Duchess (female title of nobility)

Elisheba (“Princess” in the early biblical days)

Yesterday, an article titled “Filipinos on Top of the World” appeared in Philippine Daily Inquirer.  There is no copy in the online version of Inquirer.  But a copy is preserved in here, site of and writer of the Article, Ms. Edel Mary D. Vegamora, CIA Country Coordinator in the Philippines.

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