Thursday, December 7, 2017

Indonesian ride-hailing firm Go-Jek to expand to Philippines in 2018

SINGAPORE — Indonesia motorbike-hailing startup Go-Jek plans to set up operations in the Philippines in early 2018, with other Southeast Asian countries to follow later that year, the company’s chief technology officer said on Thursday.

Go-Jek, backed by private equity firms KKR & Co. LP and Warburg Pincus LLC, competes with Uber Technologies and Singapore-based Grab to lure customers in the Southeast Asian market, home to 600 million people.

Ajey Gore said in an interview that “almost all Southeast Asian countries are on the radar over the next three, six to 12 months. The Philippines will be the first one just to figure out how things work.”

He declined to identify which other countries it would launch in next. Apart from Indonesia and the Philippines, Southeast Asia comprises Malaysia, Singapore, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia, Brunei, East Timor and Myanmar.

Gore declined to comment on reports about funding and whether the company had any plans for an IPO. The company is also backed by venture capitalist Sequoia Capital and recently raised funds from Chinese giants JD.com and Tencent Holdings Ltd.

Gore said his team would test some of Go-Jek’s core services such as transportation and then payments, “just to pilot it, learn from mistakes.” It would be the company’s first such operation overseas, he said.

Key concerns were to test whether the company’s data and systems applied elsewhere: in Indonesia, for example, motorcycles were more expensive than some cars because they could weave through traffic, making journeys faster, he said.

He said the company was also planning to roll out new services soon, including installing charging stations in retail outlets that users can access through their app. The company also plans to launch a laundry pick-up and delivery service.
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Alvarez: Sereno impeachment a constitutional, not political, process

MANILA, Philippines – What politics?

Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez on Thursday, December 7, insisted that the impeachment case against Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno is a constitutional more than a political process.

“For me it is a constitutional process. Because it’s part of the checks and balances between the executive, legislative, and judiciary,” said Alvarez in an interview with Pinky Webb on CNN Philippines.

Alvarez was asked about the ongoing impeachment hearing on a complaint filed against Sereno by lawyer Larry Gadon. The committee on justice, tasked to process impeachment complaints, has been holding hearings to determine probable cause.

Speaking to Webb, Alvarez said it was Sereno’s duty to stand before the committee, a chance which she had turned down, thus far. Sereno had wanted her lawyers to represent her before the committee, but it barred her counsels from participating in proceedings.

“You but have that obligation, because when you took your oath of office, you said, you swore to defend and protect the Constitution and the laws of the Republic of the Philippines,” said Alvarez, quoting another Supreme Court justice, Noel Tijam, who is set to be a witness in the impeachment hearings.

Alvarez also said it was “unfair” for Sereno to think that committee members had already “pre-judged” her.

“That’s an unfair statement. You know why? Because if we had pre-judgment, we should have pushed the impeachment case right away,” said Alvarez, who previously said that the case must be fleshed out at the House before it is brought up to the Senate.

Alvarez said this is because he does not want a repeat of the “unfair” impeachment of the late chief justice Renato Corona. Under House rules, an impeachment case immediately reaches plenary if it is endorsed by at least one-third of the House.

The Gadon complaint had 25 signatories.

In a press conference on December 6, Alvarez had also defended the House justice committee, saying it was out merely to find the truth in the impeachment complaint. He also said that so far, the hearings show that Sereno’s denials have no basis.

The committee is expected to vote on probable cause by January 2018. It will forward the committee report – on whether to reject the complaint or impeach Sereno – to the plenary shortly after. If one-third of the House accept a report proposing Sereno’s impeachment, she will be deemed impeached.

The Senate will then convene as an impeachment court.
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