Filipinos enter 2024 full of hope and resilience

Optimism was high across the country following a recession induced by the COVID-19 pandemic in mid-2021. (File/Reuters)
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Updated 31 December 2023
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Filipinos enter 2024 full of hope and resilience

  • 96% of adult population look forward to new year with confidence, survey shows
  • Philippine economy grew by 5.9% in third quarter of 2023, outperforming neighbors

MANILA: As 2023 comes to an end, Filipinos are welcoming the new year full of hope, a national survey has shown.

In face-to-face interviews of 1,200 adults between Dec. 8-11, pollster Social Weather Stations found that 96 percent of Filipinos are entering 2024 with hope rather than fear.
Optimism was high across the country following a recession induced by the COVID-19 pandemic in mid-2021. The Philippine national economy grew by 5.9 percent in the third quarter of this year, outperforming other major emerging economies in the region during the period.
Filipinos are “by nature happy people, hopeful and resilient,” said Resty Aguilar, a retired government official.
But the economic recovery has also driven optimism in the Southeast Asian country, he said.
“I think Filipinos are hopeful because we just came out of the pandemic and … economic activity has already improved compared with the past year,” Aguilar told Arab News.
“No matter how difficult the situation is, we will always stand up and move forward again. Filipinos are also happy people. Despite a very sad situation, even during the pandemic, Filipinos still find a way to be happy and make others laugh.”
The population was “in the dark” during the COVID-19 pandemic, but now people are starting to have “real fun again,” journalist John Eric Mendoza told Arab News.
“I think that’s the general sentiment overall; there’s a sense of optimism among the people.”
The past year was a good one for the 25-year-old, and he is optimistic about what the next 12 months will bring.
“My life is in order, so I would love for this to continue, also for our economic recovery … I’m very optimistic because all of the signs point out that it will be a better year next year.”
Jenny Salvador, an employee at a Korean restaurant in Quezon City, is looking forward to a work upgrade in 2024.
“I am already up for a promotion. My manager has already talked to me about my promotion this January,” she told Arab News. “I’m very optimistic that 2024 will be a good year.”
Jonathan Medijo, a security guard who also works in Quezon City, said: “I hope we will be given blessings. I only want a happy life for my family.”
As for taxi driver Mang Oca, who lives in Antipolo, east of Manila, health was top of his mind.
“I hope that there will be no more disease like the COVID-19 and that my family will always be healthy,” he said. “I hope that there will be more blessings for my family. Life is tough, that’s a fact, but I never lose hope.”


US envoy says Trump questioning why Iran has not ‘capitulated’

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US envoy says Trump questioning why Iran has not ‘capitulated’

  • US envoy Steve Witkoff said on Saturday that President Donald Trump is questioning why Iran has not “capitulated” in the face of Washington’s military build-up
WASHINGTON: US envoy Steve Witkoff said on Saturday that President Donald Trump is questioning why Iran has not “capitulated” in the face of Washington’s military build-up aimed at pressuring them into a nuclear deal.
The United States and Iran this week resumed Oman-mediated talks in Geneva aimed at averting the possibility of military action, after Washington dispatched two aircraft carriers, jets and weaponry to the region to back its warnings.
In a Fox News interview with Trump’s daughter-in-law Lara, Witkoff said the president was “curious” about Iran’s position after he had warned them of severe consequences in the event they failed to strike a deal.
“I don’t want to use the word ‘frustrated,’ because he understands he has plenty of alternatives, but he’s curious as to why they haven’t... I don’t want to use the word ‘capitulated,’ but why they haven’t capitulated,” he said.
“Why, under this pressure, with the amount of seapower and naval power over there, why haven’t they come to us and said, ‘We profess we don’t want a weapon, so here’s what we’re prepared to do’? And yet it’s sort of hard to get them to that place.”
The US envoy also confirmed in the interview that he had met with Reza Pahlavi, who has not returned to Iran since before the 1979 Islamic Revolution that ousted the monarchy.
“I met him at the direction of the president,” he said, without providing further details.
US-based Pahlavi last week told a crowd in Munich that he was ready to lead the country to a “secular democratic future” after Trump said regime change would be best for the country.
Witkoff’s comments come after Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said a draft proposal for an agreement with Washington would be ready in a matter of days.
Trump said on Thursday that Iran had at most 15 days to make a deal on concerns starting with its nuclear program.
As talks between the two nations continued in Geneva, Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Tuesday said that Trump would not succeed in destroying the Islamic republic.
Western countries accuse the Islamic Republic of seeking to acquire nuclear weapons, which Tehran denies, though it insists on its right to enrichment for civilian purposes.
Iran, for its part, is seeking to negotiate an end to sanctions that have proven to be a massive drag on its economy, which played a role in sparking anti-government protests in December.