Philippine President Marcos rejects sister’s accusation of chronic drug use

At a time when the country is rife with widespread demonstrations against corruption, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., his estranged sister Senator Imee Marcos, has refuted claims that he has used drugs for a long time.

The senator claimed on Monday that her brother had a cocaine addiction that had impacted his rule and sloppy decision-making.

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The president’s spokesperson, communications undersecretary Claire Castro, dismissed the allegations as being unfounded and described them as repeat accusations that have been refuted for a long time.

Senator Imee told a sizable crowd at a religious organization’s rally in Manila that her brother’s drug use began during Ferdinand Marcos Sr’s presidency, which lasted from 1965 to 1986, and continues to this day.

On August 21, 2018, Jay Rommel Labra, R-President, and Ilocos Norte Governor Imee Marcos speak during a meeting on Cebu Island, Philippines.

Without providing evidence, she claimed that the president’s addiction contributed to a “flood of corruption, the lack of direction, and very wrong decisions, as well as the absence of accountability and justice.” She also claimed that the president’s wife and kids were drug users.

Castro criticized the senator for not speaking out against former president Rodrigo Duterte, who has acknowledged past use of fentanyl and who, in the eyes of some, may be connected to corruption along with his daughter, Vice President Sara Duterte. Both parties have denied any wrongdoing.

His campaign manager released reports from a private hospital and the national police laboratory that showed Marcos Jr. had a cocaine and methamphetamine test negative results when he was running for president in 2021.

allegations made in connection with the corruption scandal

Imee’s statements have been disregarded by Castro as a distraction from ongoing inquiries into a corruption scandal involving flood control projects that might involve some of her Senate allies.

Sen. Imee, I congratulate you on helping with the investigation your own brother has been conducting, and condemn all those who are corrupt, Castro said. Don’t support or conceal them. Let President Marcos put an end to corruption.

The Marcos administration is looking into allegations of corruption related to phony flood control initiatives that have cost taxpayers billions of pesos. Officials are accused of pocketing payments from contracts to build tens of thousands of flood defenses, many of which were never constructed or were constructed in poor quality.

According to the Department of Finance, corruption in flood control projects will cause the Philippine economy to lose up to 118.5 billion pesos ($2 billion) between 2023 and 2025. According to the nation’s minister of economic planning, up to 70% of the public’s flood control funds may have been lost since the scandal emerged.

The Philippines has experienced more than 20 storms this year, which adds to the crisis. Typhoon Fung-wong, which displaced 1.4 million people and killed 28 others, was most recently responsible for the deaths of at least 269 people in early November, according to Typhoon Kalmaegi.

On Sunday, tens of thousands of protesters gathered in Manila to demand accountability from the government, including Marcos’ allies. Hunderts of thousands of people showed up for the three-day rally organized by the influential Philippine religious group Iglesia ni Cristo (INC), which disrupted offices, roads, and schools.

By the end of the year, Marcos has promised that the scandal’s officials would be subject to legal action. There won’t be a happy Christmas for them, he declared.

In 2022, the INC had supported Marcos and Sara Duterte’s candidacies. The INC has since switched its support to Duterte, the vice president, following a disagreement between Marcos and Sara Duterte.

Nearly 100 days after the inquiry began, no notable arrests have been made despite the formation of a panel to look into alleged corruption. The crackdown was seen by Marcos as part of a wider effort for accountability and transparency, which his father’s father was accused of having experienced.

LeBron Back In Training, Edges Closer To Lakers Return

After successfully completing a full practice session with the Los Angeles Lakers on Monday, LeBron James made a significant recovery from an injury.

The 40-year-old has missed the first few weeks of a season for the first time in the NBA icon’s career because he was diagnosed with sciatica last month and has been laid low for it all.

However, the veteran star is considering returning when the Lakers take on the Utah Jazz at home on Tuesday after a five-on-five practice at the team’s training facility on Monday.

James stated to the media that his recovery from Monday’s practice would determine his schedule.

Throughout the entire process, James remarked, “We’ve been taking it literally one minute, one hour, one step at a time.”

“So, check my mood this afternoon and tonight. We’ll likely have a shootaround when I wake up in the morning. So, we just need to see how the body reacts over the next 24 hours or so.

JJ Redick, the head coach for the Lakers, described James’ status as “TBD” for Tuesday’s game as “TBD,” but he added that his resumption of training was similar to signing “a new player.”

In a 109-108 win over the Spurs, Curry’s 49 points propel the Warriors.

It was great to have him join the group; this was the first time this season that all 14 players had players available for practice, Redick said. “Good to see the group coming back together,” she said.

The coach said, “We’ve got to see how he responds to today, and how he feels tomorrow morning,” and that “I know he’s itching to play, and itching to return.

James, in contrast, acknowledged that missing the campaign’s opening weeks had been difficult for him to accept.

He said, “It definitely stinks.” Never have I not begun the season in my life since I first started playing the game.

“I’ve had a lot of work trying to get myself ready to rejoin the team, but I’m built for it and am mentally and physically ready for it.”

The Lakers are fourth in the Western Conference standings with a 10-4 start to the season.

Cowboys honour Kneeland before win against Raiders

Images courtesy of Getty

Before their 33-16 victory over the Las Vegas Raiders, the Dallas Cowboys paid tribute to Marshawn Kneeland with a number of tributes.

The 24-year-old was found dead earlier this month after fleeing his car on foot after a collision that occurred as he was being pursued by police.

The defensive lineman appeared to have committed suicide, according to the Texas police department in Frisco.

The Raiders’ first game since Kneeland’s death was the Monday Night Football game, which the Cowboys won after a bye in NFL Week 10 against the Raiders.

    • November 7
    • November 6th
    • 17 hours ago

Kneeland’s jersey number 94 was displayed in a locker the Cowboys prepared in the dressing room.

The Cowboys’ second-round pick for the 2024 draft made 18 starts and eight starts.

In homage to Kneeland’s famous phrase, Quarterback Dak Prescott wore a “One Love” wristband, whose brother Jace committed suicide in 2020.

There is no better peace than playing football on this field, Prescott said, and I am aware that many other men are doing the same.

“It was a blessing to be here; this is where I can heal,” said the doctor. We are blessed to continue Marshawn’s light for him, and we love him dearly.

The Cowboys won their fourth game of the campaign with four touchdowns under Prescott.

The 32-year-old quickly struck CeeDee Lamb, Jake Ferguson, and George Pickens to give the visitors a 214-6 lead before hitting Ryan Flournoy for his final connection.

The Raiders are bottom of the AFC West while the Cowboys are in front of the Philadelphia Eagles in the NFC East.

Jake FergusonImages courtesy of Getty
A pre-game tribute to Marshawn KneelandImages courtesy of Getty

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Was Ferrari chairman unfair to Hamilton and Leclerc? – F1 Q&A

BBC Sport
  • 141 Comments

The 2025 Formula 1 season is heading for a hectic climax with three races on successive weekends to decide the winner of the drivers’ championship.

Lando Norris has a commanding 24-point lead over McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri heading into the Las Vegas Grand Prix, which takes place under the lights on the Strip at 04:00 GMT on Sunday.

That is followed by grands prix in Qatar, from 28-30 November, and then Abu Dhabi, from 5-7 December.

Are Ferrari chair John Elkann’s comments that Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc need to concentrate “on driving and talk less” after their poor results this season unfair? – Jordan

John Elkann certainly caused a stir with his remarks the day after the Sao Paulo Grand Prix.

It’s not clear what exactly provoked them, as Ferrari did not say.

But given they came less than 24 hours after Hamilton had said that his run of results in his first season at Ferrari were “a nightmare, and I have been living it for a while”, it would not be unreasonable to suppose the seven-time champion might have been in Elkann’s mind.

As far as Hamilton goes, this is typical of the sort of emotional remark he makes when he has had a disappointing race.

Remember when he said after Hungarian Grand Prix qualifying that he was “just useless” and “drove terribly” and Ferrari “probably need to change driver”?

He didn’t mean that then, not really. And Brazil should be seen in that context.

After all, Hamilton went on to say: “I believe there is something extraordinary up ahead in my life and in my destiny. I truly still believe in this team and what we can achieve together.”

Which is, one might think, exactly the sort of message Elkann would want to hear.

The issue many people had with Elkann’s comments was that their accuracy was questionable.

He singled out the mechanics for praise for “basically winning the championship with their performance and everything that has been done on the pit stops”, on the basis they are leading the rankings for average pit-stop time.

Fair enough, but then he said: “If we look at our engineers, there’s no doubt that the car has improved.”

Well, perhaps it has. But not relative to the opposition. Ferrari were 0.372 seconds off the pace on average in qualifying in the first half of the season, and so far in the second they are 0.472secs off.

As for the drivers, yes, Hamilton has been through the mill this year, but his performances have improved over the season, even if Brazil was a difficult race for him.

But Leclerc has been outstanding. And while he has pointed out regularly that the car is not quick enough, no-one would disagree with that, not even Elkann.

Ferrari are in F1 to win. Nothing less is good enough. That’s just a fact. And Leclerc has been steadfastly loyal to the team.

The grid seems to be as close in performance as I have ever seen. Has F1 succeeded in creating a situation where each driver’s performance over a weekend is a bigger differentiator than in the past, and does the upcoming regulation change threaten this balance? – Matt

It stands to reason that if the cars are closer in performance, then the driver would make more of a difference.

Whether that is more a factor now than at any other time is a difficult question to answer because there are a lot of aspects of F1 now that work in some ways to reduce the difference between drivers.

Telemetry, for example, allows drivers who are not as naturally able to find the limit a chance to catch up over a weekend.

You could see this, for example, at Alpine when Fernando Alonso partnered Esteban Ocon.

At the start of a weekend, Alonso would typically be considerably quicker than Ocon, who would inch closer with each session until he was competitive in qualifying and sometimes able to beat him.

Something else to factor in is that many would argue that the depth of talent at the top of F1 right now is as good as it has ever been, if not better.

In Hamilton, Max Verstappen and Alonso, there are three drivers who would be on anyone’s list of all-time greats.

In addition, Lando Norris, Oscar Piastri, George Russell and Leclerc are all exceptional, without question.

That’s at least seven world-class drivers in F1 at the same time.

Any major regulation change inevitably increases both the gaps between teams, and the risk that one team will steal a march on the rest of the field, as happened in 2022 with Red Bull and 2014 with Mercedes.

Lando Norris leads the field towards the first corner of the Sao Paulo Grand PrixGetty Images

As the season nears the end, the rookies are increasingly showing their talent. Is there an argument to allow more testing in current cars for new drivers than the current regulations offer? Oliver Bearman, Kimi Antonelli and Isack Hadjar really look settled and in a good place. – Chris

Well, you could argue that there is no need to change the testing regulations as Antonelli, Bearman and Hadjar have all proved their talent without the need for it!

There is no appetite in F1 to increase testing allowances. Testing is expensive.

Having said that, there is an acceptance that rookie drivers could do with more opportunities to experience F1.

That’s why the rules were changed this year to force teams to run rookies in two sessions per car – a total of four for the season.

And it’s why teams have started running young drivers in cars from previous years – so called testing of previous cars (TPC) and testing of historic cars (THC).

Las Vegas Grand Prix

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Full coverage guide

Are Aston Martin the team to watch next season with Adrian Newey in charge of the design of next year’s car? – Ian

The truth is no-one knows what the competitive order will be next year, and no-one will know until the first race of the season.

Newey has a strong record when it comes to regulation changes. He aced the ones in 1998 with McLaren, 2009 with Red Bull (once the controversial advantage of Brawn’s double diffuser had been neutralised), and in 2022 with Red Bull again.

In 1998, he had officially joined McLaren only in September of the previous year. With Aston Martin, he has had six more months than that, albeit F1 is a lot more complex now.

Of course, the whole of F1 is waiting with interest to see how Newey gets on with Aston Martin.

On the engine side, Honda, which will become sole factory partner to Aston Martin, clearly knows what it’s doing.

Aston Martin’s lead driver is pretty handy, as well.

But success in F1 tends to come from stability. And stable is the last thing Aston Martin have been in recent years.

There have been a dizzying number staff changes at senior levels, and they are continuing to this day.

A new leadership structure has to bed down. Andy Cowell has only been chief executive officer for a little over a year, and Newey did not join until March this year.

Enrico Cardile was signed from Ferrari in July 2024, but took on his role as chief technical officer only in August.

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  • Formula 1

Was Ferrari chairman unfair to Hamilton and Leclerc? – F1 Q&A

BBC Sport
  • 141 Comments

The 2025 Formula 1 season is heading for a hectic climax with three races on successive weekends to decide the winner of the drivers’ championship.

Lando Norris has a commanding 24-point lead over McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri heading into the Las Vegas Grand Prix, which takes place under the lights on the Strip at 04:00 GMT on Sunday.

That is followed by grands prix in Qatar, from 28-30 November, and then Abu Dhabi, from 5-7 December.

Are Ferrari chair John Elkann’s comments that Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc need to concentrate “on driving and talk less” after their poor results this season unfair? – Jordan

John Elkann certainly caused a stir with his remarks the day after the Sao Paulo Grand Prix.

It’s not clear what exactly provoked them, as Ferrari did not say.

But given they came less than 24 hours after Hamilton had said that his run of results in his first season at Ferrari were “a nightmare, and I have been living it for a while”, it would not be unreasonable to suppose the seven-time champion might have been in Elkann’s mind.

As far as Hamilton goes, this is typical of the sort of emotional remark he makes when he has had a disappointing race.

Remember when he said after Hungarian Grand Prix qualifying that he was “just useless” and “drove terribly” and Ferrari “probably need to change driver”?

He didn’t mean that then, not really. And Brazil should be seen in that context.

After all, Hamilton went on to say: “I believe there is something extraordinary up ahead in my life and in my destiny. I truly still believe in this team and what we can achieve together.”

Which is, one might think, exactly the sort of message Elkann would want to hear.

The issue many people had with Elkann’s comments was that their accuracy was questionable.

He singled out the mechanics for praise for “basically winning the championship with their performance and everything that has been done on the pit stops”, on the basis they are leading the rankings for average pit-stop time.

Fair enough, but then he said: “If we look at our engineers, there’s no doubt that the car has improved.”

Well, perhaps it has. But not relative to the opposition. Ferrari were 0.372 seconds off the pace on average in qualifying in the first half of the season, and so far in the second they are 0.472secs off.

As for the drivers, yes, Hamilton has been through the mill this year, but his performances have improved over the season, even if Brazil was a difficult race for him.

But Leclerc has been outstanding. And while he has pointed out regularly that the car is not quick enough, no-one would disagree with that, not even Elkann.

Ferrari are in F1 to win. Nothing less is good enough. That’s just a fact. And Leclerc has been steadfastly loyal to the team.

The grid seems to be as close in performance as I have ever seen. Has F1 succeeded in creating a situation where each driver’s performance over a weekend is a bigger differentiator than in the past, and does the upcoming regulation change threaten this balance? – Matt

It stands to reason that if the cars are closer in performance, then the driver would make more of a difference.

Whether that is more a factor now than at any other time is a difficult question to answer because there are a lot of aspects of F1 now that work in some ways to reduce the difference between drivers.

Telemetry, for example, allows drivers who are not as naturally able to find the limit a chance to catch up over a weekend.

You could see this, for example, at Alpine when Fernando Alonso partnered Esteban Ocon.

At the start of a weekend, Alonso would typically be considerably quicker than Ocon, who would inch closer with each session until he was competitive in qualifying and sometimes able to beat him.

Something else to factor in is that many would argue that the depth of talent at the top of F1 right now is as good as it has ever been, if not better.

In Hamilton, Max Verstappen and Alonso, there are three drivers who would be on anyone’s list of all-time greats.

In addition, Lando Norris, Oscar Piastri, George Russell and Leclerc are all exceptional, without question.

That’s at least seven world-class drivers in F1 at the same time.

Any major regulation change inevitably increases both the gaps between teams, and the risk that one team will steal a march on the rest of the field, as happened in 2022 with Red Bull and 2014 with Mercedes.

Lando Norris leads the field towards the first corner of the Sao Paulo Grand PrixGetty Images

As the season nears the end, the rookies are increasingly showing their talent. Is there an argument to allow more testing in current cars for new drivers than the current regulations offer? Oliver Bearman, Kimi Antonelli and Isack Hadjar really look settled and in a good place. – Chris

Well, you could argue that there is no need to change the testing regulations as Antonelli, Bearman and Hadjar have all proved their talent without the need for it!

There is no appetite in F1 to increase testing allowances. Testing is expensive.

Having said that, there is an acceptance that rookie drivers could do with more opportunities to experience F1.

That’s why the rules were changed this year to force teams to run rookies in two sessions per car – a total of four for the season.

And it’s why teams have started running young drivers in cars from previous years – so called testing of previous cars (TPC) and testing of historic cars (THC).

Las Vegas Grand Prix

Listen on Sounds
Full coverage guide

Are Aston Martin the team to watch next season with Adrian Newey in charge of the design of next year’s car? – Ian

The truth is no-one knows what the competitive order will be next year, and no-one will know until the first race of the season.

Newey has a strong record when it comes to regulation changes. He aced the ones in 1998 with McLaren, 2009 with Red Bull (once the controversial advantage of Brawn’s double diffuser had been neutralised), and in 2022 with Red Bull again.

In 1998, he had officially joined McLaren only in September of the previous year. With Aston Martin, he has had six more months than that, albeit F1 is a lot more complex now.

Of course, the whole of F1 is waiting with interest to see how Newey gets on with Aston Martin.

On the engine side, Honda, which will become sole factory partner to Aston Martin, clearly knows what it’s doing.

Aston Martin’s lead driver is pretty handy, as well.

But success in F1 tends to come from stability. And stable is the last thing Aston Martin have been in recent years.

There have been a dizzying number staff changes at senior levels, and they are continuing to this day.

A new leadership structure has to bed down. Andy Cowell has only been chief executive officer for a little over a year, and Newey did not join until March this year.

Enrico Cardile was signed from Ferrari in July 2024, but took on his role as chief technical officer only in August.

Get in touch

Related topics

  • Formula 1

China Vows To ‘Protect Safety Of Foreigners’ Amid Japan Row

After Tokyo warned Japanese visitors to be cautious in the country amid a diplomatic row, Beijing on Tuesday pledged to “protect the safety” of foreigners in China.

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s suggestion that Tokyo might engage in military action in any attack on Taiwan sparked the conflict.

China, which claims Taiwan as a part of its territory and has no intention of removing its democratic island with force, was furious at Takaichi’s comments.

Read more about Japan’s warning about safety amid the Taiwan row.

Foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning responded to a question about the law-enforcement warning to Japanese visitors.

The comments were made as Masaaki Kanai, the top official in Japan’s foreign ministry for Asia-Pacific affairs, and Liu Jinsong, the country’s top foreign minister, discussed Takaichi’s remarks in Beijing.

Mao claimed that during the discussions, Beijing and Tokyo had reiterated their “strong protest.”

China again lodged a strong protest against Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s erroneous remarks about China during the consultations, according to Mao.

Mao added that Tahiti’s statements “fundamentally damage the political foundation of China-Japan relations” and that “takaichi’s fallacies seriously violate international law and the fundamental standards governing international relations.”

After the talks with Liu shortly before 2:00 pm (0600 GMT), Kanai left Beijing’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.