MANILA — The Philippines and Qatar have inked a memorandum of understanding (MOU) aimed at bolstering their ties in tourism and business events.

Tourism Secretary Christina Frasco and Qatar’s State Minister for Foreign Affairs, H.E. Soltan bin Saad Al-Muraikhi, sealed the agreement in the presence of President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. and Qatar Amir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani at Manila’s Malacañang Palace.

The signing, which took place during Qatar Amir’s state visit, marks a significant step toward enhancing collaboration between the two nations.

Frasco hailed the MOU as a gateway to abundant growth opportunities, emphasizing the shared commitment to showcasing the richness of Filipino culture, heritage, and identity to the world. The agreement underscores efforts to boost tourist arrivals in both countries.

Moreover, it outlines plans to stimulate tourism investments, facilitate media and tourism expert familiarization visits, and enhance the skills of tourism operators, employees, and specialists through targeted seminars and training programs.

Recent data from the Department of Tourism (DOT) indicates a notable influx of visitors from Qatar, with 10,438 arrivals recorded in 2023 and 3,784 from January to April 2024.

In the realm of business events, the MOU sets forth strategies to promote exhibitions and conferences that appeal to tourists, foster collaboration among relevant organizing agencies, and facilitate knowledge exchange in event management. A joint working team will be established to oversee the implementation of the agreement’s provisions and evaluate its progress.

Frasco highlighted the DOT’s efforts to enhance Muslim-friendly and halal tourism offerings, a move that aligns with the country’s recognition as the Emerging Muslim-friendly Destination of the Year at the Halal in Travel Global Summit 2023.

With the MOU paving the way for deeper cooperation, both the Philippines and Qatar are poised to unlock new avenues for mutual growth and prosperity in the tourism sector.

(el Amigo/MNM)

HANGZHOU — A gauntlet has been laid down for Gilas Pilipinas to run through, with its fate in the 19th Asian Games hinged on one crucial qualification game, that is, against Qatar on Monday, October 2.

At stake is a spot in the quarterfinals of the men’s basketball competition where powerhouse Iran awaits.

A victory in the round of 8 would then give Gilas a shot at a podium finish against host China.

Revenge will be in the air, if the Philippines and China do meet in the semifinals, with the hometown crowd expected to turn up in huge numbers to demand payback for Gilas’ 96-75 rout of the Chinese team — behind Jordan Clarkson’s 34-point blast — in the FIBA Basketball World Cup classification at the SM Mall of Asia Arena last September 4.

The do-or-die game with the Qataris is slated at 4. p.m. at the Zhegiang University Zijingang Gymnasium, where the Philippines turned back Thailand and Tyler Lamb, 87-72, last Thursday, September 28.

Qatar knocked out Indonesia from quarterfinal contention in the Group Phase, 74-67, on Saturday, September 30, hours before Gilas absorbed an 87-62 setback to Jordan and NBA journeyman Rondae Hollis-Jefferson at the Hangzhou Olympic Sports Center.

The Nationals had the Jordanians in the ropes for a brief moment late in the third quarter, 52-all, but let them slip away with a 13-0 run going to the fourth, letting loose as well an outright quarterfinal berth where Gilas would have sidestepped Iran.

But these are the cards dealt to the Philippine team now, and the deck it has to play with. Based on Qatar’s preliminary round game against Indonesia, Gilas will need to look out for at least three licensed Qatari shooters — Abdullah Mousa, Babakar Dieng, and Khaled Abdelbaset — who launched 19 of their team’s 25 three-point attempts.

The squad from the Gulf Region also has ferocious rebounders in Nedim Muslic, El Hadji Ndoye, and Faris Advic, with Qatar’s combined 54 rebounds crushing Indonesia’s 32 total under the boards.

With their height and build, the Qataris appear to be more comfortable working inside the perimeter, taking 43 of their 68 field goal tries from within the arc. Indonesia, in contrast, took 30 of its 57 shots from beyond the 3-point line, hitting 12. Qatar was 6 of 25 from afar.

Defensively, the Nationals may not have to worry as much in the containment of a Hollis-Jefferson (25 pts, 9 rebs), a Fadi Ibrahim (17 pts, 3 of 7 threes), or a Sami Bzai (12 pts, 3 of 6 3s), all of whom delivered firepower for Jordan.

But they have to coax out of self-imposed cells Calvin Oftana, who was 0 of 7 from the field and scoreless in 28:48 minutes, CJ Perez (2 of 9 in 19:57), Japeth Aguilar (4 of 10 in 28:03) and Ange Kouame (2 of 6 in 10:27).

Even Justin Brownlee, who played without relief save for less than two minutes, was anything but a hot hand, scoring 24 points on 8 of 22 shooting, including 2 of 10 from long distance.

He and Scottie Thompson were the only Gilas players in double figures as the Nationals shot just 24 of 72 (33 percent), clanging all but 4 of 24 3-point attempts.

Quarterfinalist Jordan, meanwhile, will be gunning for a semifinal berth on Tuesday, October 3, against the winner of Monday’s qualification game between Saudi Arabia and Hong Kong.

China, Japan, Iran, and Jordan have all booked slots in the quarterfinals. (ai/mnm)