
DITO welcomes probe, says issue of ‘illegal' Chinese workers ‘rehashed'
DITO Telecommunity Corporation on Wednesday broke its silence on the allegations that it employs 400 Chinese nationals without proper working visas, saying it welcomes the probe into what it called a 'rehashed' issue.
'Firstly, DITO welcomes the investigation of the DICT on the allegations that Chinese employees or partners of DITO are involved in spying,' the telco said.
DITO Tel issued the statement after the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) announced it is launching an investigation into columnist Ramon Tulfo's claim that the company was allegedly employing Chinese nationals who 'have over-extended their tourist visas.'
The post said the 400 allegedly 'overstaying' Chinese might be endangering national security as they work for a telecom company.
'We are confident that this investigation will once again affirm the findings of the joint Audit of the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT), National Security Commission (NSC), National Telecommunications Commission (NTC), conducted recently on April 8, 2025, which stated clearly that DITO has passed the Government standards for cybersecurity and has safeguarded its network facilities and information assets by establishing a robust security system and infrastructure,' DITO Tel said.
'In fact, DITO undergoes periodic cybersecurity audits as a requirement of its franchise and as a critical infrastructure under the Public Service Act,' the telco said, adding that the post-audit report of the recent joint audit of the DICT, NSC and NTC are valid until April 2027.
The telco further said that 'these allegations, and the questions on the legal status of non-Filipinos working at DITO, are not new to DITO.'
'We have been plagued by similar allegations since we were awarded by NTC to operate as the New Major Player in 2018,' it said.
'In fact, we have already addressed these claims numerous times in our Congressional hearings for the renewal of our franchise in 2021, and in various media fora henceforth,' it added.
On the issue on visas, DITO Tel said it has always been fully compliant with all requirements for employment of foreign nationals.
The telco also emphasized that it has specifically chosen retired major general Rodolfo Santiago as chief technology officer in charge of Network, IT, and Data Security; retired colonel Roleen Del Prado as head of Cybersecurity; and retired colonel Romeo Basco as head of Corporate Security.
'These retired men in uniform have dedicated and committed their lives to protecting the sovereignty of our country and security of our people, and they are sworn to continue to do so in their work at DITO,' it said.
The telco added that 'despite these allegations being rehashed,' it has grown its subscribers to 15 million since its commercial launch in March 2021.
'Along with our over a thousand Filipino officers and staff of DITO, we take very seriously the trust given by our 15 million subscribers. We will always provide our customers with the best possible service, protect the privacy of their data, and will never allow our company to be used for any activity that would be detrimental to the interests of our country and its people,' it said.
DITO Tel is 60% owned by DITO CME Holdings Corp., a unit of Davao-based businessman Dennis Uy's conglomerate Udenna Group, while the remaining 40% is owned by state-owned China Telecommunications Corp.
DITO Tel was dubbed the 'third telco' in the country's telecommunications space as it was meant to disrupt the so-called duopoly of Globe and PLDT-Smart. — BM, GMA Integrated News
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

GMA Network
4 hours ago
- GMA Network
VP Sara Duterte back in PH after visit to Qatar, the Netherlands
Vice President Sara Duterte on Thursday returned to the Philippines after her recent visit to Qatar and the Netherlands. According to the Office of the Vice President, she arrived at Ninoy Aquino International Airport at around 7:40 p.m. 'The Vice President is expected to address relevant matters in the coming days,' the Office of the Vice President said in a statement. During her stay in the Netherlands, the Vice President visited her father, former president Rodrigo Duterte, who was arrested and brought to The Hague to face trial for alleged crimes against humanity in connection with his administration's war on drugs. The Vice President also attended several activities with the Filipino community during her stay in Qatar. She was impeached by the House of Representatives in February. However, the Senate postponed the reading of the impeachment complaints from June 2 to June 11. —Mariel Celine Serquiña/LDF, GMA Integrated News


GMA Network
7 hours ago
- GMA Network
Investment agency sees potential in PH coffee for Seattle market
SEATTLE – An economic development agency in Seattle—a city known for its vibrant coffee culture—sees great potential in specialty Philippine coffee entering its market. Rebecca Lovell, chief operating officer of the Greater Seattle Partners, a public-private partnership firm promoting investments and trade in the greater Seattle region, said the Filipinos' and the city's 'shared love for coffee' could pave the way for more active collaboration with local Filipino coffee producers. 'The cultural connections run deep,' Lovell told selected journalists from the Philippines and Japan on a reporting tour of the United States funded by the State Department. 'I'd love to explore more on how we can make connections around coffee.' Home to many coffee enthusiasts and the birthplace of the world's largest coffee shop chain, Starbucks, Seattle has an abundance of diverse and independent coffee houses across the city. Lovell said while the majority of Filipino-American-owned businesses, mostly in the food industry, over the years have significantly contributed to Seattle's 'traditional' economy, she also hopes to see greater penetration of Philippine coffee in the city in the future. 'There are some really, really incredible Filipino businesses here, and you see some of the richness of the food tradition. That's where, candidly, we would start to see more of a traditional economic impact,' Lovell said. Philippine trade officials in embassies in the US and Japan said in previous interviews that Arabica, a coffee variety that the Philippines produces from its highlands, including in the Sagada mountain municipality and Benguet province in the north and Mount Apo in the south, has been in demand, as well as the Barako coffee, a Liberica type of bean consumed locally and produced in Batangas and Cavite. However, they said that in order to meet the increasing demand, more plantations in the Philippines must be devoted to these types of coffee. Discussions with US and Japanese officials are ongoing to determine how various Philippine agricultural products, including coffee, can enter their market, they said. In terms of trade and investment, Lovell said the Philippines is Seattle's 17th trading partner, 14th in imports and 21st in exports. Seattle, which is fast becoming America's tech and aerospace hub, also has the ninth largest population of Filipinos and Filipino-Americans among cities in the US, according to Pew Research Center, with over 100,000. —VBL, GMA Integrated News


GMA Network
8 hours ago
- GMA Network
PSA: Rice inflation seen to average negative in 2025
At a press conference in Quezon City on Thursday, National Statistician Claire Dennis Mapa reported a sharper year-on-year deflation or 'negative inflation' in rice at -12.8% in May 2025 from -10.9% in April 2025. The retail price of the Philippines' staple food rice is expected to continue to go down, settling at a negative inflation rate for the whole of 2025, the Philippine Statistics Authority said on Thursday. At a press conference in Quezon City on Thursday, National Statistician Claire Dennis Mapa reported a sharper year-on-year deflation or 'negative inflation' in rice at -12.8% in May 2025 from -10.9% in April 2025. For the January to May period, rice inflation clocked in at -7.7%, according to the PSA chief. Last month also marked the 11th consecutive month of decline in rice's inflation print and the fifth month in a row that the rate of the staple's cost had been contracting. The trend of easing inflation for rice seen since August 2024 was consistent with the PSA's expectation that it will begin easing towards the second half of 2024 due to base effects, particularly when it began its uptrend in August 2023, as well as the impact of lower rice import tariff which took effect early July last year. 'The expectation is that it will continue to go down, definitely there are base effects. It will continue to be negative [inflation] for at least until August… but definitely the average for the whole year would be negative,' Mapa said. To illustrate the contraction in rice inflation seen last month, Mapa bared the year-on-year national average prices of regular, well-milled, and special rice varieties during the period. In particular, the following are the average prices of rice at the national level in May 2025: Regular milled: P43.19 per kilo from P51.11 per kilo in May 2024 Well-milled: P49.45 per kilo from P56.06 per kilo Special: P59.80 per kilo from P64.41 per kilo year-on-year The PSA chief also cited the government's ongoing P20 per kilo rice initiative aimed at easing the inflationary burden of those in the vulnerable sectors such as 4Ps beneficiaries, senior citizens, persons with disabilities, and single parents. 'The P20 rice is already coming in various outlets,' Mapa said. In a separate statement, the Department of Agriculture (DA) said it is 'expanding the reach of the P20 rice program and is studying a reduction in the suggested retail price (SRP) for imported rice—the national staple that dominates Filipino tables, especially among the poor.' The Department of Agriculture said that rice accounts for P9 of every P100 spent by the average Filipino. Among the bottom 30% of income households, the figure doubles. With the introduction of the P20 per kilo rice program in Bacolod City, the DA said the total number of outlets offering the subsidized grain grew to 87, exceeding the original target of 55 outlets by end-June. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has directed the DA to sustain the subsidized rice initiative through June 2028, to reach up to 60 million Filipinos. –NB, GMA Integrated News