Professional Documents
Culture Documents
LARAB
Copyright 2012 by Tudla Productions All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. The stories and facts in the LARAB 2012 are from the producers own coverage of news and events, interviews and research on the different stories that appeared in the book as well as from other sources cited in the references. The rights of the photographs published in the LARAB 2012 remain with their principals. Southern Voices Printing Press #7 P. Ocampo St., Brgy. Marilag Project 4, Quezon City Philippines First Printing, January 2013
Contributing Photographers
Ezra Acayan Hector Barretto Calma Demerie Dangla Jhun Dantes Shane David Leo Dilay Krystel Jen Dumapit Flor Chantal Eco Janess Ann Ellao Kenneth Roland Guda Marly Nicorina Lopez Paolo Lorenzo Macky Macaspac Ronalyn Olea Tine Sabillo Lady Ann Salem Ciriaco Santiago III, CSsR Maximo Santiago Anne Marxze Umil Dax Simbol Alliance of Concerned Teachers Philippines Arkibong Bayan Bulatlat.com Burgos Media Center Earist Technozette Gerilya Friends of the Earth - Japan Migrante Middle East Southern Tagalog Exposure UP Aperture
References
Bulatlat.com Janess Ann Ellao Ronalyn Olea Marya Salamat Ina Alleco Silverio Anne Marxze Umil Pinoy Weekly Kenneth Roland Guda Davao Today Warren Cahayag Danilda L. Fusilero Akap Bata Partylist Alliance of Concerned Teachers Philippines Arkibong Bayan Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility COURAGE Kalikasan Peoples Network for the Environment Migrante International Migrante Middle East National Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council National Union of Journalists of the Philippines Panalipdan Mindanao
Acknowledgments
Bulatlat.com RC Asa Keith Bacalso Leon Dulce Ferdinand Gaite Pia Garduce Zenaida Garduce Malcolm Guy Eshei Mesina Chito Patio Mon Ramirez Ritche Salgado Sandigang Maralitang Nagkakaisa Christian Tuayon Kadamay NCR Katribu Partylist Kathy Yamzon UGATLahi Artist Collective
Table of Contents
January page 2 February page 6 March page 10 April page 16 May page 20 June page 24 July page 28 August page 32 September page 36 October page 40 November page 46 December page 52
Introduction
LARAB or Larawan ng Bayan (Photos of the Nation) is a Philippines news and issues yearend journal that chronicles the year 2012 in photographs. But unlike any other yearend journal, this photo book centers on the most important issues and events that involved and most affected the common Filipino in each month of the year. The photo book also highlights the issues and events that have the most impact in the pursuit of human rights, social justice and social change. There are two recurring sections in the LARAB: Human Rights - features the most pressing human rights issues of the month, usually a narration of the grave human rights violations that happened
HUMAN RIGHTS
Hacienda Luisita - features the news and updates of the 50-year stuggle of farm workers to their right to land in Hacienda Luisita, a landmark case in land reform, but most importantly in the existence of democracy and social justice in the country
HACIENDA LUISITA
The word LARAB is a Tagalog word that refers to the rays or the light of the sun. In this connection, this photo book aims to give an enlightened view of society today and to emphasize the roles of individuals and sectors in working for meaningful changes.
JANUARY
PINAG
NAN 2 LABA
Hundreds of residents of Corazon de Jesus, San Juan resolutely defended their homes from demolition on January 11. Police, fully-armed SWAT, demolition teams, bulldozers and fire trucks came to implement the demolition of another section of the community for the construction of a parking lot for the new city hall of San Juan. The battle lasted for two hours until sophisticated tear gas canisters were fired at the residents. This was the second demolition in the community in two years and the fifth time the residents put up a barricade.
The city government plans to relocate residents at Montalban, Rizal, a proven danger zone, but Sandigang Maralitang Nagkakaisa (United Urban Poor), the local neighborhood association, struggled for in-city relocation, right to housing and social justice. The residents have been living in the area for 10 to 40 years. Their houses sit on national government-owned land that has been awarded to them twice by two Philippine presidents, Corazon Aquino and Gloria Arroyo. The area is also known as Pinaglabanan (Battlefield), the site of the historic first battle of the 1896 Philippine Revolution against Spanish colonial rule.
MEDIA HARASSMENT
As in the 2011 demolition in San Juan, police vilified, singled out and harassed members of alternative media group Tudla Productions. A member of Tudla was detained for a few hours in the middle of the scuffle and ensuing arbitrary arrests; another member was kept from documenting an event and police tried to confiscate the camera; and another members camera was grabbed by police but the groups members tugged at it and regained possession. The group has been consistently documenting and reporting the issue since June 2010.
When the violence subsided, 26 people were injured and 16 were arrested. Back in January 25, 2011, the local government of San Juan also tried to demolish the homes of hundreds of people for the main city hall building but the residents foiled their attempt.
CAMPOUT/INDIGNATION
After the demolition, residents still refused the relocation offered by the government. Residents and supporters held a press conference on January 12 to denounce the demolition. More than a hundred families who were forcibly evicted constructed makeshift homes and camped out at Corazon de Jesus Street. Police threatened another violent dispersal after three days of camp out. The residents moved to a temporary sanctuary offered by the church.
H 25T YEAR
MASSACR A MENDIOL F
January 22, 1987, state security forces under the command of then Philippine President Corazon Cojuanco-Aquino opened fire at the 15,000-strong peasant rally (demanding genuine agrarian reform) outside Malacaang Palace, the home and office of the Philippine President. Thirteen died and scores were injured and the event came to be known as the Mendiola Massacre. President Corazon Cory Cojuangco-Aquinos family also happened to be the owner of the still un-distributed 6,443-hectare Hacienda Luisita, Inc. (HLI), a landmark case of land reform in the country. After 23 years, Corys son, Beningo Simeon Aquino III (also popularly called PNoy) is president, yet justice for the murdered peasants remain elusive, as is the distribution of HLI to the farmworker-beneficiaries.
HUMAN RIGHTS
Dr. Gerry Ortega, Palawan-based broadcaster and environmentalist, was killed on January 24, 2011 in Puerto Princesa, Palawan. Four alleged gunmen and their accomplices have been charged for the murder but the suspected masterminds, brothers Palawan ex-governor Joel Reyes and Coron mayor Mario Reyes, were not named respondents in the case. Media groups counted Ortega as one of the 150 victims of media killings since Martial Law was toppled in 1986. Environmental advocates noted 10 environmental advocates killed under the PNoy administration who took office in July 2010.
Christopher Guarin was shot and killed by two motorcycle riding men in General Santos City while on his way home on January 5. Guarin, Tatak News publisher and editor and Radyo Mo Nationwide blocktimer, was in his car with his wife and daughter. He tried to flee the vehicle on foot but the armed men pursued him with gunshots.
HACIENDA LUISITA
FEBRUARY
PALAWA
NTAMINATIO N RIVER CO
An environmental field research presented by Friends of Earth Japan and Kalikasan Peoples Network for the Environment revealed that the river system in Palawan is already poisoned with unsafe levels of cancer-causing chemicals, which poses health hazards and possible effects on the fish resources in the area. The Togupon River is located downstream near the operations of Rio Tuba Nickel Mining Corporation and Coral Bay Nickel Processing Plant. The levels of contamination in the river exceeded both the Filipino and Japanese safety standards, and have already affected the health of downstream communities and may also affect their fisheries.
HACIENDA LUISITA
ND mILITARy
More than 300 members of Ambala foiled RCBCs attempt to fence off the 300-hectare 300 members of AMBALA foiled RCBCs attempt to fence off the More than land at Balete village, inside Hacienda Luisita on February 20. The 100 RCBC security guards were escorted by 10 elements of the 20. 300-hectare land at Balete village, inside Hacienda Luisita on February Tarlac provincial police security members of escorted by 10 elements of the Tarlac the The 100 RCBC and 15 guards were the Philippine Army. In the face off, provincial police and 15 members of the shots eight times. RCBCs claim security guards, police and military fired Philippine Army. In the face off, the to security guards, police and Hacienda land is due totimes. RCBCs claim the a portion of the disputed military fired shots eight a loan payment of to a portion of the owners of the Hacienda Luisitaa loan payment of thevillage Cojuangco-Aquino disputed Hacienda land is due to to the bank. Balete is Cojuangco-Aquino owners of thecampaign Luisita farm workers. the very site of the cultivation Hacienda of the to the bank. Balete village
is the very site of the cultivation campaign of the farm workers.
HUMAN RIGHTS
LABO MASSACRE
On February 25 in Labo, Camarines Norte, the bamboo house of Benjamin Mancera was peppered with bullets by at least 20 soldiers, killing Benjamin and his two sons Michael, 10; and Richard, 7, according to daughter Ella, 14, eyewitness and lone survivor. There were 231 empty shells recovered in the massacre site.
Evelyn Legaspi, 53, and Pastora Latagan, 33, both members of urban poor group Kadamay Southern Tagalog regional chapter, were arrested by 50 elements of police and military in Bay, Laguna on February 7 and detained on multiple murder and frustrated murder charges in connection with separate New Peoples Army (NPA) raids in Quezon and Mindoro.
Christian Roy Noceto, 15, and three other boys were foraging for food in the mountains of Atingay, Magdalena, Laguna on February 16 when soldiers fired at them. The military admitted they mistook the youth for NPA members.
Rogelio Seva, 53, a fish vendor, was killed by three men of the Revolutionary Proletarian Army-Alex Boncayao Brigade (RPA-ABB) on February 19 in E.B. Magalona, Negros Occidental. Seva belongs to a family of peasants and farmworkers who has lived and worked in Hacienda Baldevia for more than five decades. Seva himself lived in Gawahon village, Victorias City. The RPA-ABB, a breakaway group of the NPA, has been integrated into the Philippine Armys Civilian Armed Forces Geographical Unit (CAFGU), and the RPAABB are now funded and hired by local government and deployed to landlords as guards.
9 9
MARCH
L WOMENS DAY INTERNATIONA
Women and womens rights advocates united to commemorate the International Womens Day on March 8. Gabriela, the largest and oldest national womens organization, led the commemoration to raise awareness among Filipinos on the plight of women in the country. Women leaders and members of Gabriela hit on soaring prices of petroleum and basic commodities and the US military intervention.
10
#NOYNOYING
Youth group Anakbayan popularized the term Noynoying, a neologism made to mean and criticize the Presidents alleged idleness or slow action to oil price hikes, disaster and other social issues that has required his attention. In the transport protest caravan, Anakbayan demonstrated Noynoying by making effortless poses, lounging or looking tired and bored with hand propped on the chin. The group also defined the term as when you do nothing when in fact you have something to do. The term and protest action gained international attention, went viral on social media and even earned a Wikipedia entry.
11
TRIK P JANITORS S PU
The 180 contractual janitors of the Polytechnic University of the Philippines (PUP) retrenched in February 2012 went on strike on March 6 to demand their reinstatement. The workers were laid off from work following the entry of employment agency Carebest. Many of the workers have served the university for decades but were employed by an agency contracted by the university for maintenance services.
12
HACIENDA LUISITA
13
HUMAN RIGHTS
14
At least 19 families from slain tribe leader Jimmy Liguyons clan were forced to flee from Dao village after his killers threatened to kill the rest of Liguyons family. They set up a protest camp in March 14 in front of the Bukidnon capitol to press the government to arrest the killers and dismantle NIPAR.
HUMAN RIGHTS
BUTUAN
Bakwits or evacuees staged protests in Butuan City, Agusan del Norte provincial capitol to demand cessation of military operations in their hometowns Cabadbaran City and Kitcharao. The evacuees from the Mamanwa and Manobo tribes numbered to 257 families or 1,100 individuals and camped out in different areas in the city like the capitol and village basketball courts to wait for local government to heed their demands. The evacuees refrained from going back to their communities where they recently experienced threats, harassment and indiscriminate military bombings from the air and the ground.
Activists Efren Delalamon, Andres Ely, Carla Bautista, Ambrosio Ileto and his 17-year old nephew Jan Michael Ileto were arrested in Sta. Rosa, Nueva Ecija on March 28. Delalamon was a former political prisoner released only in February 2011 after cases filed against him were all dismissed. Ely is a peasant organizer, Bautista is a health worker and Ambrosio is a peasant leader. The five were at Ambrosios brothers residence when 20 soldiers came firing at the house and arrested the five.
Elmer Desoyo, 17; Rey Rodrigo, 17; and Reynaldo Delos Reyes were looking for work in coconut farms when soldiers of the 74th Infantry Battalion arrested them in San Andres, Quezon. They have yet to be surfaced and shown to their parents. Reports indicated that the three have been taken to Quezon Provincial jail and charged with illegal possession of firearms.
15
APRIL
OLE Y AND VI OOD NT LIT IO DEMO SILVER ION
BL
Thousands of residents of Silverio Compound occupied the national highway fronting their community to resist the local-government initiated demolition on April 23. The government under Mayor Jun Bernabe insisted that only the villages market is to be demolished. But residents raged over this second demolition after they were able to obtain information of Bernabes plan to wipe out the households of 10,000 residents in Silverio Compound to build medium-rise buildings whose contractor is allegedly SM Development Corporation, owned by billionaire businessman Henry Sy. There has been a city ordinance under a previous mayor that Silverio Compounds land is to be awarded to the residents via community mortgage program (CMP), which will allow residents to own the lot their houses sit on after they have paid the government. After negotiations, tear gas and water cannons failed to disperse the residents, police and SWAT opened fire at residents, killing a youth, Arnel Leonor.
16
Days before the demolition, residents protested in front of their city hall to call on their local government leaders to halt all demolitions in Silverio Compound and go on with the awarding of the land to the residents via CMP, a government housing program where the government expropriates a property to sell to the people at low interest rates.
Youth supporters of Silverio Compound and Save 182 Baguio trees staged a protest in the grounds of SM Mall of Asia, the largest of all SM malls and all malls in the Philippines owned by Henry Sy.
PEOPLES INDIGNATION
At dusk on April 23, progressive groups led by Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN) rallied supporters in giving solidarity to the fight of the residents of Silverio Compound and condemning the killing of Arnel Leonor and the Metro Manila demolitions that has destroyed homes and livelihoods of the urban poor and have become increasingly violent in implementation since PNoy took office.
17
NK VFA! JU
Thousands of US troops who arrived on April 15 to commence the Philippines-US joint military exercises or Balikatan were met with a protest by youth, activists and peasants. Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (Peasant Movement of the Philippines) and the Alyansa ng mga Magbubukid ng Gitnang Luson (Alliance of Farmers in Central Luzon) led a protest caravan to Clark Special Economic Zone in Angeles City. Despite attempts of armed security guards and police to stop the protest, protesters asserted their right to peaceful assembly. Satur Ocampo of Makabayan Coalition denounced the military exercises, that is part of the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA), as a betrayal of national sovereignty and a reversal of the Filipino peoples victory in 1991 when the people were able to drive US military bases out the country after a 50-year stay.
SM Development Corporation uprooted eight trees from Luneta Hill, Baguio City to give way to the malls expansion. The companys plan to uproot 182 trees in Luneta Hill have been met with protests since January in Baguio streets, SM malls nationwide and online. Luneta Hill is among few areas in Baguio City where patches of trees remain.
18
HACIENDA LUISITA
In a unanimous vote, the Supreme Court issued a final decision affirming its ruling on the distribution of 4,916 hectares of Hacienda Luisita land to the 4,296 original farm worker beneficiaries. The high court also denied Hacienda Luisita Inc.s just compensation appeal that would require the farm workers to pay the owners P173 million based on 2006 land valuation. The 6,443- hectare sugar plantation was established in the 1950s through a government loan to the Cojuangco-Aquinos with the promise that the land will be distributed to the farm workers. The Cojuangco-Aquino clan has evaded land distribution through the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law that provides a stock distribution option to the owners. Such law was implemented during the term of President Corazon Cojuangco-Aquino. Until the Supreme Court decision is implemented, the half-century old land dispute is far from over.
HUMAN RIGHTS
Renante Gamara, National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) peace consultant, and his companion Santiago Balleta were arrested by joint police and military forces in Las Pinas City, Metro Manila on April 3. He was arrested via a post facto warrant of arrest where his name was recently inserted in a list of those charged with kidnapping with murder. Many political prisoners like him have been charged with non-bailable criminal cases. Being an NDFP peace consultant, Gamara should have been immune from arrest in accordance to agreements signed in the Philippine governments peace talks with the NDFP.
Christian Tuayon, 25, was arrested by police for a robbery in band case, right after he led aprotest action at the Bacolod City Plaza, Negros Occidental on April 3. He did not receive any subpoena or information on the case. He was released the following day on bail.
Alex Arias, 56, provincial chairman of peasant group Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas, was abducted by suspected state agents on April 7. Arias was on his way home to Tuy Baanan, Liliw, Laguna when he was waylaid by armed men in Sta. Cruz town.
Three media men were shot and killed in April by two motorcycle riding men. Aldion Layao, a radio broadcaster from dxRP Davao City killed in Calanan, Davao City on April 8; Michael Calanasan, journalist for Laguna Courier, killed in San Pablo City on April 24; and Rommel Palma of dxMC Bombo Radyo Koronadal killed on his way home on April 30.
19
MAY
DAY RALLY LABOR
Under heat and rain, 20,000 marched from various points in Metro Manila on Labor Day, holding a program at Plaza Miranda and concluding the march on the foot of Mendiola. Labor leaders criticized Aquino for his anti-worker policies, labor export policy and demolition of urban poor homes that pushed working people to greater poverty. Protesters paraded and burned an effigy of a dog-faced PNoy to symbolize PNoys puppetry and being a lapdog to US imperialism. Around 100,000 marched in various cities of the Philippines on Labor Day.
20
Michael Cogas, Lawrence Tanjoco, Shane Juan and Emily Galdo, long-time workers of the Metro Manila operations of RMN, one of the largest radio network in the Philippines, were dismissed from their jobs just after they have successfully formed their union and got it registered with the labor department. The dismissed workers filed charges of illegal dismissal against RMN and remaining employees filed charges of union busting and unfair labor practices, which could serve as basis for strike.
21
HACIENDA LUISITA
22
In a 20-3 vote, the Philippine Senate sitting as an impeachment court convicted Supreme Court Chief Justice Renato Corona as guilty for failure to disclose his statement of assets, liabilites and net worth. Corona was the first Chief Justice removed from office on May 29. Groups under BAYAN also called for the prosecution of former president Gloria Arroyo and warned against a Pnoy Supreme Court and the reversal of the HLI distribution Supreme Court decision.
HUMAN RIGHTS
Frederick Trangria was gunned down by two motorcycle-riding men in Nabunturan, Compostela Valley on May 6. Trangria opposed the Mineral Processing Zone and large-scale mining that will affect the biodiversity of Mainit National Park. Margarito Cabal was shot inside his rented house in Palma, Kibawe, Bukidnon on May 9. Cabal was known for his firm resistance to the establishment of Hydroelectric Mega Dam project of First Bukidnon Electric Cooperative (FIBECO) that will affect 22 villages of Bukidnon and North Cotabato.
Jaime Soledad, 63, a consultant of the NDFP, was arrested at his house in Inopacan, Leyte and charged with murder on May 2. He was arrested in 2008 and had just been released in July 2011 as part of the Philippine governments compliance with immunity guarantee agreement in the peace talks.
Nestor Libaton, 47, radio announcer for Catholic-run dxHM station in Mati, Davao Oriental, was shot by two motorcycle riding men who tailed the victim when he left a fiesta in Ompao village on May 8. He was brought to a hospital where he succumbed to his gunshot wounds.
23
JUNE
RO SULA TER PENIN R
BONDOC
Exceeding Martial Law horror, eight battalions of the Philippine Army was deployed in 22 towns in South Quezon and Bondoc Peninsula, in the areas of the hacienda belt, power plant and dam project and mining sites. Documented human rights abuses involved at least 127 individual victims. Schools and village halls became the militarys sleeping quarters. Vilified and harassed peasants were forced to evacuate to other towns and to Manila to avoid constant harassment by the military.
24
HUMAN RIGHTS
Farmer Eduardo dela Pena was held at gunpoint by soldiers, being forced to admit being a member of the NPA. He and his wife fled their land.
Fisherman Joel Pejos from San Francisco, Quezon was accosted by soldiers and accused of feeding the NPA. The soldiers took his familys boat and rice supply.
Mirasol Balaston continues to search for her husband Felix Balaston. He was taken by soldiers to the Philippine Armys 85th Infantry Battalion camp on March 27, 2011. He remains missing to this day.
25 25
HUMAN RIGHTS
MERCY MIS
July
ULA
Broad formation of human rights and sectoral groups launched a Mercy Mission and Peace Caravan to call for the pullout of military troops in Quezon and to provide the residents medical and psychosocial assistance.
26
HUMAN RIGHTS
While looking for junk to recycle, Ruel, 16; Eduard, 15; Miguel, 13; and Mar, 12 (not their real names) were accused of stealing a bike and arbitrarily arrested by village executive officer Meniteryo Endozo in Marilag, Project 4, Quezon City on June 23. The four were asked to undress, electrocuted, threatened and made to clean up the village hall. Endozo was relieved from his post as the investigation commenced.
HACIENDA LUISITA
27
JULY
: JUDGMENTPNOY GOVT ES THE PEOPLA TWO-FACED
Thousands of protesters gathered in the streets to hold their own State of the Nation Address (SONA) to counter the downpour of lies and half-truths that the President Noynoy Aquino (PNoy) delivered during the SONA. The protesters burned a two-faced effigy of PNoy. One side of PNoy represented his beautifully packaged flagship programs like PPP (Public-Private Partnership) and CCT (Conditional Cash Transfer) offered to the people, while the other side represents the true nature of these programs and his administration: neglect of working peoples rights and welfare, demolition of homes and continued human rights violations under the counterinsurgency program Oplan Bayanihan.
28
29
HACIENDA LUISITA
Families of at least 180 overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in Saudi Arabia and migrants rights group Migrante International picketed in front of the government office Philippine Overseas Employment Agency (POEA) on July 17 to protest the stalled repatriation of their relatives in Saudi Arabia. The 180 OFWs then staged a hunger strike on July 23, the day of PNoys State of the Nation Address, to protest labor violations and government neglect. The 180 OFWS have lodged verified complaints that they were maltreated, denied their wages and subjected to other labor rights violations by their employers. All OFWs were deployed to Saudi Arabia by recruitment agencies licensed by the POEA. The OFWs have sought assistance from the Philippine government after they were forced to hold a stop work protest and leave their employers.
30
A MONTH OF KILLINGS
WILLEM GEERTMAN
Dutch development worker and environmentalist Willem Geertman was shot to death by two men in L&S Subdivision, Sto. Domingo, Angeles City, Pampanga on July 3. Geertman was a missionary and executive director of Alay Bayan Inc. He was a staunch advocate of indigenous peoples rights and supporter of Hacienda Luisita farmworkers just claim to the land.
MARILOU VALLE
A day before President Aquino delivered his State of the Nation Address, Marilou Valle was shot by two village watchmen in front of her house in Sitio Damayan, Tondo, Manila. Valle is the president of local group Samahan sa Sitio Damayan ng Nananambakan. Her 16-year old son witnessed the killing.
Former president Gloria Arroyo was freed from her 8-month hospital arrest at the Veterans Memorial Medical Center in Quezon City on July 25 after the Pasay City court allowed her to post one-million peso bail for her temporary freedom for the electoral sabotage case filed against her. The release of Arroyo came two days after the SONA of current president Benigno Aquino III who swore and speechified to hold Arroyo accountable for her many abuses during her nine-year term. Protesters outside the heavily guarded hospital waylaid the release of Arroyo, who left amid chants of Gloria ikulong! (Jail Gloria), Gloria panagutin! (Prosecute Gloria) and Magnanakaw (thief).
31
AUGUST
HABAGAT
Metro Manila and other provinces in Luzon were submerged in flood due to heavy rains brought by the southwest monsoon or habagat. Torrential rains poured over Metro Manila, Central Luzon and Southern Tagalog for more than three days. While the southwest monsoon is a natural phenomenon experienced year by year, this time around it was intensified by then-passing Typhoon Haikui. Habagat claimed 112 lives due to flashfloods and landslides. Environmental groups blamed logging and poor urban development planning for the widespread flooding. Aggravating the effects of the calamity was poor disaster preparedness.
32
33
philex
34
HUMAN RIGHTS
Asmayra Usman, 4, was instantly killed by a stray bullet that hit her stomach on August 21. She and her parents were sleeping inside their tent in the evacuation center in Salbo, Datu Saudi Ampatuan Maguindanao when members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) encamped in Bagan village, Guindulungan allegedly fired their guns in the direction of the evacuation center. Asmayras family is among the 400 internally displaced families who were forced to evacuate due to military operations in their town.
Merlyn Diones Bermas, chairwoman of Malaya village and whistleblower on the Philippine Armys (49th Infantry Battalions) involvement in the February 2012 massacre of farmer Benjamin Mancera and his two children, was shot and killed while aboard a hauler on her way home on August 7 in Labo, Camarines Norte. Copassenger Gerald Oreza, a 4-year old preschool pupil, also sustained gunshot wounds and died.
35 35
SEPTEMBER
DEMOLITION UATEMALA
Some 256 families were forcibly evicted and demolished at Guatemala Street, San Isidro, Makati City on September 25, but not before the residents barricaded the entrances to their community to prevent the local government and police from demolishing their homes. The demolition was conducted to pave way for the construction of multi-million peso community complex and basketball court in the area. The resistance of the residents lasted for a few hours and three rounds of battle. Tear gas canisters were fired at the residents, causing them to disperse and police to advance. Eight were arrested. Guatemela Neighborhood Association denounced the demolition and the arrest and said that they refused relocation site in Calauan, Laguna because no houses were constructed and the lack of basic services and livelihood in the area.
CONSULAR DEMOLITION
36
Another public-private partnership caused loss of homes and displacement. Retired and active military men cried foul over the demolition of their houses at Consular Area, Taguig City. Bases Conversion Development Authority (BCDA) and police implemented the demolition on September 20, even though they failed to present a court order to the affected residents. Families were offered relocation in Rodriguez, Rizal but they refused and said that their area is not a danger zone and transferring to that relocation site means moving to a death zone. According to the residents, BCDA plans to construct a condominium building, a partnership between the government and Megaworld Corporation.
MARTIAL LAW AT 40
On the 40th year of Martial Law declaration by former President Ferdinand Marcos, different groups marched to Mendiola to remember the martyrs of Martial Law and lessons in the struggle, hail the heroism of those who fought against the dictatorship, and call for the indemnification of Martial Law victims and to end the persisting culture of impunity. Members of the First Quarter Storm Movement tag todays persisting culture of impunity as a present and undeclared Martial Law.
STUDENT WALKOUT
Students from the Eulogio Amang Rodriguez Institute of Science and Technology (EARIST) staged a walkout to protest campus repression and illegal fees collection. Student leaders have been suspended due their vocal stance against the said measures. Under the Aquino administration, the neoliberal policy of privatization and budget cuts is being pushed in state colleges and universities thru the Roadmap for Public Higher Education Reforms (RPHER).
37
After five months of strike, the janitors of PUP regained their jobs upon the signing of an agreement with the new PUP administration. The PUP workers lifted their picket to conclude the strike and held a mass and a program to thank their supporters in the last week of August. While reinstated, the PUP janitors said they still suffer from the oppressive conditions of work contractualization. They went back to work on September 16.
38
HUMAN RIGHTS
Genesis Ambason, a member of Banwaon tribe and leader of Tangdumahan, a Lumad organization in San Luis, Agusan del Sur, was resting on September 13 when members of the paramilitary group CAFGU and soldiers (from the 26th Infantry Battalion) of the Philippine Army fired at him and his companions. CAGFU claimed that Ambasons group was a group of NPA rebels. Tagdumahan had been resisting the entry of large-scale mining in their ancestral lands since the 80s.
Subanen chieftain Timuay Locencio Manda sustained minor wounds but his 11-year old son Jordan Manda was killed when they were ambushed by unidentified men in Conacon village, Bayog, Zamboanga del Sur on September 4. Timuay Manda leads the Subanens ancestral domain claim and protection from excessive and illegal logging and mining since his cousin Timuay Giovanni was assassinated in 2002.
Ponciano Infante, president of the transport group PasadaAngeles City and the Pandan-Angeles Driver Operators Association, was killed by two motorcycle-riding men on September 3. He was at that time taking a nap at the Hausville Jeepney Terminal in Angeles City, Pampanga. In his stead, Infantes group joined and launched successful transport strikes and also protest actions that pushed the city to roll back its common carrier tax.
39
OCTOBER
L -MARTIA E LAW
Netizens, youth, media, lawyers, local and international rights groups and the vast public protested online and offline the Presidents signing into law of the Cybercrime Prevention Act. Sustained protests in the Supreme Court, in social media and online pushed the eventual issuance of a 120day temporary restraining order (TRO) by the Supreme Court on October 9. The TRO will expire on February 6, 2013, before which the Supreme Court is scheduled to decide on the constitutionality of the law. Controversial portions of the law include the simple acts constituting cybercrime (e.g. sharing a libelous post), online libel and its penalties, real time data collection and other violations of right to privacy and taking down websites in pursuit of suspected law violators among others. Oppositionists to the law saw it as a measure that criminalizes freedom of speech and civil liberties enshrined in the Philippine Constitution.
40
#NOTOCYBERCRIMELAW
#NoToCybercrimeLaw became a Twitter trending topic. The online and offline protests gained international support and recognition. Authors of the law in the two branches of Congress and all who voted for the passage of the bill were criticized online. Anonymous Philippines hacked various government websites to show their contempt for the law.
CYBER-PERLING
Esperlita Garcia, 62, a retired teacher and an anti-black sand mining activist from Gonzaga, Cagayan, became the first victim of a still-suspended law, the Republic Act No.10175 or the Anti-Cybercrime Act of 2012. She was arrested on October 18 and detained overnight for libel charges filed against her by Gonzaga mayor Carlito Pentecostes, Jr. (also her rival in the May 2013 mayoralty race). Pentecostes charged Garcia with libel for her Facebook posts about a violent dispersal of an anti-mining protest action her group participated in 2011.
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HUMAN RIGHTS
SSA MPAKAN MA TA
CRE
Pregnant Juvy Capion and sons Jordan, 13, and Mark John, 8, were killed in a military raid of their home in Tampakan, South Cotabato by at least 13 soldiers of the 27th Infantry Battalion of the Philippine Army on October 18. The soldiers were said to be after Daguil, Juvys husband, who was not in the house when the raiding soldiers came. Witnesses said that the bodies of the slain Capion family members were dragged outside and exposed to elements to force Daguil to surrender. Daguil is a Blaan tribe leader who with his brothers Batas and Kitari have declared pangayaw or tribal war on Sagittarius Mines Inc.-Xstrata (SMI-Xstrata). The pangayaw is in defense of the tribes ancestral land and resources, said Erita Capion, sister of the three brothers. The Capion brothers have taken responsibility for their attacks on SMI-Xstrata and its workers earlier this year as part of their tribal war while local government leaders deny that the tribal war is against the mining firm. The Capion clan has strongly opposed SMI-Xstratas extraction of rich gold and copper deposits in the boundaries of South Cotabato, Davao del Sur, Sarangani and Sultan Kudarat. The mining firms Tampakan project is set to displace an estimated 30,000 Blaan people out of their ancestral land.
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HUMAN RIGHTS
Gilbert Paborada, 47, chairman of Pangalasag (Indigienous Shield) was shot five times by two motorcycle riding men in San Nicolas, Puntod, Cagayan de Oro City on October 3. Paborada, who opposed American company A. Brown Companys oil plantation expansion in their ancestral domain, died on the spot. Paboradas group was harassed, fired at by security guards and ordered arrested by the city mayor since 2011.
MISTAKEN IDENTITY
Rolly Panesa, a civilian security guard, was abducted by the Philippine Armys 2nd Infantry Division and the PNP in Quezon City on October 5 and was tortured to admit he is a high-ranking member of the CPP. He was arrested with his partner of 10 years and two companions, but the three were released after a day. Panesa continue to be detained in Camp Bagong Diwa for charges of rebellion and frustrated murder.
Mrs. Lanie Latuga, a teacher of Dumagat children, and five other civilians were illegally arrested and detained by soldiers of the Philippine Armys 16th and 59th Infantry Batallions in Sitio Uron, Puray, Rodriguez, Rizal on October 7. She was accused by the military of being either NPA members or soldiers. The six remained in military custody in an undisclosed military location.
Men riding in tandem fired three gunshots at Daisy Ayo, a resident of Sambungan, Calatagan, Batangas, as she was selling fish in the market on October 14. Ayo, along with her neighbors, has fought for their right to the land that they have lived and tilled for more than 30 years, now being claimed by powerful and rich clan Ayala-Zobel. Ayo survived with a gunshot wound in the leg.
Dr. Isidro Olan, an anti-illegal logging and mining advocate from Lovers of Nature Foundation, Inc., survived an ambush while on his way home with his wife on October 29 in Carmen, Surigao del Sur. Dr. Olan has a long history of opposing illegal logging and large-scale mining in Surigao del Sur.
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HUMAN RIGHTS
OPS
One year has passed since the death of Fr. Fausto Pops Tentorio, a missionary who has lived in Mindanao for 30 years educating and organizing the indigenous peoples, but no perpetrator has been prosecuted. Fr. Pops was slain by two unidentified men on October 17, 2011 in Arakan Valley, North Cotabato. A new witness came forward and implicated Alamara, a paramilitary group linked with the Philippine Army. But, the Philippine government told the United Nations Human Rights Committee (UNHRC) in Geneva, Switzerland that the missionarys death has not been validated as an extrajudicial killing a day before the first death aniversary. In his work, Fr. Pops was able to set up more than 80 daycare centers in indigenous peoples communities, benefitting more than 2,000 scholars in Mindanao.
HOSPITAL PRIVATIZATION
The Alliance of Health Workers and Health Alliance for Democracy held a series of protests including lunch break walkouts, rallies and petition signing against the planned privatization of at least 26 hospitals under the Aquino governments public-private partnership program. The public health workers are against the plan for it could result to higher hospital fees, while health care services have already been expensive in some governmentowned and controlled corporations like the Philippine Childrens Medical Center, the Lung and the Heart Center of the Philippines and National Kidney Transplant Institute. The lunch break protest on October 25 resulted to the Presidents office airing an assurance on October 28 that there would be no privatization (only professionalization by way of restructuring government-funded medical facilities).
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ELECTION FEVER
Aspirants for the May 2013 elections brought out the usual fanfare and gimmickry in the filing of candidacy on October 1-5. Voters rushed to get registered until October 31, way ahead the law-mandated 120 days before election day. This time around, however, as the 2013 elections come to fore, voters and advocates shoved to politicians the issues of political dynasties, cleansing the partylist system of bogus and fake partylist groups and self-promotion through projects funded by taxpayers money.
Youth group Anakbayan challenged the Commission on Elections to cleanse the partylist system off groups that, from their charter and nominees, do not belong and represent the marginalized sectors. The group also stormed the press conference of Akbayan, a political party and incumbent partylist group, to protest Akbayans continued membership in the partylist system when at least seven of their officials have been appointed by the President to key positions in government.
ANTI-EPAL
The public converged in social media and vented ire on the indecency of politicians posting their faces and names to announce government projects such as waiting sheds, street signs and lampposts as if to credit themselves, when it is the peoples money that funded the projects. Epal is colloquial for an intrusive person or an attention-grabber or displaying such behavior.
ANTI-POLITICAL DYNASTIES
Also on social media and elsewhere, the public expressed dismay on the continued reign of political dynasties in the country. Most frontrunners in the 2013 elections come from political dynasties. The Philippine Constitution prohibits political dynasties but needs an enabling law passed by Congress to define political dynasties. No such law has been passed in more than two decades. Bayan Muna representative Teddy Casio, an independent Senatorial candidate in the May 2013 elections, authored a bill against political dynasties but the bill has not made progress in Congress. In the current 15th Congress, 19 of 23 senators and 181 of 285 representatives come from political dynasties.
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NOVEMBER
AO MASSAC MAGUINDAN
Three years after the Maguindanao or Ampatuan massacre, kin of the 58 killed still see and know no justice. The legal battle against the Ampatuan clan drags on, as only two of eight primary suspects have been arraigned. Despite the promise of President Benigno Aquino III to bring justice over the carnage, 99 out of 197 suspects remained free. Families of victims have turned down compensation offers and then received death threats, while some witnesses have been killed after the massacre. The date of the massacre, November 23, was declared in 2011 as the International Day to End Impunity.
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NO JUSTICE CRE:STILL
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ARAW NG ANAKPAWIS
Working people, youth, activists and other progressive organizations marched under the scorching heat of the sun on November 30, the birthday of revolutionary leader and hero Andres Bonifacio, now also celebrated by them as the Araw ng Anakpawis (Day of the Toiling Masses). Rallyists called for substantial wage hike, end of contractualization and neoliberal policies in labor, land for the peasants, and housing and livelihood for the urban poor. In Metro Manila, more than 6,000 commemorated Andres Bonifacios 149th birthday by a protest march from Liwasang Bonifacio to US Embassy to Recto Avenue and a program at Mendiola. The working people and activists called for continuing Bonifacios revolution with a similar purpose: to free our country from foreign domination.
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On November 29, San Juan police arrested Maritess Bacolod, an urban poor women leader and a disabled person, on charges of simple disobedience to a person of authority with an arrest warrant dated May 24, 2012. Nine other leaders of SAMANA (Sandigang Maralitang Nagkakaisa - United Urban Poor), the group that led the resistance to the Pinaglabanan demolition in January 2012, were named in the reserved warrant. Case against the ten were filed by police. President Benigno Aquino delivered a speech at Pinaglabanan Shrine on November 30 for the governments celebration of Bonifacio Day.
Group of artists Gerilya (Guerilla), Kilusang Mayo Uno (May 1st Movement) and Anakpawis Partylist (Toiling Masses Partylist) teamed up to popularize revolutionary hero Andres Bonifacio. Gerilya painted murals of Bonifacio on walls along busy streets. One mural painted in the Philcoa overpass was instantly defaced by territorial graffiti artists. Gerilya then repainted another Bonifacio mural in time for November 30.
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HACIENDA LUISITA
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HUMAN RIGHTS
Julius Cauzo, 51, a commentator for dwJJ 684 was shot dead in Cabanatuan City, Nueva Ecija while on his way to the radio station on November 8. Cauzo criticized graft and corruption in his program. Nueva Ecija governor and a foundation offered a P2-million reward for information leading to the capture and resolution of the case. He is the 6th journalist killed in 2012, 14th under the Aquino government and 154th since 1986 (post-Martial Law era).
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DECEMBER
AFTERMATH PHOON PABLO TY
Typhoon Pablo (international name Bopha) left 1,067 dead (as of December 25) in Southern Mindanao and 844 missing in its wake, according to the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC). Most of these deaths were caused by landslides and flashfloods. There are 226,497 families or 973,207 individuals evacuated from their communities. More than 217,817 homes were damaged to the point of being uninhabitable. Damage to properties estimated at 36.9 billion pesos.
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Tribes and indigenous peoples from Mindanao, who were in Manila for International Human Rights Day on December 10, held government and mining companies accountable for the tragedy brought by Typhoon Pablo. Towns such as Manay, Baganga and Caraga towns in Davao Oriental, and New Bataan, Pantukan, Nabunturan, Maragusan, Maco, Mabini, Laak and Compostela in Compostela Valley province where deaths occurred are heavily mined. The typhoon entered the Philippine Area of Responsibility on December 2 and made landfall in Davao Oriental on December 3. Typhoon Pablo raged over Mindanao for two days before moving to Palawan and then Northern Luzon, weakening on its second and third land fall.
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DE
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In Aquinos time (since July 2010), there have been 129 extrajudicial killings, 224 illegal detentions, 12 disappearances and almost 30,000 victims of forced evacuation; Arroyo has not been made to answer for the bloodiest human rights record ever; and fugitive Gen. Jovito Palparan and other fugitives remain free. Organizations led by Bagong Alyansang Makabayan and human rights advocates led by Karapatan led the rally and program. Ironically, police blocked their way to Mendiola and stalled the rally for an hour. The Lakbayan para sa Karapatan (Voyage for Human Rights) of indigenous peoples and peasants from all parts of Mindanao culminated in this rally. The Lakbayan of peasants and activists from Southern Tagalog also joined the protest, but were still set to camp out in front of the Commission on Human Rights and Mendiola in the days after December 10.
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BLAC
N PROTEST K LANTER
Teachers from the National Capital Region led a nationally-coordinated Black Lantern protest in Mendiola on December 14 to signify a gloomy Christmas after PNoy cut in half the P10,000 Productivity Enhancement Incentive (PEI) government workers have been receiving since 2010. PNoy signed Executive Order 80, the Performance Based Bonus (PBB) which justified the decrease in the PEI in lieu of a P35,000 PBB. Yet, only a fraction of employees in only the office named the Best Agency are qualified to receive the PBB. Teachers also reiterated their demand for the approval of the Salary Upgrading Bill.
Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) employees walked out from their office on December 3 to call on the government agency to pay their Collective Negotation Agreement (CNA) incentive signed in 2011 through their union, the Kapisanan para sa Kagalingan ng mga Kawani ng MMDA (KKKMMDA). Employees are entitled to receive P24,000 (or $595 each). To voice out their grievance, the employees blocked all five lanes in EDSA. MMDA employees range from street sweepers (receiving a meager salary of P9,000 or $220), traffic law enforcers, etc.
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HUMAN RIGHTS
Randy Vegas and Raul Camposano, organizers of government employees union federation Courage based in Metro Manila, were abducted by state agents in separate incidents on December 3, in Quezon City and Cavite respectively. They were surfaced on December 5 at the Camarines Norte Provincial Jail in Daet. The two have been charged with five counts of murder, one count of theft and one count of frustrated murder in connection with their alleged participation in an NPA ambush in Labo, Camarines Norte. Thirty others were named in the arrest warrant, two of them leaders of BAYAN National Capital Region chapter, Roy Velez and Amelita Gamara.
Rolando Quijano, a farmer and anti-illegal logging and large-scale mining advocate in Zamboanga del Sur, was shot to death by suspected elements of the 53rd Infantry Battalion of the Philippine Army on December 7 at Ocapan, San Miguel, Zamboanga del Sur. He was an active member of Alliance of Farmers Union in Zamboanga Del Sur. Anti-mining advocates Cheryl Ananayo and cousin-in-law Randy Nabayay were killed by unidentified assailants on December 7 in Dipidio, Nueva Vizcaya. Ananayo is a member of Dipidio Earthsavers Multipurpose Association opposed to the ongoing implementation of the 17,626-hectare Dipidio gold copper project in Kasibu, Nueva Vizcaya owned by Australian OceanaGold Corporation. The death of the two brings to 13 the toll of environmental activists killed this year.
Residents of Corazon de Jesus, San Juan threw tomatoes at the Manila house of ex-San Juan City Mayor and ex-Philippine President Joseph Estrada on December 2 to condemn the harassment against urban poor leaders in Corazon de Jesus and the continued detention of Maritess Bacolod. Estrada bought a house in Manila in 2012 to be eligible to run for mayor in the city of Manila.
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