Filipino Women Resist President Duterte’s Fascist Regime

For Immediate Release
February 25, 2018
Contact: Irma Shauf-Bajar, National Chairperson, gabrielawomen@gmail.com

Filipino Women Resist President Duterte’s Fascist Regime

Today, February 25, 2018 marks the 32nd Anniversary of the EDSA People Power movement and the end of Ferdinand Marcos’s 21 years as president and dictator of the Philippines. Like Marcos, President Duterte has taken the bloody road in an attempt to impose a full dictatorship over the country, which promises more repression and killings on top of the already 14,000 people killed by his regime. GABRIELA USA stands with the Filipino people and the rapidly growing international community who demand for Duterte to stop the killings and never again to dictatorship in the Philippines!

Last week, members of GABRIELA New York and church workers were in General Santos City in Mindanao as part of an international solidarity fact-finding mission delegation. They were observing a psychosocial intervention program implemented by GABRIELA Philippines, where they are currently serving T’boli-Manobo communities who were victims of a massacre allegedly committed by military elements. The delegation was stopped at five Philippine military checkpoints and prevented from completing their scheduled activities due to the confiscation of their passports and being detained at the immigration office. There was no just cause for the detention of the delegation.

“The U.S.-Duterte regime is engaging in tactics to cover up and prevent the public from witnessing the heightened militarization and all-out war against the Filipino people. It is our duty to continue to expose and condemn the Philippine military’s ongoing human rights violations and abuses,” said Irma Shauf-Bajar, Chairperson of GABRIELA USA. “We stand with the Filipino people, our sisters and the international community in resisting militarization and demanding an end to this fascist dictatorship!”

Since U.S. President Donald Trump’s visit to the Philippines in November 2017, state-sanctioned violence against indigenous people, workers, peasants, and human rights defenders has sharply escalated.  GABRIELA USA views this as unsurprising, given that Trump’s visit led to deals which secured U.S.-led foreign domination of the country, including $14.3 million in U.S. military spending for Duterte’s armed forces. At the same time, U.S. military presence in the Philippines is expanding under the U.S. “counter-terror” Operation Pacific Eagle; we expect this to directly contribute to even more politically-motivated killings and repression. It is clearly the U.S.-Duterte regime that continues to attack the most vulnerable and marginalized communities with impunity – violating both the people and the nation’s sovereignty.

On this anniversary of the EDSA People Power Movement, let us continue to Rise, Resist and Unite against the fascist U.S.-Duterte regime. We urge you to join MALAYA: U.S. Movement Against Killings and Dictatorship, and for Democracy in the Philippines. Please sign this  PETITION  to demand to Stop the Killings and prevent a new dictatorship in the Philippines and share it widely.

 

Filipino American Women Outraged by Duterte’s Misogynistic Remarks and Call for International Solidarity

For Immediate Release

February 12, 2018

Contact: Irma Shauf-Bajar, National Chairperson, gabrielawomen@gmail.com

 

Filipino American Women Outraged by Duterte’s Misogynistic Remarks and Call for International Solidarity

 

Members of GABRIELA USA denounce President Duterte’s fascist and violent misogynistic order to “shoot female rebels in their vagina.” Duterte said, “If there is no vagina, it would be useless,” implying that women are useless without their genitals. From the beginning of his presidency, Duterte has made several misogynistic comments towards women, including rape jokes which encourage the Armed Forces of the Philippines to commit violence against women and use rape as a tool of war. This is utterly reprehensible and must be condemned.

As GABRIELA USA, we must expose and oppose the U.S. backed fascist Duterte regime, that has killed over 13,000 Filipinos through the so called “war on drugs,” displaced more than 400,000 people in Mindanao because of martial law, and Duterte’s counterinsurgency program, “Oplan Kapayapaan,” that continues to target activists through killings, illegal arrests, and other human rights violations.

Duterte’s macho-fascist comments are violent and dangerous, as it will allow for not only his army but also encourages all men to continue to fuel violence against women. We must recognize that Duterte’s remarks on women stems from the Philippines’ feudal-patriarchal and imperialist structure. Duterte and the ruling class benefit from a system that abuses and exploits the majority of Filipinos, keeping them in poverty. This explains why many Filipinos, including women, join the New People’s Army, to engage in armed struggle for genuine liberation for the Filipino people.

GABRIELA USA calls on our family, friends, community, and allies to join us as we RISE against Duterte’s fascist regime, RESIST militarization of our homeland and bodies, and UNITE against the macho-fascist Duterte regime to oust him from office! We invite our community to join us on February 14th for One Billion Rising, a global campaign to end violence against women and on March 8th to commemorate International Working Women’s Day.

 

RISE against Fascism! RESIST Militarization! UNITE in solidarity for self determination!

End Violence Against Women Now!

Oust the US-Duterte Regime!

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Filipino Women Against Modern Day Slavery

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 18, 2017
Reference: Irma Shauf-Bajar, GABRIELA USA National Chairperson, gabrielawomen@gmail.com

Filipino Women Against Modern Day Slavery

The article written by Alex Tizon regarding the story of Eudocia Pulido and her forced migration and exploitation as a modern day slave in the United States highlights the current conditions of Filipino women. Eudocia Pulido’s story cannot be understood outside of the context of the Philippine society and history rooted in U.S. imperialism and neoliberal economic policies that have caused the systemic suffering of many underpaid domestic helpers like Lola.

The Philippines is one of the largest labor exporters in the world with 6,000 Filipinos—60% women—leaving the country every single day to work, because of rampant poverty, joblessness, and landlessness. Lured to apply for positions that do not exist, promised legal status and wages, and instead becoming undocumented, drowning in debt, and isolated in a foreign country — thousands of OFWs end up working in virtual slavery. Recruiters and employment agencies take advantage of their workers, by charging exorbitant fees and loans and threatening their workers with deportation or physical violence to the workers and their families. Living in fear and with no place to go, many OFWs endure the discrimination, abuse, and exploitation in order to survive.

It is important that we do not whitewash the writer’s parents’ and family’s crimes of slavery, imprisonment, and trafficking. Alex Tizon’s account of Eudocia Pulido’s story does not exonerate him from his family’s complicity in the abuse and exploitation of another human being. And we also must recognize this particular experience is not an isolated one, and stems from the Philippines’ feudal patriarchal and imperialist structure. The commodification and exploitation of generations of Filipina women continues to be an inherent effect of the ever worsening conditions–conditions which will persist and generate many more Eudocia’s until comprehensive and fundamental socio-economic and political changes are made to address the root causes of the country’s poverty.

Members of GABRIELA USA continue to take action and call for an end to the exploitative system in the Philippines and denounce the Philippine government for its neglect of its own people within the country and lack of protection of OFWs abroad. In addition, we uplift the voices of Filipino migrant women to tell their own stories. GABRIELA USA seeks to empower migrant women to know and understand their rights, to fight back against oppression and exploitation, and to participate in the movement for national democracy in the Philippines. If you are moved by Lola’s story we encourage you to join a chapter of GABRIELA USA and join the fight against feudal-patriarchy and the systems of power that allow women like Lola to be forced into exploitation.

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Filipinas in the U.S. March on May Day for Protection and Dignity for Immigrants and Workers

For Immediate Release
May 2, 2017
Reference: Irma Shauf-Bajar, National Chairperson, gabrielawomen@gmail.com

On May 1, 2017, GABRIELA USA chapters in Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Oakland, Los Angeles, Washington D.C., New Jersey and New York City mobilized alongside thousands of immigrants and workers to demand safety, dignity and access to basic rights under an anti-immigrant and anti-worker Trump administration. In light of increasing criminalization of immigrants, through the implementation of Trump’s fascist policies of immigration bans and building border walls, GABRIELA USA insists on upholding humane legislation such as sanctuary laws for undocumented immigrants and protection for immigrants in detention and deportation proceedings. At the same time, the alliance of progressive Filipino women’s organizations also upholds the rights of workers in this country and globally–for a living wage, dignity and respect in the workplace, and access to decent jobs.

Filipinas, both immigrants and children of immigrants, marched side by side with other immigrant communities to underscore the significant contributions of immigrants to the U.S. economy today and historically. With placards, banners, and speeches about modern day colonialism and imperialism, members connect the violence of U.S. war and occupation abroad to the trends of migration to the U.S. Trump is calling for a $58 billion increase for the Defense Department dedicating half to military spending, while cutting his federal budget on housing, education, healthcare, women’s reproductive health, and organizations that provide support for domestic violence survivors. Trump and his administration is exposes themselves in not prioritizing low-income women of color, immigrant women workers, trans and gender nonconforming people and our children who will bear the brunt of the harm of these policies.

Filipinos make up one of the largest Asian American immigrant communities in the U.S.–they also make up a formidable number of migrant workers employed in essential industries like healthcare, domestic work, construction, and education. Filipino women are also victims of human trafficking in these industries. GABRIELA women demand and say no to war because women are the victims of crimes promoted by the U.S. wars abroad and at home including murder, rape, harassment and other sexual abuses, and human trafficking. GABRIELA USA has been at the forefront of demanding justice for Filipino immigrants who have been exploited without recourse from the U.S. and Philippine governments.


Representing Filipinos who are working in low-wage industries and also professional sectors, GABRIELA USA members marched for dignified and respectable working conditions. Nationally, members are waging and supporting campaigns on livable wages, wage theft, and an end to human trafficking and forced migration. GABRIELA USA calls our community, families, and our allies to RISE, RESIST, and UNITE: RISE against fascism, RESIST militarization, and UNITE for self-determination and liberation for all oppressed peoples. With the demand to protect and preserve the dignity of immigrants and workers, mass organizations remain committed to organizing in our communities and among the ranks of working women in order to advance the struggles of workers and all the oppressed. On May Day and everyday, GABRIELA USA stands with immigrant communities and workers whose labor, skills, and contributions advance the U.S. economy, allowing society to run and function daily.

 

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Happy International Working Women’s Day!

For Immediate Release
March 8, 2011

Reference: Raquel Redondiez, Chairperson, GABRIELA USA, chair@gabusa.org

Filipino Women in the U.S. Stand in Solidarity and Sisterhood with Women’s Struggles Across the World
GABRIELA-USA’s Statement on the Centennial of International Women’s Day

On March 8, 2011, over ten thousand women in the Philippines took to the streets, in what are the largest International Women’s Day actions organized by GABRIELA, the world-renowned Filipino women’s alliance.  The women demanded relief from the economic crisis in the form of price controls of basic goods, national wage hikes, immediate repatriation and protection for migrant women, comprehensive reproductive health services, education for all, and housing for poor families.  In addition, GABRIELA highlighted their unity with the rest of the Filipino people in calling for fundamental change and national liberation.

Filipino women across the US are participating in activities throughout the week of March 8 to commemorate International Working Women’s Day and expose the dire impacts of the long-term global economic crisis on the lives of Filipinas in the nation and around the world. Filipino women are taking to the streets and are engaging their communities to confront and expose the role of U.S. imperialism in the prolonged crisis of joblessness and increased attacks on women’s rights and livelihood.

In the Philippines, women face an economic crisis of epic proportions as the prices of basic commodities like sugar, rice, and gas continue to increase beyond affordability. Households suffer as utility rates skyrocket, leaving families no choice but to live without electricity or running water. On top of the increased prices of commodities, the Aquino administration also imposes an excessive 12% tax called the Expanded Value Added Tax (EVAT). With every increase, it is traditionally the women who must carry the burden of managing the household and its shrinking budget.

In the United States, Congress continues to balance the budget on the backs of women and children by proposing cuts to basic services like health care assistance to pregnant women, new mothers and children, education, and reproductive healthcare. Republicans are attempting to pass a budget that cuts nearly $60 billion in federal funding, a move that would do irreparable damage like slash 700,000 jobs through 2011 and strip all funding from Planned Parenthood, the largest women’s health provider in the nation.

As these attacks against women are being committed, both the Aquino and Obama administrations continue to paint a rosy picture that claims that the economic crisis is lifting and that the lives and welfare of Filipinas and other women are not in danger.

GABRIELA USA chapters are participating in activities throughout the nation such as a women’s day rally in Harlem, a mother’s march in Los Angeles, a domestic violence vigil in Seattle, and a forum on women’s issues in San Francisco, to expose the true nature and situation of Filipinas, as well as take action in commemoration of the historic militant women’s movement that continues today. The demands of Filipino women for protection against unfair price hikes and cuts against social services light a fire that fuels women to take to the streets and fight against anti-women and anti-people policies.

“The centennial of International Women’s Day is an important reminder and inspiration for us to continue to struggle for full women’s emancipation, especially as we are confronted with relentless attacks against women’s rights, and the erosion of social services that women and children need more than ever,” stated Raquel Redondiez, Chairwoman of GABRIELA-USA.

On this occasion, we honor the legacy of Gabriela Silang, and all of our grandmothers, sisters, daughters, and especially all the working women who have dared to organize and struggle in defense of their rights and for the advancement of future generations of women.
Join GABRIELA USA in standing in solidarity with our sisters and mothers worldwide struggling against U.S. imperialism’s attacks on our women’s basic rights, our families’ livelihood, and the public social safety net.

MABUHAY ANG KABABAIHAN!
Long Live International Women’s Day!

Photos by Tudla Productions and Luis Liwanag

In the eye of the storm, serving the people

Paninindigan Special Issue

December 2009

“A President must be on the job 24/7, ready for any contingency, any crisis, anywhere, anytime… As a country in the path of typhoons …we must be as prepared as the latest technology permits to anticipate natural calamities when that is possible; to extend immediate and effective relief when it is not….The mapping of flood- and landslide-prone areas is almost complete. Early warning, forecasting and monitoring systems have been improved…”

These were the confident words of Mrs. Gloria Arroyo in her State of the Nation Address (SONA) last July 27 as she vowed that her government will continue to invest in environment even as, according to her, the country is “safer from environmental degradation”. But on one fateful day in September 2009, all these talk about disaster preparedness was rendered empty by tropical storm “Ondoy”, and a week later by typhoon “Pepeng”, which together brought the heaviest rains, worst flooding and landslides in the country in decades.

This string of calamities served as a grim reminder of the reality of climate change and how vulnerable the country is especially with a government that is obviously ill-prepared to deal with natural disasters. More importantly, it also showed how policies and projects long opposed by the people like large-scale dams and foreign mining do cause death and destruction, and thus the urgent need to institute policy reforms.

But even as we demand accountability from the national government and call for policy changes to avoid a repeat of the enormous devastation of lives, properties and livelihood due to typhoons, we also bring attention to the remarkable spirit of bayanihan (“helping one another”) among Filipinos. For the Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan) and our member-organizations, partners and friends, the slogan “Serve the people” has always been more than just a catchphrase, but a way of life. And this we showed in our swift response to calls for relief and assistance from the victims of flooding and landslides in Metro Manila and other provinces in Luzon.

BALSA and other relief efforts

balsa work1balsa work2balsa work3for more photos, please visit http://www.bayan.ph/gallery/main.php?g2_itemId=9689

Through the Bayanihan Alay sa Sambayanan (BALSA), Bayan and its allied organizations have launched relief drives in Ondoy- and Pepeng-affected areas in Metro Manila, Laguna, Pangasinan, and Baguio. With the support of various organizations, relief formations, and institutions, BALSA has so far provided relief goods to around 7,300 families in 13 barangays in three cities and three provinces badly hit by the flooding and landslides. (See Table 1)

balsa table 1

BALSA targeted communities that have yet to be reached by relief efforts from government and other private sector initiatives. It also ensured to reach victims who have stayed in their communities instead of those who have moved to the evacuation centers since many relief drives, both government and private-led, tend to concentrate more on these centers. In this way, BALSA widens the reach of the relief initiatives, avoids the duplication of efforts, and maximizes the goods and services it has generated.

The relief operations in Pangasinan and Baguio were in coordination with Bayan Central Luzon and the Cordillera Peoples Alliance. In San Nicolas, Pangasinan and Baguio, BALSA delivered a total of 130 sacks of rice, 36 boxes of canned goods, and 15 boxes of cooking oil on top of the 2,000 plus relief packs that it allocated for the affected barangays in the said areas. The delivered goods were enough for 2,000 families. Some 13 balikbayan boxes of clothes and blankets from Bayan USA were also brought to the Cordillera region.

On December 19, through the Serve the People Corps of Bayan- Southern Tagalog, BALSA also sent goods and boxes of clothes for the Christmas season for the still flooeded areas in Laguna. Some 1,000 Christmas packs and 70 boxes of clothes were turned over to Bayan-ST.

Aside from the distribution of relief goods, BALSA has also conducted medical missions in selected communities. With volunteer doctors, nurses, and health workers moblizied by the Health Alliance for Democracy and the Samahan Operasyong Sagip (SOS), BALSA provided free medical check-up and distributed medicines to flood victims in Barangay Bagumbayan in Libis, Quezon City and in Barangay San Isidro in San Nicolas, Pangasinan.

BALSA’s relief operations have been made possible through the cooperation and support of formations such as the health sector’s Samahang Operasyong Sagip (SOS), Promotion of Church People’s Response (PCPR), and Bayan-USA. Contributions for relief goods, mobilization of volunteers, and other forms of support have also come from IBON Foundation, Kalikasan People’s Network for the Environment, AGHAM Advocates for Science and Technology for the People, Karapatan Alliance for the Advancement of People’s Rights, Bayan Muna, Kodao Productions, and others. There were also individual donors such as the Cabaero family of Pampanga.

Among the major sources of support is Bayan’s chapter in the US, which has raised cash donations for Ondoy and Pepeng victims aside from gathering hundreds of boxes of clothes, food, and medicine from across the US. Bayan-USA also sent volunteers to the Philippines to join on-the-ground relief operations. According to Bayan-USA, it has always been the responsibility of Filipino people’s organizations in the US to provide the emergency response needed for their families and loved ones back home.

Big support came from Bayan-Hong Kong and Bayan-Canada which also promoted BALSA in their respective areas. BALSA received the biggest contributions in the Hong Kong relief drive by the Filipino community. Friends and comrades from Europe, particularly in the Netherlands and Italy also gave significant contributions to the relief drive. Workers, union members and migrants in Japan through the Asia-Wide Campaign (AWC) and Migrante Japan were the first to extend international support for the relief efforts of BALSA.

Meanwhile, organizations and institutions in the health sector and their partners formed the Samahang Operasyong Sagip (SOS) as their main platform to respond to the relief and medical needs of the calamity victims. SOS includes the Council for Health and Development (CHD), Health Alliance for Democracy (HEAD), Alliance of Health Workers (AHW), Community Medicine Development Foundation, All-UP Workers’ Union – Manila, Health Action for Human Rights, Health Students’ Action (HSA), People’s Health Movement – Philippines, Center for People’s Development and Governance (CPDG), and NARS (Association of Community Health Nurses and People’s Health Advocates).

As of this writing, SOS has already provided relief goods to 11,603 families in various areas in Metro Manila as well as in the provinces of Laguna, Pangasinan, and Benguet (in partnership with BALSA). It has also conducted a total of 15 medical missions that served 5,012 patients in calamity-hit areas. (See Table 2)

balsa table2(click to enlarge)

On the other hand, Bayan Muna’s (BM) Serve the People relief drive has, as of Oct. 18, has already reached 7,384 families in six cities in Metro Manila, three towns in Rizal, and one town each in the provinces of Nueva Ecija and Laguna. (See Table 3)

balsa table3

Another major relief project is the Tulong Anakpawis, a coordinated relief effort spearheaded by Anakpawis Partylist in cooperation with Task Force Obrero, Sagip Kanayunan, Kilusang Mayo Uno, Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas, Kadamay, Crispin B. Beltran Resource Center, Piston, Pamalakaya, National Network of Agrarian Reform Advocates-Youth, Center for Trade Union and Human Rights, Ecumenical Institute for Labor Education and Research, Institute for Occupational Health, Safety and Development (IOHSAD) and volunteer individuals from the labor, peasant, urban poor, drivers, vendors, fisherfolk, and other sectors. (See Table 4)

balsa table 4

Coping with trauma

Meanwhile, in addition to the distribution of relief goods, some institutions have began to provide psycho-social therapy services to help calamity victims cope with the trauma caused by the disaster. The Children’s Rehabilitation Center (CRC), for instance, has given such therapy to children in Barangay Olandes, Marikina City. According to CRC staff, they have observed symptoms of trauma such as lack of sleep, rousing from sleep and catching breath as if drowning, fear of darkness, and fear of water, among the children in typhoon-hit areas.

According to the CRC, the victims, especially the children, need long-term rehabilitation not only in terms of livelihood but also psychologically because the trauma they suffered is unimaginable. In one case, for instance, children and their families had to cling to a large tree for 48 hours in order to survive as they awaited government rescue that never came.

To address the needs of children who suffered from trauma due to Ondoy and Pepeng and to prepare for future disasters, the Task Force Children of the Storm, a network of organizations dealing with children’s rights and welfare and of which the CRC is also a member, will publish a self-help manual. The manual is intended as a simple, easy-to-use handout that anyone can use to help their children cope psychologically during calamities, according to the CRC.

Socioeconomic impact

The twin devastation brought by typhoons Ondoy and Pepeng hit the Philippines at a time when the country is still reeling from the impact of the global financial and economic crisis. According to the latest (as of Oct 16) consolidated report of the National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC), the total cost of damage from the two typhoons reached P21.29 billion. The cost of damage to agriculture accounted for 64.8% of the total, and infrastructure, 35.1%. About 7.43 million were affected in the country’s 12 regions, including Metro Manila[1]. (See Table 5)

balsa table 5Compiled by Bayan using data from the NDCC Situation Report No. 31 dated Oct 16, 2009

Initial estimates from the National Economic Development Authority (NEDA) claimed that the macroeconomic impact of the two typhoons is equivalent to about 0.2% of the gross domestic product (GDP)[2]. Finance Secretary Margarito Teves, on the other hand, said that aside from the budget deficit possibly ballooning to P300 billion this year, 2009 economic growth could also fall to 0.4 – 1.4% because of the storms from an earlier forecast of 0.8 – 1.8%, although the downgraded target has yet to be made official[3].

Government acknowledges that current estimates are based on conservative assessment, which did not include the thousands of homes and businesses that were devastated. Nonetheless, such extent of damage and dislocation will surely worsen the social and economic effects of the global crunch on the chronically depressed, backward Philippine economy and the exploited and downtrodden Filipino people.

While government tends to downplay the effects of the recent typhoons on the GDP, with NEDA pointing out that reconstruction will spur domestic growth, the costs are actually much higher considering the still unquantified short- and medium-term effects of losses in jobs and livelihood due to Ondoy and Pepeng (although independent think tank IBON Foundation, in a preliminary estimate, said that Ondoy alone would push at least 276,000 families in NCR, Calabarzon, and Central Luzon into “long-term poverty”).

Note also that official unemployment before the storms ravaged the country was pegged at 7.6% nationwide (National Statistics Office’s July 2009 Labor Force Survey), with the top three highest regional unemployment posted by the NCR (12.1%); Calabarzon (11.1%); and Central Luzon (9.9%) – the regions most affected by the typhoons. These regions together account for 79.9% of the total number of permanently displaced workers due to economic reasons from Jan 2008 to Jun 2009 as well as 69.3% of the total number of families affected by Ondoy and Pepeng. (See Table 6)

balsa table 6 Compiled by Bayan using data from the NSO on unemployment, BLES on displaced workers, and NDCC on affected families by Ondoy & Pepeng

Aside from economic displacements, the poor and marginalized sectors such as the families in the slums as well as villages of small fishers face physical dislocations as government uses the recent flooding in Metro Manila and other parts of Luzon to justify the demolition of squatter colonies. According to the Metro Manila Inter-Agency Committee on Informal Settlers (MMIAC), there is an estimated 544,069 households living in different illegal settlements[4], including waterways. The Laguna Lake Development Authority (LLDA), on the other hand, is renewing its push to relocate the lakeshore residents and “illegal settlers” near Laguna de Bay, which could affect about 100,000 households[5].

However, it remains to be seen if government will dismantle not only the shanties of the urban poor but the factories and other huge infrastructure such as business establishments blocking the flow of floodwater. In addition, the experience of Pangasinan residents with the flooding caused by the release of water by the San Roque Dam also challenges the wisdom of decades-old policy of government on building mega-infrastructure to attract foreign investments.

The siltation of the Agno River in the province which causes it to easily overflow and flood nearby towns is also blamed on large-scale mining operations, which the Arroyo administration is aggressively promoting to foreign investors. In Benguet and other Cordillera provinces which were hit by landslides after Pepeng poured heavy rains, large-scale mining operations are held responsible as well for making the region vulnerable to landslides.

Educating and mobilizing the people

Indeed, beyond providing immediate and short-term relief and assistance to calamity victims is the need to ensure that long-term policies are put in place to protect the environment and avoid a repeat of the destruction caused by Ondoy and Pepeng. Towards this, BALSA ensured that its every relief operation is also used to educate the affected communities of the underlying issues behind the calamities and what are the needed reforms to better protect them from future natural disasters.

Bayan-NCR promptly developed and published an education material on Ondoy and Pepeng that comprehensively discusses the relations of the calamities and their impact on the people with government policies favoring big private corporations and allowing the wanton plunder of the national patrimony. A series of public fora on climate change has since been launched by different organizations to help enlighten the people and explain to them the root causes of the disasters. During Bayan’s 8th National Congress, a resolution was passed calling for a nationwide education campaign on climate change aside from a separate resolution expressing sympathy and solidarity with the families of the victims of the flooding and landslides.

The 12-vehicle convoy to Pangasinan and Baguio on Nov. 5 and 6 under BALSA, was not only a relief effort but also a protest caravan against the San Roque dam and foreign mining. In Urdaneta, Pangasinan, a protest rally was held in front of the municipal hall to highlight the accountability of the San Roque Power Corporation (SRPC) and the National Power Corporation (Napocor) in the massive flash flood that affected 38 cities and municipalities. In Baguio City, a short program was held in Burnham Park to discuss the ill-effects of large-scale foreign mining and how it aggravated the effects of Pepeng in the Cordillera region. A similar protest and relief caravan will be held soon in Southern Tagalog.

To be sure, natural disasters will continue to hit the country in the future with drastic climate changes facing the Philippines and the world. But armed not only with the spirit of bayanihan and of serving the people, but most importantly with the firm resolve to struggle for genuine change that will free us from oppression, exploitation and from the harmful effects of an environment degraded and plundered in the name of profits, we will survive and triumph. #

Sources

[1] National Disaster Coordinating Council (Oct 16, 2009) NDCC Update, Situation Report No. 31 on Tropical Storm “ONDOY” {KETSANA} Glide No. TC-2009-000205-PHL and Typhoon “PEPENG’ {Parma} Glide No. TC-2009-000214-PHL

[2] BusinessWorld (Oct 7, 2009), Economic planners see 0.2% hit to GDP, Accessible online at http://www.bworldonline.com/BW100709/content.php?id=002

[3] Agence France-Presse (Oct 19, 2009), Philippine economy falls victim to twin storms, Accessible online at http://business.inquirer.net/money/breakingnews/view/20091019-230896/Philippine-economy-falls-victim-to-twin-storms

[4] Philippine Daily Inquirer (Oct 18, 2009), P32B needed to house 500,000 squatter-families, Accessible online at http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/metro/view/20091018-230766/P32B-needed-to-house-500000-squatter-families

[5] Philippine Daily Inquirer (Oct 18, 2009), Legarda, Manda call for relocation of lakeshore residents, Accessible online at http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20091018-230678/Legarda-Manda-call-for-relocation-of-lakeshore-residents