Home Blog Page 536

Iloilo groups hold People’s SONA

0
Hundreds of protesters held a People’s SONA last Monday, June 23, in time for President Rodrigo Duterte’s third State of the Nation Address. The activists called for justice for victims of extrajudicial killings as they demanded a stop to militarization of communities, human rights violations, neo-liberal economic policies, corruption in government as well as other […]

Stop the Attacks — United People’s SONA 2018

0
The broadest opposition forces ever assembled against the Duterte administration launched their own United People’s State of the Nation Address (SONA) on July 23, 2018 as Pres. Duterte delivers his third SONA before a divided Congress rife in factional power struggles backed by competing big businesses, domestic and foreign. With various performances, protesters slammed Duterte’s […]

‘Imbes na makakabili ka ng isang kilong bigas’

0
“Sa TRAIN Law, ang gastos ng mahihirap, lumalaki. Imbes na makabili ka ng isang kilong bigas, kalahati na lang. At ang isang kilong isda, kalahati na rin.”–Arturo Quiros, Tagapangulo, Kilusang May Kapansanan  

House power struggle exposes major crack in ruling coalition – solon

0

The country witnessed an unexpected spectacle on Monday when former president, now Pampanga Rep. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo engaged in a tug of war with Davao del Norte 1st District Rep. Pantaleon Alvarez on the speakership of the House of Representatives.

#SONA2018: Panawagan ng Kabataan

Hindi nagpahuli sa pagmartsa at pagsigaw ng kanilang bitbit na panawagan ang sektor ng mga kabataan sa naganap na United People’s SONA 2018 nitong ika-23 ng Hulyo kasabay naman ng State of the Nation Address ni Duterte sa Commonwealth Avenue, Quezon City.

Taon-taon ay mayroong malaking bilang ng mga estudyante ang nakikiisa sa SONA protest. Sa bisa ng sining-pangprotesta, mga sigaw at plakard, matagumpay na inilatag sa kahabaan ng nasabing abenida ang kanilang mga hinaing. Ang kilos-protesta ngayon ay may mas malaki pang bilang ng lumahok mula sa kanilang sektor. Naririto ang kanilang mga bitbit na isyung nais nilang ipanawagan.

 

Rejhon Modesto, 20, National Union of Students of the Philippines

Si Rejhon ay National Deputy Secretary ng National Union Of Students of the Philippines (NUSP). Si Rejhon ay kabilang sa sektor ng kabataan at nananawagan sa tunay na libreng edukasyon.

Ayon sa kanya, hindi tunay ang libreng edukasyon na pinapatupad dahil sa Return Service Policy kung saan kailangan magbalik ng serbisyo ang kabataan sa mga state universities and colleges (SUCs) na kanilang pinagtapusan. Ang polisiya na ito ay isang pamamaraan upang pagkakitaan ang kabataan. Nararanasan ito sa Cagayan State University, Palawan State University, at Negros State University. Samantala sa Polytechnic University of the Philippines, University of the Philippines, at Philippine State College of Aeronautics, nangyayari rin ito sa pagbibigay serbisyo ng mga estudyante ng 10 hours bawat linggo.

Patuloy din ang paniniil ng other school fees na labas sa resibo dahil ayon sa implementing rules and regulations (IRR) ng batas, hinde ito kasama at dapat bayaran ng mga estudyante. Naging mas matagal ang pagpoproseso sa pagkuha ng badyet sapagkat ang pondo ng mga student organization ay manggagaling mismo sa gobyerno na nagreresulta sa paghaba ng oras na ginugugol ng proseso.

Paula Mae C. Balones ng Tanggol Wika, 18, Tanggol Wika

Unang paglusong ito ni Paula ng PUP sa daluyong ng masang Pilipinong nakikibaka. “[I]pinaglalaban namin na huwag tanggalin ‘yong [kursong] Filipino sa kolehiyo kasi mawawalan kami ng [program] at mawawalan din ng subject ‘yung ibang estudyante,” aniya. Panawagan pa niya, “´Yung Tanggol Wika kasi, gusto namin na, itinataas kasi ngayon ‘yung lebel ng pag-aaral ng Filipinolohiya [ng PUP] para ipantay sa UP kaso ngayon, sinasabing tatanggalin na naman daw ulit. So, maaaring mawawalan kami ng [programa] at hindi namin alam kung saan kami mapupunta kung mawawala ‘yong [kursong] Filipino.”

Cerio Solage, 20

Wala siyang kinakabibilangang organisasyon at katatapos lang niya ng kurso na Bachelor of Secondary Education Major in Social Studies. Sabi niya, nais niyang maging guro sa hinaharap at alam niya ang hinaing ng mga guro kung saan nagtratrabaho ng sobra ngunit sila’y hindi nababayaran ng sapat sa kanilang serbisyo. Nakikiisa siya sa panawagang pagtaas  ng sweldo ng mga guro sa pambulikong paaralan. Naudyok din siya na sumama sa United People’s SONA dahil sa mga sinasabi ni Duterte na laban sa mahihirap at kababaihan. Maging ang mga polisiya niya na hindi tumutupad sa kanyang mga pinangako. At higit sa lahat ang mga direksyon na tinutulak ng pangulo na mala-diktador sa bayan.

Mula sa mga panayam nina Emmanuel Salamanca, Coleen Gonzales, James Michael Benitez ng Liga ng Kabataang Propagandista

The post #SONA2018: Panawagan ng Kabataan appeared first on Manila Today.

Missionaries of the Assumption: A Statement of Concern and Indignation on the continuing injustices against the Indigenous Peoples

0

We are called to respond to the situations of misery and injustice, wherever we work and whatever our specific tasks may be. The poor are always at the centre of our concerns. We believe that the poor, especially among the indigenous peoples, are not only those who do not have the means to satisfy their material needs, but also those who, on the level of human dignity, are excluded from full social and political participation and unable to exercise their right to self-determination, to decide for themselves.

IN PHOTOS: Art and dissent at the People’s SONA

While thousands of protesters marched yesterday at the United People’s SONA, armed officers were dispersed at various points along Commonwealth Avenue in Quezon City.

The protesters were also armed, not with guns but with their voices and their art. Here are some works of art by activist groups at the SONA protest yesterday.

The many faces of Duterte

A protester poses as Pres. Duterte during the SONA 2018 protest in Commonwealth Avenue, Quezon City. Photo by Miggy Hilario.
A protester dressed up as Duterte with a Hitler moustache points a gun at a student. Photo by Ulasha Gurung.
A member of urban poor group Kadamay paints an image of Duterte on a wok, symbolizing Filipinos’ suffering high prices of food and fuel products due to the TRAIN Law. Photo by Dez Rafal.
Duterte as ‘Demolition King’. His ‘Build, Build Build’ program on aims more infrastructure programs on the surface, but communities report massive demolitions of urban poor housing. Photo by Shane David.
#BabaeAko advocates use different ‘weapons’ against tyrannical and misogynistic Duterte. Photo by Miggy Hilario.
A protester wears a Duterte mask while alongside someone wearing a mask with the face of Department of Budget and Management secretary Benjamin Diokno. Photo by Pau Villanueva.
‘Dutertrain’ effigy by Ugatlahi Artist Collective. The effigy depicts Duterte as a deadly train that tramples on the rights of the people. Photo by Ryan Valiente.

Read: UGATLahi: Art in times of crisis

‘Dutertrain’ effigy by Ugatlahi Artist Collective. The effigy depicts Duterte as a deadly train that tramples on the rights of the people. Photo by Shane David.
Protesters burn the effigy towards the end of the program. Photo by Ryan Valiente.
A young protester dresses up as Marvel’s Deadpool as the effigy burns on the background. Photo by Miggy Hilario.

Millennials fight back

Youth protesters from Far Eastern University Manila used memes as their way to communicate their rage against the administration. Humor and wit—this is what they cannot take away from millennials, even in the midst of battle. Photo by Dez Rafal.
Youth protesters from Far Eastern University Manila used memes as their way to communicate their rage against the administration. Humor and wit—this is what they cannot take away from millennials, even in the midst of battle. Photo by Dez Rafal.
Youth protesters from Far Eastern University Manila used memes as their way to communicate their rage against the administration. Humor and wit—this is what they cannot take away from millennials, even in the midst of battle. Photo by Dez Rafal.
But just when we thought only millennials brought witty placards with them, an elderly nun had this. Photo by Pau Villanueva.

Writings on the wall

A young graffiti artist adorns the a blank wall along Commonwealth Avenue with an Oust Duterte call. Photo by Maureen delos Reyes.
Youths work on a work of stencil art. Photo by Maureen delos Reyes.
Advocates for Philippine sovereignty have nicknamed Duterte ‘tuta’, or a lapdog to economic giants U.S. and China. Photo by Mel Matthew.

Colorful calls

A large tapestry-like work of art is hung on a foot bridge, bearing calls against killings of farmers and indigenous people and development aggression on ancestral lands. Photo by Dez Rafal.
Paintings depicting the government’s various anti-people policies. Photo by Mel Matthew.
Terminated contractual workers of Nutri-Asia paraded parodied versions of the products they made. Photo by Miggy Hilario.
Metro Manila workers carry wooden standees bearing workers’ and students’ calls. Photo by Dez Rafal.
Small fisherfolk and members of Pamalakaya advocate Filipinos’ sovereignty over Philippine territory. Photo by Ryan Valiente.

Painted with blood

 

A relative of an Oplan Tokhang victim holds up a piece of cloth bearing the battlecry of many – justice. Photo by Dez Rafal.
A protester wearing a piece of taped black garbage bag portraying EJK victims. Photo by Miggy Hilario.
A group depicts victims of extrajudicial killings because of the government’s war on drugs and police operations to arrest ‘tambays’ or loiterers. Photo by Pau Villanueva.
Photo by Maureen delos Reyes.
Artist group RESBAK gave a moving piece where performers passed a long list of victims of the government’s war on drugs, Oplan Tambay, and its so-called counterinsurgency program in the countryside while some names were said out loud. Photo by Miggy Hilario.
Artist group RESBAK gave a moving piece where performers passed a long list of victims of the government’s war on drugs, Oplan Tambay, and its so-called counterinsurgency program in the countryside while some names were said out loud. Photo by Alyssa Recuenco.
One performance depicted the plight of farmers due to heavy militarization in the countryside. Photo by Dez Rafal.
Cultural workers from Southern Tagalog perform a piece about peasant killings in their region. Southern Tagalog is the second most militarized region in the Philippines under Oplan Kapayapaan. Photo by Miggy Hilario.
Artists from Sama-samang Artista para sa Kilusang Agraryo (SAKA) paint outlines of “dead bodies” on the street. Photo by Patrick Caraig.
Artists from Sama-samang Artista para sa Kilusang Agraryo (SAKA) paint outlines of “dead bodies” on the street. Photo by Mel Matthew.

 

The post IN PHOTOS: Art and dissent at the People’s SONA appeared first on Manila Today.

Si Tatay Sev at Mak, ang asong may pulang laso

Sa pag-angat ng mga karatula, pagwagayway ng mga bandera, at pag-alingawngaw ng mga boses ng mamamayan, hudyat nito ang pagsisimula nang pagmamarsta ng mga nagtipon sa University Avenue – University of the Philippines patungong Batasang Pambansa sa Commonwealth Avenue.

Kuha ni Kimi Teves.

Sa dami ng mga taong nasa paligid, sa dami ng mga kuwento na iyong maririnig, madarama mo ang bigat na pasan ng mga kababayan natin at ang tangan nilang mga mithiin na kanilang ipinaglalaban. Di maiiwasang madala sa alon at bugso ng kanilang mga damdamin, at matangay sa agos ng kanilang paninindigan. Sa kapal ng emosyon na bumabalot sa aming lupon, doon ko nakilala sina Mak at Tatay Sev.

Habang sinasabayan ko ang paglalakad ng mga tao ay nahagingan ng aking paningin ang isang puting aso at ang kanyang amo habang nakaupo at nagpapahinga sila sa may damuhan sa center island ng University Ave. Hindi ko napigilang mapangiti sa aking nakita, at maging ang mga paa ko ay tila nagkusang humakbang patungo sa kanilang direksyon, at ang tanging nais ko lamang nang mga sandaling iyon ay ang makilala kung sino sila.

Sila sina Tatay Severino, 60 taong gulang, at si Mak na halos mag-iisang taong gulang pa lamang. Si Tatay Sev ay miyembro ng PISTON (Pinagkaisahang Samahan ng mga Tsuper at Operator Nationwide) at may 30 taon ng namamasada. Ang kanyang ruta ay Pasay at Monumento. Magmula noong mapasapuder niya si Mak ay lagi na niya itong kasakasama kahit saan siya magtungo.

Naroon sila sa United People’s SONA noong Hulyo 23 upang ipanawagan ang pagbasura sa jeepney phaseout. Bagama’t sinisimulan na ang malawakang pagpapalit sa mga lumang jeepney ng mga e-jeep sa ibang parte sa Metro Manila at maging sa buong bansa, tuloy-tuloy ang mga hakbangin ng PISTON at ibang transport groups upang ipaalam sa kapwa drayber, opereytor, at pasahero ang epekto ng PUV modernization program ng pamahalaan.

Basahin: What you should know about the jeepney phaseout program

Ito na ang ikatlong martsa na kanilang dinaluhang magkasama. Si Mak ay may sariling pamamaraan upang ipakita niya ang kanyang suporta hindi lamang kay Tatay Sev, maging sa lahat ng mga dumalo sa pagtitipon, sa pamamagitan ng pulang laso na tangan ng kanyang leeg.

Kuha ni Kimi Teves.

Sumasabay sila sa pagmartsa ng mga tao, at sa bawat paghinto ay sabay rin ang paghahanap ni Mak ng puwestong kanyang mapaghihigaan.

Kuha ni Kimi Teves.

Maging ang mga tao sa paligid ay ‘di maiwasang mapatingin, at mapangiti sa presensya ni Mak. May mga pagkakataon na lumalapit rin sila upang litratuhan at magpalitrato sa piling ng mag-amo.

Kuha ni Kimi Teves.

At kahit mabigat ang suliranin na dala-dala ni Tatay Sev dahil sa mga pagbabago ng mga patakarang isinusulong ng gobyerno sa ating pampublikong transportasyon, nakakahanap ng katuwang si Tatay Sev kay Mak at sa libu-libong mamamayang kasama nilang nakikibaka.

Kuha ni Kimi Teves.

 

 

The post Si Tatay Sev at Mak, ang asong may pulang laso appeared first on Manila Today.