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Surveillance equipment from UK may be used by PH gov’t to spy on activists, rights defenders

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Karapatan today scored the recently reported
sale of $200,000 British surveillance equipment to the Philippine government,
in the light of the
listing of more than 600 persons, human rights
defenders and critics of the Duterte government in the proscription petition
filed by the Department of Justice (DOJ) at a regional court in Manila on
February 21, 2018 seeking to declare the Communist Party of the Philippines-New
People’s Army (CPP-NPA) as terrorist organizations.

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Lumad school hits NCIP prompt reaction to ‘bagani’ show issue

In a tweet thread, Lumad school group Alternative Learning Center for Agricultural and Livelihood Development or Alcadev reacted to the statement of the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) on the use of ‘bagani’ in ABS-CBN’s new fantasy series.

“NCIP has remained silent on the numerous [human rights violations] against the Lumad. But now that Bagani is trending, they are quick to release a statement – a clear attempt to paint themselves pro-IP while at the very core, they are mere puppets of [Armed Forces of the Philippines], mining companies and US-Duterte regime,” the thread started.

“While we appreciate NCIP’s statement on ABS-CBN’s use of Bagani in its fantaserye, we are also dismayed on their silence and inaction on the Lianga Massacre. In 2015, AFP-backed Magahat-Bagani paramilitary arrived at our community two days after AFP troops encamped at our areas,” it continued.

“The Magahat-Bagani group then stormed into our schools and homes, gathered us in one place and killed two of our leaders in front of us. They also killed our Executive Director inside our school.”

“Our story under AFP and Magahat-Bagani group isn’t fictional. This is what needs justice the most and it is NCIP’s duty “to protect and fulfill the IPs” as what they said in their statement,” the thread ended.

Emerito Samarca, ALCADEV’s executive director was killed on September 1, 2015 by elements of the Magahat-Bagani, a paramilitary group known to be attached to the 36th Infantry Battalion of the Philippine Army.

 

ABS-CBN draws reactions to show’s use of ‘bagani’

On March 5, the NCIP released their statement on the use of ‘bagani’ in the new teleserye [television series].

“The Bagani is real, not a fictional and not a mythological group of warriors which the ABS-CBN TV series would like to portray. Bagani is an exclusively indigenous term that refers to the peacekeeping force o the Manobo Indigenous Cultural Communities / Indigenous Peoples (ICCs/IPs) and othe ICCs/IPs in Mindanao. The Bagani defends and protects lives, properties and territory. Its prime duty is to guard the ancestral domain against any intrusion from outside forces that pose a threat to the lives of the ICCs/IPs. It is a sensitive position and class not lightly ascribed to just Amy person and never to those outside ICCs/IPs,” said NCIP Chairperson Leonor T. Orayde-Quintayo in the statement.

“By portraying Bagani as merely fictional or mythological, and without reference to the historical and cultural significance, the TV fantasy show distorts, misleads, and confuses rather than educates the Filipino TV viewers on the indigenous concept and term ‘Bagani.’ It is not surprising that members of the Manobo and other ICC’s/IPs took deep offense on the appropriation of the term Bagani on the show,” the statement also said.

Also on March 5, Alcadev tweeted on the network’s use of bagani.

“AFP has already bastardized our culture when it created paramilitary group named Magahat-Bagani who killed our Exec Director & community leaders. ABS-CBN could’ve brought back the real essence of a Lumad warrior. But they chose to trivialize this and turned it a fantaserye.”

 

They posted this quoting ABS-CBN’s March 5 press statement on the use of bagani.

When the trailer of the show came out in early February, the show also drew flak on the brown makeup applied to the skin or the ‘bronzing’ of its mixed race lead actors. The head writer of the show explained that the makeup was not intended for brown skin, but explained that in the script, the desert people were brown because the dirt and sand stick to their skin.

 

Another ‘bagani’

Joining the surge of reactions, the official Twitter account of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) shared a photo of the Pulang Bagani Batallion, a command of the New People’s Army (NPA) comprised of several company formations operating in the mountain ranges that surround the city center of Davao.

 

Another ‘bagani’ whose name surfaced in social media during this time was Parts Bagani, a prolific artist from the New People’s Army who portrays the armed struggle in his distinct style.

 

The post Lumad school hits NCIP prompt reaction to ‘bagani’ show issue appeared first on Manila Today.

Bagani: misrepresentation for profit

For motives of accumulating profits, commercial television will not hesitate to appropriate cultural symbols and states of indigenous people. ABS-CBN’s flippant drama series, Bagani is an eminent proof.

TV programs have to make a profit; to make a profit requires high viewership ratings to attract commercial advertisers. The problem, however, is the programs they feed us and on which we waste our precious time are horrifyingly dull, trashy, immature, homogenous clones of each other (a basic feature of our consumer culture). Although TV researchers and writers are trying their best to remedy this seemingly incurable defect as to resort to cultural appropriation, still our TV programs (particularly the teleseryes) never pass beyond uniformity, silliness, and sentimentalism.

One watches Bagani and cannot help noticing the whole show is, it seems, trying to make a fool of itself. Nobody knows what the term “Bagani” means; not the actors (God help them!), and definitely not the writers who seem to suffer from gross confusion, until we are referred to the very legitimate and very constructive complain made by the National Commission on Indigenous Peoles (NCIP):

“The Bagani is real, not a fictional and not a mythological group of warriors which the ABS-CBN TV series would like to portray. Bagani is an exclusively indigenous term that refers to the peacekeeping force o the Manobo Indigenous Cultural Communities / Indigenous Peoples (ICCs/IPs) and othe ICCs/IPs in Mindanao. The Bagani defends and protects lives, properties and territory. Its prime duty is to guard the ancestral domain against any intrusion from outside forces that pose a threat to the lives of the ICCs/IPs. It is a sensitive position and class not lightly ascribed to just Amy person and never to those outside ICCs/IPs.” – NCIP Statement on The Use ofBaganiin The ABSCBN Drama Fantasy Series 

The situation is made truly tragic not by the lack of imagination of the TV researchers and writers nor the silliness of the program itself, but by the fact that we are entirely ignorant of the culture of our indigenous brothers. That is shameful. Indigenous culture with its knowledge and wisdom and practices that insist on respect for the natural environment, as opposed to our excessively materialistic and frivolous way of life.

Also, NCIP’s statement unmasks the ruthless habit of commercial television of reckless and irresponsible cultural appropriation especially of indigenous culture just to augment viewership rating:

“By portraying Bagani as merely fictional or mythological, and without reference to the historical and cultural significance, the TV fantasy show distorts, misleads, and confuses rather than educates the Filipino TV viewers on the indigenous concept and term ‘Bagani.’ It is not surprising that members of the Manobo and other ICC’s/IPs took deep offense on the appropriation of the term Bagani on the show.”

On the part of indigenous people this is even more demoralizing. The TV institution, with an almost complete disregard of their circumstances, has never given them a just representation. When they appear on TV, they are often stereotyped, and never given their authentic image and voice as though their existence has no certain basis in reality. To transform indigenous culture into a mere marketing vehicle is a supreme act of disrespect and greediness.

Commercial television is never interested in serious culture. It is only interested in ratings and revenues. Its cynicism toward indigenous culture is absolutely astounding. The TV series Bagani is an acrid example of cultural distortion inflicted on indigenous reality. Considering the fact of the sufferings and lasting grievances of indigenous people at the hands of rapacious multinational corporations and the state that want to take their ancestral domain, programs like this obscure, they do not enlighten.

Of course we can always choose to turn off our lousy television.

Photo of NCIP statement on use of ‘bagani’ in new ABS-CBN teleserye

Carlo Rey Lacsamana is a Filipino born and raised in Manila, Philippines. Since 2005, he has been living and working in the Tuscan town of Lucca, Italy.

The post Bagani: misrepresentation for profit appeared first on Manila Today.

IN PHOTOS: International Women’s Day 2018 in Manila

Women from all walks of life marched together against discrimination, harassment, violence, poverty, and, most of all, what they call the macho-fascist dictatorship of President Rodrigo Duterte.

The post IN PHOTOS: International Women’s Day 2018 in Manila appeared first on Manila Today.

ALAB Newscast (March 9, 2018)

MAALAB NA PAGBATI, PILIPINAS! NARITO ANG MGA NAG-AALAB NA BALITA MULA SA ALTERMIDYA NETWORK

– Libu-libong kababaihan, nagprotesta sa International Women’s Day
– Mga sibilyan sa Mindanao, pinipilit umanong sumuko bilang mga NPA
– Pamilya ng mga EJK victims, tumindig laban sa war on drugs
– Sanofi Pasteur, dapat managot ayon sa health workers
– Mga kaanak at kakilala, pinabulaanang NPA si Myles Albasin
– Sahod ng hacienda workers sa Negros Oriental, aabot lang sa P200 kada kinsenas
– Free Raffy Baylosis Coalition, inilunsad
– Sa pagtatapos ng lakbayan ng Samar, mga magsasaka patuloy na mangangalampag vs kagutuman at militarisasyon

atbp.

PANOORIN!

I-DOWNLOAD DITO

The post ALAB Newscast (March 9, 2018) appeared first on Altermidya.

Duterte regime’s proscription petition targets critics, rights defenders – Karapatan

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Karapatan condemns the listing of more than 600 persons, human rights defenders and critics of the Duterte government in the proscription petition filed by the Department of Justice (DOJ), through Senior Assistant State Prosecutor Peter Ong, at a regional court in Manila on February 21, 2018. The petition not only seeks to declare the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army (CPP-NPA) as terrorist organizations but also named individuals as their supposed leaders or members, including those who are dead, missing and members of paramilitary units accused of killing Lumads in Mindanao.

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Marcos all over again, women journalists on Women’s Day say

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History is repeating itself, Filipino women journalists said at a forum on the role of women in Philippine media at the University of the Philippines last Thursday, International Working Women’s Day. Eminent women journalists likened the Rodrigo Duterte government to Ferdinand Marcos’s martial law for its many attacks against press freedom at the Women Talk […]