34.7 C
Manila
Friday, May 3, 2024
Home Blog Page 798

Ampatuan furlough alarms journos, rights groups

0
Journalists and human rights advocates expressed alarm over a four-hour furlough given by the Quezon City Regional Trial Court (QC-RTC) to a primary suspect in the November 24, 2009 Ampatuan Massacre that killed 58 victims, including 32 reporters. The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) said in a statement it is concerned to […]

Ang Mandirigma ay Makata

0

pula ang tinta

ng pluma,

ng bala,

ng dugong kumawala,

na umagos mula

sa katawang lupa

ng isang makata, isang mandirigma.

isinulat mo’y digma,

mga saknong ng pag-aalsa,

mga oyayi at oda,

mga taludturan ng paglaya,

para sa masang sinisinta,

para sa inapi’t dinusta,

para sa bayang musa

at lubos mong dinadakila.

ang iyong mga tula

ay di nagpalimita

sa batas ng sukat at tugma,

ni hindi nagpadikta

sa itinakda ng akademya

bagkus ay singlaya

ng angkin mong pagsinta

sa pinag-aalayang masa.

katapusan na marahil nga

ng iyong mga pulang akda

ngunit hindi ng naiwan mong digma,

hindi ng palaban mong mga tula,

ni hindi ng iyong mga panata,

panatang buhay na paalala:

na ang mga rebolusyonaryong tula

ay sila ring mga armas pandigma!

Para kay Kasamang Maya Daniel, makata, mandirigma.

The post Ang Mandirigma ay Makata appeared first on Manila Today.

Manila residents march vs impending eviction threat

0

Exactly a month after they first marched in protest tothe NLEX-SLEX Connector and the Philippine National Railway (PNR) North-South Railway Project, residents of communities in Manila facing the threat of eviction from their homes conducted a ‘Holiday March’ to reiterate their call for the government to stop the construction of the projects and to review its implementation.

Private home owners, barangay officials, associations, renters, and urban poor residents paraded along areas that will be affected by the said project. The group marched along Algeciras Street calling out to fellow residents to join the campaign versus the ‘twin project’.

Photo by Akira Liwanag

It was quite a long walk from España Avenue to Maria Clara St. in Manila, but the participants endured the struggle. They walked back along Simoun St. to España Avenue to hold a short program. They expressed their dismay and called out in protest against the bogus consultations conducted by the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) and the Department of Transportation (DOTr) by a die-in protest action while simultaneously chanting, “My house is not for sale, No to eviction!”

Photo by Mel Matthew

“Hindi naman konsultasyon ‘yung ginagawa ng pamahalaan,” said Ronnie Isaac, spokesperson of Sampaloc Peoples Alliance. “Tinitipon nila ‘yung mga residente para lamang alukin ng loan assistance. Binibigyang katwiran lamang ng gobyernong ito yung gagawing pagpatag sa aming mga tahanan,” he added.

Owners of houses that will be affected by the ‘twin project’ supports the call to stop and review the construction of the said projects by posting signs outside their homes saying, ‘This house is not for sale’.

Photo by Erika Cruz

The group challenges the Duterte administration to stop and review the said project and reconsider the appeal of the local residents to realign the construction to areas that will not flatten communities.

“Handa kaming makipagdayalogo sa pamahalaan upang maiparating ang aming pagtutol sa pagpatag sa aming mga tirahan. Hindi kami mapapagod na lumaban para sa karapatan namin sa paninirahan. Patuloy kaming magkakaisa at mananawagan hangga’t nananatiling bingi at bulag ang administrasyon sa karaingan ng kanyang mamamayan,” Isaac said.

After the program, the group continued to march to Hipodromo St. in Sta. Mesa to join the residents there who were conducting a meeting to express their solidarity with them.

“Nakikiisa kami sa laban ng lahat ng mga residente kontra sa ebiksyon at upang ipanawagan ‘yung ating mga karaingan sa pamahalaan,” stated Emerson Adapon, resident of Sampaloc. “Huwag tayong matakot lumaban para sa ating mga karapatan. Magkaisa tayo at palawakin pa ang ating hanay,” he added.

Photos by Akira Liwanag, Mel Matthew, at Erika Cruz

The post Manila residents march vs impending eviction threat appeared first on Manila Today.

Activists hold relief operation in Rizal

0
The Makabayan bloc, Bagong Alyansang Makabayan and other activist organizations organized a Bayanihan Alay sa Sambayanan (BALSA) relief operation for flood victims in Rodriguez, Rizal last Thursday, August 16. Beneficiaries of the two-day relief operations were former residents of urban poor communities in Metro Manila who were located by government to the province, but in […]

Sara not to run for senate

0

Presidential daughter and Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio said she has no plans in seeking for senatorial position despite getting positive survey results.

Palawan Lost

0

A couple of weeks ago the foreign news channel Russia Today (RT) released a mini documentary about the island of Palawan entitled, Palawan Lost.

One of the most visited islands not only in the Philippines but in the entire Southeast Asia, Palawan is loved for its captivating beaches, breathtaking marine life, and charming archipelago of tiny islands. Every year Palawan hosts thousands of visitors, foreign and local, making it one of the busiest islands in the country. But the RT documentary presents a different reality of Palawan — one that is unpopular and hidden from the public, a reality to which the mainstream media offer either a customary silence or a passing remark.

Palawan is a territory which is extraordinarily fertile, imbued with a diverse wealth of natural resources which makes it prey to rapacious mining companies and to greedy high officials. As a result of this institutional rape and plunder environmental activists are being killed like flies. The documentary quotes that second to Brazil the Philippines rates as the most dangerous place for environmental activists. The research group Global Witness documented that in “41 of the 67 cases… the activists killed were opponents of large-scale mines by both international and domestic mining companies.” And what is even more enraging is the culture of impunity which “the vast majority of perpetrators appear to enjoy… due to the weakness of the judiciary and law enforcement agencies. Allegations of security service involvement are a feature of many cases.”

The death of the activist and journalist Gerry Ortega in 2011 was linked to his exposure of high officials in the provincial government of Palawan “for the unconstitutional, illegal and anomalous arrangement with respect to the Malampaya funds (the Malampaya Natural Gas and Oil Field Project).”

The verdant territories of indigenous peoples on which they depend for their physical subsistence and cultural sustenance are where most of the mining and illegal logging activities are situated. It is in these devastated indigenous territories that one can witness the viciousness of mining companies and the immoral character of capitalism. While mining companies enjoy low taxes, impunity, political power, and colossal profits, the indigenous peoples carry all the burdens of a wrecked environment. Landslides, soil erosion, polluted water resources, deforestation, etc. The UK-based Working Group on Mining in the Philippines reported:

“Mining creates fewer jobs per unit of money invested and contributes least to poverty reduction and sustainable development. On the contrary, it often increases poverty… Profits of mining are privatised by companies, while costs are externalised to Filipino communities, the legacy remaining long after the mining corporation has left the country… Mining is also frequently associated with generating or exacerbating conflicts, militarisation, human rights abuse and corruption in the Philippines.”

Palawan is one of the many cases in the Philippines in which government-backed companies are encouraged to pillage and rape the natural resources without least consideration of the unbearable cost to the indigenous peoples. The case of the Lumads in Mindanao is an extreme case. The documentary is subtitled, The dark side of a tropical idyll that tourists don’t see. This is the tragedy of the many tourist spots in which indigenous people are living. Tourism successfully hides the ugly reality from public scrutiny. Indigenous peoples are forced out of their lands to pave way for resorts, hotels, mansions, and mining. A native of Palawan lamented:

“Time will come when our children no longer recognize the names of trees, the footprints of animals, the birds’ songs. This will be the time when the forest is gone, the mining companies are gone, the rivers no longer flow.”

It is alarming that a foreign news channel should produce a documentary about the condition of our indigenous peoples while our national media play safe. There should be studies of indigenous culture in our media, in educational institutions, in discussions and talks, in national debates. Indigenous cultures with their age-old remedies are crucial to the various crises we are facing today. The excessive materialism we have adopted from the West is proving to be disastrous from all directions. From depression, meaninglessness, insecurity, and boredom among the younger generation to political barbarity motivated by the pursuit of power to economic crisis brought by neoliberalism to the irreversible environmental catastrophe the recognition of indigenous culture might guide us to a better direction. As Antiso Mandawa, chairman of the ALDAW network (Ancestral Land/Domain Watch), said, “Indigenous peoples have been the guardians and stewards of these precious natural and cultivated resources over a long period of time.”

Indigenous resistance challenges us to rethink our values, behaviors, and economic structures that are set on destroying this already devastated planet.

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 Palawan Lost appeared first on Manila Today.

Collapse of peace talks, the rise of Arroyo, Marcoses in power

0

National Anti-poverty Commission (NAPC) secretary and convenor Liza Maza has resigned on Monday, Aug. 19 because of the grim political situation in the country under the Duterte administration.

‘Ikaw ay pinapatay na’

0
“Ang pinakamalupit na paglabag sa karapatan sa ngayon, hindi ka na kinakasuhan, hindi ka na binibigyan ng pagkakataon na magpaliwanag o magbago, ikaw ay pinapatay na.”–Teddy Casiño, Bagong Alyansang Makabayan