Statements: Appeal for support for Aldrich Yocogan

January 29, 2012 in Featured, opinion, statements

www.nordis.net

By CORDILLERA PEOPLES ALLIANCE

We appeal to you for moral and financial support in behalf of Aldrich “Belinan” Batay-an Yocogan, who was diagnosed with liver cancer (advanced stage) on 3 January 2012 and is currently in the surgical intensive care unit of the Baguio General Hospital in Baguio City, northern Philippines. Aldrich is nine years old and is a Grade 3 student at the Bangaan Elementary School in Sagada, Mountain Province. He is the son of Mark Yocogan and the late Loreta Batay-an.

We ask you to pray and visit him and, if possible, contribute financially to his hospital care. You can channel your financial contributions to the bank account below, indicating MEDICAL DONATION FOR ALDRICH in the remittance. Please notify us through e-mail as well, through cpa@cpaphils.org.

Those based in Baguio City may visit us directly at the CPA Regional Office, 3rd Floor, No. 55 Ferguson Road, Baguio City.

Thank you very much. # nordis.net

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Statements: Free the Cervantes 4!

January 29, 2012 in Featured, opinion, statements

www.nordis.net

By ILOCOS HUMAN RIGHTS ALLIANCE (IHRA)

They have long been languishing behind bars despite their innocence.

The CERVANTES 4-Edward Galao, Hilario Bantew, Luinesa Bonella and Joy Attiw, were illegally arrested on trumped-up charges by the ruthless elements of 50th Infantry Battalion and 503rd Infantry Brigade of the Philippine Army under Col. Rogelio Posadas and elements of Philippine National Police (PNP) Cervantes last September and October 2011.

The CERVANTES 4 were accused by the military as members of the New People’s Army (NPA) whom they had encountered last September, but their families and even local government officials in their respective towns attested they are civilians. Bantew and Galao were detained at the Cervantes Municipal Jail and their cases have yet to prosper after their counter affidavits were filed at the Provincial Prosecutor’s office. Bonella and Attiw’s cases have been heard at the Tagudin RTC and the Judge has yet to decide.

The CERVANTES 4, jailed and persecuted for political reasons, were denied due process and justice. Their human rights were trampled on by the blood-thirsty and merciless military. As a result, they had to endure the poor and unhealthy conditions of the local jail and suffer from the emotional distress. Their families suffer too, worried about the conditions faced by their love ones, and worst, three very young children were separated from their mother. The arrest and continuing detention of the CERVANTES 4 is a glaring proof of the military’s desperate attempt to track down their so-called “enemies”.These punishment iposed on the CERVANTES 4 is solid proof Noynoy Aquino’s OPLAN BAYANIHAN is no-different from other murderous and repressive counterinsurgency programs.

The Ilocos Human Rights Alliance (IHRA-KARAPATAN) and the families of CERVANTES 4 decry the continuing detention of the CERVANTES 4 and demand for their immediate release. We call on the Department of Justice and the Court to speed up the process of their cases. We also call on the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) to stand for the victims, conduct fast and credible investigation and indemnify the victims and their families.

FREE ALL POLITICAL PRISONERS! GENERAL, OMNIBUS AND UNCONDITIONAL AMNESTY TO ALL POLITICAL PRISONERS, NOW! JUSTICE FOR ALL VICTIMS OF HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS! # nordis.net

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Weekly Reflections: Bible, a minority report

January 29, 2012 in columns, Featured, opinion

By REV. LUNA DINGAYAN
www.nordis.net

“Your word is a lamp to guide me and a light for my path.” — Psalms 119:105

Bible Week Celebration

The designation of the Third Week of January as Bible Week is an attempt to recognize the importance of the Scriptures in our national life. This however should not surprise us since our country is supposed to be a predominantly Christian nation. Perhaps, it would be more surprising if the Scriptures were not given due importance as it should be in a Christian country.

Celebrating Bible Week or mere knowledge of the Scriptures does not a Christian make. For the Scripture to have significant impact, we should allow Biblical values and principles to mold and shape our way of life as a people and as a nation – not only our own individual personal life, but also our social, economic and political life. As the Psalmist says, “Your word is a lamp to guide me and a light for my path” (Psalms 119:105).

For instance, the enduring values of justice, honesty, and mercy – what Jesus Christ our Lord would call the weightier aspects of the law – should be reflected in the impeachment trial of Chief Justice Renato Corona. Like Jesus Christ our Lord we should look more into the spirit of the law rather than the letter of the law.

The Devil Quotes Scriptures

The Bible mirrors life itself. Interestingly, it contains the beautiful as well as the ugly, the good and the bad. Biblical stories are not only about the good things people can do; they are also about evil things people are capable of doing. For instance, we have King David taking the beautiful wife of his own soldier Uriah, or King Solomon having one thousand wives and concubines, or King Ahab grabbing the ancestral land of Naboth, and many others.

The problem with the Scriptures is that people tend to emulate the evil things rather than the good things. And worse still, the Scriptures are often used to justify evil deeds. A popular expression goes that the devil even quotes the Scriptures. Hence, we need to really search the Scriptures and discover what lessons they try top convey to us for the living of our days.

Minority Report

The Bible is a minority report. It is written from the point of view of a persecuted minority, who are struggling to be faithful to their God in the midst of powerful empires that dominated their land and people. The Exodus Event and the Christ Event are the two central events in the Old and New Testaments, respectively. But these two events are not found in the official records of the history of the ancient empires that dominated Israel. They are not included in the majority report.

However, this does not mean that the Exodus and the Christ events did not happen. The testimonies of the persecuted minority were preserved in the Scriptures to teach us two very important lessons in history. First, that genuine history can only be understood more fully from the perspective of the victims rather than the victors of history. And secondly, that the God of history can be found working on the side of the victims of history, but the big question mark would be: Is the church also present where God is at work? # nordis.net

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Youthspeak: Paano dapat ipinagdiwang ang Chinese New Year?

January 29, 2012 in columns, Featured, opinion

Ni MACON MUYOT
www.nordis.net

Ayon kay Laura Cerrano, isang Feng Shui expert, sa taon ng dragon ang bawat isa ay hinihikayat na limutin ang mga masasalimuot na pangyayari na naidulot ng nakaraang taon. Ang pagkimkim ng sama ng loob at negatibong enerhiya ay malas umano sa buhay ng tao.

Ang payo ni Cerrano, mainam na itapon ang mga bagay na hindi naman kailangan, walang pakinabang, at hindi nagagamit. Ang naturang gawain ay mas mapagagaan ang aura ng kapaligiran ng iyong bahay, opisina, at lugar ng iyong negosyo. Gayundin, maaaring magbigay ito ng positibong enerhiya na makatutulong upang mas maging maaliwalas ang pakiramdam ng isang tao.

Makatutulong din sa pagdadala ng swerte ang paglilinis ng bahay bandang alas onse ng umaga hanggang ala una ng hapon. Dapat magsimula ang pagwawalis mula sa harap ng bahay palabas sa likod. Malas kung gagawin ang paglilinis sa gabi. Hindi dapat magsimula ang paglilinis sa likod papunta sa harap ng bahay. Dahil ang ibig sabihin nito ay winawalis o itinataboy mo ang swerte.

Magiging maswerte ka din kung pupunuin mo ang iyong refrigerator ng mga bago at sariwang pagkain. Mainam ding maglagay ng mga sariwang prutas at bulaklak sa kusina o hapag-kainan. Ang paglilinis ay hindi lamang nalilimita sa mga bahay o opisina.

Dapat din umano ay may positibong pagiisip ang isang tao. Ang pagkakaroon ng positibong pag-iisip ay mahalagang bagay na hindi dapat iniaalis ng isang tao sa kanyang bagay. Makatutulong din ito upang magkaroon ng masayang disposisyon sa buhay ang tao.

Bago pumasok ang bagong taon, ang mga utang o mga bayarin ay dapat bayaran kaagad. Kung iisipin, masaya nga namang salubungin ang taon kung wala kang iniiisip na bayarin o utang.

Sa pagpasok ng taon ng water dragon, nasa mga kamay pa rin naman natin kung paano natin pagugulungin ang ating buhay. Ang mga bagay na naisaad ay mga gabay at mumunting paalala ng mga paniniwalang maaaring makaapekto sa ating buhay. Wala namang masama kung ating paniniwalaan ang mga ito. Ngunit gaano ba ito kahalaga sa mga buhay ng mga Pinoy?

Paano nakakaapekto ito sa kultura nating mga Pinoy?

Lagi nating pakatandaan na nasa ating sariling mga kamay ang ating kapalaran. # nordis.net

* FengShuiManhattan. (2012). Chinese New Year is January 23, 2012! Feng Shui Tips for how to prepare by Laura Cerrano. Retrieved from activerain.com. Retrieved on 13 January 2012.

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Resist the continuing state terrorism under Aquino’s Bayanihan

January 29, 2012 in Cordillera, Featured, human rights

www.nordis.net

By THE CORDILLERA HUMAN RIGHTS ALLIANCE

Oplan Bayanihan: State Terrorism by Deception

A year has passed since the implementation of Pres. Benigno Aquino III’s counter-insurgency (COIN) program Operation Plan Bayanihan (Oplan Solidarity). The US COIN Guide provided the blueprint for this.

The Aquino regime heralded this counter-insurgency policy against the Communist Party of the Philippines as its security sector reform. It claims to have a “paradigm shift” from a former “enemy-centered approach” characterized by heavy military combat operations to a “people centered approach” where civil military operations will be given priority.

According to the Oplan, reform shall be done to protect and respect HR. Oplan Bayanihan (OpBay) is a joint program of the Aquino regime and the United States of America aimed not only to counter the CPP/NPA/NDFP but also to quell peoples’ movement asserting the full enjoyment of human rights.

This year, we witnessed numerous human rights (HR) violations in the Cordillera and elsewhere in the country. Communities and progressive people’s organizations continue to be vilified as terrorists or terrorist fronts, and are attacked as military targets by State Security forces.

Political repression continues. Extrajudicial killings, militarization of communities, filing of trumped-up charges against members and leaders of people’s organizations and other human rights violations continue. The US-Aquino’s OpBay is nothing but a continuation of State terror policies similar to the previous Operation Plan Bantay Laya.

Civil military operations by the military only mask the actual military combat operations of the State security forces. In the current internal State security policy, the Payapa at Masaganang Pamayanan (PAMANA) is allotted a separate budget managed by the AFP to deliver basic social services in coordination with the local government units (LGUs). This is OpBay’s sugarcoat to gain the trust and acceptance of the people.

The strategy of community development under the auspices of the AFP endangers civilians, it strips off otherwise civilian functions from the civil bureaucracy with high probability that development programs will be utilized to achieve non-development objectives.

The AFP troops conduct road repair, paint and repair government structures in villages, hold medical missions and literacy programs. But all these are part of their intelligence operations and are in support to their military combat operations.

It is the responsibility of the State to deliver much needed social services to the people but this should not be coursed through the AFP and integrated in a national internal security policy which vilifies people’s organizations and communities as “enemies of the State”.

These dole-outs in the form of conditional cash transfers and livelihood programs barely scratch the surface of the problem of poverty in the country and only serve to perpetuate the continuous state terrorism against innocent civilians in the Cordillera region.

Here in Cordillera, PAMANA released P35 million to the Cordillera People’s Liberation Army (CPLA) as its partner in creating livelihood projects for its members. The CPLA is a terrorist organization that has committed HR violations against legitimate people’s organizations such as the Cordillera Peoples Alliance. During the Macapagal-Arroyo regime, the CPLA has already been integrated with the Armed Forces of the Philippines. The Aquino regime is reviving remnants of the CPLA, in effect perking up the paramilitary organization that his mother, then President Corazon Aquino, created in 1986.

Worse, the US-Aquino regime issued a directive to the AFP to protect large foreign mining corporations. In October of this year, “President Benigno Aquino III approved a military proposal to allow mining firms to organize and fund militias to beef up their security4”. We strongly criticize and raise serious concerns on this matter as paramilitary groups have been consistently involved in human rights violations.

While viciously implementing OpBay, the Aquino Administration has resumed the Peace Talks with the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).

These Peace Talks are efforts to end the insurgency through negotiation. Both NDFP and the Government have agreed to complete the Peace Talks in 18 months or by August 2012.

The first year of implementation of OpBay substantiated what it really is: state terrorism by deception. Communities, organizations, civilians suffered from various forms of HR violations associated with continuing militarization, civilian-military operations, persecution and vilification, grave child rights violations, international humanitarian laws and the collective rights to free, prior and informed consent. The incidents outlined in the following report presents an overview of the HRsituation in the Cordillera Region for 2011.

Continuing militarization

During the period from March to May, a number of HR violations were reported in the Sitio Beew, Alangtin, Tubo, Abra. Residents of the community were alarmed of the presence of unidentified elements of the 50th IBPA under the command of a certain Col. Anquillano.

The soldiers set-up a detachment at the dap-ay (indigenous socio-political structure) and barangay hall, and occupied several houses. They also positioned a ground mortar in front of the church. In many instances, they would fire the mortar without reason. The soldiers restricted the movement of the villagers by listing all the names of those who leave the village, place of destination and expected time or date of return.

The soldiers destroyed the community fence that prevented carabaos from going out of the residential area and falling into the ravine and as well as preventing these from wandering into croplands. Consequently, the carabaos destroyed vegetable plots and swidden fields. Several carabaos fell-off the ravine. Carabaos are farm animals vital to agricultural production. The soldiers did not repair the fence.

To facilitate the pursuit operations for alleged NPAs, the soldiers burned the surrounding forests. The community penalized the soldiers for the burning of the forest.

On October 10, during a military operation in Caganayan, Tineg, Abra, State security forces bombed the forests surrounding the area where they were conducting operations against alleged NPAs. The senseless bombing sowed fear among the residents.

Embedding or encampment in communities is deliberate strategy of AFP troops to instill fear among the villagers while using the community as “human shields” from NPA attacks.

It is important to note that the municipality of Tubo, along with Luba and Boliney, in Abra is a site for 26 applications for exploration permit (EXPA) that covers 1,620 hectares. Another mining exploration is underway in Tineg.

Added to the list of communities experiencing brutality from OpBay are communities in Liwon, Ifugao and in Paracelis of Mountain Province and Alfonso Lista and Aguinaldo of Ifugao, collectively referred to as ALAGPA.

Until this reporting, state security forces are using the senior citizen’s hall in Botigue, Paracelis, as their barracks. Elements of the Civil Military Operation (CMO) continue to stay at the house of Botigue Barangay Captain Narciso Balnao.

Denial of humanitarian aid

In October, houses and properties of 10 households in Liwon, Ifugao was destroyed by the mortars and bullets of the AFP. The villagers, who feared for their lives and security, took what was left of their houses and took refuge at Sitio Balococ. They have not yet gone back to their original community. Two elderly men died in the course of the military operation, one died of gunshot wounds, and the other suffered from a heart attack.

The military operation was conducted during the storm Quiel that devastated the province. Adding misery to the situation, delivery of relief goods was delayed by the DSWD because the affected communities were labeled as NPA sympathizers.

Vilification of civilians

Vilification or ‘labeling’, ‘red-baiting’, ‘smear campaign’, ‘guilt by association’, ‘malicious misrepresentation’ with the aim to discredit an individual or organization’s credibility has always been a concern of the progressive people’s movement. Vilification is a direct attack against members of people’s organizations critical of government policies by characterizing these individuals as “terrorists”, common criminals and anti-peace and development. It is perpetrated by the state or private elements acting in behalf of the state to negate the legitimacy of a political cause. Its end-goal is to quell people’s resistance and perpetuate the status quo by limiting and silencing those vilified.

There have been a number of alarming cases of vilification against civilians perpetrated by military forces in the region. Vilification is integral to OpBay as a strategy to harass and threaten civilians and communities tagged as NPA supporters as well as to suppress political dissent.

On February 26, 2011, a platoon of soldiers belonging to the 86th Infantry Batallion based in Barangay Antipolo, Asipulo, Ifugao were ambushed by alleged members of the NPA in Sitio Maloy, Cawayan, Asipulo. On March 15, 2011, the AFP filed a complaint against Mildred Salang-ey, 19 years old, a student of Mt. Province State Polytechnic College, and a member of League of Progressive Students (LPS), as one of the members of the NPA who staged the ambush.

Salang-ey was accused of murder, frustrated murder and attempted murder pending preliminary investigation by the Office of the Provincial Prosecutor of Ifugao. Salang-ey and her organization is advocating for the right to education for indigenous youth.

During the months of June to November 2011, three students from the Ifugao State University who are beneficiaries of the scholarship of Kabataan Partylist (KPL), were harassed and vilified by certain intelligence agents of the AFP.

These scholars continuously receive threatening text messages from the State security forces and were told personally that their “studying is futile because they joined the KPL [and that] they are blacklisted from getting a job when they pass their board exams.”

Also, in Kalinga, two scholars of Gabriela Womens Party and KPL were harassed by unidentified intelligence elements simply because of being scholars of the partylists.

In July 2011, members of the Community Health, Education, Services and Training in the Cordillera Region (CHESTCORE) received threatening text messages from unidentified intelligence operative of the military. CHESTCORE, whose primary objective was to provide basic health services to far-flung communities in the region, has also been the under perennial threat from State security forces.

The increasing cases of threat, harassment and intimidation of civilians are alarming. Combat operations in the communities to “clear” these of alleged members of NPA led to countless cases of vilification of civilians as “NPA supporters and sympathizers.” It can be recalled from the report on the case of human rights in the Philippines prepared by UN Special Rapporteur Philip Alston that one of the two causes of extrajudicial killings is vilification.

AFP as the violator of the HR of Children

Not even children and children facilities are spared from OpBay. Some of the documented cases and reports on the conduct of the AFP in communities constitute violations under the United Nations’ six (6) Grave Child Rights Violations against Children in Situations of Armed Conflict as verified by a team from the UNICEF.

1. Most rampant of the cases in the region are the encampments on schools and health facilities. The AFP continues to unlawfully use schools, day care centers, barangay health facilities, and barangay centers used as educational and health facilities as barracks. Such encampments endanger these institutions and civilians.

Under Republic Act 7610 (Special Protection of Children against Child Abuse, Exploitation and Discrimination) schools and health facilities should not be used as military depots, barracks, detachment and command posts. This is also enshrined in the Comprehensive Agreement on the Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL).

Certain cases of use of schools for military purposes were verified by the Human Rights Watch. According to a press release issued by the New York-based organization, educators stated “that the presence of troops in their schools distracted students from their studies and created an inappropriate environment for children by bringing weapons, alcohol, and pornography into school grounds.”

Parents, teachers and community leaders have raised their concern on this matter. They have expressed their fear over children having easy access to high powered firearms that soldiers leave around and conditions that might further violate the rights of the children.

As part of OpBay, the AFP even conducts civic operations such as haircutting, medical missions and construction and repair of facilities in the community to gain support and approval from regarding their unlawful use of schools and health facilities and encampment in villages.

In Sadanga, Mountain Province, the 54th IB constructed a health center inside the school compound, repaired the schoolhouse and took on the task of “securing” the school to legitimize their unlawful use of the school. The said services can be and must be delivered by other government institutions and line agencies without sacrificing the best interest of the children and the protective environment they must grow up in.

2. In Mainit, Mountain Province, 2 minors with their 2 companions aged 19 and 18 were physical assaulted by troops of the 54th IB last January. After they were beaten up by soldiers, they were forced to go to the house of the barangay captain. One of them was even forced to walk at gunpoint. They were asked about who they were, where they were from and what they were doing in the community. They were members of the Youth Environment in Schools and Sangguniang Kabataan who just finished cleaning their community and went to Mainit to take a bath with their friends from that barangay.

3. In Abra, members of the 41st IB encamped in villages and used children to get information on members and leaders of progressive people’s organizations. They befriend small children and use their literacy program under OpBay to get information on the parents of children. In the process of teaching the children how to write, they ask children to write information about their parents or relatives who are vocal against government policies and the encampment of the military in their village. They also conduct “leadership trainings” for teenagers who later become involved in the AFP’s surveillance work on the leaders in the community. These have resulted to cases of threat/harassment/intimidation of members and leaders of progressive people’s organizations.

Violation of IHL

Under the UN International Humanitarian Laws, parties involved in the armed conflict are obliged to protect the human rights and welfare of wounded combatants as well as provide decent burial of those killed. In the recent encounter between the AFP and NPA in Tineg, Abra where 8 members of the NPAs were killed, evidence showed that the AFP “over-killed” already dead NPA combatants with strong evidence that a number of the NPAs were wounded and could have survived, had they not been deliberately killed by the AFP elements.

Violation of the FPIC

The Indigenous Peoples Rights Act requires interested parties in the exploration, development and utilization of resources of indigenous peoples to secure the Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) of affected communities. However, the FPIC requirement is among the most violated collective rights of indigenous peoples. Such is the case of the application for mining in Bakun, Benguet in the Cordillera. Australian mining company Royalco Philippines Inc. was granted a mining exploration permit for more than 5,400-hectares covering Kankana-ey ancestral territories after the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) granted certificate of compliance to the FPIC. Several occasions of congressional investigations, legislative inquiries and a congressional on-site hearing convened by the Cong. Teodoro Baguilat Jr., in response to broad and sustained opposition from the community concluded that the FPIC process was flawed. First, there was overwhelming rejection to the mining exploration in the first FPIC meeting conducted by NCIP. Also, in several resolutions and petitions of the Bakun Aywanan people’s organization, submitted to NCIP and Royalco as collective decision of ‘no consent.’ But none of these were recognized as decision-making process. Thereafter, the NCIP repeated the FPIC process, this time dividing the affected communities to three separate processes, effectively weakening the community’s collective decision. Reportedly, Royalco, through the facilitation of NCIP, forged Memorandum of Agreement with selected tribal leaders, in violation of indigenous decision-making processes.

During the FPIC processes, AFP troops were deployed in Gambang, the community most affected by the mining exploration.

Similar incidents are happening in the numerous applications for mining in the entire region and its adjacent provinces. The FPIC processes are conducted through subtle bribery, manipulation and at worst, through coercion by direct involvement of AFP troops.

State reaction to HRVs

Despite facts on cases of HR violations, the State and the AFP still claim that it upholds its commitment to HR. This denial allows the culture of impunity to thrive.

On the 1000th day of disappearance of James Balao, his family, friends, and colleagues sent thousands of postcards to PNoy in Malacañang to urge the administration to surface him. Friends from overseas also sent their postcards. There was no response from the Aquino administration.

The culture of impunity becomes even worse when mechanisms and institutions within the State that should check the government’s fulfillment of its human rights commitments do not implement their mandate.

Of note is the action of the Commission on Human Rights-Cordillera Administrative Region in their decision to dismiss the case of the health workers of CHESTCORE as cases of HR violations. The CHR’s mandate as an independent and a quasi-judicial body is to investigate cases of human rights violations, provide recommendations to address these violations and assist the victims. The 9 CHESTCORE cases filed with the CHR were treated similar to criminal cases defined in the revised penal code, instead of addressing the cases as HR violations. They were dismissed due to lack of evidence on who the actual perpetrators were. The cases were considered as unjust vexation undermining the political motive behind the incidents that threatened the lives, security of the CHESTCORE staff and provision of health services to the people of the institution. There were no recommendations provided or any mention of assistance to CHESTCORE. And worst, in the decision, CHR made reference on why CHESTCORE is providing services to NPA areas.

Impunity only paves the way to further repression which the people should not allow.

Challenges

Of serious concern is the apparent complacency of communities and victims on the violations of their HR. HR violations have become a matter of course in the conduct of counter-insurgency operations. For the AFP, HR violations are viewed as “collateral damage” or “natural course of the game” in counter-insurgency. For the communities and victims, HR violations have become perceived as facts of life. There is a prevailing mindset that nothing substantial can be done to improve the human rights situation. Impunity has become entrenched in our society. This is the challenge that the society has to address: we need to assert our HR to its fullest extent. More intensive HR education for communities must be done for them to understand their HR and act collectively to assert their rights and access justice when these are violated.

Resist State Terrorism!
Stop Vilification!
Dismantle CPLA, other paramilitary groups, and private armed groups!
Stop the Militarization of the countryside!
End Political Persecution and Vilification!
Resist Operation Plan Bayanihan!
Pursue the genuine path to peace! # nordis.net

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Tikoy. Hopia. Bilugang prutas. Pulang damit. Ampao.

January 29, 2012 in Baguio City, Cordillera, Featured, people

Ni MACON MUYOT
www.nordis.net

BAGUIO CITY — Nagsimula na ang bagong taon ng mga Tsino. Enero 23 pumatak ngayong taon ang itinuturing ng mga Tsino na pinakamahalaga, pinakaespesyal at pinakamaswerteng araw ng kanilang taon. Ayon sa kanilang paniniwala, ang taon ng water dragon ay dapat salubungin ng walang kinikimkim na negatibong enerhiya. May dalang swerte, kasaganaan, at mahabang buhay ang taon ng water dragon. Ang dragon ay sinasabing ang pinakamalakas na hayop sa Chinese zodiac.

DRAGON DANCE. The Baguio Filipino-Chinese community welcomed the year of the Water Dragon at the Bell Church, Baguio City. Photo by Macon Muyot

Mahigit 4,000 na tao ang nakiisa sa pagdiriwang ng Chinese community ng Chinese New Year sa Bell Church, dito sa Lungsod ng Baguio. Ang taunang selebrasyon ng mga Tsino ay dinagsa ng mga bata at matanda sa karatig-lugar para sa libreng groceries na ipinamamahagi ng buong Chinese community.

Ayon kay Francis Brito, anak ni Elias Ng (isa sa pioneers ng Bell Church), tatlong linggo ang kanilang ginugol para sa selebrasyong ito. Noon ay kaunti lamang ang dumadalo sa Bell Church tuwing Chinese New Year dahil hindi ito masyadong naisasapubliko. Ang pagbibigay nila ng relief goods ay swerte para sa kanila. Paraan din nila ito ng pagpapakita ng pasasalamat at pamamahagi ng biyayang kanilang natatanggap.

Dagdag pa rito, ang ganitong aktibidad ng kanilang komunidad ay paraan nila upang maging bukas, malaman, at mas maintindihan ng mga Pinoy ang kultura, paniniwala, at kaugalian ng mga Tsino. Gayundin, upang maiintindihan ng mga Tsino ang kultura ng Pilipino. Ang pagdalo ng mga Pinoy sa aktibidad na ito ng mga Tsino ay pagpapatibay ng ugnayan ng dalawang lahi. Sa ganitong paraan nila nakikita ang magandang pakikipag-kaibigan ng kanilang mga bansa.

Buong pagmamalaki pa ni Francis na hindi lang naman Chinese community ang katuwang nila sa paghahanda ng espesyal na araw na ito. May mga Pinoy silang kasama sa pag-oorganisa ng selebrasyon. Sa katunayan, kabilang sa kanilang organisasyon na Bell Church Athletic Club ang isang purong Igorot. Ipinagmalaki ni Francis na ang Igorot nilang kasama sa pagtatanghal ng dragon dance ay isa sa pinakamagagaling na magta-tanghal. Itong club ay ang tanging grupong nagtatanghal ng dragon dance sa Baguio City.

Ngayong taon ng water dragon, mas pinaespesyal nila ang dragon dance. Ito ang kaibahan ng kanilang pagdiri-wang ngayon sa mga nakalipas na Chinese New Year. Tampok din sa selebrasyon ang 88 pulgada ng firecrackers na pinaputok nila matapos ang dragon dance.

Ang Chinese New Year ang nagsilbing pangwakas na akitibidad nila para sa pagpasok ng taon ng water dragon. Sa loob ng isang buwan, nagsagawa ang Chinese community ng barangay gift-giving, symposium tungkol sa Chinese traditional medicine ni Dr. Charles Cheng, press conference, at grand parade. Ang mga aktibidad na ito ay bahagi pa rin ng selebrasyon nila ng Chinese New Year.

Katuwang din ng Chinese community ang 911 volunteers at Benguet Police para siguruhin ang kaligtasan ng mga dumalo sa selebrasyon. Ayon sa isang volunteer ng 911, ang kanilang samahan ang nangangasiwa ng crowd control at assistance para sa mas organisadong pila ng mga tao. Dagdag pa rito, wala namang nagaganap na aksidente maliban na lamang sa mga matatandang nahihilo dahil sa init. # nordis.net

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Baguio urge PNoy to recall SM permit

January 22, 2012 in Baguio City, environment, Featured, social concerns

BY ARTHUR L. ALLAD-IW
www.nordis.net

BAGUIO CITY — In one of the largest mass action this year, more than 3,000 local residents showed their power in a mass rally which urged President Noynoy Aquino to recall the permit granted by the DENR to the retail giant SM Baguio to cut and earth ball 182 trees at the Luneta Hill here.

PROTEST ART. Artists joined the biggest protest yet in the city this year against SM City Baguio plan to earth ball 182 trees to make way for a seven storey extension building which they claim to be a parking area. Photo by Aldwin Quitasol

Occupying the People’s Park here, they declared that they will sustain their opposition to stop the cutting of trees and would file appropriate cases against government officials who issued the questionable permit to SM.

And the city government cannot wash its hands now, rallyists pointed out.

Brail Degay Daupan, chairman of the University Student Council of UP Baguio, urged the city government to show its concern by adopting a local legislation for the recall of SM’s permit to cut and earth ball trees.

Joining the youth and students dominated mobilization, he declared: “We will support future mass actions until the permit is recalled.

Rally leaders claimed that the SM parking project that would be developed at the Luneta Hill here below the SM mall needs an Environmental Compliance Certificate (ECC) only after a public consultation that would favor the project . But the DENR – aside from the permit – issued an ECC without public consultation, which oppositionists believe to be highly irregular.

A VIOLATION OF THE LAW. Former Mayor and retired Judge Braulio Yaranon said that people involved in giving permit to SM City are liable. He questioned the issuance of an Environmental Compliance Certificate (ECC) without conducting public hearing which the law mandates. He said he will support any individual or organization who will file a case against the erring officials. Photo by Aldwin Quitasol

In his speech at the program, former City Mayor and retired Judge Braulio Yaranon blamed the present city officials: mayor, the council, the CEPMO and the CBAO. He questioned the issuance of the ECC for the parking project without the law mandated public hearing?

Also pointing at weak local governance, Perry Mendoza of the Tongtongan ti Umili, a multisectoral group, believed that there was a conspiracy among the DENR, SM and local government in the issuance of the ECC and permit to SM, as based on official pronouncements and documents.

The organizers announced that their legal team will prepare the appropriate cases which they will file in the coming weeks.

Meanwhile, Mike Arvisu of Kafagway organization urged the original inhabitants of the city – the Ibaloi – to stand up against SM. “SM is considered a visitor of this city but it is destroying it instead,” he said.

Photo by Aldwin Quitasol

He pointed out that unlike the people of Baguio, SM’s Henry Sy has not spent for the parks, schools, and hospitals but he is just interested in the profit that he can get from the people of the city. “He does not have a concern for the environment because he does not breath the air that we breath here,” said Arvisu whose ancestors joined the Ibalois in the city’s early development.

Dr. Michael Bengwayan, Director of the Cordillera Ecological Center questioned Aquino’s promise to the people saying: ”Kayo ang boss ko” (you are my boss) to the Filipino people during his installation as President. “Where is it now?” he asked. He added that it is obvious whom he is serving now.

Bengwayan criticized SM owner Henry SY for destroying the heritage of the Baguio people. He said Sy does not care what will happen to the residents of Baguio because it is not his home. “His heritage is in Xianen, China”, he blurted out.

Seen this early, tactical gain has been achieved by the oppositionists as the city government calls for a public hearing on the issue on January 30. Oppositionists promised to mobilize a march again with local residents in full force on the said the date. # nordis.net

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This year’s biggest march protest yet

January 22, 2012 in Baguio City, environment

BY NORDIS with reports from FRANCESCA DE OCAMPO
www.nordis.net

BAGUIO CITY — It welcomes the Lunar year with the biggest protest rally yet this year here. More than 3,000 people from different schools, community groups and organizations marched down Session Road to Malcolm Square under the heat of the Friday afternoon sun in opposition to SM’s plan to earth-ball the trees at Luneta Hill to make way for the mall’s expansion plan.

YOUTH POWER. The youth have the most number of participants to the protest action. Photo by Brenda S. Dacpano

The protesters also expressed their disappointment at the lack of integrity in the city government and at the regional office of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR).

Last October 27, 2011, DENR had already granted an Environmental Compliance Certificate (ECC) to SM, without the required public consultation with the general public.

Students, teachers and members of the administrative staff of the University of the Philippines Baguio led the protest and even passed in front of SM to express their grievances. They were later joined by other groups at Session Road.

We are One

Groups from different sectors of the community became one for the cause. According to one of the members of the Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) community, they support the movement because they want to restore the old Baguio. They were born and raised here in Baguio, so it is sad that they would no longer see the trees that are even older than them.

More than 3,000 students, professionals and other sectors including the religious marched down Session Road to People’s Park to protest the SM City plan to remove 182 trees to pave way for the construction of a seven storey building. The protesters vowed they will not allow corporate greed to reign over the welfare of the environment and the people. Photo by Aldwin Quitasol

Sisters from a Franciscan convent also joined the protest. They happened to be in Baguio only for a retreat. “We believe in the cause,” they said.

Consequences of earth-balling

Amidst the jam-packed Malcolm Square, Dr. Michael Bengwayan, Director of the Pine Tree Cordillera Ecological Center and behind the protest movement, gave a clear and concrete explanation of earth-balling.

SM Development Corporation had stated earlier that they will not cut the trees. Instead, they would uproot them and transfer them to the DENR compound. However, people agreed that the said area could not even accommodate 150+ trees.

Photo by Brenda S. Dacpano

According to Bengwayan, earth-balling had already been done to some of the trees at Camp John Hay (CJH). Today, “ and most of them are deteriorating”. He also criticized the chosen time to start the project. The uprooting of trees is bound to happen on the first quarter of this year. By then, it will be dry season and summer approaching. Uprooting in dry season will only further damage the trees.

Dr. Bengwayan also explains how much these trees contribute to the people’s health and welfare.

Luneta Hill is the only remaining green patch in that business district. Every day, these 182 trees supply the oxygen needs of 99 people. He also added that a 50-foot tall tree can produce 3,000 pounds of oxygen yearly – an ample supply needed by five to six people for one year. As for reducing global warming, one tree can absorb 40 to 45 pounds of carbon dioxide. CO2 is responsible for the phenomenon of global warming.

Another consequence would be flooding at the CBD of the city. Since it is a hill, water caused by heavy rainfall will rush down Session Road to Magsaysay, Harrison and Burnham Park. “Luneta Hill is like a sponge,” he explained.

“Those trees can absorb up to 364,000 liters of water.” In a previous statement, SM management said that they will be replacing the trees with a water retention facility. However, people argued that a concrete facility would not hold as much as the trees can.

This is about the future generation

There is a proverb in the Cordillera that is strongly believed by many of its Indigenous Peoples – “We did not inherit the land. We borrowed it from our children.”

Elementary students from St. Louis Center and Don Bosco joined their adult counterparts early during the rally. They said that they wanted to join the protest because it concerns their future. They did their placards and banners in their Science class.

During the program at Malcolm Square, two young girls were called in front to display their poster. It said, “Save the trees for our future generations.”

This is only the beginning

Bengwayan said that the movement is not a one-day event. It is only the beginning of a long battle to save what is left of Baguio City. On Monday, January 23, there will be a legal conference to issue a Temporary Environmental Protection Order (TEPO) that will guard the trees until negotiations are settled.

There was also a suggestion to form a committee that would communicate and negotiate with SM. Bengwayan said that there are plans on public information dissemination, so that more residents can be engaged in the movement.

The largest protest march in Baguio was during former Mayor Jun Labo’s time when he made snide remarks about Igorots and that of the “Erap resign” movement in the early 2000s. # nordis.net

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Kalinga tribes push for peaceful settlement

January 22, 2012 in Cordillera, Featured, social concerns

BY ARTHUR L. ALLAD-IW
www.nordis.net

BAGUIO CITY — As tribal war looms between two tribes in Kalinga province, the Philippine National Police (PNP) arrested on Thursday, January 19, a member of the Lubo tribe who allegedly shot dead a Mangali tribesman in Tabuk City, Kalinga on Tuesday.

The arrest of Fredie Tumbali, of the Mangali tribe, could diffuse the tension that might yet trigger a tribal war between the two tribes, according to the Police Regional Office of the Cordillera (PRO-COR).

Tumbali and his tribesmate Bong Coloma shot and killed Sammy Luminang, 44 years old from the Mangali tribe. The shooting happened near a PNP post in Purok 5 at Bulanao, Tabuk. Allegedly, the killing of Luminang was done in revenge of the stabbing of Marvin Coloma, a brother of Bong, in Philex, Tuba, Benguet by alleged members of the Mangali tribe.

In an interview with the PNP of Tuba, Benguet, who gave clarification to the incident. Brothers Richard and Romnick Basyagon, from the Mangali tribe, were in Philex Mines, Tuba on January 17. Romnick was helping his brother go home as he was a bit intoxicated.

They met Marvin Coloma from Lubo along way and he volunteered to join Romnick bring his brother home. However Romnick boxed Marvin on his face as he thought that the latter pushed him. Romnick ran and came back with a knife to confront Marvin; but his brother Richard instead grabbed and they grappled the knife injuring Richard’s finger.

Richard and Coloma went to the Philex hospital for treatment where the Tuba PNP intervened afterwards for the settlement of their misunderstanding. They both agreed to have it formalized the next day.

Before the formal settlement, a Lubo tribe member from Philex Mines called the relatives of Marvin Coloma in Tabuk and told them that the latter was injured by Richard Basyagon. Coloma’s tribe mates took revenge against the tribe where on January 19 they killed Luminang.

“We are on an aggressive manhunt for Bong Coloma,” added the PRO-COR reiterating that there is no tribal war yet between the two Kalinga tribes.

A resident of Tabuk said that both police and army men are posted around the entire Purok 1 to 5 Bulanao up to Block 3, a move which is geared to control any moves of revenge from both sides.

Sources from the two tribes in Tabuk City told NORDIS that their members already sought places for their safety. Those employed already left their workplace, students went to their homes, and hospital patients were forced to be discharged.

Media in Tabuk City also relayed that as tension is already heightened there, students from both tribes were sent home by their teachers.

The Mangali and Lubo tribes are found in the municipality of Tanudan, Kalinga but they have members in Tabuk City, in this city and in the mining community areas.

“Members from the both tribes are monitoring the movements of their tribesmates especially those from the injured families to prevent escalation of revenge from or for the Mangali or Lubo tribes a source from Tabuk said.

Tribal war is a Kalinga practice of tribesmen to exact or avenge the injury or death of a member of their tribe against the perpetrator/s tribe.

Bodong or peacepact is also a Kalinga practice where the warring tribes enter peace. Bodong can be severed again if any of the tribes violate the peace pact agreement.

An interviewed member of the Mangali tribe pushed for an immediate diplomatic resolution of the conflict. More time will be wasted for the non-realization of the tribes’ activities as they are afraid to go out from their homes.

The source added that the Mangali and Lubo tribes had experienced a tribal war in the past, adding: “ It took seven years where many lives were lost, many failed to finish their education, and many resigned from their jobs.”

“I don’t like that history will repeat itself,” added the source who requested not to be identified for security matter. “Members of the victim’s clan might not share my opinion for diplomatic means of settling the conflict as they might like to pursue for revenge,” explained the source on the request to be anonymous.

Meanwhile, concerned government authorities have not released information if there would be any change of venue for the CARAA which is scheduled February 7 to 10 in Tabuk City. # nordis.net

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Fil-Sino group host forum on Chinese medicine

January 22, 2012 in Baguio City, Featured, people

BY ALDWIN QUITASOL
www.nordis.net

BAGUIO CITY — The Baguio Filipino-Chinese community made a presentation to medical students, practitioners and other residents of Baguio outputs from health researches on the use of traditional Chinese medicine in difficult and complicated medical cases.

The forum was held at the Baguio City Multi-Purpose Hall last January 19 as one of the lined up activities to celebrrate the Chinese new year.

Peter Ng, chairman of the Spring Festival 2012 Celebration and owner of the Hotel Supreme, said that the sympossium is a first time in the Chinese Spring Festival celebrations here.

He said that the purpose of the activity is to present deeper insights on the approaches of Chinese medicine which has been proven effective and without side effects. He added that the practice is one of the Baguio Filipino-Chinese community can share with the people of this city.

Professor Jimmy Fong of the University of Philippines in Baguio said that there are several ways of getting well. In this present time, he added, one has the option to make use of the western medicine or the traditional Chinese method.

Dr. Charles Cheng, Medical Director of the Filipino-Chinese General Hospital said that the research is more on the method of acupuncture. In his presentation titled “A clinical investigation into the effectiveness of Acupunture in various diseases: A Philippine Experience”, he said that it is hoped that it will answer ten questions namely: 1.what is acupuncture, 2. how does it work, 3. what diseases respond to it, 4. how is it effective as treatment, 5. is it painful, 6. what are the side effects, 7. how long is the mode of treatment, 8. what are the other medical benefits from it and 9. are there any economic benefits, and 10. do we need an alternative treatment like acupuncture?

Cheng explained the importance of the study. He stressed that there is no study on the nature of acupunture conducted locally. He also said that the results of the study will give an insight to what kind of people will most likely seek acupuncture treatment.

He added, however, that clinical studies need to further the acceptability of the acupuncture. He said that the study will suggest that acupuncture is an effective alternative to rising costs of medical and patient care.

According to Cheng, the practice of traditional Chinese medicine especially acupuncture started during the time of the “Yellow Emperor” Huang Ti 5,000 years ago. He explained that the medical aides of the emperor discovered that the body upon being slightly pricked by spears and swords feel a bit of relief. So they developed the method of puncturing the body with needles.

Cheng said further that acupuncture was rediscovered and made more popular to the world during the time of United States President Richard Nixon in 1975 when he visited Beijing. Cheng narrated that when Nixon suffered an appendisitis attack, he was treated by Chinese doctors with accupunture. Nixon, he said, recovered immediately after the treatment.

However, Cheng explained that one must know the proper way of acupuncture. He said that it is better to know the positive and negative sides of the treatment because acupuncture will heal or may trigger more the illness.

Other speakers in the sympossium presented testimonies on how acupuncture addressed complicated medical cases. Registered nurses and medical practitioners spoke before the audience how traditional Chinese medicine addressed medical cases like Temporo Mandibular Joint Disease or Locked jaw, Hyperthyroidism, Bell’s Palsy, Trigeminal Neuralgia and Herpes Zoster. # nordis.net

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Two of Cervantes 4 charged anew

January 22, 2012 in Featured, human rights, Ilocos

BY ROD TAJON
www.nordis.net

SAN FERNANDO CITY, La Union — Unknown to family and legal counsel, another fabricated charges were filed against two of the Cervantes 4, a human rights group in Ilocos reported.

FREE THE CERVANTES 4!Families and HR groups trooped at the Commission on Human Rights Regional Office 1 to file complaints on the human rights violations committed by the 50th IBPA and PNP against their kin. Photo courtesy of IHRA

Hilario Bantew and Edward Galao, two of the four illegally arrested and detained civilians in Cervantes, Ilocos Sur, were charged by the 50th Infantry Battalion of the Philippine Army with Multiple Attempted Homicide and Illegal Possession of Ammunition after the Rebellion charges earlier filed were dismissed by 3rd Assistant Provincial Prosecutor Cristopher Habab.

In the resolution dated October 20, 2011, Fiscal Habab found no sufficient evidence to show that Bantew and Galao took arms for the purpose of removing their allegiance to the government. “However, the acts of the respondents in shooting Roland Versoza, Joel Amudo, Jessie Camacho and other members of the Philippine Army constitute multiple attempted homicides.” The resolution stated.

The resolution affirmed the allegations of the military that Galao possessed one M16 magazine with ammo without any authority whatever constitutes Illegal Possession of Ammunition.

The Resolution, released October last year, a month after they were arrested by the joint forces of military and Philippine National Police (PNP)-Cervantes, did not reach the victims, their families and even their legal counsel until they were able to obtain a photocopy at the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) Regional Office 1.

The other two of the Cervantes 4, Luinesa Bonella and Joy Attiw are detained at the Ilocos Sur Provincial Jail in Vigan City, Ilocos Sur and were charged with Rebellion last October. Their case has already been heard and another hearing is set come January 26.

Denial of justice

According to Prudencio Bantew, brother of Hilario, had they not visited the CHR office, they would not even know that the arraignment of his brother was set January 19. “We are dismayed by continuing denial of justice to my brother.” Bantew said in Ilocano.

Bantew, together with Galao’s parents, Barangay Captain Elmer Galula and Ilocos Human Rights Alliance (IHRA-KARAPATAN), trooped to the CHR office to file complaints against the military for illegally arresting, detaining and filing fabricated charges against 4 civilians vilified by the military as “local communist terrorists”.

Bantew said his brother Hilario as well as Edward Galao have long been suffering from the crimes they never committed and that his brother just came from a rehabilitation facility after he was diagnosed as mentally ill.

“The military has shown no mercy to my brother,” Bantew said and narrated that in the afternoon of September 23, his brother was just roaming around Cervantes, Ilocos Sur when he was arbitrarily arrested by the PNP.

Omir Cacho, head of the investigative team of the CHR-RO1 said that they were able to visit the 4 in separate jail visits last December and January.

Cacho said that they were surprised to know that the families and even Atty. Robert Tudayan, legal counsel of the Cervantes 4, were not informed and never received any copy of the decision. “We see that the Prosecutor and the Court had difficulty in coordinating the updates on the cases,” he noted.

“The Commission will see to it that justice will be served to them,” he ensured the families of the victims during the dialogue.

Innocent civilians

Mila Marcelo, Public Information of IHRA-KARAPATAN said that the Cervantes 4, jailed and persecuted for political reasons, were denied due process and justice. “Their human rights were trampled on by the blood-thirsty and merciless military as part of their deceptive and bloody counter-insurgency program, Oplan Bayanihan.”

Marcelo said that the new cases filed against Bantew and Galao meant to harass and instill fear among the indigenous people’s communities. “They are so desperate that they resort to criminalizing innocent civilians and militarizing communities to gain ‘victory’ in their operations.” Marcelo stated and called the CHR to act immediately on the cases.

“It has already been proven that the victims were civilians, their families and even their local governments can attest to that.” Marcelo said and noted that the CHR should not only probe into the case but also resolve immediately that the military violated the 4 civilian’s civil and political rights. “The Cervantes 4 should be immediately released.” She concluded.

Attiw, Bonella, Bantew and Galao, also known as the Cervantes 4 were illegally arrested and detained on separate dates of September and October 2011 after 50th IBPA under 503rd Brigade headed by Col. Eliseo Posadas conducted operations in several communities of Cervantes, Ilocos Sur and part of Mountain Province, Benguet and Abra. They were accused by the military as members of the New People’s Army (NPA) despite the claims and material pieces of evidence that they are civilians. # nordis.net

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College editor charged with libel posts bail

January 22, 2012 in Baguio City, Featured, media, youth

BY NORDIS
www.nordis.net

BAGUIO CITY — While relieved that the editor-in-chief of a local campus paper gained her temporary liberty after posting bail, campus journalists here claimed that the case of libel against her is an act of campus press freedom repression.

UPHOLD CAMPUS PRESS FREEDOM. The staff of the campus newspaper of the University of the Philippines Baguio, Outcrop trooped to the Baguio City Justice Hall, Friday, January 19 to post bail after a warrant of arrest wass issued against them for a libel case slapped against them by one of the teachers of the same university. Photo by Aldwin Quitasol

Supported by local student writers, Jesusa Paquibot, present editor of The Outcrop, the official student publication of the University of the Philippines Baguio (UPB), appeared on January 20 in the sala of Judge Edilberto Claravall at the RTC Branch 60 where she posted P6,000 bail for her temporary libery.

In a statement, staff members of Outcrop branded the libel case filed against their editor as an act constituting repression of press freedom which they resolved to fight until the case dismissal.

“This current fiasco of libel against our editor-in-chief is less of a pursuit of justice or dignity, but a blatant effort to repress the campus press’ freedom of expression,” the statement said. It is important to note that this case was already dismissed by the city prosecutor last year but only brought up once again after the professor filed a motion for reconsideration, it added.

The libel arouse from a lampoon article in a Yupiang Yupi section published in the Outcrop’s July issue last year. A satirical article, the item told of someone sensitive to noise.

A professor from the College of Arts and Communications, Department of Communications, filed a complaint of libel against Paquibot. The professor allegedly insisted that she was the one the lampoon piece referred to and that it blemished her name as a teacher and as a person.

To support her claim, she had the affidavits from a faculty member and a student to prove that they recognized her as the subject of the article identified as “Si Raulo Locaret” which has the same initials as her name.

In the lampoon article, it describes an incident when a professor shamed a photojournalist who was merely doing her duty as a campus journalist in front of her class during the July 19 State of the Youth Address activity at UPB.

In defending their editor, the Outcrop maintains that the accusations are purely speculative and the alleged allusions are coincidental.

“The article did not mention any real name and did not make any false claim about her or her family….but we deny the allegations that we fashioned the article with malevolent intentions to deface her name,” the Outcrop statement added.

Outcrop seeks public support in illuminating the case and also in upholding the campus press’ and the citizens’ right to expression.

“We see this tactic as yet another manifestation of the larger anti-student scheme which is prevalent in the repressive atmosphere of educational institutions,” it added.

Outcrop also appealed to the UPB administration to check on this case and ensure that the highest degree of fairness will be applied. “While we do not ask them to explicitly rally behind us in this fight, we urge them to check the conduct of its employees and be firm in chastising them if proven abusive of their positions,” it ended. # nordis.net

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Kalinga elders appeal to youth, revive tribe’s cultural integrity

January 22, 2012 in Cordillera, social concerns

BY ALMA B. SINUMLAG
www.nordis.net

RIZAL, Kalinga — In a traditional ceremony to celebrate the boys’ passing into manhood called “so-ob” of the Butbut tribe in Sitio Anonang, Barangay Liwan West of this town, the elders challenged the youth to revive the deteriorating cultural integrity of the community.

One elder said he is saddened that the community’s good reputation of discipline and close community ties has greatly deteriorated.

Young people, he said, do not consult elders anymore especially on decisions that affect the whole community as was done in the past.

The spirit of being one community, he added, continues to deteriorate. People, he said, are now deciding on their own including decisions that need the opinion of the whole community.

Elder and Punong Barangay Anselmo Bador said that the people since the advent of modern technologies seem to have a very low regard for community meetings. “Kanya-kanya” attitude, he said, has become a culture and it is dangerous.

Bador added that issues concerning the sitio and the barangay as a whole have been left to the barangay officials alone unlike the traditional system where the role of the elders and the community in decision making is very important.

He challenged the young people to support their elders restore this time tested tradition.

The said kind of decision making, he iterated, reflects unity and losing it means the community is not united anymore. This culture, Bador added, is distinct to Butbut and other tribes in the Cordillera region.

It is a culture that has been praised and envied by other lowland communities. In the past, he further said, the sitio can have a consensus vote for one favored politician but for several previous elections, it was not the trend anymore because of the “kanya-kanya” attitude. The spirit of unity, he said, continues to fade if the people allow it.

Lakay Agpad apologized that they have to scold the people during a celebration. However, he pointed out that it is a perfect venue because the whole community is present compared to meetings where the elders are the only ones attending. “Let us not allow the good culture to be lost forever,” he said in Butbut language.

The younger generation represented by Matthew Gannac then said that it is really a fact that cultural integrity in the sitio that has been its identity is fading. It is then necessary, he added, to restore it before its too late. As early as possible, the elders should make the youngsters appreciate it by continually reminding them. # nordis.net

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Baguio Ibalois seek recognition in land use plan

January 22, 2012 in Baguio City, general welfare

BY ALDWIN QUITASOL
www.nordis.net

BAGUIO CITY — “Help us protect our ancestral lands that we and our ancestors have fought for so long”, said Basilio Binay-an during the public hearing of the proposed Comprehensive Land Use Plan (CLUP) on January 10 at Lucnab here.

PINUNEG. Lucnab residents prepare lunch for the participants in the public hearing on the proposed Baguio City Comprehensive Land Use Plan. Representatives of the Ibaloi clans of Baguio City attended the consultation with Councilor Isabelo Cosalan. Photo by Aldwin Quitasol

Binay-an said that they are obliged to register a sustainable development plan for their ancestral domain as this will benefit not only them but future generations. He added that it is good that the city is coming with a CLUP for this reason. He expressed however that it will be better if their version of sustainable development be adopted or integrated into the said CLUP.

Binay-an explained that they have sustainable plans over their gardens, communal forests, watersheds and even schools. He said that all these are geared towards the preservation of the climate, environment as well as the continuous existence of indigenous culture.

According to City councilor Isabelo Cosalan, an Ibaloi, and who is the council chairperson on Urban Planning, lands and Housing, he respects the ancestral claims of Indigenous Peoples of Baguio.

He said as far as the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA) is concerned, the Certificate of Ancestral Land Titles (CALT) issued by the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) are recognized and considered in the process of coming out with the CLUP.

Cosalan pointed out that the purpose of the public hearing on CLUP is to gather opinions and suggestions from the IPs of Baguio especially those who have ancestral land claims. He added that the Baguio IPs are somewhat lucky it happens that there are two Ibalois in the city council referring to him and his fellow councilor Peter Fianza.

According to the councilor, the CLUP needs more comprehensive suggestions from the residents of Baguio especially the IPs such as on ancestral lands sustainable and protection plan. He cited the Happy Hollow Ancestral Domain Development Plan (HHADP) where he said the city can adopt into the proposed city land use plan.

Cosalan said that in the 1900s after Baguio was chartered, there were only three members of the council. He explained that the council which was only composed of three members have an advisory council consisting of five Igorots.

He further explained that at present under the Local Government Code, there is a City Development Council. This he said is being composed of the Mayor, a representative of the Congressman, the council through its appropriations committee and 25 % are around 40 non-government-organizations and peoples organizations. He stressed that among the organizations are the IPS especially the elders. “Ayan yun ngay?” (Where are you now), he asked.

Engineer Evelyn B. Cayat, Officer-in-Charge Coordinator of the City Planning and Development said that prior to the final drafting of CLUP, they need to come up with policies derived form the consultations. From these, she added that they will be able to identify IP concerns especially the issues on ancestral lands.

Binay-an said that the ancestral land owners of Baguio should work hand-in-hand with the city government. He added that they are willing to sit with the city planning to arrive at a better plan. # nordis.net

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New and more events at 2nd Sagada Etag Festival

January 22, 2012 in Cordillera

BY GINA DIZON
www.nordis.net

SAGADA, MOUNTAIN PROVINCE — This year’s 2012 Sagada Etag Festival shall be celebrated with exciting events from February 2-5, 2012 by 19 participating barangays of this tourist town, guests and visitors.

It shall start with the opening of ‘etag ‘ (smoked meat) booths on the first day of the festival along with the opening of the art gallery. The first Etag Festival last year was geared to promote ‘etag’ and coffee Arabica.

Vice mayor Richard Yodong who chairs the Executive Committee of the festival said the activity is meant to promote local products including ‘etag’ and coffee, and to further affirm the local culture as the guiding framework to community development and Sagada as a tourist destination of the country.

The Church of St Mary the Virgin with the community shall observe the ceremonial presentation of Christ at the Temple and Purification of the blessed Virgin Mary which is observed every February 2 in the Christian calendar. The celebration of the Holy Eucharist shall be celebrated in morning of Feb 2 followed by a Bible quiz bee and a choir festival in the evening of same day.

A bike race coordinated by Paul Ballola and Alwyn Piluden shall commence at Sagada Poblacion in front of the Community Coop store.

Around 150 bikers shall proceed to Danum Lake on to Lazig hill to Langsayan Ridge and finally to northern Bangaan barangay. The bike race aims to promote environmental protection. The bike race sees action on February 4 with send-off ceremonies by Department of Tourism Regional Director Purificacion Molintas.

An art exhibit shall specially show paintings from Sagada’s visual artists including James Wandag, David Fowler, Eugene Magsino, and Janet Eason including works of Sagada potters Lope Bosaing. Siegried Bangyay-Rogers, and Tessie Baldo. Coordinated by artist David Fowler, the art items shall be displayed at the fourth floor of the newly inaugurated municipal building.

Street dancing participated by delegates from the four zones of the municipality shall see action morning of February 4. With fiesta theme , ‘Cultural identity, the Strength of our Community’, other cultural shows follow thereafter.

Indigenous games shall also be observed afternoon of February 5 at the community basketball court. Sanggol (arm wrestling), tulsi ( finger wrestling), tinnampak si upu ( leg spanking) among others shall be played by delegates from the four zones of Sagada. Aeta archers shall be showing enthusiasts how to shoot with bow and arrow.

The National Commission on Culture and the Arts (NCCA) sponsors most of the prizes in the cultural presentations and indigenous games.

The Baguio City National High School Rondalla and Rambak Cordillera Performing Arts shall be performing at the community court night of February 3. The performances shall be followed with a literary- musical contest among elementary and high school students.

The search for Miss Sagada shall be done at the St Jo Café conference hall eve of February 3 coordinated by Bernard Makellay and Divine Sibayan. Also, the search for Miss Gay Sagada also follows eve of February 4 at St Jo Café Hall.

A quiz bee participated in by elementary and high school students shall be conducted at the Saint Mary’s School Quadrangle.

The above activities will be simultaneously held with ball games and other sports activities including a muaithai tournament and a basketball shoot out and plotting game sponsored by SMART Telecommunications.

The public is invited to the town;s annual festivity. # nordis.net

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Chinese new year celeb to draw tourists

January 22, 2012 in Baguio City

BY KIMBERLIE NGABIT-QUITASOL
www.nordis.net

BAGUIO CITY — The city government is hopeful that the annual Chinese new year celebration in the city of pines would attract more tourists.

During the media night, last January 17, City Mayor Mauricio Domogan admitted that there was a decline in the number of tourists who visited the city as he expressed hope that the annual Chinese New Year activities would help draw in more visitors.

It can be recalled that there were earlier reports that there was a 33% decline in tourist arrivals in the city which Department of Tourism (DOT) officials claimed to be due to insufficient and poorly treated data.

Dr. Charles Cheng thanked the city officials for their support to the Filipino-Chinese community. He added that Baguio City was the first local government in the country to make the Chinese New Year celebrations a part of its activities.

Cheng further asked the media to help them inform and invite the public to join the celebrations. He stressed that the media will play a big role at informing and educating the public about the said annual event. He also said that the media will be a great help in popularizing the annual new year celebrations.

Peter Ng, the president of the Baguio Filipino Cantonese Association-CAR also expressed gratitude to media practitioners in the city as he recognized the big role they played in the annual Chines new year activities. He added that the media helped in promoting understanding and appreciation of the Filipino-Chinese cultural heritage among the wider Baguio community. # nordis.net

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Strengthening the Badchang of Batad

January 22, 2012 in Cordillera

BY ALMA B. SINUMLAG
www.nordis.net

BAGUIO CITY — Badchang or the Ifugao’s counterpart for Bayanihan is to be revived in a campaign to restore the damaged part of the Batad Rice Terraces. The damaged area was due to the wrath of a typhoon last year.

BADCHANG. John Chua, an adopted son of Banaue, Ifugao calls for the revival of the Ifugao’s version of bayanihan, badchang for the restoration of the eroded portions of the Batad Rice Terraces. Photo by Macon Muyot

John Chua, from the Federation of Philippine photographers and an adopted son of Ifugao as he claimed in a press conference here said that when he was taking photos of the Batad rice terraces, he noticed the eroded area. He asked the villagers why it was not repaired then the villagers said, they are waiting for a fund from the local government unit (LGU).

Chua according to him was sadenned that the rice terraces that were nurtured by Batad’s ancestors for 2000 years is neglected because there is no fund. Over two thousand years, he iterated the ancestors had kept on repairing the rice terraces through the Badchang system.

With Badchang, the spirit of volunteerism among the Ifugao people will be revived. Its launching will be on February 3 this year that they call “voluntourism”. Aside from the residents of Batad, Chua said, the campaign aims to invite the students, professionals and other Ifugao people in urban areas to go back to Ifugao this coming summer to help in the restoration has been started in the social networking website.

Also, Chua added that there will be a photo exhibit featuring the Badchang project along with the old and new photos of Banaue and Batad rice terraces.

With Badchang, Chua assured that with in a year, the eroded area in the rice terraces will be restored completely. Every volunteer he added will have a shovel with their name engraved on it. The shovels will be buried in the area.

Moreover, part of the activity is a Photo Eskwela where national photographers’ advocacy team led by Zarita Zafra and Peth Salvador will be offering a short course on photography among the Ifugao people. The Photo Eskwela will end with an Open Photo Competition for the participants. # nordis.net

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IPs answer mining firms TV ads

January 22, 2012 in mining, national

www.nordis.net

BY PIYA MALAYAO/KAMP

MANILA — Mining has barely been a national issue. Usually, mining only reaches headlines when colossal disasters occur such as the Marcopper disaster in 1996. But in the past several months, the issue of mining is splashed across dailies and mining ads interrupts primetime soaps. With the ‘no to mining’ petitions and the moving TV commercials, public opinion is on a tug-of-war of whether mining is evil or the redeemer of our despairing economy.

So is there life in mining, or is it a simple no to the extractive industry?

On the grounds, the ill effects of large-scale mining are no news. For decades large-scale mines had laid waste to plenty of mountains and rivers, uprooted many communities, and violated human rights. And a number of people—indigenous peoples, peasants, activists, and media folk—died amid the defense of the land, livelihood, and environment from mining encroachment.

The liberalization of the mining industry started with the enactment of the Mining Act of 1995, and since then mining applications over our mineral lands leapt in bounds. Like flies on a gaping wound, foreign mining corporations flocked over the country that allowed 100% ownership of land besides other incentives.

The mining operations caused immeasurable devastation to the national sovereignty and patrimony, destroyed and plundered the country’s national resources, while communities were eased out of their lands and are left without land and livelihood. The impoverished situation of mining communities belies the government and corporate propaganda of development and progress from the usurpation of our natural resources. In fact, the mining industry contributes a measly 1.7% of our country’s GDP.

The dire effect of mining to the people and the environment, and to the economy and national patrimony, drew a firm opposition from indigenous peoples, peasants, and environmentalists, and even from local governments and the media. While mining corporations are cashing in on our resources, resisting communities are met with violence by State forces or paramilitary groups formed by mining corporations. The indigenous peoples’ sector alone acquired four extra-judicial killings related to mining from 2010.

Today, more than 1 million hectares of Philippine mineral lands have approved mining applications, and more than half of this number is lands occupied by indigenous peoples.

Mining is also livelihood, however.

The landslide that killed several small-scale miners in the gold-rich Pantukan range in Compostela Valley could be interpreted so as to seem that corporate, large-scale mines are the ‘safer’ way to extract minerals, notwithstanding the cave-ins, mine accidents, and mine spills that killed or harmed thousands of people throughout the years in large-scale mines.

Indigenous peoples practice small-scale mining since time immemorial, and is considered a traditional economic activity especially in Mindanao and the Cordillera. In fact, plenty of miners in Pantukan are Lumad peoples. The treacherous terrain of the Pantukan hillsides is definitely unfit for hand operated or medieval mining practices, much less human habitation. However, Pantukan miners dare the loose slopes to eke out a living from the gold-laden mountain despite the frequent landslides.

According to the US State Department, there is $840 billion worth of minerals still untapped beneath the toes of Filipinos. Based on the rising trend of mining interest in the country, local and foreign mining corporations are dead set on getting their hoes on the remainder of the country’s mineral wealth, and the government President Benigno Aquino III has been more than accommodating, evidenced by 530 more approved mining applications last August. Unencumbered by its immense social and environmental impacts, such as the flooding in the mined out provinces in Mindanao after typhoon Sendong, the Aquino government does not consider ticking off mining as its flagship economic project.

Undeniably, mining is essential to development, and necessary for a self-sufficient and independent economy. However, the mining industry should emerge from a development policy based on national industrialization– meant for the development of local industries and agriculture. Furthermore, being an intrusive and extractive industry, mining should ensure and uphold social justice, people’s rights and welfare, national sovereignty, and the protection of the environment.

While the struggle continues for the People’s Mining Policy, that embodies the Filipino aspiration for a prosperous and progressive mining industry, mining companies and critics will battle it out in media and in other battlegrounds. # nordis.net

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DepEd initiates program for IP education

January 22, 2012 in education, national

www.nordis.net

BY ROBIE HALIP

MANILA — The creation of an Indigenous Peoples Education Office in the Department of Education is an A+ initiative that will improve education programs for one of the most marginalized sectors of the society—the indigenous peoples, says Rep Teddy Baguilat.

This is in response to the announcement of the Secretary Luistro on the creation of a new office in the DepEd that will focus mainly on the education of indigenous peoples.

Rep Baguilat also commends the recent adoption of the National Indigenous Peoples Policy Framework which responds to the need for a culture-responsive basic education for indigenous peoples in the country.

He sees this as a breakthrough to his call paralleled by the persistent lobbying of indigenous groups for various government agencies to establish help desks for indigenous peoples in their respective offices and craft culturally appropriate programs that will uplift the welfare of indigenous peoples.

This initiative by the DepEd also responds to one of the key recommendations contained in the Indigenous Peoples Consensus Policy Agenda that calls for the development and/or support to culturally-based education and training programs, and establishment of schools for Ips, and schools for living tradition or Alternative Learning Systems that promote and enhance the best interest and welfare of IPs, as well as provide more opportunities for scholarships for IP students.

In the National Indigenous Peoples Summit last March 21-23, 2011 attended by 150 indigenous leaders convened to discuss the National Consensus Policy Agenda for Indigenous Peoples which was presented to the president. The said policy agenda was also furnished to various government agencies.

Baguilat hopes that the DepEd will continue working with the NCIP, and genuine IP leaders in crafting programs that indigenous peoples will understand and appreciate. # nordis.net

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Land is still elusive for farmers

January 22, 2012 in land rights, national

www.nordis.net

By BAYAN PR

MANILA — A quarter of a century after the infamous Mendiola Massacre of 1987, farmers and supporters marched today to the Don Chino Roces Bridge to demand land and justice.

“From the first Aquino regime to the second Aquino regime, from the time of the Mendiola Massacre and even after the Hacienda Luisita Massacre, not much has changed in the situation of the farmers and farm workers in our country,” said Bayan secretary general Renato M. Reyes, Jr.

“The killing of farmers demanding land, then and now, is a testament to the unyeildingness of the powers-that-be when it comes to this important social justice issue. It is no different under the current regime where land reform is hardly a priority,” he added.

Bayan expressed concern that vested interests are at work to take advantage of the impeachment proceedings against Supreme Court Chief Justice Renato Corona to undermine the SC’s earlier ruling on the disputed Hacienda Luisita.

The group said that while it supported the impeachment, it was against any maneuver to reverse the decision of the SC which includes land disribution.

“The landmark Luisita decision should not be a casualty of the Aquino-Corona conflict. Now more than ever, the entire Supreme Court must show independence and decide with finality in favor of the farmers. The results of the impeachment trial should not take any toll on the Luisita decision,” Reyes said.

“The Aquino government cannot use the impeachment trial to cover up its miserable failure in addressing the issue of land, poverty and other economic issues. The people demand immediate economic relief, social justice and long-term development that go beyond the dole-outs of this government,” he added. # nordis.net

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