No to Rehabilitation, Operation of BNPP

Diocese of Balanga

Diocesan Pastoral Letter About Bataan Nuclear Power Plant

A good tree does not bear rotten fruit, nor does a rotten tree bear good fruit. (Lk. 6:43)

My dear People of God of the Diocese of Balanga,

Greetings of Peace!

Once again we are being presented a very grim scenario of the power situation in our country for the immediate future. Our government has added to our sense of foreboding because it has not been very assuring in its explanations about whether such a situation can be avoided, or if not, how it can be remedied.

Amidst the dire warnings the issue of the rehabilitation of the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant (BNPP) in Morong town has surfaced with its proponents insisting that such will be a solution to power shortage and the rise in cost of electricity.

The Diocese of Balanga had spoken before on this issue and said that it is not right; it is not proper; it is not good that the mothballed nuclear power plant be brought to life. My predecessor and now Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop, Most Reverend Socrates Villegas issued a pastoral letter in 2009 which expressed the stand and sentiments of the Diocese of Bataan: The Bataan Nuclear Power Plant is a burden and is a danger to the province. The BNPP will bring harm to lives, livelihood, and the environment. It is not the answer to the country’s present problems and needs of people for power and energy. No one is safe with the nuclear power plant and the BNPP will not bring progress and development to our province and our nation.

As your bishop now of the Diocese of Balanga likewise believe in and accept the pronouncements made by Archbishop Villegas and reiterate his stand.  This was the stand made by the clergy and faithful of the Church in Bataan, after deep reflection and prayer. I as your bishop stand with you in this issue and now express our opposition to the rehabilitation of the BNPP towards its full operation.

In view of the present day proposition to open the plant, the Diocese of Balanga has once more made a decision and sticks to its original conviction.

It is not our desire that the BNPP be given life because we know that such will endanger the lives of our citizens because there is no assurance of its safety or of the good and benefit it can give them. On the contrary the operation of a nuclear power plant only assures that our waters will be polluted and the creatures of our seas will be poisoned.  There is danger, too, of the soil of our lands be destroyed and poisoned, rendering it useless for planting. Thus if the BNPP operates we stand to lose our source of livelihood to its destructive effects.

Our Diocese of Balanga opposes the rehabilitation of the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant. That has been our constant stand and it has not changed. We are committed to this stand because we value life and the common good rather than material gain, or profits from cheap electricity, or personal comfort and interests. We value the future. We are stewards of God’s creation and we follow His command to all of us to protect, preserve, respect and nurture the seas and the creatures in it, the earth and all the plants that grow in it. We believe that there are other safe sources of power and energy that can be studied, tried and applied, such as wind (windmills), water (hydro) and the sun (solar).

Continue reading

Sulat Pastoral Tungkol sa Balak na Pagbuhay sa Bataan Nuclear Plant

“Hindi makapamumunga ng masama ang mabuting puno, at ang masamang puno nama’y hindi makakapamunga ng mabuti” (Lukas 6,43)

Mga minamahal naming Bayan ng Diyos,

Isang mapayapa at mapagpalang pagbati!

Dahil daw sa kakulangan ng kuryente o pagtaas ng langis mayroon mga nagpupumilit na isulong na muli ang rehabilitation ng Bataan Nuclear Power Plant.

Ang Diyosesis ng Balanga ay nagsalita na. Hindi tama. Hindi maganda. Hindi mabuti. Ang aking sinundan na Obispo, na ngayon ay Arsobispo ng Lingayen-Dagupan, ang kagalang-galang Socrates Villegas sa kanyang gabay at liham pastoral (2009) ay nagpahayag ng damdamin ng Bataan: ang Bataan Nuclear Power Plant ay mabigat na panganib. Ang BNPP ay pinsala sa buhay, kabuhayan at kalikasan. Ang BNPP ay hindi kasagutan sa pangkasalukuyan pangangailangan ng tao. Walang ligtas sa Bataan Nuclear Power Plant. Walang maganda sa BNPP. Walang pag-unlad sa BNPP.

At ako, bilang ngayon na Obispo ng Balanga, ay naniniwala at tumatanggap sa mga pahayag at pananaw ng aking pinalitang Obispo. Ako ay sumasang-ayon at gumagalang sa mga kapasyahan at mga balakin ng ating mga kaparian at mananampalatayang Inang Simbahan sa Bataan.

Kaya naman kaisa nila, ako po ay nagsasalita laban sa Bataan Nuclear Power Plant at tumututol sa iniisip o binabalak na pagpapatuloy ng BNPP.

Ang Diyosesis ng Balanga ay nagpasya na. At ang Diyosesis ng Balanga ay muling naninindigan.

Hindi namin nais na buhayin pa ang BNPP. Ayaw naming nailagay ang buhay sa bingit ng panganib, sa anino ng nagbabadyang kamatayan at sa kinabukasan na wala at mawawalan ng tiyak na kaligtasan, kagandahan at kabutihan. Hindi naming nais ituloy pa ang BNPP. Ayaw namin tuluyang masira ang aming dagat at malison ang mga laman-dagat. Ayaw namin din malison ang lupa at hindi na ito maaring mataniman pa. Ayaw naming masira ang aming mga pinanggagalingan ng aming ikinabubuhay.

Ang Diyosesis ng Balanga ay tumututol. At hindi ito mababago. Sapagkat labis na mahalaga sa amin ang buhay kaysa sa tubo, o pera mula sa murang kuryente o para lamang sa pansariling pangangailangan ng katawan. Sapagkat labis na nangangalaga kami sa mga nilikha ng Panginoong Diyos at kami ay tunay na tumugon sa Kanyang panawagan na ingatan, huwag sirain at pagyamanin at hindi abusuhin ang lahat ng Kanyang ginawa. Sapagkat naniniwala kami na mayroon pang mga bagay o enerhiya mula sa hangin (wind), o mula sa tubig (hydro) o mula sa araw (solar) na maaring pag-aralan, subukan o gawin.

Ang Diyosesis ng Balanga ay nagsalita na, at magsasalita pang muli. Ang Diyosesis ng Balanga ay kumilos noon, at kikilos pa rin ngayon. Tutol po kami. Tigilan na po. Tama na po.

Hindi po kami panig.Hindi po kami sang-ayon. Laban po tayo sa anuman isipin o balakin sa rehabilitation ng Bataan Nuclear Power Plant.

Marami pong salamat sa inyong pag-unawa at pagtanggap,

+Ruperto Cruz Santos, DD
Obispo ngBalanga at Catholic Bishops’ Conference for the Philippines
Episcopal Chairman for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People
16 August 2014, Kapistahan ni San Roque

Romero speaks in the here and now

Raul Julia as Óscar Romero in the 1989 film “Romero” (Paulist Productions)

National Catholic Reporter  Nov 11, 2017
by Antonio D. Sison   Media

The year, 1977, the circumstantial background, the turbulent presidential election in El Salvador. With his hands, the 60-year-old bishop cups water from a basin and washes his face. That day, in the capital San Salvador, he passively witnessed how armed military men terrorized a busload of voters from the city’s poor sector as they made their way to the polling station. Just earlier, he had tried to caution his Jesuit friend Rutillo Grande, pastor and social activist, about “going too far.” As he splashes water on his face a couple more times, he is stopped midstream by a colleague bearing the news: “You have been appointed archbishop.”

In the biopic “Romero” (John Duigan, 1989), the inaugural Mass of newly appointed archbishop of San Salvador Óscar Arnulfo Romero, gives us an unambiguous picture of his centrist theological and sociopolitical perspective; he is the “safe choice.” Conservative members of the church hierarchy, and prominent figures of the oligarchy dominate his bevy of well-wishers. “I come from a world of books,” he declares from the pulpit. “We in the church must keep to the center watchfully, in the traditional way, but seeking justice.”

But as the story arc unfolds, Romero, in a state of inertia, is drawn into a gradual conversion experience, not just in a general sense, but in the specific trajectory of a “conversion to justice.” It is by the portrayal of such a conversion that the film offers insight to Romero’s deepening spirituality that would lead him to a prophetic, liberating solidarity.

I find Jesuit activist Peter McVerry’s description of the three-stage process that leads to a conversion to justice an illuminating lens through which we can understand Romero’s transformation in the film.

The first stage, a “conversation of the feet,” is that latent doubt and discomfort when, after some form of sharing in the experience of the poor, we realize that our incapacity to love our marginalized brothers and sisters has a lot to do with our over-attachment to the comfortable lives we live. We become open to this realization not from paper cuts we get on our fingers from reading, but from the mud we get on our feet from immersion.

Early in the film, Romero faces new encounters at the edge of society where poor Salvadorans are hard-pressed on every side. This brings about a real “dis-ease” in him, especially as he continues hobnobbing with San Salvador’s rich and powerful. The camera works well to capture nuances and close-up shots of Raul Julia, the gifted actor who plays Romero, revealing subtle emotional hints; his face is a threshold of a simmering crisis of belief.

A “conversion of the head” is that juncture when we are “called to social analysis.” We come to a realization that there are structural causes for poverty and suffering, and for as long as our values and assumptions remain unexamined, we are complicit in this social injustice.

Again, the film is replete with sequences that lead Romero to a more clear-eyed social analysis. In one scene, panning shots display a collage of disturbing, real-life photographs of the victims of military atrocities as the archbishop listens to the stories of the bereaved families. This layer of realism works to convey that the scales have fallen from Romero’s eyes; he now sees the “view from below,” the barefaced reality of the ongoing human tragedy and its structural causes. Inevitably, he begins to distance himself from members of society’s elite he once called friends.

Finally, a “conversion of the heart” involves an actual, committed response after having journeyed through the two previous conversions. Catholic social teaching and theologies of liberation refer to this turning point as an “option for the poor.”

The film brings this to deeper focus in the “barracks” scene when Romero heroically attempts to re-enter the church in Aguilares that the military had occupied and desecrated. Twice, he was threatened with gunfire and literally kicked out the church building. Just as all hope seemed lost, Romero — now garbed in priestly vestments — attempts to return a third time. But he is no longer entering the church alone; the faithful had gathered around him, and in procession, they enter the building as the church. In his homily, the archbishop’s message resonates with the very heart of the reign of God: “You are the church, you are the people of God. You are Jesus in the here and now.”

The year, 2017, the circumstantial background, the rising xenophobia and racism in the United States. Or the refugee crisis in Italy and the Mediterranean. Or the violent drug war in the Philippines.

It also happens to be the centennial of Blessed Óscar Romero’s birth.

Purposefully, “Romero” is the film for us to revisit at such a time as this.

[Precious Blood Br. Antonio D. Sison is associate professor of systematic theology at Catholic Theological Union, Chicago, and author of the book The Sacred Foodways of Film. “Romero” is available on DVD and video streaming from PaulistProductions.org.]

This story appeared in the Nov 3-16, 2017 print issue.

Pope condemns possession of nuclear weapons in shift from church’s acceptance of deterrence

Cardinal Peter Turkson, prefect of the Vatican’s Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, speaks to journalists during a conference on building a world free of nuclear weapons, at the Vatican Nov. 10. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Nov 10, 2017
by Joshua J. McElwee Vatican

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis has openly denounced the continuing possession of nuclear weapons by various world governments, in what appears to be a departure from the Roman Catholic Church’s prior acceptance of the Cold War-era global system of nuclear deterrence and mutually assured destruction.

In a talk Nov. 10 to participants in a high-profile Vatican conference on nuclear disarmament, the pope also seemed to indirectly criticize world leaders such as U.S. President Donald Trump, who has openly threatened nuclear war with North Korea over that country’s continuing development of nuclear arms.

Francis told the conference participants — who include the U.N. High Representative for Disarmament Affairs, NATO’s deputy secretary general, and 11 Nobel Peace Prize laureates — that humanity cannot fail “to be genuinely concerned by the catastrophic humanitarian and environmental effects of any employment of nuclear devices.”

“If we also take into account the risk of an accidental detonation as a result of error of any kind, the threat of their use, as well as their very possession, is to be firmly condemned,” he said.

“International relations cannot be held captive to military force, mutual intimidation, and the parading of stockpiles of arms,” the pope continued. “Weapons of mass destruction, particularly nuclear weapons, create nothing but a false sense of security. They cannot constitute the basis for peaceful coexistence between members of the human family.”

While previous popes have called for the abolition of nuclear weapons, they also granted conditional moral acceptance to the system of nuclear deterrence, which arose after World War II when the United States and the Soviet Union stockpiled nuclear weapons in order to discourage either country from launching an atomic attack.

Pope John Paul II, for example, said in a message to the U.N. in June 1982 that the system of deterrence could be judged “morally acceptable” as “a step on the way toward a progressive disarmament.”

The Vatican conference, hosted Nov. 10-11 by the new Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, is the first major international gathering on disarmament since 122 countries signed a new U.N. treaty in July that calls for the complete elimination of nuclear weapons.

The Vatican is one of three signatories that have already ratified the agreement. None of the nuclear powers and no NATO members have signed on to the measure.

The disarmament conference is taking place as Trump is on an 11-day visit to several Asian nations. In South Korea Nov. 8, Trump warned North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that his quest to acquire nuclear weapons is putting his regime “in grave danger” and threatened: “Do not try us.”

Cardinal Peter Turkson, the head of the Vatican dicastery, said at the conference’s opening Nov. 10 that the event was planned long before Trump’s visit to Asia was announced. “It just happens to be a happy coincidence,” Turkson joked, adding: “If we believe in divine providence, that was part of it.”

Turkson said he and the participants at the event had gathered “for a very candid conversation about how to achieve a world free of nuclear weapons.”

In an apparent nod to North Korea, he added: “This conversation is urgently needed, given the current tensions among nuclear weapons states and given the tensions between nuclear weapons states and states seeking to become nuclear weapons states.”

Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s Secretary of State, told the conference their considerations take place during a “decidedly disheartening state of affairs” across the world.

Parolin noted that 2017 marks the 50th anniversary of Pope Paul VI’s encyclical Populorum progressio, which proposed that the world’s governments set aside a portion of their military spending for a global fund to relieve the needs of impoverished peoples.

Paraphrasing the encyclical, he stated: “Is it not plain to everyone that such a fund would reduce a need for those other expenditures that are motivated by fear [or] stubborn pride? Countless millions are starving. We cannot approve a debilitating arms race.”

‘Ethic of nuclear deterrence not morally warranted’

One of the speakers at the Vatican conference said he hopes it refocuses world attention on the nuclear ban treaty.  Continue reading

NYD2017 and Synod 2018 – Muchismas Gracias & Puede Pa!

Your Eminences,
Your Excellencies:

The Mighty One has done great things for us!

May we express once more our deep gratitude to all of you who sent your delegations of young people, accompanied by your youth ministers, to the National Youth Day 2017 in the Archdiocese of Zamboanga!  As well, our heartfelt thanks to the Archdiocese of Zamboanga, led by His Excellency, Most Rev. ROMULO DELA CRUZ, DD, for their warm welcome and generous hospitality!  We pray for safe travels back to our origins, and a beautiful way forward inspired by the experience of the NYD2017 national celebration.

The Synod Secretariat has informed us today that they are still open to accept responses from us.  Therefore, may we request those dioceses which have not yet submitted their diocesan responses to the Synod 2018 to please send to us not later than November 15.

Thank you very much for your kind attention.  May we seek your support for a meaningful local celebration of the National Youth Day this December 16, the first day of the Misa de Gallo.

Holy is God’s Name!

Yours sincerely,


+ LEOPOLDO C. JAUCIAN, SVD, DD
Bishop of Bangued
Chairman of the CBCP-Episcopal Commission on Youth
Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines
EPISCOPAL COMMISSION ON YOUTH
Visit us on the World Wide Web  cbcp-ecy.ph 
Like us on Facebook  CBCPECY

An Invitation to a Forum: Do We Need Duterte’s Federalism?

Photo credit: Philstar

Dear friends of JJCICSI,

Please join us on the morning of November 18, Saturday, from 8:30AM to 12nn, for a a forum titled “Do We Need Duterte’s Federalism?” Speaking at the forum will be Atty Christian Monsod, a drafter of our current constitution, and Dean Ronald Mendoza of the Ateneo School of Government. Atty. Monsod will begin the forum by sharing his perspective on the idea of, and prospects for, a “revolutionary government”–a proposal that President Duterte and his allies and supporters have been floating as a means to achieve a federalist structure and the change that President Duterte has promised.

The forum will be held at the Walter Hogan Conference Hall, Social Development Complex, Ateneo de Manila University (aka the ISO Conference Hall).

Slots are limited, so please confirm your attendance by Tuesday, November 14. You may confirm by sending an email to eremitafeliz@gmail.com

Thanks and hope to see you there,

Eleanor R. Dionisio
Associate Director
Tel. 426-6001, local 4660

Pro-Life Philippines Position Paper on the SOGIE Bill

A group of participants of the Metro Manila Pride March on June 27 poses in front of the Supreme Court with rainbow flags, urging the court to follow suit the SCOTUS ruling that legalized gay marriage in the United States. Photo by Speqtrum

Position Paper of Pro-Life Philippines Foundation, Inc. on Anti-Discrimination Bills on SOGIE

“An Act Prohibiting Discrimination On the Basis of Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity and Expression And Providing Penalties Therefore”

1.    Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity as Classification is Unreasonable and Against the “Equal Protection” clause

a.    Unreasonable

In classifying persons or things, there should be a clear and distinct difference between two categories.  This is because in legal terms, classification is defined as the grouping of persons or things similar to each other in certain particulars and different from all others in these same particulars (Constitutional Law by Justice Isagani Cruz, supra). There has to be what is called substantial distinction, as contrary to superficial difference.  This is the reason why we could distinctively classify men from women (difference in reproductive roles), minors from adults (difference in age of consent), citizens from aliens (difference in nationality) etc.  This distinction can be described with relative permanency in the characteristics of the distinction being made.

However when a person uses colors for vehicles or emotions and/or lifestyles for persons, they convey superficial differences in as much as these differences can change relatively in time – there exists no permanency in the distinctions being established.

That is why it is important to understand that sexual orientation is such a superficial difference since the attraction of a person to the same sex varies in degrees, and there are recorded cases of persons with diminished same-sex attractions, if not totally re-oriented into heterosexuals.  In fact, there are a number of “ex-gay ministries” available for persons struggling with same-sex attractions, such as our group Courage, and Bagong Pag-Asa, who assist the individual in understanding the struggle and living a chaste life.  So to classify individuals according to their sexual orientation (homosexuals and heterosexuals) is unreasonable.

It is also equally important to understand that gender identity is also a superficial difference.  As defined, it refers to a personal sense of identity (making it a subjective concept) based on manners of clothing, inclinations and behavior in relation to masculine or feminine conventions.  Notwithstanding the argument that sexual orientation can be changed, the indicators of gender identity – manners of clothing, inclinations and behavior – are also undeniably factors in social science that can change relatively in time.  The subjectivity of the definition (“personal”) makes it so general that it is difficult for it to be considered as a substantial distinction.  

b.    Against the “Equal Protection” clause

Anti-Discrimination bill on SOGIE was authored to address anti-discriminatory practices.  However, by doing so it unjustly favors a group of individuals over the rest despite basic natural gender similarities. It is made in favor of active gays and lesbians.

In the earlier position paper of Courage Philippines (2005), there was an example of two factory workers who were both due for promotions – one a homosexual, while the other a “straight” person.  Given two case illustrations of employer-bias, the homosexual can use Anti-Discrimination bills on SOGIE against a homophobic employer, but the “straight” person cannot use Anti-Discrimination bill on SOGIE against a biased homosexual employer.  This proposed bill ironically permits and allows discrimination and inequality.  And the inequality lies in the behavior and/or sexual lifestyle chosen by a person – through Anti-Discrimination bills on SOGIE more protection will be given to individuals who embrace the active homosexual lifestyle, as oppose to those who reject or fight against it.

For the “straight” person may also be having same-sex attractions but chooses not to act upon it, and furthermore chooses to conceal his or her struggles from the public.  Yet because of Anti-Discrimination bill on SOGIE, he or she is discriminated against in favor of individuals who choose to be openly in the active homosexual lifestyle – not unless he or she will also openly embrace the same lifestyle.  And so we can see that these bills may be used to trigger an influence upon people who are genuinely struggling against same-sex attractions to consider taking on the gay lifestyle, so as not to be discriminated against.  Continue reading

We Need a War on Sex Crime

Photo credit: Rappler

Fr. Shay Cullen
10 November 2017

We need to declare a war on child sex crime to save thousands of children who are victims of rape and commercial sexual exploitation. A hundred thousand minors are estimated to be trafficked every year into the sex dens of iniquity in the Philippines. There they are raped and abused and addicted to drugs. The drugs makes them weak, docile and submissive and that’s what the sex abusers wants and pays for- a weak vulnerable child over whom they have total power.

The girls are forced to pay for their board and lodging and food at high price and for the drugs. They are caught in a web of debt from which there is almost no escape. They are caught in debt bondage and there is no escape in most cases. There is no question that government officials are more interested in promoting the sex bars, traffickers and pimps to ply their abusive trade in buying and selling human beings, mostly children, than in curbing the trade. They issue the operating permit so the clubs can flourish. They are unwilling to close down a sex bar because they attract local and foreign tourists willing to spend big money and these politicians have interests in the sex bars. Minors are especially victimized, groomed and lured into the sex business.

That’s what happened to 14-year old Dee who was groomed online over her cell phone through text messages by a so-called boyfriend with whom she had an imagined infatuation and believed that she loved him and he loved her. This is a favorite grooming tactic of the human trafficker and the abuser. Dee fell for it. She was lured to a house and went with some of her friends. There she met Johnrey, her so called texting lover. There was a party and soon he had sexually assaulted her. She did not complain but thought that it was sexual-love and it was ok. This brainwashing of minors is common and brings them on the road to sex slavery and commercial sexual exploitation. Dee was then encouraged to have sex, drugs and alcohol with other friends of Johnrey. The teenager was one of the hundred thousand abused children sold into the sex industry in the Philippines. Soon, she was being sold to more customers and it was the end of any childhood for her. Real life had ended.

The main customers of the sex trade are the tourists from abroad. They come to Southeast Asia and especially the Philippines because they know that while some sex tourists are arrested and some are set up for exploitation by the corrupt police, they believe they can easily get away with sexually exploiting and abusing a child by paying bribes.

There is also strong evidence that the incidence of cyber-sex crimes or online sexual exploitation of children where very young Filipino children are coerced to perform sex acts for live internet broadcast to paying foreigners is increasing. A recent study conducted by UNICEF titled Perils and Possibilities: Growing up online reveals that globally there are around 75,000 child predators online at anytime and many of them are trying to contact children in the Philippines. In 2015, the Philippines Office of Cybercrime received 12,374 cyber tips from the US-based National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Also the number of criminal cases of live stream child abuse in the Philippines is rising, from 57 in 2013, to 89 in 2014, and 167 in 2015.

Cyber sex crimes are very difficult to track as it is conducted in inconspicuous places such as in residential areas as long as there is an internet connection and oftentimes parents and relatives of the child-victims are also involved in the online abuse of the victims. There is a growing acceptance that this is an Ok form of earning money by bringing their children to be videoed live on the internet.

A study published early in 2016 conducted by the Philippine Center for Women’s Resources (CWR) estimates that every 53 minutes, a woman or child is raped and that seven in 10 victims of violence were children. The CWR report further says that despite the alarming number, victims could hardly find help. Without support, aggravated by the impunity enjoyed by the perpetrators they are helpless. Besides they don’t know their rights and how to seek redress, get help and make complaints. Violence against women is prevalent and they need to have knowledge of their rights and a contact organization to get help.

Above all we need to get help for the children who are on the front target line of the human traffickers like Dee. If it were not for the help of the Preda Foundation, she would have been lost to the sex trade forever. There, the child loses self-respect and value. They come to believe that this is the only thing they can do to earn money to pay her debts. But Dee got help and was rescued from the brothel and brought to the Preda home for girls where she had a life changing experience. Today, she is a healthy young woman reunited with her family and going to school.

But of the hundred thousand, there are so many more to be saved and much more preventive education and social campaigning. That is the way to wake up the conscience of the nation to the fact that the commercial sexual exploitation of children and young women is already an accepted important part of the economy. It is a business from which the rich greatly profit. We have to speak out and stand against it and declare the dignity of every child and woman.

Davao Banana Farmers Press DOJ to Award Floirendo Lands to Them

Banana farmers and workers today trooped to the office of the Department of Justice (DOJ) to press the latter to award thousands of hectares of land taken away from them by Antonio Floirendo’s Tagum Development Corporation (Tadeco).

According to Billy Cabintoy, Secretary General of the Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries One Movement (AOM), the 28,816-hectare banana plantation of the Tadeco of the Floirendo family, a then Marcos crony, is a clear example of how legitimate agrarian reform beneficiaries are robbed of their rights to till their own land through various schemes such as leaseback, leasehold, contract growing and agri-business venture agreements (AVAs).

Not one of more than 1,890 ARBs in the Floirendo plantation benefit from the use of their land. They either remain plantation workers enduring slave-like conditions or laid-off when they complain and assert their rights.

A number of them have been harassed and barred from entering their lands. Blood has even spilt on their lands as some of their leaders have been killed by private armies of the Floirendo family.

In early May of this year, the DOJ had ruled that the Joint Venture Agreement (JVA) between the Bureau of Corrections (BuCor) and Tadeco first inked in 1969 was illegal. The Commission on Audit (COA) later reaffirmed this by stating that the deal was unconstitutional and called for the filing of criminal charges against former officials of the DOJ and the BuCor who approved the deal with TADECO.

But other than the above, Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries (ARBs) under the WADECOR Employees Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Association, Inc., Checkered Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries and Employees Multi-purpose Cooperative, PAHECO Employees Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Association, Inc., and Linda District Employees Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Association, Inc. have already won their cases at the DAR and even up to the Supreme Court.

Only the immediate installation of the ARBs would provide justice to them. This can only be done if the DOJ which is a member of the Presidential Agrarian Reform Council (PARC) strongly recommends that it revoke the Joint Venture and various Agri-business Ventures Agreements (AVA) that the Floirendo’s had not only with BuCor but with the ARBs as well.

One teen’s fight to save under fire Philippine tribal schools

Michelle Campos faces an uphill struggle amid threats from mining firms, armed groups and even the president himself

[Michelle Campos, a 19-year old Manobo tribal woman, leads her community in asserting their rights to education and self-governance. (Photo by Mark Saludes)]

Mark Saludes, Tandag Philippines UCAN  November 8, 2017

Michelle Campos was excited to go home after weeks away from her tribal village of Han-ayan in the southern Philippines.

During the two-hour trip through the mountains, the 19-year-old Manobo woman was all smiles.

“You’ll know you’ve reached the village when your ass is already numb,” she laughed.

The trip was filled with laughter as the motorcycle she was riding plied along a winding trail of mud, rocks, and fallen tree branches.

Campos had been in the capital Manila for several months to lobby for recognition of tribal rights and to protest against alleged abuses committed by soldiers in her community, including attacks on tribal schools.

Her father, Dionel, and two other elders in her tribe were killed in 2015 by militiamen allegedly backed by government security forces.

The tribal leaders were accused of promoting communism through an alternative learning center that has been supported by the Catholic Church.

After her father’s death, Campos became the face of the tribe’s struggle for justice. She carried on the campaign for an educational system that is sensitive to the culture of indigenous peoples.

The young woman is herself a product of the Alternative Learning Center for Agriculture and Livelihood Development, one of the tribal schools that were accused by President Rodrigo Duterte of “spreading subversive ideas against the government.”

Importance of education

The president’s allegation was not new. In the 1970s, church workers who introduced education programs in tribal communities were also accused of being communist rebels.

Campos’ uncle, Datu Jalandoni Campos, recalled how Catholic priests told the community about the importance of education to fight discrimination.

In was in the late 1970s when Tandag Diocese launched its Tribal Filipino Apostolate that introduced literacy and numeracy programs in tribal communities.

It took more than a decade for the program to transform into an independent learning system under the non-government group Tribal Filipino Program of Surigao del Sur.

“It was the enthusiasm of the community to give children quality education that built these schools,” said Bishop Emeritus Ireneo A. Amantillo.

Campos said it was through the efforts of church leaders and the several NGOs that schools were built in 18 communities.

In 2002, the Department of Education recognized the tribal schools and even named them as having the “most outstanding literacy programs” among NGO-run learning institutions.   Continue reading