The Challenges to Family Today

PREDA Foundation | Fr. Shay Cullen 17 August 2018 Dublin,Ireland. What is family to each one of us and how important is it to belong to a family? We all greatly desire and long for the secure “happy family” whose members love and trust each other, share solidarity, give mutual…

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URGENT Statement on the Recent Flooding

The past month obviously tells us that flooding is now the new normal in the Philippines. This is nothing but climate change in its worst. Science explains to us that climate change gives rise to changes in precipitation, along with temperature, wind patterns, atmospheric pressure and moisture. Many scientists therefore…

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‘Day of Remembrance’ proposed for slain Filipino teen

Death of Kian delos Santos in August 2017 underscores atrocities committed in Duterte’s drug war, senator says

Friends and relatives of Kian delos Santos, a teenager killed in the Philippine government’s war against illegal drugs on Aug. 16, 2017, light candles to mark the first anniversary of his death. (Photo by Kimberly dela Cruz)

Leonel Abasola and Kimberly dela Cruz, Manila, Philippines
August 17, 2018

A Philippine senator has proposed declaring a day in August each year as a “National Day of Remembrance” to mark the death of a teenager last year in the government’s war against drugs.

The death of 17-year-old Kian de los Santos on Aug. 16, 2017, at the hands of police conducting an anti-drug operation sparked national and international outrage.

Senator Risa Hontiveros said the killing of De los Santos “underscored the human rights atrocities committed in the name of the bloody war on drugs.”

The opposition legislator said that by remembering all those who have died in the government’s drug war, “the public states its clear rejection of the culture of killing and impunity.”

“We have a duty to remember,” said Hontiveros. “We must not allow Kian and all the victims to be rendered nameless, invisible and forgotten.”

The legislator said the act of remembering, “is an act of defiance against the killings,” adding that, “to forget is to give consent.”

Bishop Pablo Virgilio David of Kalookan led relatives and friends of De los Santos in unveiling a memorial marker at San Roque Cathedral in Manila’s Caloocan City.

De los Santos’ case stirred up controversy after police claimed that the teenager tried to fight it out with them with a .45 caliber pistol.

Witness testimonies, however, disproved the claims. An independent autopsy also showed the boy was shot in the head.

“If they said that he fought back, and it’s not true, how many other cases are there where police were lying?” said Jose Luis Martin Gascon, chairman of the Commission on Human Rights.

Catholic priest Flavie Villanueva said Delos Santos “became a symbol of systematic killing involving youths.”

Data from the Children’s Legal Rights and Development Center revealed that at least 74 children have been killed in the two-year old war on narcotics.

Opposition congressman France Castro said President Rodrigo Duterte’s drug war has claimed more than 12,000 victims, many of whom were poor.

Early this week, Duterte admitted that he might not be able to solve the drug problem during his six-year term as president.

The Philippine National Police has reported that 23,518 murder cases have been investigated since July 2016, when Duterte came to power, to June 2018. Of that number, at least 4,279 involved drug suspects killed during “legitimate police operations.”

Standing up for God and the Church

This is about our Father in Heaven and our Mother Church being maligned Father Elias Ayuban Jr., CMF, Manila

LaCroixInternational| Philippines August 20, 2018

Rodrigo Duterte speaking in Davao City on Sept. 30, 2016. (Photo by Toto Lozano/PPD)

This is about our Philippine president calling our God stupid.I remember when I was a teenager and my father had an altercation with our neighbor.

With a bolo in his hand, the neighbor challenged my father to a fight.I was afraid, but my father was apparently not disturbed. He did not respond to the provocation.

It was an attitude that I did not understand then. As a son, I felt I had to do something not because my father needed it but because I needed it.

I felt that I had to intervene, and if necessary, “defend” my father in a way that I was not even sure how.

By speaking ill of my father, the neighbor also hurt me. I felt violated.

What greater love can we offer to our parents than to be on their side when they are threatened?

What better expression of support can we show to them than to speak on behalf of our mother and father when they are maligned for no apparent reason?

Yes, even if they do not need it, and even if we are afraid.

To my relatives, friends, fellow priests, and religious in the Philippines, I am afraid to speak to you about this because I am not holier than anyone of you.

I hesitate to tell you what I think because you have been so good to me, and many of you are even better than some of those who criticize our president.

Even if I don’t understand your unequivocal support to the policies of the administration of President Rodrigo Duterte, I respect you in the same way that you respect me when I do not completely agree with you.

But this is no longer about the president.

This is about our Father in Heaven and our Mother Church being maligned.

God does not need us to protect Him, but we need to say something because in our blood we have the same DNA with His Son as “we are created in His own image and likeness.

“The Church “will prevail even if the gates of hell will bar,” but to be on the side of our Mother when she most needs it is the least that we can and should do.

In these challenging times, we need to draw the line.

When he cursed the Holy Father, we were silent.

Now that he calls our God “stupid,” I could not be silenced.

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URGENT: On The Recent Flooding

August 16, 2018, Manila – The window of opportunity to act is about to close and the government should act decisively now to save our country from the worst possible effects of climate change.

This was the dire warning sounded by a new network of ecological advocates after days of heavy rains inundated vast swaths of Metro Manila and six provinces of Luzon, causing rivers to swell and bringing massive floods that forced hundreds of Filipinos to flee to evacuation centers, in scenes reminiscent of Tropical Storm Ondoy nine years ago.

Called URGENT, the group was convened early this year by Bishop Broderick Pabillo of the Archdiocese of Manila, Fr. Pedro Montallana, Chairperson of Save Sierra Madre Network Alliance Inc., and Yeb Saño, Executive Director of Greenpeace Asia and former Climate Change Commissioner.

Saño made climate change issues popular when he held a hunger strike and made a tearful, emotional appeal at the United Nations Climate Change Conference that was being held as Typhoon Haiyan, locally known as Yolanda wreaked havoc on southern Philippines in 2013.

Yolanda is one of the strongest tropical cyclones ever recorded that devastated portions of Southeast Asia, causing over 6, 000deaths in the country .

“We need to stop ourselves from a business-as-usual track right now and take drastic actions,” URGENT said today in a statement sent to the media.

“The heavy rains and floods brought by five consecutive typhoons Gardo, Henry, Inday, Josie and Karding this month should shake us and wake us up to the fact that climate change issue is real and urgent and we need to act now,” the group said.

“It is a must that we make radical lifestyle change as individuals and take drastic collective actions to address this issue,” Bp. Pabillo sounded off. He further echoed Pope Francis call to all people of goodwill in his encyclical letter, Laudato Si on Care for our Common Home, for ecological conversion and hearing both the cry of the Earth and the cry of the poor.

Over the weekend, a red rainfall warning — the highest — was raised over Metro Manila and weather bureau PAGASA has said that downpours are expected to persist in the coming days due to the southwest monsoon.

Meanwhile, massive floods occurred in most of Bulacan and parts of Rizal, Pangasinan, Tarlac, Pampanga, Cavite and Zambales, as well as Metro Manila.

In recent years, tropical storms — Ondoy (Ketsana), Sendong (Washi), Pablo (Bopha) and Yolanda (Haiyan) — have left trails of death and destruction, shattered homes, and destroying communities.

In Yolanda alone, non-government organizations have estimated the damage to property and to the country’s economy to be at least P650 billion ($13 billion).

The Philippines is highly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, including sea level rise, increased frequency of extreme weather events, rising temperatures and extreme rainfall.

This is due to its high exposure to natural hazards (cyclones, landslides, floods, droughts), dependence on climate-sensitive natural resources and vast coastlines where all major cities and the majority of the population reside.

The Philippines lies in the world’s most cyclone-prone region, averaging 19–20 cyclones each year, of which 7–9 make landfall. Due to climate change, sea levels in the Philippines are rising faster than the global average, increasing the hazard posed by storm surges and threatening permanent inundation of low-lying areas.

URGENT was echoing decades of warnings made by many international scientists. Over the past decades, scientists have warned that our increasing use of fossil fuels is adding heat-trapping gases to the Earth’s atmosphere, causing mountain glaciers and ice masses to melt, sea levels to rise, plant blooming to shift, as well as extreme weather events like weird weather patterns, stronger and more frequent storms and heat waves.   Continue reading

Labour Rights Group Condemns the Killing of Butch Rosales, A Labour Rights Defender

The Center for Trade Union and Human Rights (CTUHR) strongly condemns the killing of its former Cebu staff, Butch Rosales, who was gunned down by an unidentified man last August 8, Wednesday at 12:30 in the afternoon while on board a jeepney in Punta Engaño, Mactan, Cebu a community where Rosales grew up.

He was always known as labour rights activist by his neighbors and acquaintances. Rosales was a full-time human rights correspondent of CTUHR in Cebu 2008 to 2011. A courageous and dedicated activist, he organized workers in Mactan Economic Zone (MEZ), which was considered as among the most repressive industrial enclaves in the country. He was instrumental in the founding of the Unity for Workers Rights (U4WR), a broad organization of workers and workers rights advocates, in response to massive retrenchments in MEZ and in neighboring industrial centers. U4WR was the first workers’ organization established in MEZ since the 1990’s, with members coming from eight factories.

In 2009, Rosales was subjected to surveillance and intimidation by state forces but this did not stop him from pursuing human rights work and labor organizing. He carried on organizing workers in Cebu and assisted in conducting the CTUHR’s human rights’ assessment in electronics factories in the province in 2013 and 2016. He contributed greatly in the trade union movement and local mass struggle of workers.

Very recently, Butch turned to organizing Rise Up for Life and Rights (RISE UP), an organization of families of victims of extrajudicial killings of Duterte regime’s drug war. He was on his way to a 2pm meeting in a Church in Southern Cebu City when the tragic and brutal incident happened. He was on the jeepney’s front seat when the gunman pretending as passenger riding inside shot him at the back of his head. He sustained three gunshot wounds that killed him instantly.

The killing of Rosales done in broad daylight in a public space clearly resembles the brutal anti-drug operations that extra-judicially killed thousands of mostly poor people whom the police merely state to be under investigation. Rosales is the 31st victim of extrajudicial killings in the labor sector since Duterte’s presidency. This incident sees a confluence of Duterte government’s violent drug war and naked suppression of human rights defenders who sought to bring justice to victims of EJKs and other human rights violations.

CTUHR mourns and grieves with Rosales’ family, friends and comrades. He is survived by a wife and three children. We share their pain and sorrow. In celebrating his life and contribution to the trade union movement, CTUHR vows to pursue his cause of bringing justice to victims of trade union and human rights violations. Amid heightened attacks on people’s rights and freedoms, CTUHR will persevere in the struggle against impunity, rising tyranny and state fascism alongside the people’s movement.

Justice for Butch Rosales!
Justice for all victims of Duterte’s fascism and tyranny!

The Wrong Way to Fight a Drug War

The Philippines has undertaken a brutal battle against “shabu,” or crystal methamphetamine. But the government needs to go after another target entirely.

The body of a man killed in a shootout with police in 2016 in Manila. According to the police, sachets containing a substance believed to be the drug, shabu were found in the killed man’s pockets.CreditDaniel Berehulak for The New York Times

New York Times Opinion 
By Miguel Syjuco
Mr. Syjuco is a Filipino novelist and a contributing opinion writer.
Aug. 8, 2018

If you’ve tried shabu, you’ll understand its allure. Taking it begins with ritual — folding foil into a chute, rolling paper towel into a wick and heating the gleaming crystal into running liquid trailing vapor. Inhaling it feels unbelievably clean, as if your body and mind are scrubbed of all weight. It was so good I tried it only once.

Shabu, or crystal methamphetamine, manipulates the reward pathways of the brain, flooding it with dopamine. As with other addictive drugs, repetition hinders the brain’s transmitters and receptors, pushing users to seek replenishment artificially. A fraction of users get stuck in that cycle, leading to antisocial behaviors or even criminality. Even kicking that drug can lead to dependency on other substances, increasing the likelihood of relapse. This is why it is addiction — not just shabu — that is at the heart of a public health crisis in the Philippines.

Rodrigo Duterte, speaking to Filipinos’ alarm about widespread shabu use, was elected president in June 2016 on his promise to solve the country’s drug problem. But his government’s strategy, based on fear and law enforcement, is misguided. Since he began his presidency, on average 33 people have been killed per day — more than 4,500 suspected drug users — by police, with more than 23,500 more deaths under investigation. The vast majority comes from the poor, who cannot afford private rehabilitation programs.

This drug war has been dramatic, but its effectiveness is dubious. Even official numbers remain hard to come by. Last year, the president fired the head of the government’s Dangerous Drugs Board for standing by the agency’s statistic of 1.8 million Filipinos who used drugs once within a year. That contradicted the president’s own estimate, which fluctuates between 3 million and 4 million full-fledged addicts.

Despite voicing good intentions, Mr. Duterte’s insistence on prioritizing a punitive, rather than rehabilitative, approach to addiction is proving shortsighted. Fear alone is unsustainable.

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2018 GenFest (International Gathering of the Gen Movement of the Focolare Movement) in Manila

Friends,

Here is a short 15-minute video of the recent 2018 Genfest (International Gathering of the Focolare Movement’s “Youth for a United World”) where over 6,000 young men and women from all over the world participated. This video is an abbreviated version of the full 48-minute video.
http://collegamentoch.focolare.org/project/english-31/

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1IMtkd8p9NtFiYZZg7eMbQSHdWw0YkIpy/view

This version includes a short clip of one of the fruits of our prison ministry at the Maximum Security Compound of the New Bilibid Prisons in Muntinlupa city. Pancio’s story of conversion and healing, like many others like him, is one of the reasons we dedicate ourselves to helping prison inmates at the maximum and medium security facilities of our national penitentiary, and a powerful argument against the death penalty that the Philippine congress wants to bring back!

By the way, this former inmate in now the HR manager of one of the companies of a major business conglomerate in the Philippines.

Madalas Na Mga Itinatanong Tungkol Sa Pederalismo

SIMBAHANG LINGKOD NG BAYAN 
The Socio Political Apostolate of the Society of Jesus in the Philippines
MANALANGIN. MANINDIGAN. MAKIALAM.

Paunang Salita

Hindi tamang sabihin na walang alam ang Simbahan sa mga problema at isyu na nakaka-apekto sa ating bansa. Ang totoo, marami ng pagkakataon na mismong mga politiko, lipunang sibil at iba pang mga pampubliko at pribadong grupo ang kumonsulta at humingi na ng payo sa mga obispo at pari kung paano bibigyan ng solusyon ang napakaraming suliranin ng ating bayan.

Sa kabila nito, inaamin din naman ng Simbahan na hindi siya eksperto sa lahat ng bagay at hindi ito makakapagbigay ng lunas sa lahat ng suliranin sa lipunan. Ang isa sa maaari nitong gawin ay turuan ang taong-bayan na maging matatag sa kanilang moral na paninindigan at bigyan sila ng katiyakan na ang pakikisangkot ng Simbahan ay bunsod lamang ng kanyang hangaring makamtan ang panlahatang kabutihan.

Kung nangangaral at may mga pagkilos man ang Simbahan, lagi nitong isinasa-alang-alang ang interes ng taong-bayan. Ang kanyang pakikilahok sa mga usaping pang-lipunan ay hindi upang isulong ang anumang balakin nito bilang isang institusyon o di kaya’y ito’y bunsod ng mga pansariling hangarin lamang.

Napaka-kitid naman ng ating pang-unawa kung ang mga isyu, sabihin pang ang mga ito ay politikal, ay titingnan at uunawain lamang natin sa aspetong pang-politika. Ang pangunahing tanong ayon kay Papa Benito XVI ay, “Paano nga ba magiging positibong impluwensiya ang Kristiyanismo sa mundo ng politika na hindi naman ito magiging instrumentong pang-politikal at hindi rin nito panghihimasukan ang mundo ng politika para sa kanyang pansariling kapakanan’’?

Sa paggawa ng “primer” na ito tungkol sa Pederalismo, ang Arkidiyosesis ng Manila ay hindi namumulitika o uma-aktong parang politiko na ang tanging hangad lamang ay malagpasan ang mga politikal na hamon at iba pang mga masalimuot na sitwasyon ng partido, bagkus ginagampanan ng Simbahan ang pagiging boses ng konsensiya na ang tanging hangad lamang ay mag-alok o magbigay ng mga moral na argumento o pananaw tungkol sa ikabubuti o (di-ikabubuti) ng Pederalismo.

Ang papel ng Simbahan sa gawaing ito ay malinaw na isinalarawan ni Papa Benito XVI ng kanyang sinabi, “Ang konsensiya ay talaga namang walang kapangyarihan, subalit sa ganyan mismong kadahilanan, nililimitahan niya ang kapangyahiran at ipinagtatanggol ang mga walang kapangyarihan”.

Ano ang Federalismo?

Ang federalismo ay isang anyo ng pamahalaan kung saan nagbabahagi ang Sentral na Pamahalaan (Central Government) ng makabuluhang kapangyarihan, tungkulin, at mga responsibilidad sa mga yunit ng Lokal na Pamahalan (Local Government Units). Sa sistemang ito, tinatawag na Federal o Pambansang Pamahalaan ang Sentral na Pamahalaan samantalang tinatawag namang Mga Estado o Rehiyon ang mga yunit ng Lokal na Pamahalaan, sa anyong ito, ang mga Estado at Rehiyon ay may sapat na awtonomya at kalayaan sa sariling pamamahala. Maaari silang magkaroon ng sariling batasan at mataas na hukuman. Ngunit may mga pangkalahatang kapangyarihang tanging ang Federal na Pamahalaan lamang ang maaaring gumamit tulad ng pambansang seguridad at pambanyagang diplomasya. Maaaring ihalintulad ito sa isang asosasyong pampurok tulad ng homeowners association kung saan independiyente ang bawat pamilya at kabahayan ngunit bumubuo sila ng isang malaking grupo upang tugunan ang pangkalahatang suliranin tulad ng seguridad at pagtatapon ng basura. Bilang buod, ang Federalismo ay tungkol sa pagsasalo sa kapangyarihan ng Sentral na Pamahalaan at mga awtonomo o independiyenteng Rehiyon o Estado: “kalayaan sa sariling pamamahala at magkasalong pamamahala.”

Paano ito naiiba sa kung anong mayroon tayo ngayon?

Sa paglipas ng mga dantaon, naisailalim ang Filipinas sa unitaryong anyo ng pamahalaan. Sa sistemang ito, ang buong bansa ay tinitingnan bilang isa, nagkakaisa, at di-mapaghihiwalay na politikal na yunit.

Ang pangunahing nagpapatakbo sa bansa ay ang Pambansang Pamahalaan kung saan konsentrado ang malaking kapangyarihan, tungkulin at mga responsibilidad.

Gayunpaman, ibinababa o ihinihirang ang ilang kapangyarihang pampolitika at pang-ekonomiya sa mabababang nibel ng pamahalaan o mga yunit ng Lokal na Pamahalaan – mga Lalawigan, Lungsod, Munisipalidad, at Barangay. Ang mga yunit na ito ay nananagutan pa rin sa Pambansang Pamahalaan, na maitutulad sa isang lokal na sangay o prangkisa ng isang kompanya sa pambansang tanggapan nito.

May iba-ibang uri o anyo ba ng Federalismo?

Ang mga Federasyon o Federal na Bansa ay nagkakaiba-iba ayon sa layon ng pagsasama-sama ng mga Estado.

  • Ang layon ay maaaring kultural, kung saan ang mga estado o lalawigan ay nabubuo ayon sa kanilang pangkat etniko, relihiyon, o wika, tulad ng sa kaso ng Kanada, Espanya, at Belhika. O ang layon ay maaaring ayon sa teritoryo, kung magkakadikit o magkakasunod lamang ang mga estado, tulad ng sa kaso ng Estados Unidos.
  • Ikalawa, nagkakaiba-iba rin ang federalismo ayon sa anyo ng pamahalaan kung saan maaari itong umusbong. Maaari itong maging Pampanguluhan kung saan inihahalal ang Pangulo bilang puno ng pamahalaan, o Parlyamentaryo kung saan pinipili ng Batasan (ang Kongreso o ang Parlamento) ang Punong Ministro bilang puno ng pamahalaan.
  • Ikatlo, nagkakaiba-iba ang federalismo ayon sa uri ng kapangyarihan na pinagsasaluhan ng Federal na Pamahalaan at mga Estado at Rehiyon. Sa ibang modelo ng federalismo, may kapangyarihan sa paggawa ng batas ang mga Estado na maaari din nilang isakatuparan, samantalang sa ibang federasyon, may administratibong tungkulin lamang ang mga Estado, kung saan maaari lamang silang magpatupad ng batas.

Anong mga bansa ang naisasailalim na sa Federalismo?

Mayroong dalawampu’t pitong (27) federasyon sa buong mundo, na bumubuo sa higit na 40 bahagdan ng kabuoang populasyon nito.

Ilan sa mga kilalang bansang federal ay ang Estados Unidos (mula 1789), Kanada (1867), Alemanya (1948), Suwisa (1848), Arhentina (1853), Rusya (1993), Australya (1901), Indiya (1950), at Malaysia (1963).

Anong uri ng Federalismo ang ipinapanukala ng kasalukuyang pamahalaan?

Ipinapanukala ng Consultative Committee, komiteng binuo ng Pangulo upang pag-aralan ang Konstitusyon at magmungkahi ng mga pagbabagong kinakailangan upang maisulong ang federal na anyo ng pamahalaan, ang Modelong Federal-Pampanguluhan (Federal-Presidential Model).

Sa ilalim ng modelong itong itinulad sa Sistemang Federal ng Estados Unidos, maghahalal pa rin ang bansa ng Pangulo at Pangalawang Pangulo, at ng dalawang kamarang pambatasan (Kongreso at Senado).

Ang isang paksa ng debate ay kung paano bubuoin ang mga Estado o Rehiyon base sa kasalukuyang ayos ng mga politikal na teritoryo. Sa isang dulo ng talakayan, iminumungkahi ng ilan ang pagkakaroon lamang ng tatlong Estado (Luzon, Visayas, at Mindanao), at sa kabilang dulo naman ay 81 Estado mula sa 81 kasalukuyang lalawigan.

Bakit ipinapanukala ng kasalukuyang pamahalaan ang pagtulak sa Federalismo?

Sa kaniyang mga talumpati, nagbanggit si Pangulong Rodrigo Duterte ng iba’t ibang dahilan ng agarang pagtulak sa Federalismo sa bansa.

Una, “katiting” lamang ang nakukuhang halaga o yamang pinansiyal ng mga yunit ng Lokal na Pamahalaan (LGUs) mula sa Pambansang Pamahalaan sa Maynila kumpara sa ibinibigay ng una sa huli. Bilang halimbawa, aniya, ang Davao ay nagbibigay ng P5 bilyon kada buwan ngunit nakatatanggap lamang ng P2 bilyon pabalik. Sa katunayan, binibigyan lamang ang mga LGU ng 40 bahagdan ng kabuoang buwis na kinokolekta ng Kawanihan ng Rentas Internas. Kung isusulong ang Federalismo, aniya, ang lahat ng ito ay mababaligtad –makagagamit ang bawat LGU ng 70 bahagdan ng kita nito at kailangan lamang nilang magbigay ng 30 bahagdan sa Federal na Pamahalaan.

Ikalawa, sinasabi din ni Pangulong Duterte na ang Sistemang Unitaryo, kung saan ang mga kapangyarihan ay napupunta lamang sa Pambansang Pamahalaan sa Maynila, ay malapit sa katiwalian. Tanging ang Pangulo lamang sa Malacañang at ang mga kaalyado nito sa Kongreso ang nakapagpapasya kung paano naipamamahagi ang badget at ang ilang bahagi nito ay napupunta lamang sa kanilang mga bulsa at pansariling proyekto, wika niya.

Ikatlo, mabibigyan ng Federalismo, ani Duterte, ng lakas ang mga LGU na isakatuparan ang kanilang sariling direksiyong pang-ekonomiya. “Maaari nilang imbitahan nang direkta ang mga namumuhunang dayuhan. Mapupuksa nito ang pagkagahaman ng burukrasya. Nakukuha ng Maynila ang lahat kaya’t napipilitan ang mga rehiyon na manlimos. Ang benepisyo ng federalismo, ikaw na ang direktang pupunta. Hindi na kailangang dumaan pa sa DOTC at NEDA.”

Ikahuli, para sa Pangulo, ang makabuluhang awtonomya na ipagkakaloob ng Federalismo sa mga LGU ang sagot sa separatistang hangarin ng mga grupong Muslim sa Mindanao. Madalas niyang nababanggit sa kampanya, “Tiyak na makapagdadala ang federalismo ng kapayapaan sa Mindanao.”

Bakit tinututulan ng ilang sektor ang federal na anyo ng pamahalaan?

Bagaman ang Administrasyong Duterte ay kumbinsido sa mga benepisyo ng Federalismo para sa Filipinas, nagpahayag ang ibang mga sektor sa akademya at lipunang sibil ng pagtutol sa planong paglipat dito. Mismong ang dating Chief Justice Hilario Davide ang tumawag dito bilang “paglukso sa impyerno”.

Ang mga dahilang sinasabi ng mga tutol sa paglipat sa Federalismo ay ang mga sumusunod:

Una, ang desentralisasyon, na pinaniniwalaang pangunahing benepisyo ng federalismo, ay hindi ginagarantiya ng federalism.

Sinulat ni Dr. Cielito Habito, dating puno ng NEDA: “Ang pangunahing punto ay hindi nangangahulugan ng mas malawig na desentralisasyon ang federalismo. May mga federal na pamahalaan na mas hindi desentralisado kumpara sa mga sistemang unitaryo, at katabi lamang ng bansa ang mga pangunahing halimbawa. Inilalarawan ang Malaysia bilang isang sentralisadong federal na sistema kung saan ang mga kasaping estado nito ay may maliit lamang na papel kumpara sa sentro. Sa isang banda, ang Indonesiya ay may mataas na nibel ng desentralisasyon kahit na ito ay naisasailalim sa unitaryo at pampanguluhang sistema. Naglalaro ang saklaw ng mga federal na sistema mula sa labis na sentralisado (tulad ng Beneswela) hanggang sa labis na desentralisado (Noruwega). Kung mas malakas na desentralisasyon ang hangad, hindi kinakailangang federalismo ang paraan.”

Ikalawa, may malaking pagkabahala na magdudulot ang federalismo ng mas malawak na dibisyon at kaguluhan sa Filipinas. Kinatatakutan na mas mapagtitibay ang mga dinastiyang politikal at mga pinunong may armadong grupo sa itatayong mga bagong Estado o Rehiyon. Tinataya ng Ateneo School of Government na apat sa limang kasapi ng Kongreso ang kabilang sa mga pamilya o dinastiyang politikal. Ayon kay Propesor Roland Simbulan ng Center for People Empowerment in Governance, “may 178 na dominanteng dinastiyang politikal sa Filipinas, kung saan 94 na bahagdan ng ating mga lalawigan ang may dinastiyang politikal (73 sa kabuoang 80 lalawigan).” Kinatatakutan na ang makakapangyarihang dinastiya ay maghahari pa rin kahit sa bagong sistema.

Ikatlo, ang paghahati ng bansa sa iba’t ibang estado ay maaaring magdulot ng kaguluhan. Ang mas mayayamang lalawigan ay hindi hahangaring sumama sa mga mas mahihirap na lalawigan. Habang ang mga Estado o Rehiyon ay may kapangyarihang mamahala sa kani-kanilang sarili, maaaring hindi pantay-pantay pa rin ang pag-unlad ng mga ito. Patuloy na yayaman ang ilan at lalong hihirap pa ang iba.

Ikaapat, higit na lalaki ang burukrasya ng pamahalaan dahil ang bawat Estado o Rehiyon ay mayroong kani-kaniyang kagawarang pang-ehekutibo, mataas ng hukuman, at batasan. * Lolobo ang bilang ng mga bagong mambabatas sa libo-libo, idagdag pa ang kanilang mga kawani. At natural na ang lumalaking burukrasya ay mangangailangan ng gahiganteng gastos. Tinataya ng Philippine Institute for Development Studies na ang halaga ng gagastusin ay P44 hanggang P72 bilyon, hindi pa kasama ang para sa mga kawani ng sangay ng hudikatura. Puna ni Habito, “Hindi ba lilikha lamang tayo ng pamahalaan ng mga politiko, ayon sa mga politiko, at para sa mga politiko?”

Ikahuli, kahit pa ibinabandera ng pamahalaan ang Federalismo bilang pangunahing lunas sa separatistang hangarin ng ilang Muslim sa Mindanao, hindi ito ganoon kasimple. Ebidensiya dito ang palpak na eksperimento ng Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao (ARMM). Pumalpak rin ang panukalang pagbuo ng Estadong Muslim sa pag-unawa na walang iisa lamang na bansang Muslim kundi marahil ay “mga bansa”.

Paano tayo lilipat sa anyong ito ng pamahalaan?

Ang kinakailangan sa paglipat tungong Federalismo ay walang iba kundi ang pagbabago ng Konstitusyon (Constitutional/Charter Change o Cha-Cha), dahil ang paglipat na ito ay nangangailangan ng masaklaw, radikal, at malawakang pagbabago sa sistemang politikal ng bansa.

May tatlong paraan upang baguhin ang Konstitusyon.

Una, maaaring magtawag ng kapulungan (Constitutional Convention) ang Kongreso; o ikalawa, ang dalawang kamara ay maaaring bumuo ng isang Constitutional Assembly; ikahuli, maaaring magpanukala ang mga mamamayan sa pamamagitan ng tinatawag na “People’s Initiative”.

Sa anumang paraang pipiliin, kinakailangang dumaan ang mga panukalang susog sa isang Plebisito. Sa kasalukuyan, naghirang ang Administrasyon ng isang Consultative Committee upang magmungkahi ng mga pagsusog sa Konstitusyon na kinakailangan sa paglipat tungong Federalismo.

Bagaman hindi magkasundo ang Kamara de Representante at ang Senado kung magtatawag ba ng Constitutional Convention o magbubuo sila ng Constitutional Assembly, inaasahan na ang mga panukala ng Komite ay ipepresinta sa isang plebisito sa darating na Oktubre.

Ano ang posisyon ng simbahan ukol sa federalismo?

Una, bilang pangunahing gabay, base sa makasaysayang tradisyon ng Catholic Social Teaching, walang kinikilingang sistemang politikal ang Simbahan. Nagpapahayag lamang ito ng suporta sa Demokrasya sapagkat tinatatag at pinangangalagaan nito ang kalayaan at dangal ng tao, na siyang mga prinsipyong pinahahalagahan din ng Simbahan.

Ikalawa, sa isyu ng Charter Change, naglabas ng pahayag ang Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines noong Enero na nagpapahayag ng kanilang suporta sa 1987 Konstitusyon, at nagsasabing kung matutuloy ang Charter Change, kinakailangang siguraduhing lehitimo ang buong proseso at humihikayat ito sa aktibong pakikisangkot ng mga mamamayan.

Ikatlo, sa parehong pahayag, nakikita ng mga Obispo na hindi kailangan ang mga pagkilos tungong Federalismo sa panahong ito. Ayon sa kanilang sinulat: “Ang tanong namin: kailangan bang baguhin ang Konstitusyon upang makapagbahagi ng kapangyarihan? Maraming eksperto sa konstitusyon at batas ang nagsasabing hindi. Ang kinakailangan sa tunay na pagbabahagi ng kapangyarihan, ayon sa kanila, ay ang ganap na pagsasakatuparan ng Konstitusyon, ang paglikha ng mga nakapangyayaring batas, at ilang rebisyon sa Local Government Code, at mas mapagpasyang pagpapatupad ng Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Act. Ang mga ito lamang, ayon sa kanilang paniniwala, ang makapaninigurado na ang kalayaan sa pagpapasya sa sarili at desentralisasyon ng kapangyarihang politikal at pinansiyal ay tunay na maisasakatuparan.”

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Primer on Federalism

F O R E W O R D

The Church cannot be said to be ignorant of the problems and issues besetting the nation. There are times, in fact, when politicians, civil society, and other interest groups would seek the counsel of clergymen and solicit their involvement in addressing society’s myriad of problems.

The Church, of course, does not pretend to be an expert who can provide “cure-all’’ remedies to everything that ails our country. The least that she can do is to provide the public with moral fortitude and to make assurances that her involvement is always motivated by a desire to achieve the common good.

When the Church speaks and does something, she always has the people’s interests in mind. Her involvement is neither for advancing any institutional agenda nor motivated by any ulterior motive.

It’s too narrow a sense, if issues, even if basically political in nature, should be viewed and understood only from the point of view of politics. The fundamental concern as Pope Benedict XVI puts it should be, “How can Christianity become a positive force for the political world without [itself] being turned into a political instrument and without, on the other hand, grabbing the political world for itself?”

By making this primer on Federalism, the Archdiocese of Manila does not see herself as a “political-actor’’ that is concerned mostly with political conundrums and partisan dilemmas but as the voice of conscience offering “morally suasive’’ thoughts aimed at objectively educating the people on the merits (and demerits) of Federalism.

The role of the Church in this undertaking is aptly described by Pope Benedict XVI when he said, “Conscience is essentially powerless, yet for that very reason limits power and protects the powerless’’.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ON FEDERALISM

WHAT IS FEDERALISM?

Federalism is a form of government wherein a Central Authority shares significant power, function, and responsibilities with Local Government Units. In this set-up, the Central Authority is called the Federal or National Government while the local government units are called States or Regions. In this form of government, the States or Regions, enjoy sufficient autonomy or self-rule. They may have their own Legislative Bodies as well as Supreme Courts. To the Federal Government, however, are reserved some general powers such as national security and foreign diplomacy.

One can think of a neighborhood association wherein families or homes are independent of one another and yet form one association that takes care of common concerns such as security and garbage disposal.

In sum, Federalism is all about the sharing of power between a Central Authority and autonomous or independent Regions or States: “self-rule and shared rule.”

HOW DOES THIS DIFFER FROM WHAT WE HAVE NOW?

For centuries now, the Philippines has been structured around a Unitary form of government. In this set-up, the whole country is regarded as one, united, and undivided political unit. Running the country is the National Government where great power, functions, and responsibilities are concentrated. However, some political as well as economic powers and functions have already been devolved or delegated to lower levels of governments or Local Government Units—Provinces, Cities, Municipalities, and Barangays. These units, nevertheless, remain dependent on and answerable to the national government like a local branch or franchise of a company to its national office.

ARE THERE MANY KINDS OR FORMS OF FEDERALISM?

Federations or Federal Countries can vary on the basis of the purpose for which states come together. The purpose can be cultural, wherein, states or provinces are formed based on ethnicity, religion, or language, such as in the cases of Canada and Belgium. The purpose can simply be territorial, the states being contiguous or adjacent to one another, such as in the case of the United States of America.

Federalism can also vary in terms of the form of government that the federation adopts. It can be Federal-Presidential where the President, who is the head of government, is popularly elected, or, Federal-Parliamentary where a Prime Minister

is the head of government and is selected by the Legislative Assembly, that is the Congress or the Parliament.

Still, Federalism can vary in terms of the kinds of power that the Federal Government shares with States or Regions. In some models, States have legislative power, which means, they can enact their own laws, while in other Federations, States merely have administrative power, that is, they only implement or execute laws.

WHICH COUNTRIES HAVE ADOPTED FEDERALISM?

There are at present twenty-seven (27) functioning Federations around the globe, which encompass over 40 percent of the world’s population. Among the well-known ones are the United States of America (Since 1789), Switzerland (1848), Argentina (1853), Canada (1867), Australia (1901), Germany (1948), India (1950), Malaysia (1963), the Federated States of Micronesia (1979) and Russian Federation (1993).

WHAT KIND OF FEDERALISM IS THE CURRENT GOVERNMENT PROPOSING?

The Consultative Committee, which was formed by the President to study the Constitution and propose the changes needed for a Federal form of government, has suggested the Federal/Presidential Model. Patterned after the US Federal System, under this model, the country will continue to elect the President and the Vice-President as well as the two chambers of Congress. A bone of contention however is how the States or Regions can be formed based on existing political territories.

WHY IS THE CURRENT GOVERNMENT PROPOSING THE CHANGE TO FEDERALISM?

In speeches then and now, President Rodrigo Duterte has cited various reasons for the urgency of the country’s shift to the Federal System of government.

First, the share that Local Government Units (LGUs) are getting from the National government in Manila is a pittance, compared to the amount that the former turns over to the latter. He cites, for example that Davao gives P5 Billion a month, but only gets P2 Billion in return. As a matter of fact, LGUs are allocated only P40 percent of the total taxes collected by the Bureau of Internal Revenues. If Federalism is adopted, he says, all this will be reversed, with each LGU retaining 70 percent of its income and remitting only 30 percent to the Federal government.

Second, President Duterte also bemoans that the current Unitary System, with powers centralized around the National government in Manila, has been prone to corruption. He says, “Only the President in Malacañang and his allies in Congress decide on how the budget is distributed and much of that goes to their pet projects and their pockets”.

Third, Federalism, Duterte says, will allow LGUs to chart their own economic destinies. “They can invite foreign investors directly. It will eliminate bureaucratic greed. Manila gets everything so regions are forced to beg. The benefit of federalism, they can get directly. They won’t have to go through departments like DOTC and NEDA.”

Finally, for the President, the considerable autonomy that Federalism gives to LGUs is the answer to the secessionist tendencies in Mindanao by Muslim groups. He was oft quoted in the campaign trail saying, “Nothing short of federalism will bring peace to Mindanao.”

WHY ARE SOME SECTORS OPPOSED TO THE FEDERAL FORM OF GOVERNMENT?

While the Duterte Administration is convinced of the benefits of Federalism for the Philippines, other sectors in the academe and civil society have expressed opposition toward the shift. The reasons put forward by those against the shift to Federalism are as follows:

First, decentralization, which is supposedly the primary benefit of Federalism, is not, in fact, guaranteed by Federalism. There are federalized governments that are less decentralized than unitary ones, and prime examples lie right next to us. Malaysia is described to have a centralized federal system where the constituent states play relatively limited roles in relation to the center.

On the other hand, Indonesia has achieved highly decentralized governance under its unitary presidential system.

Federal systems range from highly centralized (as in Venezuela) to highly decentralized (United States), just as unitary systems range from highly centralized (Singapore) to highly decentralized (Norway).

As it is said, “If there is a need for greater decentralization in government, Federalism is not the only way to it’’.

Second, there is great concern that Federalism will lead to greater division and chaos in the Philippines. It can lead to overlapping and contradictory policies in different parts of the country. It may breed governmental division and strengthen centrifugal pressures and ultimately lead to disintegration or failure of political union. In view of this, the threat of entrenched political dynasties is also a possibility. We must, therefore, ensure that the proposed changes in the Constitution will have self-executing provisions that will ban political dynasty. It can also lead to over-government.

Third, the division of the country into various states could become troublesome as it can lead to inequality between the federated units. It may increase regional discrepancies in wealth, resources, services and even democracy. Richer provinces will not wish to be joined with poorer provinces. With States or regions left to fend for their own, they can develop unevenly, with some growing richer and others poorer. To put it best, Federalism will hinder coherent development.

Fourth, the size of government bureaucracy will be multiplied. New legislators alone, with their staff, will number in the thousands. Each State or Region will also have its own Executive department, Supreme Court and Congress. Of course, with a burgeoning bureaucracy come staggering costs. The Philippine Institute for Development Studies estimates the cost to be between P44 and P72 billion, without the new judiciary personnel. One economic expert observes, “Won’t we simply be creating a government by politicians, of politicians, and for politicians?”

Fifth, even as the government touts Federalism as the ultimate solution to the separatist desires of Muslims in Mindanao, this may not be that simple. The failed experiment in the Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) proves this point. Having trustworthy, honest and strong leaders may even be a more important consideration for the development of the region than merely shifting to Federalism.

Finally, the continuing armed struggle of both Moro rebels and Communists, the rampant corruption, the complete disregard for rules, the enormous poverty, and the widespread abuse of power are gigantic burdens that cannot be addressed by just simply changing the system of government.

HOW DO WE TRANSITION TO THIS FORM OF GOVERNMENT?

What is needed for a shift towards Federalism is no less than a Constitutional Change/Charter Change or Cha-Cha, because the shift would require extensive, radical, and widespread changes in the country’s political system. There are three ways Constitutional amendments are undertaken.

Firstly, Congress can call for a Convention, or secondly, the two chambers can simply constitute themselves into a Constituent Assembly. Finally, the people themselves can propose thru what is called a “people’s initiative.”

Whichever is taken, the amendments must be submitted to a Plebiscite. Currently, the Administration has appointed a Consultative Committee (Con Com) to propose the Constitutional amendments needed for a Federal shift.

Although, the House of Representatives and the Senate are at odds whether to call for a Constitutional Convention or to constitute themselves as a Constituent Assembly, it is widely believed that the work of the Consultative Committee (Con Com) will be subjected to a plebiscite this year or the following year.

WHAT IS THE POSITION OF THE CHURCH ON FEDERALISM?

First, as a general rule, based on its long tradition of Catholic Social Teachings, the Church does not favor a particular political system over another. It has of course shown preference for “authentic Democracy” as this allows for the establishment and protection of freedom and human dignity, which are values that the Church espouses.

Quoting St. John Paul II, “Authentic democracy” is possible only in a State ruled by law, and on the basis of a correct conception of the human person. It requires that the necessary conditions be present for the advancement both of the individual through education and formation in true ideals, and of the “subjectivity” of society through the creation of structures of participation and shared responsibility”. (Compendium, No. 406) (quoting Centesimus Annus, 46).

Second, on the issue of Charter Change, the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines issued a statement last January, reiterating its support for the full implementation of the 1987 Constitution, and saying that if Charter Change is to happen, the whole process must be above-board, must involve the participation of citizens and should include the principle of human dignity and human rights; the principle of integrity and truth; the principle of participation and solidarity; and the principle of the common good.

Third, in the same statement, the Bishops find the move towards Federalism unnecessary at this point. “We ask the question: is it necessary to change the Charter in order to devolve power? Many constitutional and legal experts do not seem to think so. What is truly needed for a genuine devolution of power according to them, is a full implementation of the Constitution, the creation of enabling laws, and some revisions on the Local Government Code, and a more decisive effecting of the Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Act”. These, they believe, can ensure that self-determination and decentralization of powers, both political and financial, are in fact realized.”

Finally, they say, it is not about structures but rather, the people running those structures. “We have also heard the views of those who believe that the solution we seek is ultimately the transformation of our political culture, the eradication of a political mindset of personalities, payoffs, and patronage – a culture that is entrenched in our present political structures and practices. Without conversion of mindsets, the new political wine of Charter change will remain in old political wine-skins, and merely end up bursting the hope for a new political culture.”

WHAT CAN WE DO AS CITIZENS IN THIS DEBATE?

Every Filipino must participate in this debate because the stakes are very high. A member of the 1986 Constitutional Commission, warns, “If the Constitution is amended to pave the way for Federalism, the far-ranging or radical changes will be very hard to undo”. Whatever one’s position is on this issue, therefore, he/she must see to it that he/she is well informed of the intricacies or complexities of the matter.

Also, as an appeal to the populace, the Bishops, in their Pastoral Statement, suggest that the people “Form or reactivate circles of discernment and use your freedom as God’s children to discern, participate, discuss, and debate. Have an “informed conscience” and decide in the light of Gospel values. Do what is necessary. Persuade our legislators to do only what is genuinely for the good of all.”

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ON FEDERALISM Reference: Araral, Eduardo, Jr., et al. Debate on Federal Philippines: A Citizen’s Handbook. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 2017.