Clamor for Peace, Defend Human Rights

A gathering calling for the release of detained peace consultants and the resumption of the GRP-NDFP peace talks on November 24, Saturday.

18 November 2018
Dear Friends,
Greetings of peace!

The recent arrests of NDFP peace consultants have further derailed the possibility of resuming the peace talks that were unilaterally terminated by President Rodrigo Duterte on 23 November 2017 through Proclamation 360.
Five of those arrested, along with several of their companions, remain detained based on trumped-up charges of illegal possession of firearms and explosives. There has been a disturbing pattern wherein arresting officers plant evidence to justify their illegal arrest and indefinite detention. The five peace consultants are Ferdinand Castillo, Rommel Salinas, Rafael Baylosis, Adelberto Silva and most recently, Vicente Ladlad. Two more, Eduardo Sarmiento and Leopoldo Caluza, have already been convicted and face life sentences at Muntinlupa.

We believe these arrests signify the ascendancy of the militarists and warmongers in the Duterte administration. The dominant policy is to use military might to crush the communist insurgency, employing politically repressive measures to quell dissent and all opposition. Meanwhile mass murder in the “war on drugs”, a creeping dictatorship, militarization of the civilian bureaucracy, and the threat of imposing nationwide martial law and/or a so-called “revolutionary government” continue. There are also moves to proscribe the CPP-NPA as “terrorist organizations” through Proclamation 374.

The road to a just peace via peace negotiations that address the root causes of armed conflict have apparently been all but abandoned. Ironically, this comes at a time when the GPH and NDFP peace panels had made significant strides on a draft Comprehensive Agreement on Socio-Economic Reforms (CASER), considered by many as the most substantive agenda of the peace negotiations. A draft agreement on a coordinated unilateral ceasefires that would lead to a more permanent bilateral ceasefire agreement, and a General Amnesty Proclamation for Political Prisoners were also in the works.

We believe that the unprecedented gains thus far achieved in the peace negotiations are worth pursuing even as the unprecedented attacks on human and democratic rights under the Duterte regime must be resolutely resisted.

We thus invite you to “Clamor for Peace, Defend Human Rights: A gathering calling for the release of detained peace consultants, the resumption of the GRP-NDFP peace talks.”

The event will be held on a Saturday, 24 November, from 9 to 11:30 am at the 3rd floor of the Immaculate Conception Multipurpose Building, Lantana Street, near E. Rodriguez Avenue in Quezon City.

Please join us in defending the rights of the peace consultants and in pushing for a just and lasting peace.

One Vocation, One Mission

Dear Fellow Religious Men and Women,

As our fitting activity for the end of the Year of the Clergy and Consecrated Persons, the Religious Discernment Group (RDG) is inviting you, your communities, lay leaders and partners to its annual Advent Gathering with the theme:

“ONE VOCATION, ONE MISSION”

Speaker: Fr. Edward Luc Mees, MDJ
(Missiology Professor of IFRS and ICLA)
01 December 2018; Saturday, 8:00 am to 12nn
4th Floor, Multi-Purpose Hall, San Pio V Building
(beside Sto. Domingo Parish Office and Formation Center)
Quezon Avenue, Quezon City


PROGRAMME

7:30 am Registration
8:15 am Opening Liturgy
8:30 am “ONE VOCATION, ONE MISSION
Speaker: Fr. Edward Luc Mees, mdj
9:30 am Testimonies and Sharing on missionary work
Sr. Juanita “Nenet” Daṅo, rgs
Ms. Angie Ipong of Solidarity with the Poor Network
(who will share on the missionary commitment of Sr. Pat Fox, nds)
10:00 am Open Forum/Sharing
10:30 am Snacks/Break
11:00 am – 12:00 nn – Part Two
A Continuing Tradition of Missionary Commitment to the Poor
Remembering the Martyrdom of  Fr. Marcelito “Tito” Paez of the Diocese of San Jose, Nueva Ecija
Moderator: Professor Jerry Imbong of Colegio de San Juan de Letran

A registration fee of P 100.00 is requested to cover the snacks, handouts and other logistical needs of the activity.
Please relay your response to our secretariat as soon as possible, not later than November 27 through email address religiousdiscernment@gmail.com or through mobile no.0996. 619.3538




Prayer for the Closing of the
Year of the Clergy and Consecrated Persons

O God Most Loving Father,
You called us to be fully and ever united to
You and with one another as members of the One Body of Christ. In
Jesus, your Son, we confidently move forward in the spirit of
collaboration and co-responsibility journeying as one family in faith,
hope and love.

As we close this Year of the Clergy and Consecrated Persons, we
thank You for the gift of their vocation from and for Your People.
Pardon them in their weaknesses. Guide, strengthen, protect and
embrace them to persevere in their continuous personal conversion.
May they always become humble bearers of the Gospel of Your love
through their joyful service, suffering and sacrifice.

As we welcome the Year of the Youth, May all of us be renewed
Servant-Leaders of communion for the New Evangelization.
Make us gracious in affirming the beauty and giftedness of the Filipino youth.
Encourage us to accompany the young to fulfill their mission in loving service.  
With Mary, Star of the New Evangelization, may we continue to be agents of transformation in our country and in the world.

Amen.

Sa Digma ng Halimaw: The Bigger Picture of the War on Drugs

The SIKAD or Sining Kadamay, an artists’ organization for urban poor rights and welfare, will be conducting a fundraising performance “Sa Digma ng Halimaw,” a documentary theater production about the war on drugs, as told by loved ones of the victims of Extra-Judicial Killings (EJK) under the said war and others affected by it. It is a series of monologues that use interview transcripts, news articles, incident reports, photos and video footage and other relevant documents to bring the featured stories in public performance.

This will be on November 22-23, 2018, 7pm onwards at Pardec A, CHR, Diliman. Quezon City.

PRODUCTION BRIEF

“Sa Digma ng Halimaw” is a series of monologues that use interview transcripts, news articles, incident reports, photos and video footage and other relevant documents to bring the featured stories in public performance.

The production is a mobile theatre project that will travel to different communities, schools and churches, and will be performed in open and public places. The performance will take various versions of staging: one, as stand-alone monologues; or two, as two monologues in one performance; and three, number of monologues woven into a full-length play.
All performances will have an actor-audience dialogue at the end to generate discourse and understanding on various issues attending the drug war.

Continue reading

New PPCRV Chairperson & Board of Trustees

17 November 2018
FOR: The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines
and All Archdiocesan / Diocesan PPCRV Coordinators

Your Excellencies, our Cherished Bishops,
and Beloved PPCRV Coordinators,

Warm greetings.

I am very happy to let you know that after some months of a vacuum in leadership in the Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting (PPCRV), and a tenacious search for new leaders, with God’s grace, I can now announce that we have a new and dynamic PPCRV leadership, the composition of which is as follows:

BOARD OF TRUSTEES
16 Nov 2018 to 31 Oct 2022

  1. Ms. Myla C. Villanueva National Chairperson
  2. Mr. Johnny O.R. Cardenas Vice Chairman-Internal Affairs
  3. Atty. Jose Victor Emmanuel De DiosCo-Vice Chairman-Internal Affairs & Finance Committee
  4. Mr. Henry Dizon Antonio Vice Chairman-External Affairs & Finance Committee
  5. Atty. Christian Robert S. Lim Co-Vice Chairman-External Affairs & IT Committee
  6. Ms. Ma. Theresa G. Curia Treasurer
  7. Atty. Henry R. Aguda Trustee & IT Committee
  8. Atty. Rene Banez Trustee & Finance Committee
  9. Mr. Rommel P. Bernardo Trustee & IT Committee
  10. Mr. Paolo Roberto Domondon Trustee & Voters Education Committee
  11. Mr. Dioscoro V. Ochangco, Jr. Trustee & Voters Education Committee
  12. Dr. Arwin A. Serrano Trustee & Voters Education Committee
  13. Dr. William Emmanuel S. Yu Trustee & IT Committee  

Archbishop Rolando J. Tria Tirona
National Spiritual Director
Amb. Henrietta T. de Villa
Chairperson Emeritus
Executive Director: Ms. Ma. Isabel “Maribel” Buenaobra

Further, it fills my heart to note that our new PPCRV Team since noontime Friday 16 Nov 2018, right after I presented them to Comelec, our partners and media, they literally “hit the ground running”. Preparations for the NLE 2019, including the BOL Plebiscite on 21 Jan 2019 are now going full steam ahead. Some of the plans they are putting on the drawing board are:  updating ICT of PPCRV, especially engaging in social media, upgrading Voters Ed to include digital format of OGV module, developing new modes of youth involvement, systematizing collaboration with Comelec & election partners, new impetus against vote buying & selling, as well as heightened advocacy against fake news, etc. O, their ideas and passion are so contagious.

All I asked of them:

Continue reading

Massacre of Farmers

(Guest Editorial written by Bishop Broderick Pabillo) ; CBCP News

WHEREVER there is massive poverty there is injustice. People are made poor! Their rights are stepped upon and they are even oppressed! This reality has again come to the fore with the massacre of the farmers in Hacienda Nene, Purok Fire Tree, Barangay Bulanon in Sagay City of Negros Occidental last October 20. Nine farmers, three of whom were women and two minors, were gunned down in their makeshift camp after they had taken their dinner around 9:30 pm by unknown assailants. After this brutal killing gasoline was poured over their bodies and they were set on fire.

Massacre of farmers is not new. We still remember the Escalante massacre in 1985, the Hacienda Luisita Massacre in 2002, and the KidapawanMassacre in 2016. Under Duterte’s watch in the last two years, 45 farmers have already been killed in Negros.

The reason for all these killings? Land! The farmers are denied their right to the land. Our Constitution of 1987 clearly stipulates that land reform is to be implemented to bring about social justice in the countryside. This mandate has been haphazardly executed because of the vested interests of our politicians who mostly come from the landed elite. Instead, the farmers who fight for their right to the land are tagged as “rebels” by the authorities. Hence many of them are mercilessly abused and even killed. The Sagay Massacre is the most recent incident.

Many farmers’ groups resort to “Bungkalan” because the implementation of the constitutional mandate of Land Reform is very lame and slow. Not a few blame the farmers for forcible entry, but how many would blame the government and the landowners for non-implementation of the Basic Law of the land? But even if the bungkalan is “illegal,” would this be enough reason to kill them mercilessly?

Some officials in the government is “softening” this brutality by tagging the National Federation of Sugar Workers (NFSW) to which the farmers belong as leftist. Do they mean that “leftists” are fair game, that they can just be killed?

The government seems not to be able to put their acts together. While some officials claim that the NFSW is leftist, other officials in the same administration, without any evidence at all, already tag the NPA as the perpetrators. This is already a sign that the killers will not be brought in. Can they bring in the NPA?

Now some, to ride on the anger of the public, assert that the “full wrath of the law” be fall on the killers? Are they really serious, or is this just plain bravado? Will the perpetrators, and more so, the brains, be ever brought to justice? Has the government the political will and the capability to bring justice for the farmers? Basing on the records of the Escalante massacre, the Hacienda Luisita massacre, the Kidapawan massacre, and the so many killings of farmer leaders, I strong doubt. None of the masterminds of these dastardly deeds have been brought to justice. The strong suspicion is that those involved are among the land owners, the military and/or the politicians.

But justice to the farmers is not just to get the killers of the Sagay massacre. It is to address the root of these killing. Give land to the farmers! Implement the constitutional mandate of land reform! Nothing short of this will bring peace in our troubled countryside.

Has this administration the political will to do this? Will it be a better government than the previous ones, or will it be of the same kind—elitist, corrupt and against the people?

The Truth About the “Fake Encounter” in Escalante

The AFP’s 303rd Brigade Continues to Threaten Survivors of the Sagay Massacre and Members of Progressive Organizations

NFSW-North Negros Statement

Reference: Aldren Aloquina, November 17, 2018

The Armed Forces of the Philippines 303rd Brigade and the 79th Infantry Battalion are not satisfied with the massacre of ordinary farmers in Sagay, farmers who were brutally killed just because they wanted a piece of land to till for food. Until now, justice is elusive and it is clear that the initial investigations only twist the events. The survivors and relatives of the victims are now the suspects in the massacre.

Even survivors of the massacre who suffered severe trauma and are now trying to rebuild their lives and livelihood are continously being surveilled and threatened. The army desperately tries to “establish their links” to the New People’s Army (NPA). For their lies to be believable, and to justify their operations as “legitimate,” the soldiers fired indiscriminately at bamboo trees in Sitio Puting Bato, Barangay Washington, Escalante City, so they can say that there was indeed an “encounter.”

It is obvious that the military desperately wants to make it appear that the Sagay survivors are connected to the NPA. Even the office of the National Federation of Sugar Workers (NFSW) in Sagay City is under surveillance, pictures are taken by suspected state intelligence agents. Aside from this, the leaders of NFSW, KARAPATAN and the Northern Negros Alliance of Human Rights Advocates (NNAHRA) and other progressive organizations who are helping in the Sagay 9 case were tailed and surveilled, they received death threats thru text messages, and suspicious persons aboard motorcycles are always posted near or infront of their homes.

Even the legal counsel of Sagay 9 survivors, Atty. Ben Ramos, NUPL Secretary General, was brutally murdered. The killers want to threaten all human rights defenders and advocates and lump them with the CPP-NPA to justify the killings.

Today fresh human rights violations transpired in Sitio Puting Bato, Barangay Washington, Escalante City where the “Bulanon family,” a family of Sagay 9 survivors chose to live with their relatives. But the military tailed the “Bulanon family” and threatened them anew. Early in the morning of November 16, the military barged into house where the “Bulanon family” was staying and forcibly took photos of their companions in the home. The personal belongings, sack of rice and provisions of the “Bulanon family” were confiscated by the military.

Not content with the threats, the military made it appear that an encounter ensued so that they could claim that the “Bulanon family” and other massacre survivors are close to the NPA. Today a picture of their sack of rice and provisions was displayed along with weapons that the military supposedly “recovered” from the fake encounter — an M16 rifle, bullets and two short arms.

The “Bulanon family” already suffered severe trauma but the military shows no mercy. Their own son was killed in the massacre. The military still calls them “fake grandparents” of the 14-year old witness even if authorieties are aware that it is only natural for the “Bulanon family” to claim the child because they were the ones who cared for him since he was small, when the minor’s biological father abandoned him and his mother. The police want the father to take custody even if the child no longer knows his father. The police and military continues to claim in public interviews that the child was “kidnapped” by lawyers and human rights workers of KARAPATAN, even after the mother and child have told the public in a press conference that they voluntarily sought the help of the group and they were NOT KIDNAPPED.

When will they let the massacre survivors have their peace? What is the military trying to do, intimidate and force the survivors to attest that the NPA was behind the massacre? Now that they refuse to follow the military’s story line, does this warrant the continuous threats against them?

All these violations they carry out with impunity to supress the peasant movement for genuine land reform. Even President Duterte has ordered the military to shoot at peasants who occupy lands for food cultivation. It is obvious that the US-Duterte regime favors the big landlords and have no concern for the lives of peasants who feed the nation.

Continue reading

Facts Not Fake News

About The So-Called “Encounter” In Sitio Puting Bato, Brgy. Washington, Escalante City, Negros Occidental

PRESS STATEMENT November 17, 2018
Reference: Rey Alburo
Northern Negros Alliance of Human Rights Advocates (NNAHRA)

I. “Abu Sayyaff or ISIS Landed in Coastal Areas of North Negros” is a story that came from the mouths of soldiers deployed in Sitio Puting Bato, Brgy. Washington, Escalante City, Negros Occidental. Early morning of November 16, the soldiers who occupied the residential areas did not wear any nameplates so the residents became wary and asked about their presence. It was the soldiers from the 62nd IB and 79th IB who told the residents that “naa Abu Sayyaff diri,” (They are after the Abu Sayyaff). This story immediately spread in the community.
Why Scare the People with This False Information?

II. The Encounter is Fake. The news of an ENCOUNTER in Sitio Puting Bato, Brgy. Washington, Escalante City was first reported by local radio stations like Hapi Radio Sagay, Bombo Radyo Bacolod and Aksyon Radyo Bacolod before noon of November 16. The reports said that the military engaged 10 elements of the CPP-NPA in a “running gun battle.”

Residents of Puting Bato attest that soldiers already swarmed the whole area by as early as 5:00 am. The so-called encounter happened only around 10:00 am, according to the AFP. Classes in the nearby elementary school was already ongoing at that time. Before the so-called “encounter,” teachers and students were ordered by soldiers to stay down, indicating that soldiers were already planning on firing their weapons.

The residents, who did not dare go out because of the “Abu Sayyaff scare,” said that they could not see who the soldiers were firing at. But while some soldiers appeared to be maneuvering and shooting, many other soldiers were just relaxed and even cooking rice very near the so-called “encounter site.” The shots came from only one direction and was more like indiscriminate firing or strafing. This caused panic and fear among many residents because the military fired in the populated area, and shots were flying near the elementary school.

III. Militarization is Real and the AFP Confirms This. The military poured several armed units into the area as confirmed by Col. Benedict Arevalo of the AFP’s 303rd Brigade. The units he mentioned were the 79th Infantry Battalion, 6th Special Action Force Battalion, Joint Intelligence Task Group and CAFGU/SCAA.

Checkpoints were held to control the movement of the population. All transportation was on hold. Relatives of residents were not allowed to immediately check on their family. Media coverage was also constricted. These facts were also confirmed and reported by field reporters of local radio stations.

IV. FAKE NEWS: Suspects in the Sagay Massacre were in puting bato.
THE TRUTH
:
A family of survivors of the sagay massacre are trying to rebuild their lives with their relatives in the puting bato but the military continues to threaten and harass them. The family is repeatedly maligned by the police and military as “fake grandparents” of the 14-year old witness but the truth is that they are survivors of the massacre and their own son was one of those killed.

For several instances since his deployment last month, Col. Benedict Arevalo of the 303rd Brigade of the AFP has repeatedly publicly maligned and red-tagged human rights organization KARAPATAN-Negros and now, the Northern Negros Alliance of Human Rights Advocates or NNAHRA as “nagpapanggap na advocates” (pretending to be advocates) and “ginagamit lang ng CPP-NPA” (only used by the CPP-NPA). Just as Col. Lozanies before him, who red-tagged the bungkalan and the National Federation of Sugar Workers (NFSW), we condemn Arevalo for his dangerous statements against legitimate peasant organizations and human rights advocates.

Let us not wait for another massacre to happen here in Escalante City. Remember that the 1985 Welgang Bayan was a brave action against dictatorship and tyranny. All the tyrants will fall and the truth shall prevail.

The people of Negros will never allow the sacrifices of our martyrs to go to waste!

RESIST CRACKDOWN!
FIGHT TYRANNY!
STOP KILLING FARMERS!

Unyon ng mga Manggagawa sa Agrikultura
Federation of Agricultural Workers | Philippines

Group opposes bill dividing Palawan into 3 provinces

‘The division of Palawan is not the appropriate answer to the existing weak governance, corruption, and natural resource use issues in the province,’ says the Save Palawan Movement

Keith Anthony S. Fabro
Published 10:49 AM, November 07, 2018
Updated 10:49 AM, November 07, 2018

3 PALAWAN PROVINCES? The image shows lawmakers’ proposed division of Palawan into 3 provinces

PUERTO PRINCESA CITY, Philippines – A civic group wants to block the passage of a proposed bill dividing Palawan into 3 provinces, which is up for second reading at the Senate next week.

Campaigner Cynthia Del Rosario of the Save Palawan Movement claimed that the “railroaded” House Bill 8055, which the House of Representatives approved in August, reached the Senate “without undergoing prior public consultation.”

“Such consultation will show that there was no true clamor from the people; rather, it was a plan conceived by a handful of local politicians,” Del Rosario told Rappler on Tuesday, November 6.

She was referring to Palawan Governor Jose Alvarez, the provincial board members, and the 3 Palawan congressmen who have pushed for the proposal.

In supporting the proposed measure, Alvarez had said that dividing Palawan into 3 provinces would speed up the delivery of basic services to residents and further boost the provincial economy.

Senator Juan Edgardo “Sonny” Angara, chairman of the Senate committee on local government, endorsed the bill.

He announced this in a Facebook post that drew mixed reactions, mostly negative ones from Palawan residents who claimed they were “blindsided” by the speedy progress of the proposed measure in Congress.

Angara had also stressed in his post that the proposal was “not motivated by partisan political concerns, nor a gerrymandering exercise,” but was fitting since Palawan is the biggest province in the Philippines in terms of area.

‘One Palawan’ campaign

In a bid to delay or even stop the bill’s approval, the Save Palawan Movement recently launched the “One Palawan” campaign, gathering signatures against the proposed measure.

“The division of Palawan is not the appropriate answer to the existing weak governance, corruption, and natural resource use issues in the province,” Del Rosario said.
She pointed out that the taxpayers would bear the cost of creating these provinces.

“The huge costs entailed in creating provinces, as well as holding a plebiscite, will be shouldered by taxpayers’ money. This is unnecessary because the Palaweños did not ask for the division in the first place,” Del Rosario added.

Del Rosario, a Puerto Princesa resident, also questioned a provision in the bill stripping city residents of their right to vote in a plebiscite that would give them the chance to accept or reject the proposal.

“Puerto Princesans were not consulted nor included in a scheduled plebiscite on the bill. They will wake up one day without a province and they did not know how it happened,” she added.

While declared a highly urbanized city, the campaigner said vote-rich Puerto Princesa is still defined as “a political unit that will be ‘directly affected’” by the effects of division.

The definition, Del Rosario mentioned, is stated in the “law (1987 Constitution and the Local Government Code) and jurisprudence (Supreme Court decision on Umali v. Comelec case, among others).” Based on this, she said, “the city residents should be included in the plebiscite.” Continue reading

Pastoral Letter of the Diocese of Infanta

No to Kaliwa Dam, Yes to Alternative Sources of Water

“In the heart of this world, the Lord of life, who loves us so much, is always present. He does not abandon us, he does not leave us alone, for he has united himself definitively to our earth, and his love constantly (He) impels us to find new ways forward. Praise be to him!” (Laudato Si, 245)

Our country has been blessed by God with an abundance of natural resources especially water, but for many factors, we are now faced with the concrete reality of managing our water especially for the next generation.

After listening to the strong opposition to the construction of the New Centennial Water Source Kaliwa Dam Project, we too express our opposition to the said project and strongly recommend to look for alternative sources to the Kaliwa Dam for the following reasons:

  1. It will inundate the ancestral domain of the Dumagat-Remontados, uprooting them from the Sierra Madre where their ancestors lived for centuries enjoying a symbiotic relationship with the earth like the children to their mother. Undeniably, until now the indigenous people have not given an FPIC (Free Prior and Informed Consent) to the Kaliwa dam project as required by R.A. 8371.
  2. Kaliwa dam to be constructed over the Infanta Fault (It) will be a “sword hanging over the head” of 100,000 people living downstream the Kaliwa River. Etched in their memory is the 2004 flash flood that left 1,000 killed and over million worth of properties destroyed.
  3. Climate change and its ill-effects are the ‘new normal’ that could no longer be ignored yet we do not know of any study made on climate and the Kaliwa dam. The ambivalent nature of climate change can cause random and sudden flooding. Japan with its highly advanced technology was devastated by the earthquake in 2011. The catastrophic collapse of the dam in Laos last July 25, 2018 has a message to all of us.
  4. Global warming was 0.8 degree centigrade when Yolanda struck us with 315 kph winds. This year we have reached 1 degree centigrade. How much rainfall can this dam hold when another Yolanda comes in Quezon? About the landslides?
  5. NEDA has kept the data on Kaliwa dam secret with the word “confidential” despite the much publicized Freedom of Information E.O. No. 2, series of 2016.
  6. This project which is connected with the Laiban dam has been in the pipeline for 30 years, yet until now it does not even have the necessary Environment Compliance Certificate (ECC) as mandated by R.A. 7586. 

In 2000 the World Commission on Dams (WCM) mandated by the World Bank and the World Conservation Union (IUCN) reported that while “dams have made an important and significant contribution to human development, and benefits derived from them have been considerable… in too many cases an unacceptable and often unnecessary price has been paid to secure those benefits, especially in social and environmental terms, by people displaced, by communities downstream, by taxpayers and by the natural environment.”

Angat and IPO dams supply Metro Manila with 4,000 MLD of water but a big percentage of this is lost due to leaks. With the P18 Billion budget for constructing Kaliwa Dam, there can be alternative sources of water, many of which are being advocated now:

  1. Launch a massive education campaign to convince the 13 million Metro Manila residents to learn “water management”. This would reduce water consumption significantly. This could be bad news for business but best for the environment.
  2. Harvest rain water which flood us perennially and implement the pertinent provision of the National Building Code of the Philippines (RA 1096).
  3. Fast track the recovery of the NRW (non-revenue water) through fixing leaks;
  4. Rehabilitate the Pasig-Laguna River Basin which would cost only P13 Billion (estimated by Dr. Esteban Godilano, an environmental scientist).
  5. Adopt the Singapore New Water technology which treats wastewater to become potable.
  6. And most importantly, protect and expand our dwindling forests that serves as our largest watershed and these would refill our underground aquifers which are now over extracted. 

All of us – government and the people – have to work together to resolve our water issues. Hence as pastors of the faithful we

  1. Support a transparent dialogue with MWSS and NEDA and the stakeholders of the Kaliwa dam making available all the pertinent documents;
  2. Support the initiative in Congress and Senate to make an inquiry into the Kaliwa Dam; and
  3. Encourage all to “rethink how to use water” in terms of the demand-side and consumption and protect our environment.

World Commission on Dams sees that “the future for water and energy resources development lies with participatory decision-making, using a rights-and-risks approach that will raise the importance of the social and environmental dimensions of dams to a level once reserved for the economic dimension.”

Pope Francis warns that: “Caring for the ecosystems demands farsightedness, since no one looking for quick and easy profit is truly interested in their preservation.” (Laudato Si #36)

For the Clergy of the Diocese of Infanta: 
Sgd.: +Bishop Bernardino Cortez, D.D.
With the support of the bishops in the Philippines and the Major Religious Superiors of the Philippines. 

An Urgent Letter to President Duterte

Who is Being Manipulated by His Advisers to Sign the Contract for the Kaliwa Dam Project with Chinese President Xi Jinping on November 11,2018

Dear Mr. President:
If you really care for our country, you will NOT SIGN the Agreement FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE KALIWA DAM for the following COMPELLING reasons:

  1.    IT WILL PLACE 100,000 LIVES IN DANGER.

While Manila is now preparing for the Big One earthquake of the Marikina West Valley Fault, the proposed 60-meter Kaliwa Dam will be constructed within a zone of two active tectonics represented by the Philippine Fault Zone and the Valley Fault System. Particularly the Kaliwa Dam site is located only 7-8km distant from the Philippine Fault Zone (Infanta Fault). In case an active fault passes nearby the proposed dam site, two major problems can occur and will greatly affect in the design of the proposed structures, namely: 1.) seismicity caused by the earthquakes occurring in active fault zone; and 2.) deformation in dam-foundation caused by the movement of active faults. Most of the proposed dam sites would be subject to high peak acceleration and are exposed to generally high degree of seismicity. Along the Philippine Fault where many large-scale earthquakes were recorded in the past and the relative movement of 6 cm was observed in the period of 1991 to 1993. Therefore, it can be said that the Philippine Fault Zone has a potential to cause very high seismic activity, as what have been recorded in the July 18, 1880 earthquake where the old churches of Infanta, Mauban (both in Quezon province) and Manila Cathedral were devastated.(Page 3-11 of the The 2003 results of JICA study “The Study on Water Resources Development for Metro Manila in the Republic of the Philippines”). ”Even with its best technology, Japan was caught flat-footed with its 2011 earthquake”.

2.   IT VIOLATES THE LAW.

To sign the bilateral loan agreement thru ODA for the Kaliwa Dam Project would essentially violate R.A. 8371 and R.A. 7586. Up until now there is no Free, Prior and Informed Consent ever given by the Dumagat-Remontados for this construction as required by R. A. 8371. Neither has there been an Environmental Compliance Certificate as required by R.A. 7586 and yet your advisers have scheduled the signing on November 11, 2018.

3.   IT IS A DEBT TRAP.

By refusing to be transparent on the Kaliwa Dam by NEDA, despite your Freedom of Information (E.O.# 2), your advisers have effectively prevented a solidly based scientific study of the Dam. For all their rhetorics your advisers are paving the way to a debt trap. They are simply duplicating Sri Lanka’s Hambantota airport and seaport experience during the dictatorship of Mahinda Rajapaksa. Both airport and seaport became liabilities so much so that Sri Lanka had to lease the seaport for 99 years. Malaysia’s newly elected Mahatir has cancelled projects with China to avoid being trapped.

4.   IT IGNORES THE IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE.

The collapse of the dams in Vietnam and in Mayanmar a few months ago, the Itogon tragedy, the landslide in Naga, Cebu City and the most current incident in Natonin town, Mountain Province are enough signs that the impact of climate change can no longer be ignored. These should teach the Philippines to listen to the recommendation of the World Commission on Dams not to build big dams anymore.

5.   THE PHILIPPINES IS FLOODED WITH RAIN WATER. PROMOTE THE FORESTS, NOT DAM PROJECTS.

The proposed NCWS – Kaliwa Dam Project will inundate 291 has. of forest from the total 9,800 has. in Infanta Kaliwa Watershed, including the sacred site of Dumagat-Remontado in the areas of Tinipak in Brgry. Daraitan, Tanay, Rizal. Kaliwa Dam also plans to get 600 MLD (Million Liters per Day) of water in the Kaliwa river thru embarkment dam of 60 meters high, transported via conveyance tunnel with 4 meters in diameter to Tanay & Antipolo Water Treatment Plants. This will greatly affect irrigation system that sustainably supports Infanta rice granary and it will dry up aquifers supplying ground-water source for Infanta Quezon Water District (IQWD) servicing its populace.

Construction of Big Dams are not the only answer to the impending water crisis in Metro Manila, there are many other sustainable options. Why not fund the protection and rehabilitation of our degraded watersheds and existing dams, and not the construction of another big dams – it is good news for the environment and can save us from global warming, but bad news for the investors who only want profits at the expense of massive deforestation and community dislocations. The government can also mandate rain water collection modules and water conservation measures, especially for the households and big subdivisions / condominiums, as well as companies, industries, factories and hotel operators within the Metro Manila, instead of spending billions for dams without the assurance of success.

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