Task Force Mapalad
August 2, 2020
Castriciones urged: Install us now! We can only fight the pandemic if you will let us win our fight for land
“We appeal to Secretary Castriciones to stop this injustice now. This is his sworn duty. CARP is pro-poor and pro-peasant, it is not an enabler of greed and impunity. The program is there to strengthen our rights to the land we till, not to further enrich the already rich and embolden them to further oppress us.”
Landowners on paper but still landless in real life, about 100 farmers of Capiz province are appealing to Department of Agrarian Reform Secretary John Castriciones to install them in an agricultural landholding that was supposedly awarded to them 23 years ago via the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP).
“The DAR, Secretary Castriciones’ own agency, the Court of Appeals, and recently, Malacañang, have already removed all the legal hurdles to enable us to take control of the landholding and stop the heirs of our former landowner from blocking agrarian reform,” said farmer-leader Teresita Billonid of the Montecarlo Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Organization (Montecarba), a member of national peasant federation Task Force Mapalad.
Billonid is referring to the 198-hectare sugar plantation in the towns of President Roxas and Pilar formerly owned by the late Nemesio Tan.
It was supposedly already distributed by the DAR to Montecarba farmers in 1997 through certificates of land ownership award (CLOA), but up to now, the estate remains under the control of Tan’s administrator Ferdinand L. Bacanto, who is also the village chief of Brgy. Culilang in President Roxas.
Landless title holders
“What is the use of a land title if we still don’t have our land? How did it happen that while it is written in our CLOAs that we own the land, the government has allowed the former landowner to continue controlling it and earning millions of pesos from the property?” said Billonid.
“We appeal to Secretary Castriciones to stop this injustice now. This is his sworn mandate. CARP is pro-poor and pro-peasant, it is not an enabler of greed and impunity. The program is there to strengthen our rights to the land we till, not to further enrich the already rich and embolden them to further oppress us,” she said.
Fifty-nine of the 147 Montecarba farmers have already died.
Most of them grew old, got sick, and perished waiting to own the land they had tilled for a long time. The 59th CLOA holder was killed two years ago by gunmen being linked to the camp of our former landowner, according to Billonid.
She was referring to Orlando T. Eslana, 49, who was shot dead on February 11, 2017 by perpetrators allegedly linked to Bacanto. Eslana was killed five days after he joined 68 of his fellow CLOA holders in occupying a portion of the landholding in Pilar town.
At least five men opened fire on the CLOA holders, who had set up fences in the area. Four farmers were also wounded in the incident ̶ Ana Bocala, Nida Amo, Adel Vergara, and Melinda Eslana Arroyo, the sister of Orlando, who remains paralyzed, with the bullet still stuck in her head.
“Recently, the DAR chief said that CARP beneficiaries as food producers ‘are going to play a key role in winning this war’ against Covid-19. But in our case, Secretary Castriciones must first make us win in our decades-old struggle for land, before we can become among the fighters of the pandemic,” said Billonid.
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