Author: MigranteEurope

  • OPEN LETTER TO INDONESIAN PRESIDENT jOKO WIDODO: Save the life of Filipina Mary Jane Veloso

    April 1, 2015

    With hopes still raised high, we humbly and sincerely appeal to Your Excellency that the Indonesian Government spare the life of Filipina Mary Jane Veloso who was convicted in your country for drug trafficking and sentenced to be executed after her judicial appeal was rejected by the Indonesian Supreme Court last March 26.

    mary-jane-veloso

    We sincerely ask Your Excellency for clemency to save her life.  We believe that Mary Jane was a victim of large drug syndicates who take advantage of the unawareness, vulnerability and desperation of our people.  We are pained that she has been meted the death penalty while the big true drug operators and syndicates go on with wild abandon.

    Mary Jane was a victim not only of drug trafficking syndicates but of circumstance. A single mother of two, she was forced by dire straits to seek employment abroad and became vulnerable to exploitation of a person she trusted. The person who tricked her into carrying a luggage that contained 2.6 kilos of heroin remains at large to this day. Mary Jane does not deserve to be executed, her two children do not deserve to lose their mother, over a crime that she did not wittingly commit.

    Mary Jane was also a victim of Philippine government neglect. If her execution pushes through, she would be the eight (8th) Filipino on death row to be executed under one regime. Like others before her, she was not provided proper legal assistance and counsel by the Philippine government until the last minute. The Philippine government has thus far failed to show transparency and accountability for failing to save the lives of Filipinos on death row.

    We also hold the Philippine government accountable for failing to address the root causes of drug trafficking and other criminal activities that prey on the desperation of Filipinos. Our Filipinos will always be subjected to tragedies such as Mary Jane’s for as long as the government sticks to promoting a labor export policy unmindful of the welfare and protection of Filipinos abroad. Unless the Philippine government creates enough decent jobs at home to curb forced migration and trafficking, it will always be responsible for every life that is threatened, endangered or lost.

    Our appeal is thus an appeal for mercy and compassion.  None would be happiest than Mary Jane’s two children. The children have not seen their mother for a long time. Even now, they, as the rest of the Filipino people, have not lost hope.

    We appeal to you to heed our plea. Please save the life of Mary Jane Veloso. Our hope and prayers are with our compatriot and for a just and compassionate world. ###


    Website: http://migranteinternational.org
    Office Address: #45 Cambridge St, Cubao, Quezon City
    Telefax: 9114910

     

    Appeal for Urgent Action Mary Jane Veloso

  • Pinoys in Belgium call for BS Aquino’s resignation

    aquino-resign-nowNoynoy Resign Now!

    The Ugnayang Pilipino sa Belgium (UPB) forms part of the more than 10 million Filipino migrants around the globe trying to earn by all means to support their families in the Philippines. Any calamity back home be it natural or man-made affecting our families add pain to us.

    The recent 44 SAFs and civilian victims of the Mamasapano incident brought pain and financial strains to the families and relatives of those victims abroad because they were obliged to send home money just for the funeral of their loved ones.

    The disastrous response of the government to the victims of natural calamities like supertyphoonYolanda disheartened many of us migrants in spite of the goodwill of many individuals, groups and humanitarian agencies from abroad to help.

    In such situations, we expect our national government led by the president to do more than just offering lip service.

    As migrants, we see that our government is intensifying the labor export policy through the state-run Housemaids Academy in Manila that schools tens of thousands of house cleaners, chauffeurs, mechanics, gardeners and other peons every year with the intention of sending them for a long-term service abroad.

    This only sends us the message that our government leaders looks only the easy way to ease economic problems and unemployment but when these migrants encounter problems in their host countries, our government leaders often shun any responsibility.

    This time the multi-sectoral people’s movement in the Philippines is calling on President Benigno Aquino III to resign and the creation of a People’s Council for National Unity, Reforms and Peace to lead a transition government. We are convinced that President Aquino should resign!

    We believe in the creation of a People’s Council! We know that in a year’s time, a national election is going to be conducted and we are sure that political dynasties, money, goons and flawed automated electoral system will decide our fate as a people, much more of our families at home.

    Together, we stand with the call for Aquino’s resignation!
    Together, we push for the creation of a People’s Council for National Unity, Reforms and Peace!

    In unity with the Philippine Multi-Sectorial mobilizations,

    Ugnayang Pilipino sa Belgium (UPB)
    Email: [email protected]

  • SUMA-Total: Filipinos around the world want BS Aquino out (Summing-Up of the State of Migrants Under Aquino 2014)

    Prepared by Migrante International, July 2014

    After four years of corruption, mendacity, puppetry, oppression and human rights violations, Pres. Benigno Simeon Aquino III (BS Aquino) has once again roused the Filipino people into collective action and determination to exercise their democratic power to bring about regime change as mounting calls for his ouster continue to gain strength around the country and all over the world.

    The ever-worsening socio-economic conditions of the Filipino people underscore the urgent need to struggle and work for the ouster of the BS Aquino regime. By putting forward the demands for genuine land reform, higher wages, employment, sufficient social services, lower prices, justice and other democratic demands, Filipinos around the world can effectively expose and oppose BS Aquino’s claims of “tuwid na daan” and “economic miracle”.

    Chronic crisis: BS Aquino’s perpetuation of a backward, pre-industrial economy belies “economic growth”

    26 years of bogus land reform

    “65 years old na ako. Araw-araw nagbubungkal pa rin ako para sa pagkain (I am 65 years old. I still till the land everyday for food),” said Nanay Leoning, a farmer from Brgy. Mapalacsiao, Hacienda Luisita, Tarlac. Her small parcel of land in the hacienda is currently under dispute following the distribution of Certificate of Land Ownership Awards (CLOAs) by the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) to farmworker-beneficiaries under the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP).

    Last year, Nanay Leoning’s small parcel of land was raffled off and awarded to another farmer-beneficiary as part of the DAR’s implementation of the landmark 2012 Supreme Court decision ordering the distribution of 4,500 hectares of land to 6,296 farmworker-beneficiaries in Hacienda Luisita. “Mas masahol pa sa sabong ang ginagawa nila sa amin. Nangako sila ng pamamahagi ng lupa pero kami-kami ang pinag-aaway nila dahil sa iskemang ito’. (What they’re doing to us is worse than a cock fight. They promised to give us land but this distribution scheme is dividing us and turning us against each other).” Nanay Leoning, like countless farmers and farmworkers in Hacienda Luisita and other vast farmlands in the country, is testament to the failure of the Philippine government’s land reform program.

    CARP, or Republic Act 6657, was passed in 1988 by former Pres. Corazon Aquino as the centerpiece of her administration’s professed social justice legislative agenda. It was initially effective for 10 years and was extended for another 10. By its deadline in 2008, some 1.2 million hectares of agricultural lands remained undistributed to farmers. It was further extended through RA 9700, more popularly known as CARP with Reforms (CARPER), when Pres. Benigno BS Aquino III took office in 2010. CARPER is set to expire on June 30, 2014.

    According to DAR, from 1987 to June 2009, CARP had covered 2,321,064 hectares of private agricultural lands and 1,727,054 hectares of non-private agricultural lands, or 4,048,118 hectares all in all distributed to 2,396,857 beneficiaries. For 2002 to 2013, it said, it had already issued 67,577 notices of coverage (NOCs) for 628,745 hectares for compulsory acquisition. An NOC mandatorily places an agricultural landholding under the CARP.

    Further, the DAR said that, under CARPER, it had distributed 196,055 hectares of private agricultural lands and 209,151 hectares of non-private agricultural lands from July 2009 to December 2012, awarded to 210,586 beneficiaries. The DAR said that it is geared to distribute 5,635 NOCs covering 48,344 hectares by the June 30, 2014 deadline.

    According to a study by think-tank Ibon Foundation, however, land reform and distribution in the Philippines had been on a steady decline since 1972, when then Pres. Ferdinand Marcos passed Presidential Decree No. 27 that created the DAR. During that time, fully-owned lands accounted for 63 % of total agricultural farmlands. By 2002, the number had decreased to around 50 %. The Annual Poverty Indicators Survey (APIS) of 2002 also reported that only 11 % of families who owned lands other than residential properties obtained their land ownership through CARP.

    In terms of post-Marcos regimes, the BS Aquino administration is now at the helm of implementing the longest-running, and most spurious, agrarian reform program in the world – 26 years since the implementation of CARP and 41 years since Marcos’ PD No. 27. It comes as no surprise that despite protests and declaration from farmers that CARP had failed them, a haciendero president like BS Aquino is still now advancing the passage of yet another law extending the effectivity of the CARPER.

    Pres. BS Aquino had already certified as urgent for the next Congress House Bill 4296 that seeks to extend CARPER until 2016.According to data from the Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas, almost 95 % of the estimated 900 million hectares of land covered by CARPER has not yet been distributed to farmers as of the second half of 2013. Seventy-five % (75%) of these lands comprise of haciendas and hacienda-type farms located in 25 provinces in the country. DAR Sec. Virgilio delos Reyes himself admitted that at least 500,000 hectares with NOCs will remain undistributed by the June 30, 2014 deadline.

    The most controversial land up for distribution is the Aquino-Cojuangco-owned Hacienda Luisita.

    From 1988 to 2004, CARP allowed the implementation of a sneaky circumvention of land distribution in Hacienda Luisita through the Stock Distribution Option (SDO). The SDO declared Luisita farm-workers as “stockholders”, in effect re-concentrating the lands up for distribution back to the hands and ownership of the Aquino-Cojuangcos. Through the SDO, the Aquino-Cojuangcos were able to re-organize Hacienda Luisita into a corporation, and in lieu of subjecting its lands to distribution, ownership of the agricultural portions of the hacienda were transferred to the corporation; and stock shares, instead of land, were distributed to Luisita farm-workers. The unjust SDO was met with militant protests by the farm-workers resulting in the violent dispersal of the strike of farm-workers, now infamously known as the Hacienda Luisita Massacre, that killed seven strikers on November 16, 2004. Several other peasant leaders, activists and advocates also became victims of harassment and extra-judicial killings in the succeeding years.

    Moreover, because CARP gives absolute premium to the right of landlords to so-called “just compensation”, the BS Aquino government had graciously disbursed a generous sum of Php471.5 million to the Aquino-Cojuangcos for the 4,500-hectare supposedly distributed lands. This, even before any minimal land transfer to the tenant-beneficiaries could be completed.

    The Aquino-Cojuangcos have cleverly maneuvered to exempt Hacienda Luisita from land acquisition and distribution over the years. Their most recent scheme was carried out on more than 350 hectares of agricultural land being disputed by Luisita farm-workers and the Tarlac Development Corporation (TADECO), the Luisita estate administrator . The BS Aquino-Cojuangcos cunningly declared that the said lands are not covered by CARP because they have been classified as a “residential area” in 1985 by the Tarlac City Council. Last December 2013, the DAR issued an NOC subjecting said lands for distribution. TADECO, however, disregarded the NOC and has since been employing all sorts of attacks intended to expel farmers who have been tilling the area since 2005 – bulldozing and setting fire to kubols (nipa huts), crops and even houses set up by farm-workers asserting their right to the land. The DAR, for its part, could not do anything and has ironically cited principles of the CARP in defense of TADECO, stipulating that NOCs do not necessarily mean automatic land acquisition and distribution.

    Now, after 26 years, CARP remains a failure, an insult to farmers and a bogus land reform scheme. The extensions it had been given, including the CARPER, underlines its bankruptcy. Hacienda Luisita is not an isolated case but rather a prototype of the very antithesis of land reform. A similar “tambiolo system” is being implemented in Hacienda Dolores in Pampanga; Hacienda Looc in Batangas is being land-grabbed by business tycoon Henry Sy and Fil-Estate Lands; Haciendas Arloc and Ilimnan are being claimed by the governor of Negros Occidental. Likewise, farmers in these haciendas are holders and beneficiaries of CLOAs but they are still currently engaged in intense land disputes and struggles.

    These land struggles intensified under the BS Aquino regime despite statements by DAR and Malacanang that claim otherwise. The fact is CARP’s failure is rooted in its very orientation. It is not about free land distribution, which is the core program of any genuine land reform. It is not pro-farmer because it gives primacy to landlord compensation by the state whilst requiring farmer-beneficiaries to pay for the very land that they have been tilling for generations. What it is, fundamentally, is an agreement and connivance between the government, landlords and big corporations, with the government successfully acting as comprador.

    And CARP, CARPER or any so-called land reform especially under BS Aquino’s haciendero presidency is nothing but “promised” land to tillers, and a smokescreen for land-grabbing, land conversion, corruption and social injustice in favor of the “kamag-anak, kaklase at kabarilan”.

    25 years of labor contractualization

    In 1989, the Labor Code was amended to institutionalize and legitimize labor contractualization, or the hiring of workers for short-term, non-regular employment. The amended Labor Code is tantamount to the deprivation of benefits and privileges accorded by law to regular workers, and the practice of labor contractualization has ran rampant among business and industrial enterprises in the country since.

    Labor contractualization, combined with the ever-worsening state of unemployment, has been plaguing workers, especially so under the present BS Aquino administration. In his past State of the Nation Addresses (SONAs), BS Aquino attempted to downplay the jobs crisis by claiming lower unemployment rates (1.4 million jobs created in 2011 and 3.1 million jobs created in 2012). However, he failed to mention that the jobs created were either short-term, contractual or highly disproportional to the ever-growing labor force.

    By 2012, the growing number of job loss in growing sectors belied any attempts to face-lift the figures. On the third quarter of 2012, wholesale and retail recorded 728,000 job losses, real estate 45,000 job losses, financial and insurance 15,000 job losses and agriculture 694,200 job losses (IBON).

    To cover-up the record-high jobs crisis in the first quarter of 2013, Malacanang placed a very unbelievable Labor Force Survey data of a mere 7.2 % – a very huge discrepancy from figures released by the National Statistics Office (NSO), Social Weather Stations (SWS) and other economic surveys. Presidential Spokesperson Edwin Lacierda even cited that the peak in unemployment in the first quarter of 2013 was a result of an “employment bonanza” during the Christmas season when “seasonal jobs” were on the rise.

    On the other hand, those who do land domestic jobs still suffer very low wages. Since 2001, the gap between the mandated minimum wage and the family living wage (FLW) in the National Capital Region (NCR) had considerably widened. In 2001, the minimum wage was 52 % of the FLW. By March 2013, the P456 NCR minimum wage is only 44 % of the P1,034 FLW. Worsening joblessness feeds on already chronically low wages, with the current minimum wage grossly inadequate to sustain even the most humble of families. Family incomes are not keeping up with the inflation. By the end of 2012, the average family in NCR lived on P22 to P37 a day (IBON data).

    Minimum Wage     Family living wage     Wage gap
    2001         P265         P509     P244
    2014         P456         P1200     P744

    Source: IBON Foundation, estimates on data from National Wages and Productivity Commission

    Labor contractualization has succeeded in further depressing wages and repressing the rights of workers to strike and form unions. It has spawned union-busting schemes among industries beleaguered by labor disputes, much to the advantage of big local capitalists and foreign-owned corporations.

    Presently engaged in struggle for a significant wage hike and against labor contractualization and union-busting are workers of the NXP Semiconductors Cabuyao, Incorporated (NXPSCI).

    NXPSCI, formerly Philips, is a subsidiary of NXP Semiconductors, one of the top semiconductor manufacturers in the world, operating in 25 countries. In the Philippines, it has 5,000 workers, of which 1,600 are regulars and 1,700 are contractuals, the rest are supervisors. Located in Light Industry and Science Park 1 (LISP 1) in Cabuyao, Laguna, one of the country’s special economic zones under the jurisdiction of the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA), it is one of the biggest semiconductor manufacturers in the country. It produces microchips and is a supplier of well-known brands Apple, Bosch, Continental, Delphi, Huawei, Panasonic, Samsung, among others.

    The NXP workers are demanding an 8% increase in wages (Php 80), but the management is offering a mere 3.5% hike (Php 25). They are also demanding that contractual workers, some of whom have been working in the company for more than two years, be regularized. The management’s refusal to enter into a CBA and unfair labor practices brought on series of protest actions by the workers in the form of taking leave from work on four official holidays: April 9 Araw ng Kagitingan (Day of Valor), April 17 Maundy Thursday, April 19 Black Saturday, and May 1 International Labor Day.

    In response, the NXP Management fired 24 union leaders and issued an “explanation slip” threatening to dismiss 1,700 contractual workers. Condemning the illegal dismissals and harassment of workers, the NXPSCI Workers’ Union assert that their leave from work are within bounds of their right to take holidays and have since launched “silent protests” in their workplaces to demand the reinstatement of their union leaders. The NXP Management, in turn, is now threatening to dismiss all regular workers. The real reason, the union stresses, more than the protest actions, the company has long been gearing to transform all its workers into contractuals and is now utilizing the labor dispute to commence its massive retrenchment of workers. The NXP management has been hastening the training of contractuals since the labor dispute erupted.

    Interestingly, even former Sen. Ernesto Herrera, main author of the 1989 Labor Code, has endorsed a bill filed in Congress seeking an end to labor contractualization. House Bill 4396, authored by Gabriela Women’s Partylist Reps. Luz Ilagan and Emmi de Jesus, is a revised version of an earlier bill filed by the late Rep. Crispin Beltran and former Reps. Satur Ocampo and Liza Maza. Salient points of the bill include a clause preventing employers from terminating workers without just cause, the setting up of a six-month probationary period for contractual workers to become regularized, and the repeal of Articles 106-109 in the Labor Code which gives license to the Labor Secretary to authorize so-called “flexibilization” of labor under the guise of “increasing efficiency and streamlining operations”. Indeed, Articles 106-109 of the Labor Code institutionalize labor contractualization as a state policy.

    According to labor group Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU), the case of the NXP workers “is not just the violation of workers’ rights but the government’s collusion with big capitalists as shown in its inaction on labor disputes. The government is standing idly by as violations of trade-union rights continue to be committed”. The Center for Trade Union and Human Rights (CTUHR), for its part, slammed the unjust dismissal of the NXP union leaders, saying that it is a “deliberate move to weaken union organizing in export processing zones”.

    The BS Aquino administration’s anti-worker and pro-capitalist government and its continued and more rabid subservience to neoliberal policies will surely bring forth a more aggressive policy of labor contractualization – and, in effect, worsened wage depression and “cheap labor policy” in favor of big local businesses and foreign-owned corporations. Under the BS Aquino administration, union-busting schemes were also employed in Carina Apparel Inc. and Hoya Glass Philippines, resulting in the retrenchment of 3,600 workers in February and 2,600 workers in April, respectively.

    For four years, BS Aquino has consistently rejected demands for a significant wage hike and has instead implemented so-called non-wage benefits which come from workers’ taxes and premium contributions. It has taken great advantage of chronic unemployment to coerce workers into accepting starvation wages and slave-like conditions in the workplace, contractualization and union rights violations.

    Weakened economy, intensified chronic crisis aggravate forced migration

    The problem lies in the BS Aquino government’s perpetuation of a semi-feudal semi-colonial economy through its refusal to implement genuine land reform and national industrialization to generate decent employment. The country’s economic situation has not improved under BS Aquino’s policies. Development policies, including the Philippine Development Plan (2011-2016), continue to rely heavily on foreign investment, export-import dependence, debt and the so-called free market. BS Aquino’s essential economic thrust is clear-cut: strict adherence to policies of neoliberal globalization, implement these more thoroughly and systematically through his Private-Public Partnership (PPP), and more recently, through a proposal for a charter change.

    This explains why a more intensified and aggressive labor export policy has been further entrenched in the BS Aquino administration.Through remittances from overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), the government earns exponentially without having to shell out much capital investment.

    Top 10 OFW remittance-sending countries
    Country         2008     2009     2010     2011
    United States     7,825,607     7,323,661     7,862,207     3,232,073
    Canada         1,308,692     1,900,963     2,022,611     830,863
    Saudi Arabia     1,387,120     1,470,571     1,544,343     616,193
    United Kingdom     776,354     859,612     888,959     382,347
    Japan         575,181     773,561     882,996     381,192
    UAE         621,232     644,822     775,237     307,964
    Singapore         523,951     649,943     734,131     317,786
    Italy         678,539     521,297     550,515     242,411
    Germany         304,644     433,488     448,204     194,475
    Hong Kong     406,134     339,552     362,524     148,873

    (Source: Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas)

    The BS Aquino administration, while mouthing local job generation as its core program to eliminate unemployment, continues to hail the “remittance boom” to further promote labor export. To do this, it has become more aggressive in lobbying for job markets abroad in the past four years. Even funds for labor outmigration management through agencies such as the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration and the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) are directly sourced from OFWs or recruitment agencies and employers through various fees.

    However, the so-called remittance boom does not necessarily translate to economic growth, nor does it automatically translate to higher investments or economic relief for families of OFWs – factors that are supposed to have contributed greatly to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth.

    The latest survey of the BSP’s Consumer Expectations Survey conducted on the second quarter of 2013 showed that the increase of households in the higher-income group with savings was overshadowed by the decline in savings among households in the low- and middle-income groups. Of the total number of 5,884 number of households, 525 respondents in the survey were remittance-dependent families. Of this number, 95.4% said that remittances from their relatives abroad were spent mainly for food, 67% for education, 54.9% for medical expenses, and 42.1% for debt payments. The percentage of remittance-dependent families that used remittances for savings fell significantly, from 42.5% to 39.4% during the first quarter of 2013.

    The latest BSP report also showed that OFW households that allotted part of their remittances for investments such as the purchase of real estate and other real properties suffered a steep drop compared to previous years. Savings, if any, were prioritized for emergency, education and hospitalization.

    With the continuous spates of onerous price hikes of basic utilities, tuition fee increases and privatization of services and hospitals, and in the wake of the devastation brought by supertyphoon Yolanda and other calamities, this figure is expected to further decline in the coming years. Further, although annual OFW remittances increased amid the global economic crisis, its growth rate has been decreasing in recent years. From a 25% record growth in 2005, it dropped to a lowest 5.6% in 2009, a year after the global economic erupted. In the US where 50% of remittances originate, the growth rate had decreased from 7.8 % in 2008 to 7.3% in 2009. It had a slight increase to 7.9% in 2010 but has been suffering a steady decline since the US debt crisis ensued.

    The continuing decrease in growth rate of remittances is a constant worry for the Aquino government. If the trend continues, the government will be in big trouble because it relies mainly on remittances for foreign exchange revenues.

    Policy-wise, there are no indications that BS Aquino would instill much-needed reforms to curb forced migration and deviate from a policy of labor export. If anything, the Philippine economy’s dependence on labor outmigration and remittances has become unparalleled under the BS Aquino administration.

    Anatomy of Forced Migration: The case of trafficked Filipino teachers to the US A group of teachers victimized by an elaborate trafficking scheme today launched a manhunt for their trafficker after he was released from detention following the dismissal of a case against him by the Makati Regional Trial Court.

    GURO, or “Grupo ng mga Gurong Umuusig kay Rodriguez”, bewailed the Makati RTC’s release order for trafficker Isidro L. Rodriguez, dated April 14, on grounds that the first batch of teachers who filed an estafa and illegal recruitment in large scale against him failed to appear as witnesses in court.

    GURO represents at least 200 teachers who were victimized by Rodriguez. Rodriguez, through his agency Renaissance Staffing Support Center (formerly Great Provider Service Exporters, which is licensed by the Philippines Overseas Employment Administration), was able to dupe hundreds of teachers by offering them fictitious jobs in the United States. Rodriguez was able to collect an average of P500,000 from each of his victims. He recruited teachers in batches, with each batch consisting of about 10 to 15victims. Migrante International is currently aware of at least 20 batches in the Philippines and some 70 teachers in the US who have filed cases against him.

    Some of the teachers were able to leave the country, only to realize that no jobs awaited them in the US. The US-based teachers have already filed human trafficking cases against Rodriguez in the US and some have been granted T-Visas (trafficked visas) by US courts. Meanwhile,majority of the teachers remain in the country and only learned about Rodriguez’ treachery when he was arrested last November 2013. The Philippine-based teachers have filed case upon case of estafa and illegal recruitment in large scale against Rodriguez et al, while three batches have already filed trafficking in persons cases against him. GURO questioned the Makati RTC’s dismissal of the first case, “People of the Philippines versus Isidro L.Rodriguez, docketed criminal case nos. 13-2830 to 13-2834”. They learned that the first batch of teacher-complainants came into settlement with Rodriguez. While this may be true and is very unfortunate, there is no logic and justice behind the release order when the Makati RTC, the PNP-CIDG and the Department of Justice are fully aware that there are numerous other pending cases against Rodriguez. Also, under the amended Migrant Workers’ Act (Republic Act 10022), since Rodriguez was arrested via entrapment, investigators and his arrestors can act as witnesses against him in the absence of witnesses.

    Rodriguez remains at large to date. He was expected to appear at previous hearings of the trafficking cases against him but failed to attend.

    The specifics of each case vary slightly, but all follow a disturbingly similar trajectory: A licensed recruitment agency like Great Provider and Renaissance will recruit and process applications from potential victims. The local agency will affiliate itself with a foreign agency in the US, usually also controlled or founded by the local agency’s owner. It will introduce itself as having connections with employers, or in this case, schools, in Washington, DC or other states in the US.

    The local agency will ensure that it appears, for all intents and purposes, legitimate. It will open an online advertisement and will strive to maintain its good standing status in the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA). Should anyone complain, causing the cancellation of its license, the owner or the same people who founded the agency will be able to get another license from the POEA by registering another agency with a different name.

    In transacting with the applicants, the agency will ensure that they pay an initial deposit, usually the biggest amount that they will be asked to pay in the whole application process. They will call this the “processing fee”, in the case of the teachers amounting to USD$6,500. This will be the “point of no return” for the applicants. They will not be able to easily retract their applications because they already invested a huge amount of money – acquired through debts with onerous interest rates.

    To evade suspicion and preempt protests, the agency will give the applicants false hope by staging a detailed and comprehensive application process – seminars, updates with the US embassy, meetings with “employers”, and if needed, “deploy” a handful of applicants toleave the country. Through these, the applicants will continue to be at the agency’s mercy and the modus operandi is maintained. The victims are left with no choice but to shell out more money to fulfill all “requirements”, and the agency retains its good standing status at the POEA. In other words, the agency’s illegal processes are “legalized”.

    A modus operandi as intricate and sophisticated as this cannot be made possible if Rodriguez is not in cahoots with agencies such as the POEA, US Embassy, the Bureau of Immigration, among others, as well as connections with paralegal services in the US.

    Most of the teachers victimized by Rodriguez are teachers from public or small private schools. While they do have job security and regular incomes, they still chose to apply for teaching jobs abroad even if it meant going into debts or mortgaging their meager properties. Why?

    According to the Alliance of Concerned Teachers (ACT), a licensed teacher receives only Php18,549 in salary every month. This amount is a far cry from the monthly allowance, for example, of a high school cadet in the Philippine Military Academy who receives Php21,709 a month.

    According to a study by Ibon Foundation, Php1,054 or Php31,620 per month is needed to fulfill the Family Living Wage (FLW) in the National Capital Region (NCR). The teachers’ salaries are certainly not enough to fulfill their families’ monthly needs.

    Meanwhile, for fiscal year 2014, BS Aquino enjoys Php1.1 trillion in presidential pork while only Php3.2 billion is allotted to fund teachers’ proposed 75% salary increase for salary grade Teacher 1.

    In search of jobs, higher wages and livelihood, the number of OFWs has increased significantly since BS Aquino took office. By 2012, at least one-fourth of the country’s labor force has gone abroad to find work. According to the Labor Department, there are now 12 million OFWs abroad. Migrante International pegs the number of overseas Filipinos between 12 to 15 million, to include undocumented OFWs. The International Organization for Migration (IOM) still places the Philippines as the fourth leading migrant-sending country in the world, next only to China, Mexico and India. According to data from the POEA, 1.5 million Filipinos were deployed abroad on the start of BS Aquino’s term in 2010. This figure is 50,000 or 3.4 % higher than the deployment rate in 2009. POEA-OFWDeployment2008-2012
    Source: POEA

    Under the BS Aquino administration, the number of OFWs leaving the country increased from 2,500 daily in 2010 to 4,884 in 2013. In 2013, the BS Aquino government has breached the two million mark in deployment of OFWs for a year, the highest record in history.

    Corruption and dirty politics in “daang matuwid”

    Patronage politics and cronyism are basic characteristics of a semi-colonial semi-feudal order – practices that BS Aquino have promoted, protected and benefited from despite his posturing of “good governance” and “tuwid na daan”.

    The use of political power and privilege for personal gain or political favors for the “kamag-anak, kaklase, kabarilan” remains rampant under the BS Aquino regime. His anti-corruption rhetoric now rings hollow amid obvious attempts by the government at cover-ups and whitewash involving the pork barrel scam. What has become more clear now is that, a year since the disclosure of the pork barrel scam, corruption and dirty politics continue under the BS Aquino administration.

    The pork barrel scam has evolved into a more complex web of lies, deceit and exploitation of the Filipino people, with BS Aquino and his allies in full control. The pork barrel is still present in the 2014 budget, only this time concentrated within and controlled by the Executive branch. The government’s selective prosecution of political foes, while protecting the likes of administration allies Sec. Abad and Sec. Alcala, whose names appeared in the notorious “Napolist”, has caused widespread doubt and skepticism among the public of the BS Aquino government’s sincerity and political will to punish all plunderers.

    Since BS Aquino took office in 2010, allocation for the Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) increased exponentially. The biggest chunk of this allocation went to the presidential pork. According to a study by the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ), 57% of the national budget went to discretionary special purpose funds, unprogrammed funds and lump-sum funds under the presidential pork.

    For the 2014 fiscal year, in the Php2.6 trillion national budget, Php1 trillion in unprogrammed and lump-sum funds again went to the presidential pork. Former National Treasurer Leonor Briones broke down the Php1-trillion presidential pork into the following: (1) SPFs — Budgetary support to state-owned corporations; Allocations to local government units; Calamity fund; Contingent fund; DepEd school building program; E-government fund; International commitments fund; Miscellaneous personnel benefits fund; Pension and gratuity fund; PDAF; at, Feasibility studies fund. (2) Unprogrammed funds — Budgetary support to government-owned and controlled corporations; Support to foreign-assisted projects; General fund adjustments; Support for infra projects and social programs; AFP modernization program; Debt management program; Risk management program; and, People’s survivial fund. These are all under the complete discretion of the president and do not have to undergo scrutiny by the Commission on Audit (COA). The trillion-peso presidential pork is on top of the funds allotted for the Office of the President in the General Appropriations Act, amounting to Php2.8 trillion for 2014.

    In 2010, BS Aquino gave the biggest pork barrel to congressmen, senators and local government units who delivered the biggest votes for him and his allies in the previous elections. They also enjoyed the largest funds for their Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program, or the conditional cash transfer, ballooning its budget to Php23 billion in 2011 despite proposals to junk the program due to allegations of corruption. During BS Aquino’s first two years as president, large sums of pork allocation, now revealed as the Malacanang-concocted Disbursement Acceleration Program (DAP), were given as bonuses to solons who voted to impeach former Supreme Court Justice Renato Corona.

    BS Aquino has favored his cronies, allies, big businesses and the ruling elite in the awarding of infrastracture contracts under the Public-Private Partnership Program. The most lucrative PPP contracts were awarded to his biggest contributors in the 2010 presidential elections – among them, Danding Cojuangco, Henry Sy, Manuel Pangilinan, the Ayalas and other big businesses. Even rehabilitation and reconstruction efforts in the wake of supertyphoon Yolanda were also awarded to these same beneficiaries. Such PPP negotiations were allegedly brokered by his sisters and closest allies – as in the cases of Ballsy Aquino’s involvement in the purchase of new trains for the MRT-3 project, and Executive Sec. Paquito Ochoa’s hand in the awarding of huge infrastrature contracts to his brother-in-law Jojo Acuzar of the New San Jose Builders.

    Despite these, BS Aquino signed Administrative Order 31, calling on all government heads and agencies to “rationalize the rates of their fees and charges, increasing their rates and impose new fees and charges”. He has incessantly raised taxes and imposed state exactions while his administration’s tax policies are heavily tilted to favor big business. According to IBON, at least 40% of the top 100 companies in the Philippines are not included in the Bureau of Internal Revenue’s top 500 corporate taxpayers, while foreign corporations, including oil and mining companies, are among the biggest beneficiaries of tax exemptions.

    The BS Aquino administration’s blatant plunder of public funds is an unforgivable crime against the people considering the continuous decline in the quality of social services.

    This is especially scandalous for OFWs who have been getting a share of less than one % (1%) of aggregate funds in the national budget since 2010. Each OFW only gets roughly Php260 per capita spending per fiscal year. Since 2010, the BS Aquino government has slashed funds for direct services to OFWs, and passed on the burden to OFWs through various fees and collections.

    A study by Migrante International estimated that since 2010 the BS Aquino government has been collecting an average of at least Php26,267 from every OFW processed by the POEA. This amount was higher than the average Php18,000 the government collected before 2010.

    With the recent increases in the Philhealth premium, NBI clearance fees, e-passport fees, barangay clearance fees, and the mandatory contributions to Pag-Ibig, OWWA and mandatory insurance, among other requirements, the average cost for every OFW for the processing of their Overseas Employment Certificates (OECs) has reached an estimated Php31,000. If 4,884 OFWs leave daily to work abroad, the government now earns an average of Php146.5 million a day from processing fees and other costs shouldered by OFWs, even before they leave the country.

    Aside from the hike in costs of requirements for the OEC, other fees and tax schemes being imposed on OFWs include the affidavit of support (AOS) in UAE, Macau and some parts of Europe and the discriminatory P75 Comelec certificate of registration, other onerous fees specifically charged to seafarers and entertainers, and House Bill 3576 dubbed as the “forced remittance bill”.

    Ironically, the further institutionalization of state exactions and tax impositions has not translated to improved welfare services for OFWs in distress. Unresolved cases of OFWs continue to pile up at the POEA, National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC), OWWA and the DFA. OFWs are plagued with an assortment of issues and problems throughout the entire migration cycle yet the BS Aquino government has barely done any decisive action to support and protect migrant workers and their families. The BS Aquino government’s ability to uphold Filipino migrants’ rights and promote their welfare has lagged behind its apparent success in money-making schemes.

    Fees charged to OFWs for the Overseas Employment Contract (OEC)
    Basic document requirements     P12,000 (approximate)
    E-passport (minimum)     P1,200
    OWWA fee (USD $25)     P1,100
    POEA fee (for new hires)     P7,500
    Pag-ibig mandatory premium contribution     P600
    Mandatory insurance coverage (minimum premium USD $144)     P6,336
    Philhealth premium     P2,400
    TOTAL     P31,136

    Source: Migrante International estimates, 2014

    State exactions have caused OFWs and their families to become debt-ridden, contributing greatly to the widespread landlessness and poverty of many. It is not unheard of for peasant families to mortgage or sell their small parcels of land or to submit their children to unpaid labor just to be able to pay debtors or produce the sum needed to pay for exorbitant pre-departure and placement fees. The continuous onslaught of state exactions on OFWs, combined with the BS Aquino government’s lack of welfare service and assistance to OFWs in distress and the overall economic conditions of OFWs and their families amid widespread corruption and criminal neglect of the government are enough reasons for Filipino migrants to call for BS Aquino to step down from office.

    EDCA and Cha-cha: Unparalleled surrender of sovereignty and plunder of patrimony

    BS Aquino’s remorseless subservience to US-imposed policies and dictates has totally stripped the country of its sovereignty and independence, and has further endangered the lives of millions of OFWs around the world.

    The BS Aquino administration’s recent signing into the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA) and its underhanded tactics to implement charter change (cha-cha) are paving the way for US re-occupation and re-colonization of the Philippines. History is testament to how US military occupation and domination over national industries and lands have undermined national patrimony and sovereignty.

    Under the EDCA, a much bigger, uninhibited and unlimited number of US troops and their armaments are allowed to be stationed on Philippine soil. US troops can now easily set up base virtually anywhere in the country for an indefinite period of time. Needless to say, US military presence in the Philippines has never been more strongly established than under BS Aquino’s presidency.

    The EDCA is much worse than the return of the former US bases in Clark and Subic that were expelled from Philippine soil after the historic rejection of the Philippine Senate of the bases agreement in 1991. It in fact multiplies US military presence beyond the 1947 Military Bases Agreement. Under the EDCA, US troops are allowed to “preposition and store military equipment inside Philippine military bases”; and, to exercise “operational control” over airfields, ports, public roads and other “agreed locations”, including those used for civilan purposes. It will convert Philippine military bases into US bases and, worse, will turn the entire country into one huge US facility.

    Since he took office, BS Aquino has dangled the “China bogey” to justify military and defense decisions it has made. The EDCA is supposed to “modernize” the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and, thus, increase its chances of defending the country against China’s incursions. However, nowhere in the EDCA does it state that US troops are required to come to the AFP’s aid should any attack take place. Even US Pres. Barrack Obama was not able to give a categorical response when asked by Philippine media during his state visit this year. Critics argue that then, as now, there is no imminent threat of a China invasion. And even if the threats were genuine, the Philippines should be able to assert its sovereignty from territorial threats on its own terms, instead of allowing itself to become a battleground of US proxy wars in light of the US military pivot to the Asia Pacific.

    The US government’s continued vested interest in the Middle East-North Africa (MENA) region, for instance, is cause for unending conflicts in the said countries – imperiling the lives and welfare of tens of thousands of OFWs in the region.

    The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) recently again raised the crisis alert in Libya and Iraq to Alert Levels 3 and 4, respectively, or mandatory and voluntary repatriation for OFWs. Alert Levels 3 and 4 also mean the imposition of a total deployment ban of OFWs to Iraq and Libya.

    The Philippine government first enforced a total ban to Iraq in 2003, during the Gulf War. In 2004, Iraqi insurgents fighting the US-led overthrow of Saddam Hussein kidnapped OFW Angelo dela Cruz and condemned then Pres. Gloria Arroyo’s support for the US. In 2011, the total ban was partially lifted to allow the deploymen of OFWs particularly in US military bases. Another total ban was imposed in 2012, and it was only last year that the total ban was lifted, allowing the processing of job orders from Iraq. There are currently approximately 10,000 OFWs in Iraq.

    Dela Cruz had said then that the conflict in Iraq will not simply end because what the Iraqis want is for US troops to leave. The situation is still the same now. Since the overthrow of Hussein and the installation of a US-backed government, violence in Iraq has erupted time and again. For as long as the US government refuses to leave Iraq to fend for its own, conflict in the region will not end. The most recent crisis in Iraq is yet another civil war waiting to happen, with the US goverment at its helm.

    Pres. Obama had already hinted of a possible military action targeting Iraq. Presently, the US aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush and its strike groups have been spotted in the Arabian Sea, presumably waiting to act on Obama’s orders on Iraq. Meanwhile, Libya, where an estimated 13,122 OFWs are located, has largely remained in conflict. At the height of the Libya civil war in 2011, the US government was accused of funding terrorists to sow violence and conflict in the country. Libya’s Gadhafi was a staunch anti-imperialist leader who was outspoken about his objection to US policies.

    Like before, OFWs in crisis-riddled countries – Iraq, Libya, Syria, Kuwat, Afghanistan – are caught between the devil and the turbulent sea. They left despite risks posed in working in these countries because of worsening domestic unemployment. And like before, a number of them will surely opt to stay because no jobs await them should they decide to return. OFWs continue to be placed in precarious conditions in these countries due to US interventionist wars to protect its vested interests, and the BS Aquino administration’s dogged support for the US continue to place them in dangerous situations.

    The Aquino government’s railroading of cha-cha, on the other hand, will allow 100% foreign ownership and control of lands, businesses, industries and resources and will make Filipinos squatters in their own homeland.

    Cha-cha will also pave the way for the signing of the US-PH Transpacific Partnership in trade which will further aggravate forced migration and the labor export policy. It will mean a more systematic and no-holds-barred privatization, deregularization and denationalization of the country’s resources, lands and industries which will result in massive unemployment, wage depression, landlessness and dismal social services.

    Once again, the BS Aquino administration’s recourse will again be to further seek job markets abroad and intensify its labor export policy at the expense of the rights and welfare of OFWs. The labor export policy is nothing but a big business venture, which cha-cha will allow without restriction or obstruction, from which both the US and PH governments profit, with OFWs as milking cows.

    Oplan Bayanihan: Anti-peace, anti-development

    The BS Aquino administration has a habit of labelling its policies with blatant misnomers, and its “peace and development” program is no exception.

    In 2011, the regime, through the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), claimed to have fashioned a counter-insurgency program that is focused on “winning the peace, not just defeating the enemy”. Oplan Bayanihan, which will run until the end of BS Aquino’s term in 2016, is said to prioritize on non-combat strategies. Unlike its predecessors Oplan Bantay Laya 1 and 2, which drew the ire and condemnation of human rights groups and the internatonal community for numerous gross human rights violations, the AFP promises to operate under the premise of protecting human rights and respecting international humanitarian laws.

    Oplan Bayanihan is patterned after the Unites States’ Counter-Insurgency Guide of 2009 (US COIN Guide 2009). It supposedly banks mainly on two strategies: the “whole of nation approach” and “people-centered approach”. As such, Oplan Bayanihan involves a so-called multi-stakeholder approach that would include various stakeholders in the promotion of “peace and development”, namely, government agencies, the AFP, civil society organization and the general Filipino public – with the aim to end insurgency through civic-military operations, social services, relief and rehabilitation efforts and the like.

    Fast forward to 2014. The AFP is now tangled in a web of its own lies and broken promises when it declared that the Oplan Bayanihan is still focusing on “triad operations” to combat insurgency. Triad operations involve the employment of a combination of combat and non-combat operations that are far from being “people-centered”. Non-combat and intelligence operations mainly serve to fortify military intelligence and intensify militarization of civilian communities.

    Oplan Bayanihan turned out to be no different from, and is actually worse than, Oplan Bantay Laya 1 and 2. Under ostensible “peace and security operations”, the AFP uses it to deceive the masses, vilify revolutionary movements as well progressive and activist organizations, increase the mobilization of civilian entities for counter-insurgency and intelligence networks, and deodorize the AFP’s image.

    The BS Aquino administration aimed to project Oplan Bayanihan as pro-peace and pro-people progam but has failed miserably. Human rights group KARAPATAN records 192 victims of extrajudicial killings (EJKs) since BS Aquino took office, 21 of whom were victimized in the first quarter of 2014 alone. Most of the victims were farmers and indigenous peoples who fought for their land, environmental protection from big mining companies and foreign corporations, and those who denounced human rights violations by state perpetrators.

    Recently, more than 1,300 Manobos were forcibly evacuated from their communities in Talaingod, Davao del Norte after a series of indiscrimintate aerial bombings, firings and other rights violations by the 68th Infrantry Battalion, 60th IB PA of the 1003rd Brigade and the 4th Special Forces of the AFP since March 3, 2014. In the whole of Mindanao, Oplan Bayanihan’s direct detrimental effect is the deployment of five divisions, or an estimated 60%, of AFP forces. According to the AFP, their concentration in Mindanao, particularly in the Davao region, is aimed at annihilating strongholds of the New People’s Army (NPA), the armed wing of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP). As a result, towns and villages where the AFP are situated suffer the most number of human rights violations by the government’s military and para-military forces.

    What is happening now in Talaingod and the massive militarization of countrysides underline the urgent need for the BS Aquino government to resume peace talks with the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP), something that the Philippine government has unfortunately blatantly abandoned. Countless human rights violations show the BS Aquino administration’s utter disregard for previously signed agreements such as the Joint Agreement on Safety and Immunity Guarantees (JASIG) and the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL), among others. The recent arrest of Benito Tiamzon and Wilma Austria, senior leaders of the CPP and NDFP peace consultants, is another testament to the BS Aquino government’s contempt and insincerity in working for a just and lasting peace. For the BS Aquino government, capitulation and ceasefire are preconditions to peace talks.

    The “peace deal” between the Aquino government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), for instance, gives much emphasis on”decommissioning”, or the surrendering of arms of the MILF. Article No. 5 of the GPH-MILF Framework Agreement on normalization states, “The MILF shall undertake a graduated program for decommissioning of its forces so that they are put beyond use”. This, while the BS Aquino government continues to circumvent key issues in the “peace deal” that are instrumental in addressing the root causes of the centuries-old Bangsamoro conflict.

    The stalled GPH-NDFP peace negotiations, on the other hand, should by now have tabled the second substantive agenda in the peace talks – socio-economic reforms addressing the root causes of the communist insurgency. BS Aquino’s low prioritization of the peace talks with the NDFP is yet another indication of its unwillingness to go beyond rhetorics, propaganda and psywar. In essence, the regime’s “peace and development” agenda is nothing but a program for pacification and a cover-up of the actual fundamental problems of a semi-feudal semi-colonial system. Its main objective is to crush armed revolution and other movements struggling against anti-national, anti-masses and anti-democratic rule. All that Oplan Bayanihan is offering are superficial solutions that do nothing to address the historical and real problems of landlessness, lack of social services, poverty, oppression and injustice.

    To achieve a just and lasting peace, the BS Aquino government should take up the core issues of rebellion and armed conflicts. It should focus on genuine land reform, decent wages, social justice and the right to self-determination. Without these, the deteriorating socio-economic and political conditions in the country will further fuel the people’s resistance and unrest.

    Oust the US-BS Aquino regime!

    BS Aquino should be made accountable for his anti-people and pro-imperialist regime that continues to perpetuate and worsen the chronic crisis of the semi-feudal semi-colonial economy. His subservience to imperialist dictates to the extent of allowing 100% foreign ownership of lands and industries and the re-occupation of US military troops in the country should be vehemently opposed and fought.

    BS Aquino’s cacique presidency and patronage leadership make him responsible for massive corruption in government in favor of big businesses and political cronies amid widespread poverty and hunger. He is primarily accountable for the government’s criminal neglect of millions of Filipino people who suffered from calamities and catastrophies.

    BS Aquino should be made accountable for the continuous rising costs of health care, education and other social services as a result of privatization and deregulation. He should be denounced for imposing labor contractualization and a wage-freeze policy amid price hikes and various state exactions and tax impositions. As an haciendero president, he can never be expected to implement genuine land reform but will instead continue to condone land-grabbing, land transformation and the plunder of the environment and natural resources.

    BS Aquino should be condemned for widespread human rights abuses and attacks on civil liberties in the use of militarization against the people. His is a fascist government hiding behind rhetorics for so-called “peace and development”.

    These are the reasons why Filipino im/migrants and their families want BS Aquino out. They do not want him to remain until 2016. They know that BS Aquino has the capacity and gall to exploit his power over various government agencies and sectors in society for his political expediency and to escape accountability. Filipinos around the world are now resolved more than ever to work more vigorously to compel him to resign, have him impeached or ousted from power. Migrante International fully supports the establishment of a transition council that will hold BS Aquino responsible for all his crimes against the Filipino people. A transition council borne out of a broad mass movement that can facilitate clean and honest elections for regime change.

    History has proven twice that the Filipino people can succeed in effecting regime change: in overthrowing the fascist Marcos dictatorship in 1986 and ousting the corrupt Estrada regime in 2001. History has also proven the significant role of the Filipino migrant sector all over the world in successfully exposing and opposing puppet, corrupt and fascist presidents. By bringing to the fore the demands and plight of OFWs compelled by dire situations in the country to leave their families in order to work abroad; by fighting for their rights abroad and struggling against modern-day slavery, exploitation, discrimination and oppression; by exposing and opposing government neglect and abandonment of OFWs in distress; and, by arousing, organizing and mobilizing Filipinos all over the world to unite and fight, Filipinos all over the world, comprising of more than 10% of the population and situated in more than 100 countries, are a potent political force for the ouster of the US-BS Aquino regime – and, ultimately, for the struggle for national democracy.

    The Filipino migrant sector’s struggle is not isolated from the struggle of other sectors in society. The problems of the Filipino migrant sector are deeply rooted in the fundamental problems of Philippine society. Its struggle for dignity, rights and welfare, against government neglect and against forced migration play a very important role in the struggle for genuine freedom and national democracy. The only solution to the problems of the Filipino migrant sector is genuine social change so that families would not have be separated and broken apart in order to survive.

    To genuinely address the problem of forced migration, economic policies should focus on developing the national economy by advancing local industries, agriculture and basic services. Migrante International fully supports the call and struggle for national industrialization and genuine land reform as the ultimate solution to the problem of forced migration and to end the labor export program. ###

  • 20 years after Flor Contemplacion’s death, more women OFWs abused, exploited and enslaved under Aquino’s term

    flor-20-iconOn International Women’s Day, Migrante International gives tribute to all Filipina migrant workers who continue to fight against abuses and exploitation, and stand in solidarity with them in the struggle against forced migration and modern-day slavery being espoused by the Aquino administration’s more aggressive labor export policy.

    Under the administration of Pres. Aquino, more women overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) have been forced to migrate and leave their families. An estimated 6,092 Filipinos leave the country daily (IBON Foundation, 2015 data) – among them, mothers, sisters, aunts, nieces, grandparents who were forced to face dire straits and uncertain conditions abroad due to widespread joblessness, landlessness and dismal social services here in the country. This figure is an increase of 50% percent from 4,030 OFWs a day in 2010, when Aquino took office. To date, women OFWs make up more than half (55%) of the stock estimate of OFWs, outnumbering male OFWs especially in the service sector (Center for Filipinos Overseas, 2012).

    Women OFWs face very specific vulnerabilities because they are women – sexual discrimination and other gender-specific abuses, exploitation and violence in the sorts of work they tend to predominate. This is especially the case when women OFWs migrate for work that is in line with their traditionally-defined reproductive roles in society (i.e. domestic workers, nurses, caregivers, etc.).

    According to Migrante’s annual databank (2013-2014), more women OFWs faced all sorts of hardships and exploitation during the past year. Of the 174 cases of repatriation handled and facilitated by Migrante’s Rights and Welfare Assistance Program (RWAP), 138 are women. Majority of them were physically, verbally and emotionally abused, overworked, underpaid and suffered work-related violations.

    Of the 104 cases referred by Migrante to the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) from 2013 to 2014, 88 cases involved women OFWs who were illegally dismissed or terminated or were victimized by abusive recruiters and employers. 45 out of the 60 cases endorsed by Migrante in that same period to the National Labor Relations Commission, meanwhile, (NLRC) involved women OFWs.

    For January to February 2015 alone, Migrante’s RWAP has already handled at least 50 cases of violence against women (VAW) OFWs, ranging from physical assault, sexual harassment, attempted rape, rape, sex trafficking to verbal abuse and emotional torture.

    The current onslaught of the global economic crisis also further intensifies abuses and violations faced by women OFWs. The worsening crisis makes them more vulnerable to trafficking, criminalization of irregular or undocumented migrants, and drives them to tolerate more abuses in the workplace. The worsening crisis under the Aquino regime conceives for them more desperate conditions, locally and abroad.

    Under the Aquino administration, the number of trafficked OFWs, mostly women, has reached a staggering 1.3 million, according to 2012 data by the Commission on Filipinos Overseas. Many of them migrated to work through legal means but were later coerced into exploitative conditions, drug trade or white slavery.

    Unfortunately, the Aquino government lacks the political will and competence to fully address these cases. Twenty years after the execution of Flor Contemplacion, many others like her have come after. Many abused, exploited and maltreated women OFWs are yet to attain justice, with government support and assistance generally lacking. Twenty years after Flor Contemplacion’s death, many women migrant workers have organized themselves to continue to organize in efforts to confront the struggles and challenges of their plight.

    Today, marching with us are modern-day Flor Contemplacions, courageous women OFWs from different parts of the world and their families who braved their plight and survived. They continue to call for justice. They realize that forced migration and modern-day slavery can only ever be stopped on a day when our citizens will no longer be forced to face dire and dangerous conditions overseas out of desperation, poverty and hopelessness. They unite with other women and sectors of society in calling for the removal of Aquino from office. Migrante marches with them in solidarity with the women’s struggle for freedom and national democracy. This International Women’s Day, we salute and honor them and other women OFWs around the world.

    Twenty years after the death of Flor Contemplacion, Filipino migrants and their families are once again roused into collective action and determination to exercise their democratic right to bring about regime and system change. Migrante International is part of NOW! (Noynoy Out Now!), a broad multisectoral formation calling for Aquino’s resignation and the formation of a People’s Council to replace him. On March 17, the 20th death anniversary of Flor Contemplacion, Migrante and its chapters and affiliates worldwide will be holding a “Global Day of Action for Aquino’s Resignation”. ###

  • Thank you, Pope Francis, for acknowledging gov’t neglect of OFWs – Migrante

    pope-migThank you, Pope Francis, for acknowledging gov’t neglect of OFWs – Migrante

    Global alliance of overseas Filipinos expressed tremendous gratitude to Pope Francis for acknowledging the real plight of overseas Filipinos workers (OFWs) and their families.

    In his speech delivered in Malacanang, Pope Francis made mention of OFWs and the Filipino diaspora. The Pope said that he “cannot fail to mention” the OFWs “who are often neglected and whose contributions to society are not fully appreciated”. The Holy Father also said that the Filipino diaspora is “helping the life, culture and religious heritage” of other countries.

    “Thank you very much, Pope Francis, for hearing our cries! Thank you for speaking in behalf of the 15 million overseas Filipinos all over the world who are being neglected, abused and exploited and abandoned by the Aquino government. Filipinos all over the world are overjoyed and empowered to further fight for our rights and to struggle for genuine social justice so that our common endeavors may be realized,” said Garry Martinez, Migrante International chairperson.

    Martinez also noted the Pope’s mention of “families being destroyed.”

    “One of the main reasons of Filipino families being torn apart is the phenomenon of forced migration. Our OFWs are separated from their families because of desperation and the need to survive. Pope Francis, who hailed from a family of migrants, knows this by heart. We agree with the Pope that what we should strive for is a ‘society of authentic justice, solidarity and peace’, something that is very far from what we have now which is a society of corruption, greed and conflict under the Aquino administration,” Martinez said.

    The migrant leader said that he hopes the Pope’s statement will “open new doors and networks among churches and their brethren for the promotion and protection of the rights of Filipino migrants and their families around the world”.

    Lastly, Martinez called on all OFWs and families to continue to organize, unite and struggle for social justice and revolutionary reforms. “The Pope himself said, ‘Dear migrants and refugees! You have a special place in the heart of the Church… Do not lose your faith and hope!’. For us, this should translate to the message that, despite and in spite of all our sufferings and torments, the people united shall never be defeated.” ###

  • Filipino migrants and families call on Pope Francis to heed cry of OFWs in distress

    #DearPopeFrancis

    Pope FrancisGlobal alliance of overseas Filipinos Migrante International will hold a small gathering at the Plaza Miranda later this afternoon to welcome the arrival of Pope Francis and to call on the Holy Father to heed the cry of Filipino migrants and their families, especially those in distress.

    Around Metro Manila, simultaneous activities were also held earlier today to gather “letters to the Pope” from families of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in distress.

    In a previous open letter to the Pope, Migrante International had called on the Pope to “bear witness to our struggle. We call on you to speak on behalf of overseas Filipinos in our quest for a better life.”

    According to Garry Martinez, Migrante International chairperson, “We are thankful to Pope Francis for consistently speaking on behalf of migrants and refugees. We agree with him that human trafficking is indeed ‘a crime against humanity’ and that forced migration is ‘an anomaly’ and a matter of grave concern for our migrant workers and their families.”

    “As he visits the Philippines, we call on Pope Francis to speak on behalf of an estimated 15 million overseas Filipinos in over 239 countries around the world. We call on him to speak out for Filipino migrants in distress and their families,” Martinez said.

    There are currently 125 Filipinos on death row abroad – the most number of whom have been executed under the present Aquino administration. At least 7,000 Filipinos are languishing in jails abroad without legal assistance and at least 25,000 are stranded and awaiting repatriation in the Middle East alone. Millions are undocumented and in danger of being criminalized abroad as host countries continue to impose more strict immigration and border policies. At least half a million Filipinos, mostly women and children, are victims of trafficking. Millions more suffer labor abuses and violations and endure modern-day slavery for the sake of their families back home.

    Despite all these, Martinez said, the Aquino administration has intensified its labor export policy. “The Aquino government has highly praised itself for its supposed efforts to work with migrant-receiving governments to ensure the rights and welfare of OFWs. But the truth is OFWs are plagued with an assortment of issues and problems throughout the entire migration cycle yet the Aquino government has barely done any decisive action to support and protect OFWs and their families. The Aquino government’s ability to uphold Filipinos migrants’ rights and promote their welfare has lagged behind its apparent success in implementing its labor export policy.”

    Pope Francis is a staunch supporter and advocate of the rights and welfare of migrants and refugees. He has been very vocal in his criticisms on forced migration and the criminalization of undocumented migrants and refugees, and his stance against trafficking in persons and modern-day slavery.

    On January 16, the Holy Father will be holding a dialogue with some Filipino migrants and their families at the Mall of Asia Arena.

    On the same date, Migrante International will be holding an International Day of Prayer and Solidarity to bring to the Pope’s attention the plight of Filipino migrants and their families all over the world.

    “We call on Pope Francis to heed our call: Stand with us against trafficking and modern-day slavery of Filipino migrants! Struggle with us against Aquino’s labor export policy!” Martinez said. ###

  • Open Letter of Filipino Migrants to Pope Francis

    Pope of the Poor, Fight with Us: An Open Letter of Filipino Migrants to Pope Francis
    December 18, 2014
    Reference: Garry Martinez, Chairperson, 0939-3914418

    Pope of the poor, fight with us.

    POTD_Pope-baby_2521172bWe are Filipino migrants, immigrants, refugees from all over the world who, together with our families, call upon Your Eminence, to bear witness to our struggle. We call on you to speak in behalf of overseas Filipinos in our quest for a better life. We have experienced first-hand human and labor rights abuses and exploitation. Hear our stories and join us in our fight against modern-day slavery.

    Of present, an estimated 15 million overseas Filipinos are found in over 230 countries. Massive unempoyment, landlessness, poverty and globalization have been forcing our countrymen to migrate. There exists a widespread desolation, hopelessness and desperation that have caused the Filipino people’s diaspora.

    Pope of the poor, fight with us. In your tenet to build “A Church without frontiers, mother to all”, we likewise reach out to you with open arms and hearts for our common objective to open the doors of Your Church worldwide in the spirit of genuine service to the people.

    Like you, we stand firm that forced migration is an anomaly and a matter of deep concern involving the lives and dignity of our migrant workers. Ours is now an era of modern-day slavery wherein our migrant workers and their families are subjected to most cruel conditions in favor of greed for remittances and the desecration of human rights.

    Pope of the poor, fight with us. We have seen the absence of legal frameworks that genuinely promote and protect the rights and welfare of our OFWs and their families. We have dissected and evaluated the efficiency or lack thereof of existing government programs and discussed ways to bring these to the concern of our authorities. We realize that the Philippines has many policies and laws on migration that need to be translated into concrete action.

    We have seen that the continuation and intensification of the government’s labor export policy would only add more to the sufferings of our people, making them more vulnerable to human and labor rights abuses. We ask of you to speak out against this policy. We need to address the fundamental conditions of our society, especially the unequal distribution of wealth and work among nations which drives our people to forced migration.

    Pope of the poor, fight with us. We agree with you that human trafficking is indeed “a crime against humanity”. It is a violation of our fundamental rights. It breeds the evils of discrimination, criminalization of undocumented migrants and all forms of violence, oppression and enslavement.

    We are also greatly disturbed and moved by the tragedy of the separation of families. We cry for the sufferings and pains of children left behind and growing up without proper guidance, parents and couples estranged from each other, and the resulting economic, emotional and psychological implications of loved ones being uprooted from their families.

    We call on you to work hand in hand with migrants’ organizations and advocates in support of the plight of our Filipino migrants. There are still many things that need to be done. Pope of the poor, fight with us.

    We call on Your Eminence, that through Your Office, you can help us in organizing and broadening our reach and making our voices resound. There is a dire need to consolidate our efforts in various parts of the world. Together, let us face the challenge of holding the cause of Filipino migrants and their families.

    Pope of the Poor, fight with us. In the spirit of service to the people, together, let our aspirations and advocacies be realized. ###

  • Nang magising si Juan OFW matapos ang mahabang-mahabang paglalakbay…..

    Ako si Juan OFW, dating badante. Kabilang na ngayon sa tinatawag na “stranded” o walang  regular na trabaho. Iyan ang hirap kapag caregiver ka kapag natigok si Italyano kasamang  natitigok ang bulsa. Magaang trabaho, maraming oras mag-Facebook, pati selfie dinadamay ang amo. Kalaban mo lang ang inip at dapat matibay ang sikmura kapag pumulandit ang ihi at tae ni Italyano sa kanyang karsunsilyo.

    Isang umaga, tutal rin lamang at walang trabaho, nagpasya akong magsadya  sa tanggapan ng POLO-OWWA sa Roma para i-renew ang aking membership.  Sinuot ko pa nga ang bagong damit na binili ko sa Mercato. Sabay wisik ng bagong biling pabango, suklay ng buhok at bago tuluyang lumabas ng aking kwarto di mapigilang sumulyap muli sa kwadradong salamin sa lumang tukador na minana ko pa sa aking unang amo. Di ko na nga binigyang-pansin ang mga dokumento na dadalhin. Sabi ko “ tiyak namang mayroon akong lahat ng kailangan nila.”

    Hindi kasi ako nakasama sa palistahan nang magkaroon ng service mission sa Firenze. Di ko kasi kilala ng personal si  Mr. Fernandez , isang Pilipinong boluntaryong nagtatrabaho sa Konsulado. Di ko alam pero wala na raw pwesto para sa akin. Ayaw ko na lang isipin na nakarating pa dito sa Italya ang palakasan. Sa kabilang banda masaya ako dahil first time akong makakarating sa Roma kaya dapat GWAPO! Marahil dadaan na rin ako sa Vaticano at tatagpuin ko ang aking ex doon.

    Bago pa ako matuntong sa tarangkahan ng Embahada, sinipat ko pa ngang muli kung may watawat ng Pilipinas. Dahil sa harapan nito, may isang makisig na lalaki, Bill daw ang pangalan na tinatalakay ang PORK BARREL . Sa isip ko litsong baboy na niluto sa bariles. Aniya, “Pork Barrel King” si Presidente Aquino dahil ang gabinete partikular ang Department of  Budget at ang pinuno nitong si Abad ay kasabwat ni Napoles. Dawit din sa kwento niya si dating Senate President Drilon. Sa kwento nga , kalahati ng senador, daang kongresman at mga kalihim ng Departamento ang sangkot. Dahil dito,bahagyang naantala ang aking pangunahing pakay, i-renew ang pagsapi sa OWWA.

    Nagulantang ako sa haba ng pila, Huwebes pala ngayon, day-off ng maraming tulad ko. Sa wakas at nakakuha ako ng numero. Hinihintay kong tumayo ang isang dalaga na mukhang tinatawagan ng amo at pinababalik sa trabaho.
    ”KAINIS”, aking naulinigan. Nurse daw yun, walang makitang trabaho sa Pinas kaya andito. “Flussi” ang nagiging paraan niya ng pagdating . “ Ako pala si Weng” pakilala ng aking nakatabi sa upuan, “ako naman si Juan OFW”, sagot ko. Katabi niya ang isang kwarenta anyos na babaeng may pasa, parang sinaktan o nagulpi. “Napano siya , tanong ko?”  “Ginulpi ng amo,“sabi ni Weng.  Nangyayari din pala yan sa Europa, alam ko lang ay talamak yan sa Middle East (rape pa nga ang madalas), Hong Kong at kung saan sangkaterba ang mga OFW na nagtatrabaho bilang kasambahay. Paalis na rin sila dahil sa halip na asistihan sila ng POLO, isang labor attache officer at ng OWWA tinuro sila sa Sindacato.

    “Numero 69”, anunsyo ng babae sa maliit na salamin.  “Numero ko yun , kagyat akong tumayo at tumapat sa bintana. ”Magandang umaga ma’am,” bati ko. “DOKUMENTO, ani ng babae. Aking iniabot ang aking pasaporte at permesso di soggiorno, apat na buwan na at paso na rin ito. Laking gulat ko nang di tanggapin ng ahensya ang aking inihahaing passport at permesso di soggiorno.

    Hinahanapan  ako ng konrtibusyon sa INPS o sulat ng aking employer bilang  katibayang ako ay may trabaho. Kung wala ang mga iyon malabong maging kasaping muli ng OWWA.

    Kagyat kong naisip na, paano kung may mangyari sa akin (wag naman sana)! Tulad ng nangyari kay  Aling  Saling na taga Tacloban. Dumating siyang (clandestino) dito sa Italya. Minsang naglilinis ng bintana, akalain mo ba namang nakabitaw sa hinahawakang seratura. Hayon, pinoproblema ng mga kasamahan  niya sa inuupahang  silid ang pagpapadala ng kanyang bangkay sa Pilipinas.

    Tulad ko kulang daw sa bagong rekisitos sa pagsapi. Nawasak pa naman ang kanyang ipinapatayong  bahay bunga ng bagyong Yolanda. At hanggang ngayon  sa mga tent pa rin  sila nakatira. Marami ngang kwento na kahit sa parte ng Samar at Leyte hindi lang sa Tacloban ganito ang tanawin. Walang tirahan, trabaho, tigil na ang rasyon, nagtitiis sa maiinit na tent (kubol) at yung malapit sa baybaying dagat ay di na muling pinayagan magtayo ng kahit barong-barong. Gagawin daw eco-tourism ang lugar.

    Tumambling akong palabas ng Embahada. Bigo, pagod, nasayang na oras at panahon, higit sa lahat tumataginting na 50 euro (solo andata) na ipinambayad ko sa tiket, mahal kasi ang Freccia Rosa pero masisiyahan ka sa bilis, linis at komportableng biyahe.

    Tinuloy ko ang plano na tumungo  sa Vaticano. Tinawagan ko si Sisa, ex ko sa Pinas noong kami’y nasa parehong iskwelahan sa probinsya. Krrringgggggg…..”ayoko sana na ikaw ay mawawala”(Aegis yata ang ring tone ng telepono niya), paborito niyang grupo ng mang-aawit dahil hanep kung bumirit. “Il numero che ha chiamato e non disponibile”, naisip ko mauunsiyami pa yata ang aking matagal nang hangad na makita siyang muli. Purnada! Dami ko pa namang plano, kakain kami sa Mc Donald o Burger king (siyempre sagot ko), mamamasyal at kung posible, katulad ng dati gawin ang ginagawa ng mag-asawa, ito e kung posible pa.

    Sa di kalayuan nakakita ako ng grupo ng mga Pilipino na may dalang mga plakards. “LAHAT NG SANGKOT MANAGOT!” “Bro intsik ka ba?”, tanong ng isang nagpapaliwanag.  Sa loob-loob ko, pinagdudahan pa ang aking nasyonalidad e pango naman ang aking ilong! Paliwanag niya na umabot na hanggang Malakanyang ang alingasaw ng korapsyon at pilit ikinukubli ang partisipasyon ng mga susing opisyales ng Gabinete.  Sekretaryo Butch Abad at lima pa sa kanyang pamilya na sangkot sa PDAF, Sekretaryo Alacala sa Kagawaran sa Agrikultura dagdag pa ang bigong pangongotong ng kapatid ni P-Noy sa gobyerno ng Czech para sa pagbili ng bagon ng MRT at LRT. Tumataginting na $30M ang hinihingi kapalit ng pagkopo sa kontrata. Naisip ko tuloy, mabuti na lamang at may mga taong handang magsiwalat ng lahat at malalakas ang loob para labanan ang katiwalian at mapawi ang pagsasamantala. Nilingon ko ang isang placards, nakasulat “ LP – Lapian ng pangulo, Lapian ng Plunderers”.

    Nakasabayan ko si Pedro, taga Mindanao. Pareho Regionale ang sinakyan naming treno  pauwi. Tumaas na naman kasi ang presyo ng biglieto. Ipinaliwanag niya sa akin na ayon sa OWWA Omnibus Law ( art.IV, sect.1.B.) ang usapin sa boluntaryong pagsapi ng lahat ng OFW. Karapatan ko pala ito! Sinasaad pa sa Republic Act 8042 na nararapat pangalagaan ang lahat ng OFW o mga “bagong bayani” dapat pangalagaan, asistihan at bigyang proteksyon. Maling i-abandona ng POLO-OWWA ang dikretong ito, diin pa niya. Umabot pa ang aming kwentuhan na sa Mindanao ay laganap ang malawakang pagmimina. Kabilang nga ang kanyang pamilya sa naitaboy dahil ang kanilang niyugan ginawang taniman ng DOLE at Del Monte.

    Naunang bumaba ng tren si Pedro.  Binasa ko ang polyetong iniwan niya sa akin. Nananawagan pala ang mga Migrante dito sa Italya sa Board of Trustees sa pamamagitan ng kanyang Administrador na –
    1. Ibalik at ipatupad ang dating alituntunin na passport at kontrata lamang ang kailangang dokumento sa panahong ipinoproseso ang kanyang pag-aaplay sa trabaho at passport lamang ang kailangan kung siya ay boluntaryong nag-aaplay na maging kasapi sa panahon siya ay nasa labas ng ating bansa.
    2.   Ibalik ang dating “lifetime membership”.
    3.   Pag-uulat sa kaganapan sa ahensya laluna sa kanyang pananalapi.
    4.   Pagtiyak sa mabilis at epektibong pagbibigay ng serbisyo at pagtugon sa problemang kinakaharap ng mga OFW.
    5.  Pagpaparami ng representasyon ng OFW sa Board of Trustees at pagbibigay sa kanila ang pangangasiwa ng nasabing ahensya.

    Pagdating ko ng bahay, tumambad sa akin ang lumang dyaryo ng Ako ay Pilipino. Sa frontpage “ P450 milyong pondo ng OWWA pinakialaman ni GMA”. Sa inis ko, nanuod na lang ako ng Pinoy channel sa TFC. Ang pangunahing balita – Pangulong Noynoy Aquino  nagpamigay ng milyon-milyong bonus sa mga pinuno ng OWWA.  Pondo ng Philhealth nawawala, baon sa utang at namemeligrong di mapakinabangan ng mga kasapi ang kanilang kontribusyon.

    Nagdesisyon na lang akong mahiga at magpahinga sa aking inuupahang “repostilyo”, ginawang kwarto, mas mura kasi ang bayad. Umuukilkil sa aking gunita ang anak ko na  humihingi ng pang-matrikula. Taon-taon na lang tumataas, renta sa boarding house, pamasahe, uniporme at pagkain. Kahapon lang tumawag ang kapatid kong bunso, kasamang natangal sa NXP semi-conductor sa Cabuyao. Ang kompanyang gumagawa ng  micro-chips ng sikat na I-Phone at I-Pod. Naalala ko ng mag-strike din ang mga manggagawa ng Coca-cola.

    Mahigit limang taon na silang manggagawa bilang driver pero nanatili silang kontraktwal.  Herrera Law, isa sa batas na pinirmahan ni Cory Aquino, ina ni Pres. P-noy. Sa ilalim ng batas na ito, lumaganap ang kontraktwalisayon, nameligro ang seguridad ng mga manggagawa sa trabaho, napako sa napakababang minimum wage ang mga obrero.

    Bumalik sa aking isipan ang ilang kwento sa Mindanao. Mula ng maaprubahan ang Mining Act of 1995 sa panahon ni Presidente Ramos, naglitawang parang mga kabute ang mga mining company. Nito lamang taong ito, sa rehiyon ng Davao sangkatutak ang pinayagang magmina. Open pit mining ang modernong paraan. Pinapatag ang kabundukan. Kabilang sa mga kompanya ang IndiPhils, Kinimi Copper  Exploration and Mining Corp, Pacific Heights Resources Inc, Mcwealth Mining Corp, Geoffrey T. Yengko at Compostela Valley.  Macliing Dulag ang pangalan na natatandaan kong lumalaban sa Philex at Cellophil Mining Co. na pinaslang sa Cordillera  sa dahilang nilalabanan nila ang pagmimina na nagdudulot ng pagkawasak ng kalikasan at pagtataboy sa kanilang lupang ninuno.

    “Che giornata!…” Andirito na ako sa Italy ayaw pa akong lubayan ng mga problemang panlipunan.  Dito naman, patuloy din ang pagtaas ng lahat bilihin, mula sa pagkain at damit, upa sa bahay, tubig-kuryente-gas, gasolina. Patong-patong din naman ang bayaring buwis…hay naku!

    “Juan, Juan, Juan gising na, anong oras ba ang sasakyan mong treno papuntang Roma? Sayang ang tiket mo “pag nagkataon”. (sinulat ni RO, isang migrante sa Firenze, 2014)

  • Seeking decent shelter a year after Yolanda

    IBON Features | 8 January 2015 | Survivors still face the difficulties of prolonged uncertainty of temporary shelters and lack of livelihood, amid government measures that aggravate their plight

    By Xandra Bisenio
    Haiyan-Donations
    IBON Features– Decent shelter is a fundamental social right which super-typhoon Yolanda survivors have not fully realized even a year after the calamity hit the country. Government’s establishment of a one-stop-shop for the clearance and processing of permanent housing projects just days before the first year anniversary of Yolanda is more likely a publicity measure amid growing criticism of its slow-paced rehabilitation program.

    Notwithstanding government efforts to create a semblance of improvement in areas in Leyte where Pope Francis will be setting foot this January, Yolanda survivors continue to face the difficulties of residing in temporary shelters as well as the prolonged uncertainty of livelihood amid goverment measures that aggravate their plight.

    In focus: Eastern Visayas. Tatay Benigno, 62, lost his livelihood of fishing and fish vending to the sea. His house, along with about 500 households in Barangay San Roque, one of the most populated coastal barangays of Tanauan, Leyte, was totally destroyed and washed out by Yolanda. Despite his old age and with only one hand to work on, he continues to assist fishermen in pulling their boats ashore in exchange for fish and crabs, which he sells to his neighbors at the relocation at Bgy. Pago so he could buy rice. He worked every day without pay to complete the 1,800 hours “sweat for asset” mechanic just to get this housing unit. But his unit, the roofing of which is faulty and leaks into a small pool of water whenever it rains, remains incomplete because the 70% funding counterpart from the National Housing Authority has not arrived as of September 2014. Two other relocation areas are set to be put up in Barangay Sacme and Barangay Maribi of the same town even if these barangays have been mapped as among those prone to severe flooding in Tanauan.

    Meanwhile, many of the region’s residents living in tent cities have to suffer extreme heat and cold in Tacloban City tent cities located near coastal areas: an eight-month-old baby died at the San Jose tent city last May because of this. Also, to replace other tents that have become dilapidated after almost a year, residents of Barangays 87, 88 and 89 have requested for temporary shelter kits from the local government but in vain.

    “Mainit dito,” says twelve-year-old Charlene Gonzales who stays in a tent house in San Jose of the same town with her mother and siblings. “Walang kuryente, at sa gabi minsan hindi kami makatulog sa init kahit nagpapaypay si Nanay (At daytime we go out because the house is like an oven. There is no electricity, and in the evening sometimes we couldn’t sleep even if Mother uses a fan).” Because it had become difficult to fish since government imposed the no-dwelling zone near the shores, Charlene’s father, who was formerly a fisherman, was forced to find work in Manila as a construction worker.

    Thirty-seven-year-old Rodrigo used to earn Php160 everyday as a construction worker before Yolanda struck. Last July, a month after government declared that the relief period was over and stopped delivering relief to Yolanda-stricken areas, Rodrigo’s wife Andrea left for Manila to work as a housemaid for P3,000 a month. There are hardly any jobs available to earn income and support families after Yolanda. Rodrigo is left at the bunkhouse to care after their 15-month-old daughter Rodalyn. They eat twice a day on budgeted rice and noodles and could no longer afford fruits.

    Rosenda, 32, is worried that the planned relocation site for them by the LGU in Barangay Tacuranga, Palo, is several kilometers away from the town center of Palo and that their four children’s daily transportation to school would triple from Php30 to Php90 a day. She works as a part time pedicurist and manicurist at Php80 and also sells food. Her husband earns Php260 daily as a hotel janitor.

    Rosenda is among the survivors whom the Mayor of Palo informed will be relocated to another temporary shelter in preparation for the visit of Pope Francis in January 2015. The International Organization for Migration, which works with government under the shelter cluster program, checked the relocation site and found that the bunkhouses there did not have toilets yet. Instead of transferring to the relocation site, many of the survivors chose to go back to the original location of their pre-Yolanda homes and livelihood along the government-decared “No-Dwelling-Zones”.

    Government itself has countered its own “No-Dwelling-Zone” policy supposedly meant to keep residents from danger zones. For instance, it set-up tent cities in the forbidden areas in various Tanauan barangays and relocated some 764 households from their former temporary shelter, while permanent housing is not yet available.

    Aggregates. According to the United Nation’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), shelter is the second most wanting among the unmet needs of super-typhoon Yolanda/ Haiyan victims at 58%. Shelter follows early recovery and livelihood (73%) as the most unmet need and is succeeded by child and family protection (55%), education (40%), health (38%), food (35%), water, sanitation and hygiene (24%) and nutrition (11%).

    Relatedly, the number of displacement sites in Yolanda-affected areas decreased from 109 to 66, but the number of displaced families grew from 5,523 to 5,830 from December 2013-April 2014. Displacement sites include evacuation centers, tent cities, transitional bunkhouses and spontaneous settlements. As of April 2014, the most number of displaced families (3,928) were in bunkhouses. The next most number of displaced families were in 14 tent cities (1,422). Yet, in other typhoon-stricken areas, as in Cebu, bunkhouses have been phased out.

    These figures show the lack of more permanent settlement that would more aptly serve as the survivors’ space for long-term recovery. The unconditional provision of decent housing for the typhoon victims appears to be excluded from government’s priorities in the immediate aftermath of the typhoon. The lack of jobs available for the super-typhoon survivors also does not indicate the presence of a strategic economic rehabilitation plan.

    The decrease in the 2015 national budget’s overall allocation for socialized and low-cost housing from Php16.4 billion in 2014 to Php9l7 billion proposed for this year, partially explains the sorry state of settlement in Yolanda-affected areas. Social housing has become less of a priority for the national government, especially after giving more room for the private to construct low-cost housing. The fact that majority of Filipinos are poor and cannot afford to avail of these housing projects will be underscored after the one-stop-shop for permanent housing in Yolanda-stricken areas has been declared open for business.

    Such state neglect for people’s general welfare and national development is the socio-economic disaster that continues to afflict Yolanda-affected areas – and the entire nation, for that matter – even before the onslaught of what has come to be known as one of the world’s strongest typhoons ever. IBON Features

  • LABANAN ANG PANGANGALAKAL AT PANG-AALIPIN, PALAKASIN ANG MIGRANTE INTERNATIONAL

    ilps-en-espac3b1ol

    Mensahe sa Ika-7 Kongreso ng Migrante International
    Ni Prop. Jose Maria Sison
    Tagapangulo, International League of Peoples’ Struggle
    Disyembre 16, 2014

    Ang internasyonal na pamunuan at lahat ng kasaping-organisasyon ng International League of Peoples’ Struggle ay  nagpapaabot ng taos pusong  pagbati at militanteng pakikiisa sa Migrante International sa ika-7 Kongreso nito.  Humahanga kami sa inyong mga tagumpay at hinahangad naming umani pa kayo ng ibayong tagumpay batay sa inyong kasalukuyang lakas at sa inyong paglalagom at pagbabalak sa  kongresong ito.

    Napakahalaga at napapanahon ang tema ng inyong kongreso: Labanan ang Pangamgalakal at Pangaalipin sa Pilipino sa Ibayong Dagat at sa kanilang Pamilya! Isanib ang Lumalakas na Kilusang Migranteng Pilipino sa Daluyong ng Mamamayan para sa Tunay na Pagbabago!”

    Karapat-dapat na magpursigi ang Migrante International sa pagpupukaw, pag-oorganisa at pagpapakilos ng mga migranteng manggagawang Pilipino upang labanan ang pang-aapi at pagsasamantala sa kanila at  ipagtanggol at isulong ang kanilang mga karapatan at kapakanan at upang itaguyod ang tunay na pagbabago sa Pilipinas at pag-unlad nang sa gayon magkatrabaho sila sa sariling bayan imbes na umalis sa bayan at mapahiwalay sa pamilya.

    Dahil sa kawalan ng pag-unlad ng ekonomiya ng Pilipinas sa pamamagitan ng tunay na reporma sa lupa at pambansang industryalisasyon,  sapilitang  nagtratrabaho ang milyun-milyong kababayan natin sa ibang bansa.  Patakaran ng rehimeng Aquino na pasidhiin at pabilisin ang pangangalakal at pang-aalipin sa Pilipino sa ibayong dagat.  Patunay ito ng paglubha ng disempleo at pagbagsak ng kita sa bansa.

    Ipinagmamalaki ng rehimen ang lumalaking foreign exchange remittance ng mga migranteng manggagawa.  Umaabot na ito sa USD 28 billion at mga 8.7 porsyento ng  Gross National Product (GNP). Mas malaki pa kaysa bahagi ng tradisyonal na iniluluwas na produktong agrikultural. Sa pangkalahatan,  pangsustento ito sa mga pamilya ng mga migranteng manggagawa ang foreign exchange remittances nila.

    Matapos na maipalit sa peso,  ang kitang foreign exchange ng mga migrante ay pinakikinabangan ng mga bangko, malaking komprador at  korap na opisyal na may mga foreign exchange accounts. Hindi ito ginagamit  para sa pagpapaunlad ng ekonomiya  kundi para sa pagpapanatili ng sistema ng pagkonsumo na dependiyente sa pag-aangkat ng yaring kalakal, pangungutang at panlulustay at panluluho..

    Lantarang nagsisinungaling ang rehimen sa pagsasabi na mabilis ang paglaki ng ekonomiya at mayroon nang “reverse migration” o malakihang pagbabalik ng mga migranteng manggagawa.  Ang paglaki naman ng GNP sa ilang taon ay dahil sa tinaguriang “hot money” o portfolio investments na pumapasok sa stock market, bond market at money market at hindi lumilikha ng mga empresa at empleyo kundi kumikita lamang ng tubo sa espekulasyon at madaling umaalis, tulad ng nangyayari na ngayon.

    Malaki ang hinuhuthot ng gobyernong reaksyonaryo mula sa mga migranteng manggagawa.  Sa pamamagitan ng  Administrative Order 31, pinahigpit at pinataas ng rehimeng Aquino  ang mga singil sa ilalim ng  OWWA, Pag-ibig, Philhealth,
    Department of Foreign Affairs, airport at iba pang ahensiya.  Ngunit wala o labis na limitado ang mga serbisyo at benepisyo na naibibigay ng gobyerno sa mga kaso ng aksidente, pagkakasakit at pagkamatay at iba pang panganib sa panahong may kontrata o wala nang kontrata ang migranteng  manggagawa.

    Walang ibinibigay ang gobyerno na proteksyon at pangangalaga sa mga karapatan at kapakanan ng mga migranteng manggagawa.  Bale wala sa rehimeng Aquino ang demanda na pagsabihan ang mga gobyernong tumatanggap sa mga migranteng mangggawa na irespeto ang mga karapatan nila.  Hindi ipinapatupad ng rehime and  Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipinos Act (RA 10022,
    amended RA 8042), Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act (RA 9208) and the Overseas Absentee Voting Act (RA 9189).

    Wala o salat ang  tulong sa mga kaso ng karahasan, panggagahasa at pagpaslang sa mga migranteng manggagawa,  sa paglabag ng mga kontrata at arbitraryong pagpapatalsik at sa mga malakihang paglikas dahil sa gera, gulo, paghihigpit o kalamidad.  Sa normal or abnormal na pagtatapos ng mga kontrata sa trabaho, walang maliwanag na komprehensibong plano sa reintegrasyon ng mga balikbayan.

    Ang bisa ng mga dati ninyong pagsisikap sa pag-organisa sa mga migranteng manggagawang Pilipino at mga pamilya nila sa Pilipinas ay nakikita sa pagkakaroon ninyo ng 30 chapter sa labas ng bansa at 21 sa loob ng Pilipinas.  Umaasa kami na batay sa mga pag-uulat ng mga global coordinator at mga chapter delegation  at talakayan ng kongreso maitatakda ninyo ang mga  tungkulin at pamamaraan  para maiangat sa bago at mas mataas ng antas ang inyong gawain at pakikibaka.

    Malaki ang potensyal ng Migrante International sa gawain, pakikibaka at ibayong tagumpay dahil nasa ibayong dagat para magtrabaho ang mga 12 hanggang  15 porsyento (12 hanggang 15 milyon kung isama  ang walang dokumento) ng populasyon ng Pilipinas o hindi bababa sa  24 por syento ng labor force na mga 62 milyon.  Tantiyang 30 hanggang 40 porsyento ng mga Pilipino ang dependyente sa kita ng mga migranteng manggagawa.

    Karamihan sa mga migranteng manggagawa ay kasambahay o tagalinis ng mga bahay at opisina, staff sa mga hotel at restaurant, health workers sa mga ospital,  mga caregiver, skilled at unskilled workers sa mga pabrika, construction at engineering projects at crew ng mga barko.  Galing sila sa ibat ibang dako ng Pilipinas.

    Ang mga migranteng manggagawang Pilipino ay nasa higit na  200 bansa at teritoryo sa lahat ng kontinente (Asia, Australia, North America, South America, Africa at Europe). Pinakakonsentrado sila sa United States (3.5 milyon); sa Saudi Arabia (1.8 milyon ); at Canada (639,686). Konsentrado rin sila sa United Arab Emirates, Australia, Qatar, Malaysia, Japan, United Kingdom, Hong Kong at Singapore.

    Kapag mabisang masaklaw ninyo ang mga konsentrasyon ng migranteng manggagawa, magkakaroon kayo ng lakas at kasanayan para abutin ang nasa iba pang bansa.  Mas madaling maugnayan din ninyo ang mga migranteng manggagawa sa mga barko kung sa mga mayor na daungan makakapagtayo kayo ng mga pwesto na kombinasyon ng opisina, tindahan at tambayan.  Mainam din kung sa Pilipinas may organisasyon ng mga pamilya ng mga migranteng manggagawa at kung may lugar ugnayan o tambayan na pinupuntahan ng mga migrante bago umalis o sa pagbalik.

    Mataas ang pagtingin namin sa Migrante International at itinuturing naming isa ito sa mga mayor na kasaping-organisasyon ng ILPS.  Malaki ang utang na loob ng ILPS sa Migrante International sa tulong nito na maging  global ang saklaw ng ILPS at sa pagpaparami ng manggagawa sa batayan ng ILPS . Mapagpasya rin ang inyong organisasyon sa komisyon ng ILPS  na may kinalaman sa mga migranteng manggagawa ng ibat ibang di-maunlad na bansa at sa pagbubuo ng International Assembly of Migrants and Refugees.

    Mabuhay ang Migrante International!

    Mabuhay ang mgamigranteng manggagawa!

    Mabuhay ang sambayanang Pilipino!