Category: Homefront

  • PARTICIPATE: Stand Up for Human Rights! Join the #EndImpunity Photo Challenge!

    PARTICIPATE: Stand Up for Human Rights! Join the #EndImpunity Photo Challenge!

    The #EndImpunity Photo Challenge is a social media campaign in support of the IPT’s call for truth, accountability, and justice as a public opinion tribunal.HOW IT WORKS

    On June 16, to mark the ONE MONTH COUNTDOWN to the IPT, supporters are called to take a photo that represents the pain suffered by victims of human rights abuses under the Aquino administration.

    To participate:

    1.     TAKE A PHOTO of yourself BLINDFOLDED and GAGGED holding up a sign that reads:

    #EndImpunity
    #PeoplesTribunal
    tinyurl.com/2015ipt

    2.   POST your photo on social media.

    ●      for FB– make FB profile pic and/or post on wall
    ●      for twitter– time TBD, twitter rally (retweet initial photo or tweet photo of yourself), since Wed is better for social media
    ●      post on instagram, tumblr, and other social media platforms

    3.  Visit the International Peoples Tribunal Facebook Page<https://www.facebook.com/events/1579657442313012/> for info and instructions on upcoming #EndImpunity Facebook and Twitter rally dates during the 1-month countdown.

    Hashtags:

    #EndImpunity
    #PeoplesTribunal
    #BeTheJudge
    #AquinObama

    IPT url:
    tinyurl.com/2015ipt

    Sample posts:

    twitter: Countdown to #PeoplesTribunal Intl community crying to #EndImpunity by prosecuting #AquinObama
    FB: Let’s put #AquinObama on trial and #EndImpunity. Justice for all victims of human rights abuses in the Philippines! #PeoplesTribunal

    For more information, please visit: internationalpeoplestribunal.org
    In solidarity (and on behalf of the conveners),Angie M. Gonzales
    Coordinator
    International Coalition for Human Rights in the PhilippinesPaul Quintos
    IBON International
    IPT 2015 Philippines Coordinating Secretariat

  • Neither the claws of the Dragon nor the Eagle: we stand for a truly independent Philippines

    Neither the claws of the Dragon nor the Eagle: we stand for a truly independent Philippines

    Press Statement
    June 12, 2015

    On the occasion of June 12, Bayan calls on the Filipino people to stand in defense of national sovereignty and territorial integrity against the foreign powers that seek to tear the Philippines apart. Today we are reminded that the Philippines is not truly free.

    We denounce in the strongest terms the aggressive actions and incursions of China in the West Philippine Sea, in blatant violation of the UNCLOS. China’s imperialist agenda is behind the grabbing of our seas and islands. We vow to resist such actions and call on the people to fight back through the various political and diplomatic means available to us.

    We likewise reject the increasing US intervention in the maritime dispute with China. The US cares not for Philippine sovereignty and territorial claims and is merely concerned with freedom of navigation in international waters. The US is more interested in reestablishing is bases and increasing its troop presence in the Philippines as part of its pivot to Asia. Decades of US military presence in our country has brought us never-ending woes and has severely and shamefully undermined our sovereignty.

    Both the US and China connive to exploit the Philippine economy, including our workforce and our natural resources. Both have economic interests in the Philippines. Both stand to gain from the ongoing efforts to change the economic provisions of the PH Constitution.

    We will not be caught in the claws of the Dragon nor the Eagle. We stand for a truly free, independent and self-reliant Philippines. We stand for an independent foreign policy based on our national interest and respect for our sovereignty.

    We assail the puppetry of the Aquino regime who up to now has no strategic plan for developing the domestic economy and our capacity for external defense. As with the economy and everything else, Aquino relies on foreign interests to boost our external defense vs China. This is precisely what keeps us weak. Aquino has failed to lay the foundation for an effective external defense not reliant and dictated on by the US.

    We are not helpless in the face of the big powers. Our people are our greatest strength. A patriotic movement is now developing to counter China’s incursions and US intervention.

    In the coming days we vow to:

    1.       Continue holding protest actions against the imperialist designs of the US and China.

    2.       Conduct a wide-scale education campaign on the matter of Philippine sovereignty and territorial integrity and mobilize the people for their defense

    3.       Press the Philippine government to undertake the necessary steps to defend Philippine sovereignty in our waters and islands while rejecting one-sided pacts such as the US EDCA

    4.       Press the PH government to nationalize the industries and enterprises of the countries that commit hostile acts against the Philippines

    5.       Fight for national industrialization and genuine agrarian reform as the main requisite for developing and strengthening the economy so that we can have a basis for an effective defense capability.

    We reiterate our solidarity with the working people of China and the US, that they too oppose the imperialist agenda of their governments and promote peace instead of imperialist aggression.

    To Filipino people, it is time to rise up. Tindig, Pinas! Tindig Pilipino! Ipagtanggol ang soberanya at integridad sa teritoryo ng ating Inang Bayan! ###

  • On the Kentex Factory Fire – Statement of the fact-finding team

    Dear friends,

    Karapatan shares with you this statement of a member organization Center for Trade Union and Human Rights (CTUHR)  on the results of their fact finding mission on the fire incident at the factory of Kentex Manufacturing Incorporated which killed more than 72 workers.

    Public Information Desk
    Karapatan

    16 May 2015
    http://ctuhr.org/on-the-kentex-factory-fire/
    Seventy-two (72) workers, many of whom were women, were burned to death and 20 more are still missing in the biggest factory fire that hit the Philippines – the fire that gutted the factory of Kentex Manufacturing Incorporated last May 13, 2015. The company, located along Tatalon Street in Barangay Ugong in Valenzuela City, manufactures rubber slippers for sale and distribution in various parts of the Philippines.

    Labor Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz claimed that the factory passed an inspection on compliance with general labor standards and occupational health and safety standards that was conducted by the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) on September 2014.  The Bureau of Fire Protection reportedly also gave the factory a fire safety inspection certification.

    However, the fact-finding team which was composed of labor NGOs namely, the Center for Trade Union and Human Rights (CTUHR), the Ecumenical Institute for Labor Education and Research (EILER), and the Institute for Occupational Health and Safety Development (IOHSAD), and the national labor center of Kilusang Mayo Uno, which visited the area on May 14, found glaring violations of standards pertaining to general labor conditions and to occupational health and safety. It is most likely that these violations caused the tragic and massive loss of lives in the recent fire.

    These violations include:

    → Mishandling of the chemical Super Seal, which is used as a rubber emulsifier. Survivors of the fire whom the Team interviewed said that the fire started on the ground floor of the two-storey building when the welding spatter from roll up door being repaired by an outside contractor reacted with the chemical that wasunsafely placed on the factory’s floor and was not kept in a separate and safe stockroom.

    This clearly violates Rule 1943.07 on storage of the  Occupational Safety and Health Standards of 1989. The Rule provides that “(1) Significant quantities of commodities with fire hazards greater than ordinary combustible commodities shall be separated from the main bulk by fire walls.”

    → Absence of proper labeling and awareness of the nature of the said chemical. Workers, including the welder who was fixing the gate of the factory compound, were not aware that the chemical is highly flammable as it was not properly labeled. Survivors also said that when smoke started to rise from the sacks of the chemical where the welding spatter fell, there were workers who poured water, which only caused the fire to become bigger. The fire was already huge when the workers attempted to put it off by using the fire extinguisher. Immediately after using the fire extinguisher, they were immediately engulfed by black smoke.

    Absence of proper labeling violates Rule 1093.04 on Marking of Containers which requires “All containers with hazardous substances shall be properly labelled. No employer … shall accept any container of hazardous substances for use, handling or storage unless such containers are labelled.”
    → Absence of proper smoke and fire alarm and apparent absence of fire and safety drill among the workers. Survivors also noted that even when the ground floor was already filled with smoke, workers in the assembly line and the office staff at the second floor still continued working. They said the fire spread so quickly that they were trapped inside and there was no other way for them to go out except through the main door. They also recounted that they heard no fire alarm. They also claimed that workers in the second floor of the building were trapped as it was impossible for them to go through the door with such a strong fire coming from the building entrance. Workers who had been working for years in Kentex have not experienced any fire and safety drill conducted by the management. When asked about the Safety Officer, workers interviewed did not know if there was one.

    These are clear violations of Rules on alarm and fire drills. Rule 1948.01 states that “(1) All buildings having two or more stories in height shall be equipped with fire alarm system and signals of distinctive quality and pitch clearly audible to all persons inside the building.” Rule on 1948.03 requires that “(1) Fire-exit drills shall be conducted at least twice a year  to maintain an orderly evacuation of buildings, unless the local fire department requires a higher frequency of fire drills.”

    → Absence of fire exits. The factory compound had NO fire exits and there were only two gates, one is for people and the other is for delivery trucks. The factory windows are covered with steel grills and chicken wire which could not easily be destroyed even during emergencies. Witnesses said that workers at the second floor attempted to break the windows open until they could no longer be seen from the outside. Workers who were able to escape the compound even had to climb the walls at the back as the gate for delivery trucks was locked. Out of the more than 70 workers on the second floor, only four workers escaped by squeezing themselves through an opening and jumping out of the building.

    Rule 1943.03 requires “(1)  At least two exits shall be provided in every floor and basement of every workplace capable of clearing the work area in five (5) minutes,” and “(6) On every floor, except the ground floor, one of the exits shall lead to an inside stairway or a smokeproof tower, while the other exits shall lead to inside stairways, smoke-proof towers or horizontal exits.”

    With all these glaring and clear OHS violations of Kentex Manufacturing, how did the Department of Labor and Employment release an OHS compliance certificate to Kentex in year 2014? How can the lack of fire exits inside the workplace premise pass the evaluation conducted by DOLE inspectors? If these were pointed out during that inspection, corrective measures could have been implemented to ensure occupational safety of workers in Kentex and evade the loss of lives. The issuance of DOLE to Kentex Manufacturing, an OHS standards violator, as complying to OHS standards, makes DOLE primarily accountable to the deaths of the 72 workers in this tragedy. DOLE failed its role in ensuring that workers are protected and their lives are safe and secure inside the workplace.

    Working conditions

    Kentex Manufacturing Corporation is owned by Mr. Beato Ang and Mr. Ong King Guan.   Apart from the clear violations of occupational health and safety standards, worker survivors in Kentex also reported violations of general labor standards, contrary to the claims made by the Labor Department.

    Only workers who served for 20-25 years in the company are considered “regular” workers, while those who have been working for an average of 10 years are considered “casual” workers. These regular and casual workers comprise a minority of the workforce and receive only the minimum wage despite having worked for the company for many years. Workers say that the union is a “company union” with around 30 members.

    There are more than 100 workers out of the less than 200 workers who were hired by the CGC agency and were receiving only a daily wage of P202 plus P187 to P220 daily allowance, depending on the number of years of service. Agency workers also complain that they discovered that the CGC agency did not remit their SSS, Philhealth and PAG-IBIG contributions and that whenever they complain, the agency would only return their contributions instead of enrolling them in the said mandatory social benefits.

    Workers also complain that they have to bear the heat inside the factory during work hours as there is no proper ventilation in the factory. They claim that they get tired of work not because of the heavy workload but because of the heat inside the factory premises.

    Apart from the daily-paid casual workers who were hired by the manpower agency, there were also workers who were hired on “pakyawan” or piece-rate basis. These workers work for 12 hours a day without formal contract. Mary Ann Tenis, 30 years old and a single parent of three children, was one of the victims. Her youngest was just nine-month old, according to a friend who was waiting for news about her friend. Tenis had worked for Kentex for five months and was hired as a piece-rate worker.

    Almost an entire family was burned to death, with both parents working for Kentex and their three high-school children taking a summer job in the factory. The tragedy orphaned a child enrolled in primary school.

    The victims’ families say that they lost their loved ones and their bread winners in the fire. They are pained by their relatives’ death and they are pained by the difficulty in identifying the bodies of their loved ones and giving them a proper burial. They are anxious about what the future holds, thinking of how they can support family members who were left behind.

    Call for justice, criminalization of violations that result in deaths

    We mourn the death of scores of workers in Kentex and we express our deepest condolences to their families, friends and co-workers. We connect their unjust death with the tragedies that also claimed the lives of 11 construction workers in Bulacan, 8 female workers of AsiaTech in Pasay, 10 construction workers in Eton Towers, and 17 women workers at Novo in Butuan. Many had died but no one had been prosecuted or held criminally liable, constituting impunity in industrial safety.

    Successive occupational accidents leading to deaths of workers only prove that existing policies and rules on occupational health and safety standards continue to fail in protecting workers and avoiding tragic accidents. Even the joint assessment and tripartite monitoring system mandated by DOLE Order No. 131-13 that superseded DO 57-04 – which was much-criticized as for promoting companies’ “self-assessment” with regard to occupational health and safety standards – apparently fall short in ensuring that factories and workplaces comply with occupational health and safety standards.

    Workers’ safety and health cannot be left to the mercy of companies’ self-regulation or voluntary compliance. Workers’ basic rights to occupational health and safety should not be hinged on companies’ voluntarism but rather on strict enforcement by the government. From this perspective, it is justifiable to claim that DO 131-13 is in essence the same as DO 57-04, except that it uses the rhetoric of tripartism. It still still about the government’s abnegation of its regulatory responsibility. With the lack of genuine workers’ representation through a legitimate and independent union, and with the government working in cahoots with employers, tripartism from this end is nothing but hollow mechanism that masks employers’ sole power in the workplace.

    Let not the tragedies in Kentex, Novo Jeans, Eton, among others happen again and claim the lives of more workers. Thus, we demand:

    (1) Hold the DOLE and the Bureau of Fire Protection who gave the company compliance certification accountable for the factory fire and deaths of almost a hundred workers and employees. Investigate the process of inspection for the issuance of compliance certification of Kentex. Impose criminal and administrative penalties/charges (?) to key DOLE officials in-charge of the issuance of the compliance certificate.

    (2) The imposition of criminal and administrative penalties on Veato Ang et al., owner of Kentex, and all owners of companies who have clearly violated occupational health and safety standards that resulted in the death of workers.

    (3) Just compensation for the families of victims, proper benefits for workers who lost their jobs after the fire, and long-term support for orphaned children.

    (4) Repeal of DO 131-13 and immediate passage House Bill 4635 or Workers’ SHIELD  (Safety and Health Inspection and Employers’ Liability Decree) that will make violations of occupational health and safety standards both criminal and administrative offenses, while providing victims avenues for justice.
    We call on the families of victims of Kentex accident to rise up and demand justice for their loved ones. We also call on the people to demand justice for Kentex workers and all other victims of occupational accidents by joining the national day of mourning on Monday, 18 May 2015.
    Justice for Kentex workers and other victims of OHS Standards violations!
    Strict Enforcement of Occupational Health and Safety Standards, not Joint Assessment or Self-Regulations!
    Hold DOLE accountable for the Kentex Tragedy!
    Penalize and criminalize the violators of Occupational Health and Safety Standards!
    End impunity of OHS violations in the Philippines!
    Repeal DO 131-13! Pass Workers SHIELD!
    Struggle against Contractualization! Workers fight for Wages, Jobs and Rights!
    Institute for Occupational Health and Safety Development
    Center for Trade Union and Human Rights
    Ecumenical Institute for Labor Education and Research
    Kilusang Mayo Uno
    ———————————————————————
    PUBLIC INFORMATION DESK
    [email protected]
    ———————————————————————
    Alliance for the Advancement of People’s Rights
    2nd Flr. Erythrina Bldg., #1 Maaralin corner Matatag Sts., Central District
    Diliman, Quezon City, PHILIPPINES 1101
    Telefax: (+63 2) 4354146
    Web: http://www.karapatan.org

  • Disaster Survivors Vow to Continue the Fight for Justice and Rights

    DaluyongLogo

    PRESS RELEASE

    May 8, 2015

    Rehabilitation is not for Sale!

    Disaster survivors from different parts of Mindanao and Visayas converged in Yolanda-stricken Tanauan, Leyte to demand a stop to President B.S. Aquino’s wholesale selling of rehabilitation projects to business ventures in disaster-stricken areas.

    As a national network of disaster survivors, Daluyong calls for “full and independently-verified” transparency in Aquino’s relief and rehabilitation funds amidst widespread cases of corruption by government agencies, local government officials, and non-government organizations and continuing sorry conditions of disaster survivors in substandard housing and in relocation sites that are detached from livelihood sources, high unemployment, and worsening poverty.

    Daluyong leaders, in its national council meeting in Leyte, expressed support to Typhoon Yolanda survivors in their opposition to the business-led “Build Back Better” scheme which they said had only benefited President Aquino’s closest allies in the business sector through the Private-Public Partnerships (PPP).

    Daluyong leaders specifically demanded full transparency on the government’s Emergency Shelter Assistance (ESA) that the Department of Social Work and Development (DSWD) implements.

    “The guidelines set by DSWD only discriminates victims and sets the limits for its availment. ESA should be given to all victims,” said Marissa Calbajao, spokesperson of People Surge of Yolanda Victims.

    Daluyong leaders also called for government’s comprehensive response to the impending drought to hit the country.  The El Nino is already hurting farmers, the prolonged dry season has been destroying crops making farmers who are yet to recover from calamities and farmers in general, fearful of the damage the drought will bring to their communities.

    “The government is ill-prepared for this drought and we are not seeing a comprehensive plan. Unlike typhoons, the drought is a calamity with gradual but far-reaching effects on livelihoods and disrupts the next cropping seasons,” said Felipe de Jesus, of the Unyon sa mga Mag-uuma sa Agusan del Norte (UMAN) who are reeling from the double blows of Tropical Depression Agaton and Typhoon Senyang.

    Daluyong leaders representing different disaster survivors organizations shared common problems facing calamity victims today – commercialization of rehabilitation projects, corruption by government officials and use of rehabilitation projects for early electoral campaigns, heightening militarization, and increasing human rights violations in disaster-stricken areas.

    Among human rights violations are the killing of disaster organization leaders (11 in Typhoon Pablo areas and 1 in Typhoon Yolanda area), military deployment in disaster-stricken areas to pave way for mining and plantation ventures, and red-tagging of protesting disaster survivors, their organization and leaders.

    “Many of the leaders who protested the government’s corrupt distribution of relief aid to Typhoon Pablo victims have been killed. I am facing charges for public disturbance for a mass action demanding immediate relief aid. DSWD Secretary Dinky Soliman and President Aquino are the ones who should be tried and fired,” said Carlos Trangia Sr, chair of Barug Katawhan (People Unite) for their criminal negligence and corruption.

    Daluyong leaders reiterated the chronic problems faced by disaster survivors even before supertyphoons reached their communities.  Most of the regions hit by calamities were already in the top 10 list of poor communities. In a recent survey, Yolanda-stricken area Leyte was catapulted into #1 spot, purportedly surpassing the Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao (ARMM).  Disaster communities have long been vulnerable to destruction due to the large-scale mining activities, logging, and vast agri-business plantations, but despite these warnings, foreign and local corporations continue to proliferate in these communities aided with investment incentives from the Aquino government.

    Daluyong leaders vowed to continue their fight for justice and rights for the victims and survivors of disasters.#
    ——————————-

    Reference: Marissa Cabaljao +639358997858 (People Surge Alliance of Yolanda Survivors), Carlos Trangia +639303143841(Barug Katawhan, Typhoon Pablo Survivors); Rogel Otero (Indug Kautawan, Typhoon Pablo Survivors), Francisco Pagayaman +639361215714 (Survivors of Sendong – Collectives), Felipe de Jesus, Sr. +639076714223 (UMAN, Typhoon Agaton and Typhoon Senyang Survivors)