Category: Regularization

  • The Diminishing Respect for Human Rights in the Philippines

    The Diminishing Respect for Human Rights in the Philippines

    Filipino migrants and solidarity friends in Rome Dec. 7, 2017

    Press Statement
    10 December 2017

    “Is the promised of change possible by the Duterte government, while the nation becomes the bloodshed of unjust killings and terror? In a state where life and dignity of every person have no more values but hatred for the poor and oppressed?” Fr. Herbert Fadriquela, Chairperson Migrante Europe

    On the 18th month of Duterte’s Presidency, he turns the state into much alarming human rights situation. His anti-poor campaigns, the war on drugs and withdrawal on peace talks, have put the most marginalized sector of Filipinos in vulnerability and abuse; indeed the European communities became vocal on strong criticism against Duterte’s arrogance and madness, his dictatorship, and fascist rule.

    Most Filipinos remain poor despite Duterte’s anti-poverty pledge “to transform the Philippines into a prosperous, predominantly middle-class society.” Recently, when the urban poor headed by Kadamay who trooped to NHA to demand the distribution of idle houses, they were confronted by violent dispersal by the state security forces and results to the serious injuries to protesters and the illegal arrest and detention of a Migrante campaign staff.

    It is estimated that 44% of the urban population live in slums (UN-Habitat). In Manila, 3.1 million are homeless. An estimated 1.2 million children sleep rough, with more than 70.000 in Manila. A genuine housing program for the poor and homeless is the economic, social and cultural right to adequate housing and shelter. Economic prosperity is an illusion when a great number of populations are denied proper housing right.

    Duterte’s notorious war on drug triggered an international alarm and global protests of human rights advocacies group and Migrante chapters abroad. As of August 2017, the death toll has now reached 13,000. An estimated 3,451 “drug personalities” have been killed in gun battles. Another 2,000 more died in drug-related homicides, including attacks by masked gunmen on the motorcycle and other assaults, while the 8,200 homicide cases are under investigation.

    Since June 2016, when Duterte took office, there have been at least 30 minors killed. The killing of Kian de Los Santos, 17 years old and a son of an OFW, who witnesses said was falsely accused of being a drug dealer, heightened mass protests, and outrages over Duterte’s ruthless war on drugs.

    Much worse, following Duterte’s issuance of proclamation 360, formally terminating peace talks with the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP)-National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) last November 23, members of human rights fact-finding mission in Negros Oriental were attacked by suspected state forces that claimed the lives of Elisa Badayos, regional coordinator of KARAPATAN, and peasant organizer Eleuterio Moises. With the government tagging CPP-NPA as a terrorist group and accusing progressive militant organizations of conspiracy, there will be more killings, illegal arrests, and detention of activists and mass leaders.

    According to KARAPATAN, from July 2016 to November 2017, there were 924 illegal arrests without detention and 256 arrests in detention. Currently, there are 449 political prisoners facing trumped-up charges, including Bishop Carlos Morales, who was arrested last May.

    Bishop Morales, the Bishop of Ozamis in the Iglesia Filipina Independiente, or Philippine Independent Church (IFI), was charged with “illegal possession of firearms and ammunitions.” According to the World Council of Churches (WCC), Bishop Morales is a respected church leader from the IFI, a member church of the World Council of Churches, and is well known for his activism for dialogue, justice, and peace in Mindanao.

    Amid the crackdown and mass arrest, the human rights advocacy groups and broadest Filipino mass organizations and abroad including Migrante Europe will continue its fight against all forms of repressions and oppression by the present regime.

    From December 10, the International Human Rights Day and the International Migrants Day on December 18, Migrante Europe and its chapters, members, and allied organization will hold protests, significant events to denounce the human rights violations committed by the state security forces and the Duterte government against the Filipino people.

    The following cities in Europe will hold protest and actions on the said occasion above:

    December 10 – AALST Belgium –Stop the Killings
    December 10 – Migrante France
    December 11 – Migrante The Hague, Netherlands – Filipino Against Corruption
    And Tyranny
    December 11 – Brussels – Stop the Killings International
    December 16 – Rome – Italy wide protest for Migrants and Refugees on “Rights without Borders.

  • INTERNATIONAL MIGRANTS ALLIANCE-USA (IMA-USA) STATEMENT FOR MAY DAY 2017

    INTERNATIONAL MIGRANTS ALLIANCE-USA (IMA-USA) STATEMENT FOR MAY DAY 2017

    Migrant Workers and Refugees Rise Up!

    Build solidarity with workers and oppressed and exploited peoples of the world!

    The International Migrants Alliance-USA Chapter (IMA-USA) stands with all the workers of the world on May 1st, International Workers’ Day.

    Ironically, it was in the United States where International Workers’ Day was initiated. Workers in Chicago started a general strike on May 1, 1886 to demand an 8-hour work day. A few days later, some workers were killed by state forces, prompting the bombing at the Haymarket Square, also known as the Haymarket Massacre. Around the world, International Workers’ Day has been commemorated on May 1, except for North America — the United States and Canada.

    In recent years, the workers and migrants rights movement in the United States has reclaimed May 1 as International Workers’ Day. In December 2005, the Border Protection, Anti-Terrorism and Illegal Immigration Control Act, also known as H.R. 4437 or Sensenbrenner Bill, was proposed in the 109th United States Congress criminalizing working-class undocumented migrants and those who would be found helping them. This prompted the mobilization of millions of migrant workers into the streets in different parts of the country on May 1, 2006.

    As the United States of America enters a new period under the Trump administration in 2017 — a brazenly fascist, racist and anti-im/migrant president — within his first 100 days in office, we have seen his administration attack immigrants, migrant workers, and working-class people of color through his proposed Executive Orders.

    Banning of Muslims, heightened raids in communities, profiling people of color in different parts of the country, continuous deportation of migrants and his plans of building the wall at the Mexican border are only the beginning of his open anti-im/migrant attacks. Trump has also made clear in his pronouncements that refugees are not welcome to the United States.

    As migrant workers and refugees, we have long been forcibly displaced victims of the ravages of U.S. Imperialism. With its huge demand for cheap labor to sustain its capitalist needs, to the imperialist and proxy wars that the U.S. has been waging all over the world, displacing peoples from their home countries and resulting in forced migration and the current refugee crisis, Trump has only intensified the U.S. imperialist crises in different global regions. We can expect Trump to continue the horrendous legacy of past U.S. presidents, but we predict he will only worsen these problems, including the climate crisis as a professed climate change denier.

    In this light, we call on all migrant workers and refugees to stand up against this new face of U.S. imperialism, still the most powerful among the world super-powers. Trump has pitted the U.S. working class against migrant workers and refugees, and so we must strive to create bridges, not bans or walls, to connect our struggles together.

    We must build the broadest alliances and mass movements with the working-class peoples and the most oppressed and exploited communities around the world, forging strong international solidarity to resist the neoliberal policies advanced by U.S. imperialism and its representatives across the globe.

    This May Day 2017, just like when it was called for in 1886, we support the calls for a general strike and to shut down businesses who do not support the struggles of the working-class, whether migrants, people of color and/or U.S.-born.

    A tyrant can only be defeated by the people’s collective voices, efforts and power.  Let us march together as IMA-USA and advance people’s movements and struggles to greater heights!

    Migrant workers, refugees, and workers of the world unite!

    No to deportations! No bans! No walls! No to U.S. imperialist wars!

    ###

    http://tinyurl.com/imausa-mayday2017

  • Migrant and Local Workers Unite: Fight back against Imperialist Offensives

    Migrant and Local Workers Unite: Fight back against Imperialist Offensives

    The International Migrants Alliance (IMA) stands in solidarity with workers of the world in celebrating the International Labor Day. The International Labor Day is highly significant for it commemorates the unity of workers around the world as they fight for decent jobs, living income, human rights and justice. This year, as imperialism intensifies its attacks on migrant and local workers and peoples, all the more we need to strengthen our solidarity and fight back.

    Yesterday, April 30, various Hong Kong-based Indonesian members of IMA went to submit their petition to Indonesian president Joko Widodo but were physically blocked, harassed and intimidated jointly by Hong Kong and Indonesian security forces. This high-handed response fortifies the notion of migrant workers as security concerns, instead of people with rights and entitled to social protection and dignity.

    Migrants and refugees all over the world continue to be targets of attack as imperialist offensives heighten. Immigrants, migrant workers and refugees in the US, Europe and other developed countries are confronted with racism, chauvinism and hate crimes as right-wing governments take over, neofascism rises and oppressive policies are enacted. Anti-migrant hysteria is being fanned and migrant workers are targeted as scapegoats – practically endangering their lives. Government security through its police and military has been heightened as racial profiling becomes prevalent.

    This smacks of the hypocrisy of governments mouthing safe, orderly and regular migration for all. Under the global neoliberal regime, both sending and receiving governments have already systematized the export of cheap and docile labor yet completely violating the rights of migrant workers through various anti-migrant legislation and practices. This they do as they continue to impose anti-worker policies like labor flexibility and contractualization, further assaulting the working people and contributing to increased global unemployment.

    From the depression of wages to commodification of labor, from the outright denial of rights of workers to brutal dispersals of workers’ protests, from legislating repression to actual waging of wars, imperialism is putting migrant and local workers in the line of fire as it attempts to salvage itself from a worsening crisis that it itself has created.

    While imperialist powers scuffle to have hegemonic control over and plunder oil and other resources of other nations, it worsens its own crises while intensifying the displacement and sufferings of the peoples of the world through militarism and war. The war-mongering Trump regime is now hell-bent in justifying a military onslaught on North Korea while continuing the war in Syria. Actions similar to this exacerbate the refugee crisis and the dislocation of peoples, including many children.

    This environment of injustice builds in us the resolve to arouse, organize and mobilize our sector to collectively resist and struggle. We will mobilize in hundreds, in thousands, as we join our local working brothers and sisters in resisting the numerous neoliberal attacks on our jobs, wages, livelihood, and rights.

    The formation of the International Migrants Alliance and the continuing growth and expansion of the global migrant movement are concrete expressions of the willingness and resolve of migrant workers, joined by refugees and displaced peoples, to continue and heighten the struggle for their rights, welfare and dignity.

    We will continue to challenge this system that perpetuates the unequal and unjust treatment of marginalized peoples, especially migrant and local workers. We will not stop until we achieve a world without imperialist oppression, exploitation and war and where justice, peace and prosperity for all exist. #

    Reference:
    Eni Lestari, chairperson

  • Philippine migrant workers unite with working people in France

    Philippine migrant workers unite with working people in France

    Solidarity Statement
    May 01, 2017
    Greetings of Solidarity!

    We, United Filipinos in France (NPSP), express our support and solidarity with the working people in Europe on the occasion of the May 1st International Workers’ Day. We recognize this as a day of struggle and mobilization for social change and justice, and for solidarity among working peoples around the world.

    As migrants who have been forced to leave our homelands due to extreme poverty, unemployment and state repression, we are one with all the workers and peoples of the world fighting for better wages and better working conditions both in the Philippines and abroad.

    In the Philippines, workers are confronted with the oppressive practice of contractualization and extremely low wages, not even enough to provide for the basic necessities of their families. Here abroad, we suffer from homesickness, unstable residency status, the effects of anti-immigration policies and exploitation.

    There is a great need to address the root causes of systematic and forced migration in the Philippines. For as long as there are no opportunities for decent jobs and livelihoods in our own land; for as long as there is landlessness in the countryside and labor contractualization; and for as long as there is poor social services — thousands of Filipinos will continue to go abroad every day.

    We join our hands together with all the working class and call on governments to address the plight of migrant workers rather than taking advantage of our remittances. Look into migrants´ working conditions as we and our families have been in great suffering being away from each other and having to experience the system failures imperialism has created such as discrimination, racism and exploitation.

    On International Workers´ Day, we join people from all walks of life out in the streets to show our collective strength and echo our call for solidarity, justice, and emancipation of the working peoples from capitalist exploitation.

    Workers of the World Unite!
    Long Live International Solidarity!

    Nagkakaisang Pilipino sa Pransya (NPSP)

    Migrante Europe

    For references:
    Marie Mercado, Secretary General, NPSP
    Email: [email protected]
    Mobile No. (+33) 771808910

    Revd Fr. Herbert F. Fadriquela Jr.
    Chairperson, Migrante Europe
    Chaplain to the Filipino Community
    Diocese of Leicester
    Church of England
    Email: [email protected]
    Mobile No. +447456042156

    Ann Brusola, Secretary General, Migrante Europe
    Email: [email protected]
    Mobile No. (+39) 3278825544

     
  • A First Rally Experience in Paris in the time of #OccupyBulacan

    A First Rally Experience in Paris in the time of #OccupyBulacan