Tinig ng Plaridel - 6 November 2018

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Year 40 Issue No. 1 6 November 2018

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When cries of hungry farmers are stifled with bullets

News

Proposed temporary org registration passed to CMC ad hoc comm

ABBYGAIL BOISER

By Kiana Cardeno

SOLIDARITY  (above and below) Groups of female peasant farmers from across the Philippines march towards Mendiola in observation of World Rural Women’s Day, calling on the government to heed its promises on land reform, food security, demilitarization, and improved labor and living conditions for the rural poor.

News  In Sagay, Negros Occidental, nine sugar workers are the latest victims of oppression against the landless Here are some of the greatest ironies about the Philippines. The farmers who till lands from daybreak to noon are mired in decades-long landlessness. The peasants who grace our tables with food are dying from hunger. Rural workers remain the poorest population despite their back-breaking labor and rich production. Sugar workers in Hacienda Nene, Sagay, Negros Occidental were simply asking for land last October 20, and in turn - they got bullets. October was set as the Peasant Month by peasant groups to commemorate the continuous plight of farmers since the implementation of Ferdinand Marcos’ Presidential Decree (PD) 27, the first agrarian reform policy in the country, on October 21, 1972. This year, farmers and fisherfolks, led by Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (KMP), conducted a series of protest actions and forums nationwide, with its call for resistance against worsening peasant landlessness, hunger, and state-fascism. But instead of addressing their legitimate calls, the state’s response is brutal repression.

Inside

PEASANT HARASSMENT AND KILLINGS The land being defended by the peasants is fortified with years of bloodshed of past peasant movements. From the massacres at the Hacienda Escalante and Luisita to the merciless slaughter in Sagay, farmers are hushed from asserting their rights through violent means. The victims of the recent Sagay massacre, members of the National Federation of Sugar Workers (NFSW), were staging their “bungkalan” campaign, when some 40 unidentified assailants gunned them down. All nine bore shots to the head.

Three of the bodies were doused with gasoline and set on fire. Bobstil Sumicad, 52, survivor of the massacre and participant in the “bungkalan,” recalled how he found the body of his seventeen-year old son Marchtil a few meters away from their makeshift tent. “When the gunfire ended and the attackers had left, I ran to our tent to find the lifeless body of my son,” Sumicad said, making an X with his arms, showing the position of his son’s dead body. “All I could do was cradle him in my arms and weep. He was gone and there was nothing I could do,”   → page 7 he said.

ABBYGAIL BOISER

By Abbygail Boiser

Opinion What are you most scared of? page 2

Feature Will it be the end of your favorite food haunt? page 6

Sports What’s next for the Men’s Basketball Team? page 8

The student council-proposed temporary organization registration process has been referred to the College Ad Hoc Committee by the UP CMC College Executive Board (CEB), College Secretary Teresa Congjuico said. The CMC Student C ounc il (CMCSC) proposed a temporary organization registration process while discussion of the Faculty-Student Relations Committee’s (FSRC) organization registration guidelines remained within the College Ad Hoc Committee. The College Ad Hoc is set to make recommendations before the regular faculty assembly in December. The body will either make a decision on the issue or defer depending on the discus  → page 3 sion.

News

UP workers oppose new job order, calls on UP admin to act By Kristel Limpot Around 500 non-contractual workers in the University of the Philippines (UP) Diliman campus are at risk of being transferred to private agencies first thing next year. Joint Circular No. 1, which covers all government agencies including state universities, allows for the contract renewal of existing Job Order ( JO) and Contract of Service (COS) workers only until December 31, 2018. JO and COS workers are defined as those who “cover piece or intermittent work for a short duration” or “undertake special jobs within a specific period of time”. In UP, these workers include the special services brigade, street sweepers, messengers, research and laboratory aides, and teachers who have no existing employer-employee relationship with the university. → page 3


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