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Working class hero Crispin
"Ka Bel" Beltran leaves a living legacy
Today, Rep. Crispin B. Beltran, ANAKPAWIS Party list representative on his
3rd term in Congress, a great labor leader, an incorruptible
parliamentarian, staunch fighter for national freedom, democracy and
international working class solidarity, died at 11:48am at the FEU
hospital in Quezon City due to severe head injuries. He was 75.
We mourn with his family and friends, comrades and colleagues. Yet, in his
passing, he left a distinctive and brilliant legacy of fighting for the
interest of the workers and oppressed peoples. Rep. Beltran is scheduled
to file a bill to remove the e-vat on electric power to lower the rates
affecting his constituents. Rep. Beltran's study of his legislative
measures are for the protection of the underprivileged and other
marginalized sectors.
Crispin Beltran, more endeared to the masses as "Ka Bel", is a living
legend and epitome of militancy and progressive lawmaking in the country.
He is currently the Chairman of the national political party Anakpawis
(Toiling Masses) Partylist and is its re-elected Representative in the
Philippine Congress.
Having been an activist for over fifty long years, Ka Bel is esteemed by
laborers, peasants, urban poor and other marginalized sectors as a true
defender of the toiling masses and staunch critic of privatization,
deregulation and other destructive policies of globalization.
Ka Bel also stands against the United States' war of aggression on Iraq
and its war on terror. He also is steadfast in his call for
respect for national sovereignty and international unity against
foreign intervention.
During the Japanese occupation of the Philippines, at an early age, Ka Bel
volunteered as a courier for the guerillas. After the war, he worked as a
farm hand and janitor to support his studies. He then worked as a gasoline
boy, messenger, bus driver and later on, a taxi driver. At age 20, he
joined his fellow drivers in a strike against unfair labor practices. The
police attacked their picket line, injured many and claimed the lives of
three protesting workers. Since then, Ka Bel vowed to fight alongside the
working class.
He organized the Amalgamated Taxi Drivers Association, for which he served
as President from 1955 up to 1963. Together with Felixberto 'Ka Bert'
Olalia and Feliciano Reyes, leaders of the Filipino labor movement's
militant tradition, he organized the Confederation of Labor of the
Philippines (CLP). He was CLP's Vice-President from 1963 to 1972. Ka Bel
also helped found the Philippine Workers Congress and other labor
organizations such as KASAMA and PACMAP, which de facto asserted their
recognition during Martial Law.
Under the repressive martial law, Ka Bel helped establish the Federation
of Unions in Rizal and the Philippine Nationalist Labor Organization (PANALO)
until KMU was founded in 1980. From 100,000, KMU's membership soared to
500,000 in the 1980s. The establishment of KMU united and strengthened the
people in its fight against the fascism of the Marcos dictatorship.
When Marcos launched a crackdown in August 1982, Ka Bel was one of those
arrested and detained. In November 1984, he was able to escape, and went
back to organizing workers and peasant s in the countryside. When Ka
Rolando "Lando" Olalia was brutally murdered in 1987, Ka Bel took over the
presidency of KMU. He ran for senator under the banner of Partido ng Bayan
that same year and garnered 1.52 mi llion votes but lost due to massive "dagdag
bawas" (ballot and vote switching) scheme of elect ion fraud. He remained
a leader of the militant union until March 2003.
He also became a National Council Member of multi-sectoral alliance Bagong
Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN) which means New Patriotic Alliance) in 1985
and also served as its national chairperson from 1993 to 1999. Ka Bel
became the chairman of the International League for People's Struggles in
2002. He is also considered as one of the pillars of international working
class solidarity in the era of globalization.
From February 2001 to November 2003, he served as Vice President and one
of the three representatives of Bayan Muna (People First) Partylist to
Congress, where he introduced legislations imbued with his high sense of
patriotism and advocacy of the rights and welfare of the marginalized
sectors.
In 2004, he became the representative for Anakpawis Partylist as a
sectoral representative of workers, peasants, urban poor and other toiling
masses.
Ka Bel was cited by the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism as
the partylist representative in the 13th Congress with the most number of
bills and resolutions filed, totaling to 130, and with a nearly perfect
attendance before his arrest in February 2006.
His three-term stint in the House of Representatives has garnered him
awards such as Filipino of the Year and Most Outstanding Congressman for
four consecutive years from 2002 - 2005, and in 2006, was adjudged part of
the Congressional Hal l of Fame - all these and the respect of the public
he reaped even as the Arroyo regime continues to persecute him and his
fellow activists.
After his arrest and year-and-a-half long arbitrary and illegal
detention initiated by the Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo administration, Ka Bel
was proven innocent of the rebellion charges against him. Persecution,
however, persists through the fabricated inciting to sedition case that
the Metropolitan Court of Quezon City refuses to dismiss until now,
despite legal prohibit ions for duly-elected officials to be charged with
crimes punishable by not more than six years of imprisonment such as
inciting to sedition.
In October 2007, Ka Bel exposed bribery attempts by administration allies,
particularly by KAMPI member Francis Ver. He was offered P2 million in
exchange for his support to the weak impeachment complaint against
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.
Ka Bel is survived by 11 children, 29 grandchildren and 5 great-grand
children. His remains will be interred at his home, May 20, at Lot 16, Blk.
30 Francisco, San Jose del Monte, Bulacan, and transferred to the Iglesia
Filipina Independiente starting May 21. ###
(Anakpawis press release, 20 May 2008)
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