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11 September 2007
Open Letter of
Concerned Artists
and Cultural Workers to the
NCCA Board
Uphold the People-Oriented Mandate of the NCCA!
The law which created the National Commission on Culture and the Arts
(NCCA), Republic Act 7356, reads… “The Filipino national culture shall be:
a) independent, free of political and economic structures which inhibit
cultural sovereignty…” (Section 4)
It is on this note that we, Filipino artists and cultural workers, express
our indignation over Malacañang’s control and manipulation over the NCCA.
We protest the continued occupation of the office of the Executive
Director by Ms. Cecile Guidote Alvarez. Ms. Alvarez is also the
Presidential Assistant on Culture (PA) and, therefore, biased in favor of
her immediate boss’ political interest. Ms. Alvarez showed her bias during
the 2005 NCCA-sponsored culture summit with the theme , "The Power of Arts
and Media Education in Breaking the Cycle of Corruption and Poverty," that
featured mostly resource speakers from government—supremely ironic as they
are the primarily responsible for corruption and poverty.
Ms. Alvarez allegedly ordered the unauthorized release of additional
funding for the anti-corruption summit. She attempted to move the National
Endowment Funds for Culture and the Arts (NEFCA) without following proper
procedures. She initiates her own multi-million projects and have them
funded by the NCCA.
Ms. Alvarez as Executive Director should be a non-issue if the civil
service regulation is followed-- the office of the Executive Secretary is
to be occupied by a Career Executive Service Officer (CESO). Ms. Alvarez
is non-CESO.
We demand the immediate ouster of Ms. Alvarez and her replacement by an
eligible Executive Director who will abide by the principles of the NCCA
and handle the management and operations of the commission competently and
professionally.
Furthermore, we oppose Malacañang’s "letter of desire" to have Department
of Education Undersecretary Vilma Labrador elected by the NCCA Board as
the new Chairman. Usec. Labrador faces cases with the Ombudsman on shady
deals concerning misappropriation of funds.
We call on the Board of Commissioners to choose a chairman who can uphold
participative decision- and policy- making that emanate from the
Commission's members and who can expend time and dedication for the
commission. Furthermore, we urge the Board to select a leader who can best
represent the principles of transparency and accountability so that the
culture of corruption will not pervade the commission on culture.
We call on the NCCA Board members representing the subcommisions and
thereby the cultural community, to be assertive and continue to pursue the
interest of the culture sector. We call on the Board members representing
cultural government institutions not to be hampered by the baggage of debt
of gratitude. As public officials, your responsibility is to the people
and not to your political patron.
We remind the Board that the NEFCA is an endowment fund for artists and
cultural workers. Its rational is to empower grassroot artists, cultural
workers, and cultural communities so that they can act free of dominant
political and private corporate interests.
We demand the suspension of the revised Implementing Rules and Regulations
as we believe that the process was undemocratic and manipulative and the
implication detrimental to the cultural sector as it effectively decreases
its representation in the commission.
Furthermore, we express our dismay over the Board's decision to terminate
the terms of office of the 2004-2007 National Executive Council
member-volunteers of twenty two (22) National Committees effective June
30, 2007 , while extending the terms of the four SubCommission
representatives to the Board. This act renders the SubCommissioners
representatives of a virtual void.
We thereby demand the immediate resolution of this impasse by convening
the NCCA Summit and General Assembly and the general elections for the
Executive Councils of the twenty two (22) NCCA National Committees and the
four (4) SubCommission Heads. This is urgently needed so as not to further
stall the process of delivering NCCA services, specially in the area of
project grants administration.
We commit ourselves to pursue and uphold the spirit by which the NCCA was
created: that culture should be of the People, by the People, and for the
People.
List of signatories led by:
Bienvenido Lumbera, National Artist
Chairperson,
Concerned Artists of the Philippines
Concerned Artists of the Philippines (CAP) #39 Scout Bayoran, QC tel:
(0632) 927 9260
concerned_artists_phil@yahoo.com
sikat@philonline.com
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Culture of
Corruption in the Culture Commission by Soc Jose, CAP Sec-Gen
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An Inconvenient Truth About
NCCA's Culture
of Corruption and Trapo Patronage
On September 11, 2007, concerned artists and cultural workers brought
their protest against the continuing state control, mismanagement and
politicization of the National Commission for Culture and the Arts before
its very door. The protest rally served as a launching pad for the formal
submission of sectoral demands before the NCCA Board of Commissioners
which was scheduled to elect its Chairman upon pressures from Malacanang.
The four main demands are as follows:
1. The suspension of implementation of the Revised NCCA Internal Rules and
Regulations (IRR) until a system of genuinely democratic consultations is
in place where the genuine voice of a wider cultural constituency is
assured;
2. The upholding and assertion of NCCA's institutional integrity and
independence through rejection of Malacanang's intrusion into NCCA
internal affairs, particularly on the election and appointment of its
leaders which, by law, is the sole responsibility and function of the NCCA
Board;
3. The immediate removal of Ms. Cecile Guidote Alvarez as NCCA Executive
Director on the grounds of violating the Civil Service provisions and
requirements for Career Executive Service Officer (CESO) eligibility;
illegal act of unilaterally moving the National Endowment Fund for Culture
and the Arts (NEFCA) without prior approval and authorization of the NCCA
Board; self-serving acts of pushing for her personal projects which are
inimical to institutional rules and procedures; and her underhanded and
undemocratic management style that promotes divisiveness among the ranks
of NCCA Secretariat and the culture sector; and
4. The immediate convening of the NCCA Summit and General Assembly where
the general elections for the Executive Councils of the twenty two (22)
NCCA National Committees and, subsequently, the four (4) SubCommission
Heads can be held and confirmed.
The protest rally called attention to the impasse and structural vacuum
that the NCCA Board of Commissioners has inflicted upon the entire NCCA
organization. As matters stand, the NCCA Secretariat has effectively
supplanted the functions and mandates of the National Committees,
including the discharge of roles and functions the law assigns to them.
The culture sector at large is now effectively robbed of genuine
representation and voice in the Commission that it helped institutionalize
and sustain.
Presidential appointee Executive Director Cecile Guidote-Alvarez, a
self-exiled artist who escaped to the United States during the Marcos
dictatorial regime, remains the most powerful functionary in an agency
born out of the determined engagement and activism of concerned artists
and cultural workers after the EDSA People Power Revolution. She was
quoted by the Philippine Daily Inquirer as saying that the protest rally
was "initiated by people salivating to become Chair" after declaring that
she was open to dialogues but will not step down from her post.
By her own manipulations, Alvarez has engineered the nomination and
premature appointment of DepEd Undersecretary Vilma Labrador as NCCA
Chairman to replace her nemesis Ambeth Ocampo in complete disregard of the
law and established procedures. On September 11, Usec Labrador was elected
Acting Chairman by a vote of 10-4 through a secret balloting procedure by
the Board. Also elected through the same voting pattern and result was
Corazon Alvina of the National Museum as Acting Vice Chairman.
The elections constitute the latest blow in the continuing marginalization
of the NCCA's main constituencies by the very NCCA Board of Commissioners
mandated to represent and serve them. It clearly draws the line between
principled cultural activism, as demonstrated by concerned artists and
cultural workers on the one hand, and the cowardly act of betrayal and
trapo patronage manifested by the majority of the state-manipulated Board
members, on the other. Clearly, a sectoral loyalty check is in order and
accountability must be determined.
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For whose
interest and authority are the so-called honorable men and women of the
NCCA Board acting?
We ask this of
Komisyon ng Wikang Filipino Commissioner Ricardo Maria Duran Nolasco, he
of the undisputed absenteeism record in NCCA Board meetings who suddenly
showed up in the September 11 Board meeting and unrelentlessly repudiated
the sector's call for suspension of the IRR implementation. In no
uncertain linguistic terms, Commissioner Nolasco pushed for the election
of Malacanang anointed Usec Labrador whose only credential is that of
being Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's political operator at DepEd.
We also ask this of Cultural Center of the Philippines President Nestor
Jardin, an otherwise populist and principled artist- administrator with
whom we previously rallied against Malacanang's intervention on CCP
affairs. Why the silence and indifference to the artists' demands on the
IRR and Alvarez's abuses? Where are the much- touted principles behind the
artists' engaged activism in the CCP debacle which benefited him and his
institution? Considering the unsavory results of the CCP case, which
established jurisprudence on the presidential power of appointment that
continues to haunt all government corporations and entities, the least
that the CCP president could do is to ensure that the NCCA scenario would
not fall under the same bureaucratic trap(o).
We ask the same question of the other government cultural agency heads
represented in the NCCA Board, namely National Museum's Corazon Alvina,
National Library's Prudenciana Cruz, and Records Management and Archives
Office's Marietta Chou. How far can they carry on with their sworn mandate
of preserving the institutional integrity and independence of the NCCA as
prescribed in the law and time-honored traditions?
And to the rest of the NCCA Board Members who continue to ignore the
culture sector's calls for anti-Malacanang intervention, equity of
representation and transparency in cultural governance, how can you cast
your lot with Malacanang and the disgraced leadership it installed at the
NCCA which is largely instrumental for the marginalization of its own
constituencies? Where were you during and after EDSA, when NCCA was being
created to "set directions for and coordinate the participation of the
cultural sector in nation building?" The raison d'etre for NCCA's
existence, as well as the sense of delicadeza and public accountability,
is definitely lost on the majority of the current NCCA Board of
Commissioners.
Through sheer
tyranny of numbers in the smallest but most powerful structural unit of
the NCCA, a trapo dispensation has been forced upon the culture sector.
Left unaccounted for in the process was the absence of logic and disregard
for qualification standards. Usec Labrador is a non-entity in the culture
sector. She possesses neither the stature nor the experience in managing
cultural affairs beyond DepEd's sorry definition and practice of such. She
has not actively engaged the sector in the conceptualization, promotion,
and dissemination of artistic, cultural, and heritage programs. Elected in
absentia, she has, to date, personally attended only one NCCA Board
Meeting since she replaced Usec Fe Hidalgo last year. She is accused of
several graft-related charges before the Ombudsman and is hounded by
accusations of electioneering and partisanship in the 2004 presidential
elections. The herculean tasks and official duties expected of her at the
DepEd will render her NCCA posting ineffective and ceremonial at best, a
situation that compromises the operations of the NCCA Board and portends
greater incursions into power play by the Executive Director.
Malacanang and its lackeys in the NCCA Board, particularly the Executive
Director, may be gloating over their perceived victory after the September
11 Board Meeting. They conveniently forget that the spirit that moved and
sustained NCCA throughout its birthing years remains alive in the hearts
and minds of those who actually toiled for its inception. This spirit will
see to it that all traces of political and cultural patronage, and the
institutions that perpetuate them, will be exposed and held accountable
for the damages that they have wrought upon NCCA, in particular, and the
cultural movement in the country, in general.
- Reform NCCA Now Movement
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