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Thousands walkout nationwide in National Day of Action for Education
Led
by several progressive national youth organizations, students from all
across the Philippines walked out of their classes yesterday and were
joined by hundreds of out-of-school youth. They held the walkout as part
of a ‘National Day of Action for Education’, a protest against what they
termed an ‘education crisis’ in the country, and its apparent continuation
under a new administration which came to power using promises to reverse
the policies and practices of the previous regime.
Among the NDAE’s organizers are: Anakbayan, a comprehensive nationalist &
democratic youth group; League of Filipino Students (LFS), an
anti-imperialist student organization; the Student Christian Movement’s
Philippine chapter; young artists’ group Karatula; National Union of
Students in the Philippines, the nationwide alliance of student councils;
College Editors’ Guild of the Philippines, the nationwide alliance of
campus publications; and Kabataan Partylist, the parliamentary youth
party. The organizations are advocating a common 5-point agenda, which
they have challenged the new government to adopt:
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Strict regulation of Tuition and Other Fee increases. This includes an
emergency call for the State to adopt an immediate ‘Tuition Freeze’ in
all colleges and universities nationwide.
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Increase state funding of the education sector to the UNESCO-recommended
equivalent of 6% of the country’s GDP (Gross Domestic Product).
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Ensuring the welfare of other sectors in campuses, such as teachers,
government employees, health workers (in the case of UP Manila, which
operates the Phil. General Hospital), and illegal settlers in idle lands
owned by state colleges and universities.
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Ensuring the autonomy and independence of student institutions such as
student councils and school papers. Included in the proposal are other
measures to give students representation in the decision-making bodies
of their campuses.
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Junking and repealing of certain anti-student policies, such as the
Education Act of 1982 and the Campus Journalism Act of 1991.
In
the National Capital Region, many of the participants came from state
universities such as the University of the Philippines-Manila, University
of the Philippines-Diliman, Polytechnic University of the Philippines,
Eulogio Amang Rodriguez Institute for Science and Technology, and the
Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila. They were also joined by students from
private schools such as the Far Eastern University, University of the
East, Adamson University, Lyceum, Philippine School for the Business Arts,
Jose Rizal University, and the Technological Institute of the Philippines.
They were also joined by public high school students, mostly from Culiat
High School in Quezon City.
Students from the UP-Los Banos and youths from the same region (Laguna)
also joined the protest in the NCR. |
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Student leaders from the UPM and UPD Student
Councils, as well as campus parties STAND UPD and ASAP KATIPUNAN-UPM
(courtesy of the LFS) |
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Love Carlos, student
leader from the UPLB (courtesy of Janine de Vera) |
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Youths and students
from the Central Luzon region also participated in the NDAE by holding a
picket in front of the Commission on Higher Education’s regional office in
the province of Pampanga. This happens to be the first youth-led protest
in the region since the military implemented a program of assassinating
and abducting anti-government activists in the said region. |
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Youth and students in the Central Luzon region
picket their regional CHED office (courtesy of Kabataan-Central Luzon) |
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A similar trooping was also done by youths
and students in the province of Cebu. |
x Their press statements is
as follows:
A month after they stormed the CHED Regional Office-7,
students led by the League of Filipino Students (LFS), Anakbayan,
Kabataan Partylist, Student Christian Movement of the Philippines (SCMP)
and Kabataang Artista para sa Tunay na Kalayaan (KARATULA) returned
today to demand the promised action by CHED against the skyrocketing
increases in tuition and other fees by 339 Higher Education Institutions
in the Philippines as part of the National Youth Day of Action for
Education.
“CHED 7 Assistant Regional Director Candelario Aytona’s
statement last June 15 was not strong enough to convince us that they
will forcefully act on our demands,” Kyle Tumbiga, spokesperson of
LFS-Cebu, “So we return today as we promised to repeat our demands for
immediate action to stop the tuition hikes this year.”
The students marched to the CHED office in Sudlon, Lahug,
Cebu City where they held a picket rally. “CHED should be the one
upholding the interests of the students but it has become a mere
mouthpiece for the capitalist educators as it rationalizes the increase
in school fees instead of ensuring the accessibility of quality
education to the Filipino people,” Tumbiga lamented.
The unabated tuition fee increases has been the cause of
the ballooning number of out-of-school-youth as students are forced to
drop out because they are unable to afford the rising cost of education.
In 2009, 5.6 million young people were classified as out-of-school
youth. The state of Philippine education visibly worsened under the
Arroyo administration during which the average increase in tuition fees
rose to 94.72% in the 9 years that it was in power.
Therefore, the biggest challenge for the new
administration of President Noynoy Aquino, who was swept to power by the
promise of undoing the injustices of his predecessor, is to arrest the
decay of the quality of education in the country and to ensure the
availability of education even to the financially incapable.
The protests were held simultaneously with other actions
all over the country as thousands of students walked out of class to
condemn the worsening crisis of Philippine education. “If the
commercialization of education continues, we will become nothing but a
nation of ignorant citizens for we are depriving our youth of a better
future,” Tumbiga warned.
Reference:
Kyle Tumbiga
Spokesperson, LFS-Cebu
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Youth and students in Cebu picket their regional
CHED office (courtesy of Kyle Tumbiga) |
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Meanwhile, students from the University of
the Philippines-Tacloban, in the province of Samar, held a different kind
of protest: a silent march across their entire campus. |
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(courtesy of Karlo Mikhail Mongaya) |
Security guards try to stop the protest (courtesy of
Karlo Mikhail Mongaya) |
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x
Filipino youth organizations in the U.S, including the U.S-based
chapters of Anakbayan and the LFS, issued the following statement:
Solidarity Statement from the
Filipino Youth and Student Movement in the U.S. for the July 16 National
Day of Action for Education
We, the Filipino youth, extend our
most militant solidarity to our brothers and sisters in the Philippines.
We express our admiration and total support to those who are boldly
breaking out of the confines of their universities to intensify the
struggle for our basic right to education.
The struggle against the continued
commercialization and privatization of our education is also our fight.
We also experience continuous, systematic attacks on our inalienable
right to education.
In the belly of the beast, public
education remains under constant attack from neo-liberal policies upheld
by the current Obama administration. As American Imperialism escalates
its assault on its semi-colonies through war of aggression and economic
plunder, it continues to exploit and deprive its own citizens of their
basic democratic rights. Budget cuts degrade the quality of public
education by decreasing student services yet increase class sizes.
Increased tuition hikes and layoffs force working-class students,
faculty and workers to bear the brunt of the economic crisis caused
primarily by the financial institutions of monopoly capitalism.
On March 4th tens of thousands of
students, teachers, faculty, staff and workers participated in hundreds
of actions in 32 different states. The actions in March were a huge
success, but the struggle continues to intensify as the budget cuts
worsen. In New Jersey, 19,000 students walked out of schools to protest
the cuts. In Puerto Rico, University of Puerto Rico students went on
strike for over a month in response to cuts there. Another national day
of action is being organized for October 17, 2010 to continue the
struggle against the continued commodification of our right to
education.
In the home front, we echo our
youth and students’ demand to the newly seated President Benigno
“Noynoy” Aquino III to (1) immediately allocate an emergency fund for
education; (2) to freeze and roll back tuition and other fees; and (3)
to ensure the allocation of at least 6% of the Philippines’ gross
domestic product (GDP) to education. Let us settle for nothing less than
a nationalist, scientific, mass-oriented education for all.
Lastly, we encourage the Filipino
youth to continue and intensify our struggle against the three evils
that burden our people, namely: Imperialism, Feudalism and
Bureaucrat-Capitalism. Let us be bolder in arousing, organizing and
mobilizing an ever-increasing number of youth and students to join the
ranks of the basic masses in our fight to advance genuine independence
and democracy towards a society that prioritizes peoples’ needs above
all!
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U.S-based youth activists from Anakbayan,
ALAY, and POWER also joined the protest. |
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Representatives of ALAY and POWER share their
solidarity message to the NDAE (courtesy of Paul Gallegos) |
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Members of Anakbayan-USA, ALAY, and SINAGBAYAN liven
up the crowd with their progressive rap performances (courtesy of ASAP
KATIPUNAN-UPM) |
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Members of Anakbayan-USA, ALAY, and SINAGBAYAN liven
up the crowd with their progressive rap performances (courtesy of ASAP
KATIPUNAN-UPM) |
Students walkout
from the Mathematics Building in UPD (courtesy of Gold Villar)
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Students from UPD symbolically occupy the steps of
Palma Hall (courtesy of Gold Villar) |
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