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2011 May Day Statement
by Manny Sarmiento on Friday, April 29, 2011 at 6:21pm
2011 May Day Statement
We at MIGRANTE Austria honor and march with the working people of the
world as we denounce a whole year of betrayal by President Benigno Aquino
III.
Armed with a most welcome promise of change, Aquino was mandated by the
people to drag the country out of the quagmire left behind by the 10-year
rule of his predecessor Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. He made sweet promises on
his 10-point agenda declaring that we, the people, are his „boss“. But
instead of delivering on his promises ( http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/aquino-promises),
he has outrightly neglected the Filipino people’s issues and legitimate
demands in his first year of his term.
As a candidate for President, Aquino talked big about prosecuting and
holding Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo accountable for plunder and gross human
rights violations. Now in office, Aquino continues many of the policies of
Arroyo’s and other previous governments as the socio-economic and human
rights situation in the country further deteriorates.
Facts and figures are available to prove this. But when a third of the
country's 94 million people remain in deep poverty and their numbers
continue to grow by the day, statistics are hardly necessary. We know and
experience it in our daily lives.
The costs of basic commodities and services in the country continue to
rise (http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20110412-330651/Aquino-warned-of-rice-crisis)
and 4.1 million families -- have gone hungry at least once in the past
three months (SocialWeatherStation poll, March 2011).
According to the National Statistics Office (NSO) there are about 2.86
million unemployed and 6.76 million Filipinos underemployed as of 2010.
The daily minimum wage of Php404 is just 2/5 of the estimated average
family living wage (FLW) of Php988 in the National Capital Region (NCR) as
of March 2011.(http://www.ibon.org/ibon_articles.php?id=138). Despite of
this, Aquino refused to legislate a P125 (USD 2.71) daily wage increase
across the board and is instead leaving up the matter to the Regional
Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board – a cheap way to shirk
responsibility.
Owing to the Labor Export Policy implemented by previous governments in
the last four decades, more than 20% of the 36-million Philippine work
force is deployed abroad at a high social cost (including family
separations, various forms of maltreatment in host countries). The
so-called Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) who remit the dollars that fuel
the Philippines' economy are hailed as the country’s present-day heroes
but the government hardly pays more than lip service to their rights and
welfare. The government does not have a system for the repatriation of
OFWs in crisis-struck countries and has neither the will nor the capacity
to reabsorb them into the local work force.
Rep. Rafael Mariano of Party-list, Anakpawis stressed " If only the
government will protect the local industries from smuggling, global
competition and trade liberalization policy, then unemployment and
underemployment will not be a cause of concern." (http://www.congress.gov.ph/press/details.php?pressid=4862
)
Indeed, Aquino has chosen to pursue a policy of subservience to foreign
dictates. In fact, thousands of urban poor families have been displaced
through violent demolition of their homes, public transportation fares
have been hiked, and value added tax has been imposed on expressways --
all in the name of the public-private partnership program pushed by the
World Bank. Large scale foreign mining projects that give foreign
companies a high return on their investments cause environmental
destruction and damage to human lives and human rights violations. It is
also to meet the conditionality of the World Bank that Aquino stopped rice
subsidies via the National Food Authority and created the Conditional Cash
Transfer, a dole-out program prone to corruption by government officials
at all levels.
Not surprisingly, the dictates of imperial power go beyond socio-economic
policy. The Visiting Forces Agreement with the USA continues to be in
force. Aquino has reneged on its promise to review said Agreement
containing provisions that compromise the country’ s sovereignty. Only
several days ago, on the occasion of the visit of 2 US senators to the
country, he started sounding off to the nation the possibility of the
return of US forces in the country’s "former" US bases.
Furthermore, in accordance with the US Counter-Insurgency Strategy for the
Philippines, Aquino implements measures that violate the human rights of
our already-suffering people. (http://www.chrp.org.uk/2010/rights-group-presents-2010-human-rights-report/).
He extended Arroyo’s military campaign upon taking office in June 2010 and
launched at the beginning of 2011 his own Oplan Bayanihan which likewise
seeks to silence voices of dissent specially in the countryside where
peasants and farmers fighting for their basic rights to the soil they
till. Harassment, abductions, illegal arrests, trumped-up charges torture
and other forms of human rights violations continue unabated throughout
the country and the human rights watchdog KARAPATAN documented more than
40 cases of extrajudicial killings during Aquino’s first year in power.
We can fill a book, we can fill a lot of books, to show that Aquino, in
his first year, was not eager to make the government work on behalf of the
laborer, the farmer and the urban poor, the small businessman and has
waisted a good part of his time mismanaging the crises that came his way.
He has not proven that he can be trusted to look out for the interests of
the Filipino people. And there is no indication that the situation will
change for the better within his term. He is not into the peace talks with
the National Democratic Front of the Philippines to achieve peace based on
social justice. He is not for the implementation of genuine land reform,
as one can see from his handling of the dispute over his family’s Hacienda
Luisita. He must have the willingness to assert national independence and
adopt an economic development program based on national industrialization
and enlightened social policies.(http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/8296147/content/66794539-philippine-president-aquino-addresses-the-opening-of-the-public-private-partnership
We believe that only the united action of all working people will bring
the much-needed change in the key areas of our lives. Your solidarity and
support give us enormous strength to press on in our struggle
For more information, please contact:
migrante.austria@gmail.com
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Filipino-Americans Join May Day Rallies Demanding for
Jobs and Legalization in the US
May 1st, 2011
Reference: Bernadette Ellorin, Chairperson, BAYAN USA
email: chair@bayanusa.org
Filipino-Americans Join May Day Rallies Demanding for Jobs and
Legalization in the US
On May 1, 2011, Filipino-Americans across the United States, under the
banner of BAYAN USA, join workers in the Philippines, the US and across
the globe in commemorating International Workers Day, a day designated
around the world to celebrating the ongoing militant class struggle of
workers for living wages, job security, safe working conditions, and a
guarantee to pensions and benefits. Recognizing the ongoing militant trade
union movement at the forefront of the struggle for genuine national
independence from US intervention in the Philippines, Filipinos in the US
are also working to help raise the class struggle in the US with the class
demands for jobs and legalization of all undocumented immigrants.
Unfortunately, the significance of May Day for the working American
majority is one that has consistently been suppressed by the US government
and corporate elite it serves because of the potential threat it poses to
their interests.
Now more than ever, in this time of worsening economic crisis, the unity
between immigrants and workers struggling together in the US of vital
importance. Workers in the US, both citizen and immigrant, play a decisive
role of exposing the bankruptcy of the neoliberal economic agenda
responsible for the worst economic crisis in history. The potential of the
power of this unity has already been recently exemplified in the struggle
of public sector workers in Wisconsin, whose fight united a broad front of
supporters across the country and was partially inspired by people’s
struggles against the impacts of neoliberalism and US puppetry in North
Africa and the Middle East.
As the fastest-growing Asian immigrant community in the US, approximately
four million Filipinos– at least one million of which are undocumented–
suffer first hand from the effects of neoliberalism in the Philippines and
also in the developed countries they migrate to, such as the US, to find
work. As a semi-colony of the US, the Philippine economy is violently
crippled and denationalized by neoliberalism, including the assistance of
a US puppet government, to serve foreign interests. The extraction of
cheap raw materials from the Philippines to imperialist countries such as
the US and structural blocks imposed by the International Monetary Fund
and World Bank to the national industrialization of the Philippines
cultivate a chronic national debt, deepens poverty and joblessness,
creates a desperate army of cheap surplus labor for export, and sows a
tragic culture of forced migration and broken families in the Philippines
largely facilitated through the Philippine government’s exploitative Labor
Export Policy (LEP).
At the same time, the continuing financialization of capital promoted by
the world’s corporate oligarchs, banks, and firms encroachingly devastates
the economies of imperialist countries, such as the US, where the gap
between the ruling elite and the working majority is widening
considerably. This is due to the funneling of trillions in public money
towards war, military production and the unapologetic bail-out of banks
and capital firms. Meanwhile, unemployment skyrockets as the same
joblessness abroad that forces workers to migrate to the US in search of
jobs displaces workers in the heart of imperialism itself.
An emerging dominant trend in fascist, racist, right-wing politics aimed
at sowing divisions amongst struggling peoples continues to sweep through
the US with legislation such as Arizona’s anti-immigrant SB 1070,
Wisconsin’s union-busting Walker Bill, the Tea Party Movement, and the
corporate media’s calculated censorship of people’s resistance in the
country.
Furthermore, the so-called “broken immigration system” in need of
“comprehensive immigration reform” is exposing itself as a calculated
instrument of US imperialism to revive a slave army of low-wage to no-wage
workers by keeping over 12 million undocumented workers in the US cheap,
docile, desperate, fearful, and vulnerable. This serves to further
facilitate the extraction of more superprofits for US bosses and
corporations.
While the crisis of monopoly capitalism continues to prove itself a
deathtrap, and the ruling financial oligarchy is occupied with only saving
itself, it nonetheless provides the best conditions for the development
and advancement of heroic working people’s resistance that have the
potential to frustrate capitalism.The thoroughgoing awakening of a
sleeping giant of workers in the US to the long-suppressed fightback
spirit of May Day and the need for heightened class unity with immigrants
is paving the only real recovery from economic crisis in the US, and that
is to seek a pro-people alternative to its present anti-people economic
system. But when linked in solidarity and in coordination with concrete
international struggles for national and social liberations across the
globe, such as the Philippine movement for genuine national independence
and democracy, its potential to threaten and chip away piece by piece at
the global enemy that is imperialism knows no bounds.
JOBS FOR ALL! LEGALIZATION FOR ALL!
UPHOLD WORKERS RIGHTS!
NO TO BUDGET CUTS! HEALTHCARE AND EDUCATION FOR ALL!
LONG LIVE THE SPIRIT OF MAY DAY IN THE US & THE WORLD!
LONG LIVE INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY!
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