Agdao, Davao City:

People's collective resistance and the intervention of the city mayor

abort the violent demolition of homes

 

Soliman, Agdao, Davao City

 

July 1, 2011

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  Davao City Mayor Sara  Duterte  
   
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Photos courtesy of Karlos Manlupig
   

 

Sinapak Niya Ang Sheriff
Ni Kislap Alitaptap

02 Hulyo 2011

Sinapak niya ang sheriff
Hindi upang hamunin si Pacman
O kaya’y i-knock out sa paghanga
Si Coach Freddie Roach.

Sinapak niya ang sheriff
Hindi upang ipapansin
Ang pagkakahawi ng kanyang buhok
O kung epektibo ba ang kanyang deodorant.

Sinapak niya ang sheriff
Hindi upang patunayan ang
Mabilisang bisa ng Alaxan-FR
O para lang makasapak, paminsan-minsan.

Sinapak niya ang sheriff
Hindi dahil sa alam n’yang tama siya
O maaari rin namang tama siya
Pero, bago pa lumutang ang balitang

Sinapak niya ang sheriff
Mas nauna na SILAng magbarikada
Mas nauna na SILAng magpasyang
“Ang maghimagsik ay makatarungan!” #

 

 

 

 
 
   

 

BAYAN-Southern Mindanao Regions's Statement on the Demolition in Agdao

We condemn the violent demolition in Soliman, Agdao, Davao City which happened just 10 days after the demolition in Tigatto. If it were not of the people's collective resistance and the intervention of Mayor Sara Duterte, the sheriff and the police would have succeeded in ushering the demolition crew in enforcing the demolition order.

The recent demolitions across the country is a slap on the face to PNoy who is bragging about programs for the poor. Displacing the people in exchange of foreign investments and corporate greed is unacceptable.

Note: According to urban poor group KADAMAY, 10 residents were wounded including a 12 year-old girl.
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NEWS RELEASE
July 4, 2011
Reference: Cristina Palabay, Spokesperson (0917-5003879)

WOMEN’S RIGHTS GROUP COMMEND INDAY SARA

Women’s rights group Tanggol Bayi today commended Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte for supporting the plight of the urban poor in Agdao, Davao City by her intervention in the demolition of the houses and shanties in the
said area, that was supposed to affect 217 families in the area, including women and children.

Cristina Palabay, Tanggol Bayi Spokesperson, said Inday Sara, as she is known in Davao, as the first woman mayor of the city clearly expressed her concern on the situation of the urban poor who will be left homeless after the floods hit parts of Davao the past week.

“Inday Sara may have lost all ‘lady's graces’ because he punched a man who is hell-bent on leaving people homeless but she definitely articulated a most graceful support for the struggling urban poor in Davao. What she has done, though it may be in such a form, and the efforts she has exerted to temporarily stop the demolition of the poor’s houses show that local chief executives can intervene and decisively stop the dislocation of the urban poor, if and when they take the side of the oppressed. It is rare that a mayor in this country takes the side of the poor,” Palabay said.

The urban poor group Kadamay claimed that 10 residents were wounded, including a 12-year-old girl, in the violence that broke out at the site before the mayor arrived.

Palabay said “perhaps, without Duterte’s intervention, we could have been faced with more victims of the violent eviction in the said demolition, more than a man with a black eye.”
--
Tanggol Bayi is an association of women human rights defenders in the Philippines to advance women’s rights as human rights. Tanggol Bai is formed to further develop the capability of women human rights defenders to protect and advance women’s, human and peoples’ rights while giving special attention to the rights of WHRDs; to provide a venue by which WHRDs can give mutual assistance to one another especially to those who are facing immediate threats; provide information and facilitate HR education to WHRDs to even better sensitize them to violations of political, civil, economic, social and cultural rights; through common effort, enable WHRDs to effectively forward policies and legislations, fight for their rights and generate resources for the needs of their human rights advocacy; and network with other human rights organizations in the country and abroad.

Contact us at:
2/F Erythrina Bldg., #1 Maaralin corner Matatag Streets
Barangay Central District, Diliman, Quezon City
Telephone: (632) 434 2837
Fax: (632) 435 4146
E-mail: tanggolbayi@gmail.com

 

     
           

 

Press Statement
July 4, 2011

Campus journalists call for a comprehensive analysis of the Soliman demolition

The College Editors Guild of the Philippines (CEGP) - Mindanao, an alliance of tertiary student publications, expressed support to Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte, while at the same time urged for a comprehensive analysis of the Soliman demolition.

The CEGP believes that more than just the issue of the mayor punching the sheriff, the issue on “housing rights” must be given specific focus. “It all boils down to respecting the rights of the urban poor, of a people that are not supposed to be squatters to their own lands. The state that is supposed to be safeguarding such rights of the people must be building more shelters and must not be the fascist agents in destroying houses,” said Paul Randy P. Gumanao, CEGP Vice President for Mindanao.

Gumanao added that “(W)hile CEGP recognizes that beating the sheriff should have been the least possible outcome of the incident, we praise the mayor for being consistent in standing by her people from whom her power emanates.”

He said that “while Mayor Duterte may have violated the right of one person, she defended the rights of hundred poor constituents. I do not see the logic why some people overly reacted to the punching of the mayor. They say it is violent. Yes, it is violent. But, how about demolitions? Aren’t these events more violent?”
The CEGP believes that all government officials whose powers come from the people should do the same courageous act of Duterte in defending as well as upholding the welfare of the majority. More than just protecting her self-image, Mayor Sarah Duterte did what she had to do

“Campus journalists and members of CEGP, must actualize what is meant by ‘student publications as alternative media’ especially now that the guild is celebrating its 80th anniversary. While the mainstream media talk about the mayor punching the sheriff, let us, the campus journalists, discuss the incident as something not isolated from the bigger picture of injustices, poverty and class oppression in the Philippines. Let a comprehensive analysis be done,” concluded Gumanao. ###

For reference: Paul Randy P. Gumanao
CEGP Vice President for Mindanao
09082429474

 

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Mindanao Guilders
College Editors Guild of the Philippines - Mindanao
Email: cegpmin.site@gmail.com

Blog Site: http://www.cegpmin.blogspot.com

 

 

 
 
   
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JUNE 02, 2011
 

Demolition and resistance
 

The protest march last Monday called by the urban poor alliance KADAMAY, to denounce a rash of violent demolitions of urban poor communities in Metro Manila, was quite daunting, what with the sweltering heat under the noonday sun. Nonetheless, my activist instincts impelled me to walk with the diminutive but fiery urban poor leader, Ka Mameng Deunida who, at 80-something, remains at the forefront of their uphill struggle.

What struck me immediately was that many of the rallyists were scrawny women who had even scrawnier babies, toddlers and pre-teens in tow. Even the leaders were mostly women, a testament not so much to women’s liberation it seems, but to the extent of desperation that had taken hold of their households and was forcing the mothers to take a stand.

The protesters’ placards showed that things hadn’t changed much since I began as an activist organizing in urban poor communities some 40 years ago, except that it had obviously gone from bad to worse. The demands remained to be “No to demolitions! Yes to jobs, decent wages, affordable housing, education and health care!” and a fairly new one “Stop urban militarization!”

President Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III had signed a 10-Point Covenant with the Urban Poor as a presidential candidate and had promised an end to forced evictions. According to the pro-Aquino Urban Poor Advocates, Mr. Aquino was also committed to “decent relocation” that meant “relocation with quality housing, adequate basic services and sustainable livelihood support.”

The return to the practice of forced evictions under the Aquino watch jolted many urban poor communities back to the harsh reality that after elections, they were back to being “eyesores” and “hazards to public safety”.

Six months into his term, Mr. Aquino was forced to grant a four-month moratorium on demolitions after the valiant defense by residents of their sprawling urban poor settlement in North Triangle, Quezon City. Their homes were being wrecked by the National Housing Authority to give way to a public-private-partnership with a real property developer, Ayala Land, whose owners had supported Mr. Aquino’s presidential bid.

The urban poor have shown that pushed to the wall, they can and will fight back. Stopping the demolition teams by sheer street fighting is a valuable lesson that the urban poor have learned instinctively. As they learn about the roots of their poverty and insecure existence in the cities, their true empowerment begins.

Last April, DILG Secretary Jesse Robredo filed a report to Mr. Aquino on the problem of “informal settlers”, using the more politically-correct term in place of the pejorative one, “squatters”, that is still in use by government, mass media and private property owners.

To his credit, the report forthrightly acknowledges the extent of the problem – 556,526 families, whose total members comprise 25% of the projected 11.5 million population in the National Capital Region for 2010 (NSO).

It also candidly states that the “current and projected government shelter programs are inadequate to fully and effectively address the challenge”. The current shortfall is a whopping 523,765 units.

The Robredo report bats for making shelter a top priority of the national government with the requisite mobilization of financial resources from both the national government and LGUs. It highlights the fact that the average Philippine annual expenditure on housing from 2001-2007 was only .089% of GDP, far below what other southeast Asian countries were spending, from a high of 2.089 in Singapore to a low of .383 per cent in Malaysia.

It also calls for “socially inclusive urban redevelopment schemes” or those that provide poor, working people, whose labor is necessary to any society, a decent place to live.

This translates to a policy wherein “on-site housing solutions shall be exhausted first before considering in-city resettlement, then near-city resettlement and as a last resource, off-city resettlement.” And in order to accomplish on-site or in-city resettlement, the report advocates medium-rise or high-rise buildings to increase density of the population using a “vertical solution”.

A critical point is underscored: while initial capital outlay for such vertical housing is higher than current estimates of off-city relocation, most planners fail to take into account the latter’s attendant social and economic costs.

These include additional government costs in providing basic services (eg water systems, schools, hospitals); costs to the urban poor such as loss of livelihood or hiked transportation expense to commute to and from work or school; and separation of breadwinners from their families because livelihood opportunities are absent in relocation sites.

Of course, government has a habit of dislocating slum dwellers from their already difficult and precarious living conditions only to throw them out into the streets or cart them off to unlivable, far-away relocations sites, hidden from view. That way, they don’t have to bother about any added costs to the government. Moreover, who cares about how the urban poor fare.

The Robredo report, though a welcome departure from previous anti-people government approaches to the “challenge” posed by the urban poor, still fails to address the “push” and “pull” factors underlying the relentless mass migration of rural folk to the cities and the exacerbation of urban poverty and blight as a consequence.

In an earlier column, I tried to summarize these factors; to wit: “The underlying causes of this ever increasing rural to urban exodus are deeply rooted in landlessness (farmers dispossessed, evicted from land they till by land grabbers, land conversion, etc.); entrenched rural poverty and agricultural backwardness (aggravated by neoliberal policies of import liberalization and deregulation, e.g. the removal of agricultural subsidies); landlord and state suppression of peasant struggles against feudal oppression and exploitation; and the continuously deteriorating and overall stultifying living conditions in the countryside.” (See “No titles”, Streetwise 30 September 2011.)

This month the Reciprocal Working Committees on Socio-economic Reforms (RWC-SER) of the Philippine government and the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) meet again to thresh out the provisions of a bilateral agreement that, if inked, could lay the basis for a negotiated political settlement of the armed conflict that has been raging for more than four decades.

The plight of the urban poor is squarely addressed in a fundamental and thoroughgoing way by the NDFP in its proposals for a Comprehensive Agreement on Socio-economic Reforms (CASER).

The NDFP calls for abolishing land monopoly in the rural areas and redistributing land to the tillers for free; establishing rural industries and supporting agricultural production in order to squarely address the rural poverty that drives mass migration to urban centers.

National industrialization on the other hand is recognized as “the key to a modern and diversified industrial economy” that can ensure livelihoods for the people, guarantee the satisfaction of their basic needs, bring about rapid and sustained economic growth and achieve economic independence from unwanted foreign domination. In this way decent jobs and other livelihood sources are generated for a burgeoning population, greater social wealth is created and government resources are beefed up as well to be used for the common good.

The Robredo report has been sitting on Mr. Aquino’s table unacted upon for more than two months.

Meanwhile the heartless demolitions are back with a vengeance; so too, the people’s growing resistance.

Dr. Carol Araullo

Published in Business World

3-4 June 2011

 

 

 

     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
           
     
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