Reference: Florida
"Pong" Sibayan
AMBALA Chairperson, +639293201477
July 27, 2014
A new video by the Unyon ng mga
Manggagawa sa Agrikultura (UMA), Tudla and the Luisita Watch network narrates
the saga of farmworkers and reports on the current state of land reform and
human rights in Hacienda Luisita. The 13-minute video primer can be accessed
via Youtube:http://youtu.be/2jyAB7So5Yc
In the President’s State of the Nation
Address (SONA) last year, President BS Aquino made special mention of his
family’s controversial sugar estate, Hacienda Luisita with promises of land
distribution and social justice. “Kung may isa man pong paksang paboritong ikabit sa pangalan ko,
ito ay ang Hacienda Luisita,” Aquino said,
while claiming that land distribution was underway, not only within his family’s
long-disputed estate but in all other landholdings covered by the Comprehensive
Agrarian Reform Program (CARP).
Days before this
year’s SONA, however, farmers in Hacienda Luisita continue to
struggle with landlessness. Today, more than a hundred farmers have been
evicted or are currently under threat of eviction from foodcrop farms they have
been tilling for nearly a decade. In fact, whole communities are under constant
threat of being wiped-out to make may for grand plans to convert the estate into
a commercial hub, while the Cojuangco-Aquinos continue to control the sugar
plantation and mill.
During the 2013 SONA, Aquino played his
usual blame game and attributed land reform backlogs to the previous
administration’s “defective land records system.” But Aquino, who was already
President two years before the SC proclaimed its landmark decision on Hacienda
Luisita, cannot invoke blamelessness. He not only failed to push his relatives
to withdraw their opposition to the just prospect of land distribution – he
directly used power and influence to ensure his family’s hold on Hacienda
Luisita.
The current fiasco over bribery and
landlord compensation culled from Aquino’s patently anomalous and
unconstitutional Disbursement Acceleration Program (DAP) says
it all.
Out of the 6,453-hectare
estate, only 4,915 were declared agricultural in use under the
Hacienda Luisita, Inc. (HLI) Stock Distribution Option (SDO) scheme which the
SC revoked in 2012. Upon election, Aquino proudly proclaimed that he has
divested all shares in the family sugar business that he directly managed – but
played dumb as to the existence of more than a thousand hectares of Luisita
agricultural land that the first Cojuangco-Aquino President, his mother, Cory,
“hid” from CARP in 1989. If PNoy really wanted to prove “good faith,” he could
have easily pointed these areas out without reference to the “defective records
system,” and immediately ordered distribution of more than a thousand hectares
of Luisita land, even before the SC decreed the same for the rest of the 4,915
under HLI.
These “hidden” agricultural lands have
actually “resurfaced” around the same period as last year’s SONA – and have
since been fenced and heavily-guarded by armed private personnel, police and
military units beholden to yellow corporations like TADECO, Luisita
Realty Corporation (LRC) and the Central Azucarera de Tarlac (CAT). In
December 2013, the DAR did issue a belated notice of land reform
coverage (NOC) for some 358 hectares in two Luisita
villages, but this NOC did not stop the Cojuangco-Aquino family from evicting
farmers, bulldozing ready-to-harvest palay, and slapping trumped-up charges
against hundreds of tillers. A full company of the 3rdMechanized
Battalion is even stationed within a 250-hectare area claimed by TADECO.
In the 2013 SONA, Aquino
also promised that his administration can definitely accomplish the issuance of
NOCs for ALL CARP-covered landholdings all over the country by
this year. However, no other NOCs have so far been issued even for
landholdings under Cojuangco firms in Luisita. The sugar mill CAT,
where Presidential sister Kris Aquino sits as a director, is
actively contesting coverage of hundreds of hectares claimed by
farmworkers. Today, thousands of the so-called “beneficiaries” have
been dislocated, or are under threat of wholesale disqualification. The DAR’s
chaotic lot allocation process cunningly complemented the rampantaryendo (lease)
system and buy-back offers unleashed by yellow
financier-agents.
Unknown to the public – principally to
most of the 52 survivors and relatives of victims who filed the complaints –criminal
charges against perpetrators of the 2004 Hacienda Luisita massacre were
dismissed in 2010, during the very first year of BS Aquino’s term as
President. Today, more human rights violations are piling up in Hacienda
Luisita.A farmer leader was murdered last November. Burning of
farmhuts and homes, destruction of crops, and looting of farm animals and tools
have become common occurrence. Farmers are mauled, serioulsy injured,
nabbed and detained in series of incidents involving private security men,
police and the military.
Even the DAR has been
directly involved in evicting tillers and destroying crops using government
equipment and resources. Incidents last June 25, July 3 and 8 have
resulted in the destruction of a farmhut and around 50 hectares of productive
palay and organic food crop farms cultivated under the AMBALA’s bungkalan. Another
questionable eviction notice was issued farmers only last week, stating that a
cooperative farm hut will be destroyed by the DAR today, July 27, a Sunday – a
day before the President’s SONA.
With the reign of
terror and impunity perpetually hanging over Hacienda Luisita, farm workers can
only pin their hopes in the campaign to oust this corrupt and despotic landlord
president. ###
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Unyon ng mga Manggagawa sa Agrikultura
Unyon ng mga Manggagawa sa Agrikultura
(Agricultural Workers Union)
Philippines
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