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Focus' Letter to PNoy Regarding the deportation of Mr. Joseph Purugganan from South Korea

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On 6 November 2010, Focus staff member Mr. Joseph Purugganan traveled to South Korea to attend civil society events parallel to the official Summit of the Group of Twenty (G-20) in Seoul. Despite being granted a valid visa, and for reasons unknown to Focus, Mr. Purugganan was barred entry to South Korea and was deported back to the Philippines on the same day. South Korean Immigration Police also roughly handled Mr. Purugganan and five other Filipinos in a similar situation.

Below is the letter sent by Focus to President Aquino explaining the reasons for Mr. Purugganan's travel and detailing the circumstances around his eventual deportation.

Subject: Statement of Concern re the deportation of Mr. Joseph Purugganan from South Korea on 06 November 2010

Dear Mr. President:

We are writing in relation to the deportation of six Filipinos from Seoul, South Korea on 06 November 2010. We are the Focus on the Global South – Philippines Programme (Focus Philippines), an advocacy and research group duly registered in the Philippines. We work on the issues of globalization, trade, climate justice, peace and democracy, and the commons. As part of the regional Focus on the Global South based in the Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok, Thailand, we have also been involved in many international advocacies, including the campaign to stop the World Trade Organization Doha round of negotiations, which former Senator Mar Roxas also opposed. We have participated and spoken in various international forums and conferences in Latin America, Asia and Europe. Members of our staff have been invited as panelists, discussants or participants to various events and processes of foreign governments and international organizations like the International Monetary Bank, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, among others. Rep. Walden Bello of Akbayan is one of the founders of Focus on the Global South and continues to seat in its Board of Trustees.

Download the full version of the letter here

Focus's Open Letter to P-Noy

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Not just about Hacienda Luisita; fate of future farmer-beneficiaries at stake

A Supreme Court (SC) ruling against land distribution and in favor of the SDO and the so-called compromise deal offered by the Hacienda Luisita Inc. (HLI) will have far reaching impact not only on the farmworkers in the Cojuangco-owned Hacienda but also on other future farmer beneficiaries. This fight is not only about Hacienda Luisita.

The bigger issue at stake is the fate of the whole agrarian reform program. The SC decision will influence how the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program Extension with Reforms (CARPER) will fare in the next four years. In the SC decision will also rest the fate of the millions of potential agrarian reform beneficiaries awaiting agrarian reform implementation.

This is why it is crucial for President Noynoy Aquino to now take a stand and push for the distribution of Hacienda Luisita. To distribute the lands to which the farmworkers are entitled is to merely follow the law. The failure of the HLI to implement the Stock Distribution Option agreement, which was also a result of a referendum in 1989, has deprived the agrarian reform beneficiaries of the hacienda the purported benefits under the arrangement.  This is the reason why the farmworkers wanted the SDO scheme revoked. Once revoked, the lands that were placed under the SDO should immediately be distributed, something that should have happened years ago if the HLI had not asked the Supreme Court for a temporary restraining order on the implementation the DAR order to revoke the scheme adopted by HLI.

Open letter to Pres. Noynoy re. the inclusion of Passage of FOI as one of his Priority Measures

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20 July 2010

His Excellency
BENIGNO S. AQUINO III
President of the Philippines
Malacañan Palace
Manila

    Thru:

    Hon. Paquito Ochoa
    Executive Secretary
   
    Hon. Julia Abad
    Presidential Chief of Staff
   
    Hon. Edwin Lacierda
    Presidential Spokesperson
   
Subject: Appeal for Inclusion of the Passage of the Freedom of Information Act as one of the President’s Priority Measures for the 15th Congress

Non-government, basic sector organizations endorse UP Dean for top labor post

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 Amid news of political supporters and kin endorsing allies and friends for various posts in President-elect Noynoy Aquino’s government, the NGO sector is tapping on the selection process Aquino initiated as he forms his cabinet, to ensure that the basic sectors’ interests are not sidelined.

In a letter signed by 59 endorsers—39 organizations and 20 individuals—and sent to Aquino, these people recommended Dr. Rene E. Ofreneo, former Dean of the University of the Philippines’ School of Labor and Industrial Relations (UP-SOLAIR), for the post of labor secretary, one of the toughest jobs in government and an often aspired-for position by politicians.

Citing Aquino’s Social Contract with the Filipino People, which underscored the primacy of “integrity, humility and trust-worthiness in public leadership,” the groups said these are the qualities that the 60-year old Ofreneo has exhibited  throughout his eight years of service as SOLAIR dean, as a recognized leading scholar in the Philippines and Asia on labor and industrial relations, as advocate of a pro-poor development agenda and as volunteer arbitrator for the labor department, among other functions he performed.