Saturday, May 25th

Last update:02:35:07 PM GMT

Headlines:
You are here: Programmes

Focus on the Global South - Philippines Programme

Hacienda Luisita Farmworkers-Beneficiaries Vow to Make their Land Productive; Urge government to review other SDOs and distribute other landholdings under CARPER

E-mail Print PDF

The Farmworkers Agrarian Reform Movement in Hacienda Luisita (FARM-Luisita) and Save Agrarian Reform Alliance (SARA) today claim victory in the aftermath of the Supreme Court decision to distribute Hacienda Luisita, and for the lands to be valued at 1989 prices. The decision validates the decade long struggle of farm workers in Hacienda Luisita and re-affirms that land distribution should be at the heart of government's agrarian reform program.

FARM-Luisita president Renato Lalic said the recent Supreme Court decision to distribute Hacienda Luisita is a strong signal to get CARP out of its paralysis and its critical condition.

"Hindi lamang kaming 6,296 na mga manggagawangbukid ng Hacienda Luisita ang maisasalba sa pinal desisyon na ito ng Supreme Court pabor sa pamamahagi ng lupa kundi ang libu-libo pang magsasaka sa bansa na umaasa na makakamit din ang hustisyang matagal na nilang inaasam," Lalic said.

FARM members vow to make their land productive. Already, they are preparing their farm development plan. "Kahit wala pang isang ektarya mukaha naming, kaya naming paunlarin lalo pa't may suportang serbisyo dahil kumikita na kami ngayon", Lalic added.

Ka Jimmy Tadeo, Presidential Agrarian Reform Council (PARC) farmers' representative, said this should signal a multiplier effect for the government to act and resolve problematic landholdings especially those with similar SDO cases in other parts of the country.

"Now that there's no more legal impediment for the distribution of Hacienda Luisita, DAR has no excuse but to implement agrarian reform immediately. We should compel them to review other SDO cases such as the Hacienda Hernandez in Iloilo, in Mindanao and 10 more in Negros province."

FARM however asked DAR to carefully and immediately resolve the conflict among the farmworkers. DAR needs to talk to the different groups in Hacienda Luisita and collectively come up with acceptable solutions on individual or collective titling and farm development plans.

Farmer leaders from the Save Agrarian Reform Alliance, a coalition of farmers, farmworkers, rural women and agrarian reform advocates pushing for the just and effective implementation of agrarian reform in the country, remain vigilant in the midst of victory. " Bagamat nagdiriwang kami sa ginawa ng Korte Suprema, Mas magiging mapagbantay ang hanay ng mga magsasaka sa posibleng maging sunod na hakbang ng mga Cojuangco. Hindi namin hahayaan gawin nila ang ginawa nilang panggagapang sa korte kaugnay ng isyu sa 20 porsyento ng cocolevy fund, na sa isang personal na sulat lamang ni Atty. Estelito Mendoza ay agad itong pinaboran ng ilang mahistrado ng korte. Mahigpit na panghahawakan ng mga magsasaka ang tagumpay na ito," Ka Ed Mora of Pambansang Katipunan ng mga Magbubukid sa Pilipinas said.

Akbayan Citizen's Action Party today congratulated the farmer-beneficiaries of Hacienda Luisita. Akbayan joined the farmers in calling DAR to immediately and without any hesitation distribute the land to the Hacienda Luisita farmers. The partylist also called on President Noynoy Aquino and DAR to use exceptional political will to distribute the remaining lands without any fear or favor. "The Aquino government must side with the interests of the country's peasants and respond to the underhanded tactics of these landlords with an escalation of land distribution", Akbayan Representative Kaka Bag-ao said. #

For contact or to set interviews with farmer leaders and their lawyers:


Joann Fernandez (for FARM-Luisita/KATARUNGAN): +639198007010

Mary Ann Manahan (for Save Agrarian Reform Alliance/Focus on the Global South): +639062983206

 

Why Land to the Tiller, Why Now

E-mail Print PDF

By Mary Ann Manahan, Focus on the Global South-Philippines/Southeast Asia Program

We are seeing the retreat of agrarian reform as a result of the Department of Agrarian Reform's (DAR) lackluster performance, national government's budget cuts for program implementation, 'reforms' that block land redistribution and an ineffective bureaucracy that has not been responsive to the urgency of completing CARPER targets.

Agrarian reform under the P-Noy government has been marginalized, even de-prioritized as the program's exit in 2014 nears. No amount of "we are on track" pronouncement by Malacañang can refute organized farmers' assessment that CARPER is failing under P-Noy's helm. The non-implementation of CARPER, unfortunately, will affect 1.1 million farmers in the country.

Since February 2012, farmers from all over the country, from different people's organizations and federations, are camped out in front of the Department of Agrarian Reform in an effort to show their discontent over the paralysis of agrarian reform implementation in the country. Their placards and streamers are not only expressive demands but also reflections of the real state of agrarian reform.

Focus on the Global South will join thousands of “Water Warriors” at the Alternative World Water Forum

E-mail Print PDF

Every three years since 1997, the World Water Council (WWC), a Marseilles-based policy think tank run by the World Bank, development aid agencies like the United Nations, the major water corporations such as Vivendi and Suez, water ministries of a number of Northern countries, and water experts and professionals, hosts the World Water Forum (WWF). The forum is a formal gathering of governments, international water experts, development aid institutions, water corporations and other agencies to discuss the fate of the world’s water, likening itself to a United Nations conference. Its sixth edition will be held in the birthplace and heartland of “privatization”— Marseilles, France from March 12-17, 2012.

Civil society and social movement resistance to the WWF have been growing. Thousands of ‘water warriors’, including rural and urban communities, students, trade unions, social movements, indigenous peoples, women groups, and NGOs, from various parts of the world gathered in the alternative WWFs to take part in mobilizations to defend the world’s water. In Marseilles, an alternative world water forum called Forum Alternatif Mondial de l’Eau (FAME) will be held parallel to the official one. This is a space and platform to highlight struggles against corporate control of their water, for activists and movements to share their struggles, learn from each other, strategize together, and collectively build alternatives.

Focus on the Global South will join thousands of “water warriors” at this triennial event. Focus, together with the Reclaiming Public Water, Municipal Services Project, La Via Campesina, the Food and Water Watch, Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy,  Council of Canadians, and other groups will organize a series of workshops around alternatives to privatization, rural water, the financialization of nature, climate change, and Rio+20. For more information about the FAME program, visit www.fame2012.org/en/.

Programme

Theme: 'Public Community Water Management and Partnerships' (Anchored by Reclaiming Public Water)

As the failure of privatisation has become evident, the time has come to refocus the water debate on how to improve and expand public water delivery around the world. The workshops under this theme will focus on how to develop democratic, participatory, social and environmentally sustainable public models to ensure universal access to water and sanitation. 'Public' does not only mean public authorities and public water operators. Where public authorities fail to serve communities, they often organise themselves to build and manage their own people-centred water systems. Solidarity-based partnerships among public operators as well as with communities are increasingly becoming popular. Why is this so? How can we scale up such partnerships? How can we finance public water for all? These workshops will discuss ways to build stronger alliances among civil society groups, trade unions, communities and public water operators in order to advocate for public and community control over our water systems.

Public-public partnerships: strengthening public water and implementing the human right to water

Workshop 1. Friday March 16, 10:00 - 12:30, Venue: Cabaret, Dock des Suds, Marseilles, France

This workshop provides an opportunity to share diverse experiences with not-for-profit water partnerships, which have achieved very different results compared to Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) and privatization. These partnerships are described as public-public partnerships, public-community partnerships and water operators partnerships (WOPs), but are all not-for-profit and based on solidarity. Highlighting the role of communities, trade unions and public operators, this workshop aims to exchange lessons and challenges in such partnerships.

Public water models: ensuring universal access, strengthening and building democratic public water systems.

Workshop 2. Friday March 16, 13:00 - 18:00, Venue: Cabaret, Dock des Suds, Marseilles, France

This workshop will discuss why and how public water models ensure universal access, as well as equitable and environmentally-sound water provision. Public water operator(s), citizen associations, and trade unions will present how democratic, social, and participatory models can be developed from a diversity of perspective and under diverse conditions. To deepen discussions, we will focus on: 1.How to challenge concrete threats undermining public water, and 2.Financing of public water. 

Municipal Services Project Workshop

Workshop, Thursday March 15, 10:00 - 18:00, Venue: Cab. Rouge 1, Dock des Suds, Marseilles, France

Session I: Alternatives to Privatization: Public Options for Water, Health and Electricity in the Global South

This workshop presents the findings of our new book on ‘alternatives to privatization’. It looks at water, health care and electricity in over 40 countries in the global South and celebrates the women and men who are reinventing the meaning of ‘public’. We discuss the diversity of public models that exist, how we evaluate their ‘success’ and how they might be reproduced elsewhere.

Speakers: David McDonald, Municipal Services Project, Canada; Marcela Olivera, Red VIDA, Bolivia; Mary Ann Manahan, Focus on the Global South, Philippines; Yoswa Dambisya, University of Limpopo, South Africa, and Daniel Chavez, Transnational Institute, Netherlands

Session II: Research and Activism: Together in Defense of Public Services

This participatory workshop explores how researchers and activists can join forces in the fight against privatization and the search for improved public services. Examining this relationship is critical to understanding where the movement for public services is going and how research can reinforce action.

Speakers: Greg Ruiters, Municipal Services Project, South Africa; Amit Sengupta, People’s Health Movement, India; Maude Barlow, Council of Canadians, Canada; Carlos Crespo, Universidad Mayor San Simón, Bolivia; and Susan Spronk, University of Ottawa, Canada

Session III: Remunicipalisation: Putting Water Back in Public Hands

Remunicipalisation is a growing trend in the water sector. Defined as the transfer of water services from private companies to municipal authorities, remunicipalisation shows that public can outperform private worldwide. This workshop reviews five recent case studies from Argentina, Canada, France, Malaysia and Tanzania, looking at the origin of the process, the transition period, and the public phase. It offers insights into campaign strategies and lessons learned.

Speakers: Martin Pigeon, Corporate Europe Observatory, Belgium; David McDonald, Municipal Services Project, Canada; Satoko Kishimoto Transnational Institute, Netherlands; Carles Escolano, ATTAC, Spain; and Nila Ardhianie, Amrta Institute, Indonesia

Theme: Climate Change and Financialization of Nature (Anchored by Focus on the Global South and ATTAC-France)

Common goods against the commodification of life and of the planet, strategies and mobilizations of social and environmental movements towards Rio+20 and beyond?

Assembly, Friday, March 16, 13:00-15:30, Venue: Docks B, Dock des Suds, Marseilles, France

This participatory assembly will gather networks, organizations, activists and individuals to discuss strategies and define a common agenda towards Rio+20 and beyond.

Organizations: Arci, Food and Water Watch, Ecologistas en Accion, Ibon, Focus on the Global South, La Via Campesina, Fair, IATP, Council of Canadians, Stop Corporate Abuse, Ritimo, Amis dela Terre, Transform, Aitec, ATTAC-France 

Water, Land and Resources: The Search for Just Solutions at Rio+20 and Beyond

Workshop Friday, March 16, 15:30-18:00, Venue: Cab. Rouge 3¸ Dock des Suds, Marseilles, France

This workshop will be a space for activists and practitioners working on food, land, water and climate issues to share issues, strategies and struggles in the hope to find common grounds and create joint initiatives and collaboration. The workshop will combine information sharing and strategizing. In particular, the session will understand and unpack nature and the links of the multiple crises, identify local challenges and opportunities that communities face and understand what it means for international advocacy, and discuss progressive solutions and alternatives including local water adaptation efforts and agroecological techniques, in the context of Rio+20 and financialization of resources.

Speakers: Wenonah Hauter, Food and Water Watch, USA; Nicola Bullard, Focus on the Global South, Thailand; Mary Galvin, Umphilo waManzi, South Africa; Sheelu Francis, Tamil Nadu Women’s Collective, India; Mae Buenaventura, Jubilee South-APMDD, Philippines; La Via Campesina

Financialization of Nature and Rio+20

Plenary Session, Friday, March 16, 18:30-21:00

The plenary session will feature activists and personalities to discuss the issues, challenges, linkages, and strategies around the issues of financialization of nature, Rio+20 process, and the green economy.

EDSANGANDAAN airing on the Knowledge Channel

E-mail Print PDF

In celebration of the 26th Anniversary of the EDSA People Power Revolution, Knowledge Channel presents the following programs to commemorate one of the most famous, well-known historical event in the Philippines.

EDSAngangdaan: The EDSA Stories Film Festival

EDSAngangdaan: The EDSA Stories Film Festival is part of Focus on the Global South-Philippines’ broader contribution to the 25th Anniversary of the People Power Revolution, under its EDSA Stories Project. 

These short films, each produced under a film grant as well as Focus’s own documentary, EDSAngangdaan: Mga Pagtatagpo’t Pagpapasiya, will paint a broad canvas of Philippine society and history in relation to the three EDSAs over the years. Stories of mothers and wives of the rebelling soldiers in EDSA; stories of farmers, politicians and street children; stories of ordinary lives in extraordinary circumstances. The Film festival presents all these vital stories with the aim of furthering social and historical education, of turning cinema into a vehicle for socio-political change.

 Airing (Philippine Time):
February 19 (9:20pm)
February 20 & 21 (10:00pm)
February 25 (8:40pm)

EDSAngangdaan: Mga Pagtatagpo’t Pagpapasiya

Airing:
February 19 (9:40pm)
February 22 (10:40pm)
February 25 (9:40pm)

The EDSA Stories

Focus on the Global South also conducted over 34 interviews with some of the key personalities who directly participated in or were associated with EDSA 1986. Watch some of these interviews on the following dates:

February 20 & 21 (10:20pm)
February 22, 23 & 24 (10:00pm)

*For the rest of the interviews, you may check their website at edsastories.focusweb.org

EDSAngangdaan: Directors

E-mail Print PDF

Their stories take center stage during the EDSAngangdaan Film Festival on December 7 (UP Film Center) and 8 (Bantayog ng mga Bayani). Click here for more information

Page 1 of 43

  • «
  •  Start 
  •  Prev 
  •  1 
  •  2 
  •  3 
  •  4 
  •  5 
  •  6 
  •  7 
  •  8 
  •  9 
  •  10 
  •  Next 
  •  End 
  • »