This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. IV, No. 52, January 30 - February 5, 2005
NEWS AT A GLANCE Macapagal-Arroyo pressed to
intervene in Malaysia A Party-list House
representative appealed Jan. 28 to Congress to urge President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
to exert all diplomatic efforts to press the Malaysian government in extending
its Jan. 31 deadline for the deportation of alleged illegal migrants including
some 170,000 Filipinos. Anakpawis (toiling masses)
Rep. Crispin Beltran also denounced Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto Romulo for
his inaction on the imminent deportation of Filipino workers. Aside from the deportation
threat, the Malaysian government has said it will prosecute all arrested
undocumented migrants on pain of imprisonment and caning. In 2001, hundreds of
Filipinos were herded like cattle into ships and repatriated to the Philippines.
At least six Filipino children were among those who died. Bulatlat * * * Hacienda Looc bombing a
prelude to Luisita-like carnage? The secretary general of
Anakpawis party-list has accused government authorities of using military force
to harass farmers of Hacienda Looc in Nasugbu, Batangas who are opposed to the
Harbor Town project of the Manila South Coast Development Corporation (MSDC). The incident, said
secretary general Cherry Clemente in a Jan. 24 statement, “smacks of the same
brazen violence and illegality shown in the tragic massacre of the Hacienda
Luisita strikers last November. Osmundo Bautista, a leader
of the farmers group Ugnayan ng Mamamayan Laban sa Pagwasak sa Kalupaan sa
Hacienda Looc (Umalpas-Ka), and several others were injured when MSDC, the LRTK
Construction, and the 310 Construction reportedly used dynamites to level the
land owned by the Hacienda Looc's farmers. Demolitions started after
the MSDC's incursions into the 8,650-hectare Hacienda Looc, south of Metro
Manila, which had been marked for land redistribution to its resident-farmers.
The MSDC is going ahead with its controversial eco-tourism project which is
expected to displace thousands of farmer families. The case is pending at the
Supreme Court. Bulatlat * * *
8 of 10 Filipinos thumb down water rate hike Eight out of 10 Filipinos
think that the rate hike implemented starting this month by Maynilad Water
Services Inc. and Manila Water Company Inc. is unreasonable, according to the
latest survey by Ibon Foundation. The Metropolitan Waterworks
and Sewerage System (MWSS-RO) allowed private concessionaires Maynilad and
Manila Water to increase tariffs by 52 percent and 16 percent, respectively.
From P19.92 per cubic meter in 2004, the average tariff of Maynilad is now
P30.19, while Manila Water raised its average tariff from last year's P13.99 to
P16.17. Asked if the water rate
increase of Maynilad and Manila Water is reasonable, 83.47 percent of the 1,313
respondents said no. Only 3.2 percent said yes while 13.33 percent said they
don't know. Bulatlat * * *
Soldiers, cops real threat to Luisita strike - KMP The militant peasant
organization Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (KMP) demanded Jan. 28 the
withdrawl of all policemen deployed in the strike-bound Hacienda Luisita sugar
estate. The pullout, KMP secretary general Danilo Ramos said, would create the
conducive atmosphere for resuming negotiations between the Cojuangco-Aquinos and
the strikers. In a dialogue with
Philippine National Police Chief Director General Edgardo Aglipay in Camp Crame,
Quezon City, Ramos said that labeling the strike being maintained by thousands
of unionized farm workers and milling laborers at Hacienda Luisita as a national
security matter "a pretext to justify their increasing presence in the estate."
The real threat, the
peasant leader said, is the military and the police. "Wasn’t they who massacred
seven strikers last Nov. 16?," he said. * * * Environment chief breaks
word The Alyansa ng mga
Mamamayang Nagkakaisa sa Hilagang Quezon (ALMANA-HQ), an alliance of
organizations of the typhoon victims in Real, Infanta and General Nakar in
Quezon province, denounced Environment Secretary Mike Defensor Jan. 26 for
breaking his own directive allowing typhoon victims to use logs that were swept
down by landslides in rebuilding their homes and rehabilitating their province
from the devastation caused by late last year's typhoons. Many of the logs and trees
uprooted during the typhoons have disappeared and no lumber has been given to
the thousands of victims, ALMANA leaders said. ALMANA-HQ spokesperson
Meling Rotaquio said only a few moneyed individuals with power saws were able to
take advantage of the Defensor’s order. Most of the logs have been taken over by
the DENR-authorized sawmills and storage sites in Real, Mauban and Atimonan, he
added. Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
■
Alipato Publications Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.