This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 36, October 16-22, 2005
To evade land reform, Negros
plantation owners together with local executives and land reform officials have
devised various schemes. All these enflamed cane farm workers even more.
By
Karl G. Ombion and Ranie Azue BACOLOD CITY - The history of landlord
resistance to agrarian reform has never been more pronounced than in Negros
Island. In the 1980s, the peasants and farm
workers-based revolutionary movement and the militant struggles of National
Federation of Sugar Workers (NFSW) for lands alarmed the ruling elites in the
region. This prompted the Bitay Lacson-Coscolluela
administration in Negros to implement at that time a 60-30-10 scheme: retention
of 60 percent of lands in Negros for sugar production, 30 percent for
diversified commercial crops, and 10 percent for so-called land transfer program
through voluntary offer to sell, voluntary land sharing, temporary land use,
contract growing and management contract. Other similar schemes were the Sixto K. Roxas
“Salvapulbamur Scheme” that wanted to promote the district-size Economic
Development Management System as mere key production areas for commercial crops
for exports; the Provincial Government-Philippine National Bank Scheme of
“Negros Land for a Productive Life Program (NLPLP),” a socio-economic program
without land transfer; and the Ed Locsin’s model of “Voluntary Land Sharing” and
encouragement of peasants-landlords cooperative partnership projects backed by
government and foreign funding assistance. All these proved futile however as no actual
land transfer took place. The peasants’ discontent only grew even more. Under Aquino’s CARP, landlords’ resistance to
agrarian reform has intensified all the more. Reportedly in connivance with the
powers that be, big landowners were able to carry out land reform evasion
schemes such as the leaseback scheme, buy-back Scheme, land use conversion,
Community-based Forestry Management Contract, Foreshore Lease Agreement,
contract growing scheme, SDO and now, JVA. Contrary to DAR claims of high
accomplishments in land distribution in Negros, a closer scrutiny of its actual
land distribution as of 2004 reveals a measly 15 percent of its total targets of
246,465 hectares. Even DAR’s compulsory acquisition of commercial
farms/plantations of 50 has. and above, which should have started in 1998, has
covered a dismal 656 has. most of which are bank-foreclosed lands anyway.
Another irony is the fact that of 153,650
has. of sugarlands marked by DAR Task Force Sugarland for land distribution,
only 26,992 has. of sugarlands are actually covered in Negros Occidental, the
bastion of landlord monopoly, while 126,658 has. are in Negros Oriental.
Today, of the 1.33 million has. total land area of Negros, 818,991.026 has. are
under private control. Of these, some 618,991 has. are controlled by 46,574
landowners; about 200,000 has comprising 101 has. and above are controlled by
486 families only. This practically placed around two-third of Negros lands are
under private monopoly control. It
is not surprising therefore that the big landlords and big sugar
planter-miller-traders have been fiercely opposing any agrarian reform
implementation in sugarlandia. They have always insisted for the continuous
consolidation of bigger lands and sugar farms into sustainable economic units.
According to a PSMA (Philippine Sugar Millers Association) leader, a viable
economic size unit must retain at least 70 has. Less than that is not profitable
anymore especially if one thinks “globally,” he said. Bulatlat / With CIRMS
News Service
© 2005 Bulatlat
■
Alipato Publications Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.
SPECIAL REPORT
Negros: A Bastion of
Landlord Resistance
Conclusion
Bulatlat
Negros farmers groups demand similar SDO
cancellation
First of
two parts