‘Senator’s Village’
Render 172 Peasants Homeless
Forty-two houses in a
rural village in Silang, Cavite
were forcibly dismantled by a 65-member demolition team, rendering 172
peasants homeless. The peasants were forcibly displaced to give way to a
high-end subdivision named “Senator’s Village”, reportedly a project of
former movie actor-turned-senator Ramon Revilla Sr. (Jose Bautista in real
life).
By Dennis Espada
Bulatlat
Forty-two houses in a
rural village in Silang, Cavite were forcibly dismantled by a 65-member
demolition team, rendering 172 peasants homeless.
The demolition team
arrived at the 25-hectare Barangay Cabangaan at 6:08 a.m. last Feb. 3,
escorted by around 300 composite elements of the Philippine National
Police (PNP), Special Weapons and Tactics Team (SWAT), Police Provincial
Mobile Group (PPMG), Rocky Security Agency and the military.
Thirty-minutes later, they started tearing down the houses using mallets
and iron rods.
Rodel Pelimbergo,
together with several other residents, reportedly sustained wounds in
their arms as a result of intimidation by armed elements, according to the
militant Kalipunan ng mga Magbubukid sa Kabite (Kamagsasaka-Ka or Peasant
Federation in Cavite).
After two hours, only
two houses were left untouched ― but only because they were intended to be
converted into security barracks. Kamagsasaka-Ka charged that each member
of the demolition team was paid at least P500 for “construction services”.
“The farmers
negotiated with Sheriff Ricardo Crucido of the Department of Agrarian
Reform Adjudicatory Board-Cavite (Darab) to no avail. The farmers were
harassed,” Kamagsasaka-Ka said.
Since 2004, farmers
have been receiving threats and urged to voluntarily leave their homes or
face violent eviction. The land is under dispute between the farmers and
the landowner, former movie actor-turned-senator Ramon Revilla Sr. (Jose
Bautista in real life).
Revilla reportedly
plans to convert the coffee and pineapple farm into a so-called “Senator’s
Village”, a high-end residential subdivision complete with golf course and
other recreational amenities. The area is less than a kilometer away from
Tagaytay City, one of the country’s tourist spots.
Housing crisis
Sheryll Villegas,
secretary-general of the militant Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan or New
Patriotic Alliance)-Cavite chapter, condemned the “anti-farmer tandem" of
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and Governor Erineo Maliksi “for
supporting infrastructure projects that undermine the poor’s right to
domicile.”
The plight of the
peasants in Cabangaan, she said, is no different from urban poor
communities facing demolition orders.
The Cavite chapter of
Kalipunan ng Damayang Mahihirap (Kadamay or Association in Aid of the
Poor) revealed that out of the total 29 communities within the province’s
lowland areas, there are 13,969 families who are currently confronting a
housing crisis and facing serious threats of displacement. There are 21
communities who occupy public lands. Not less than 7,291 houses are
threatened to be demolished.
“Nakalulungkot na
maitala, na sa Pabahay 2000 at Belvedere Homes, mga proyektong pabahay sa
panahon nina Pangulong Ramos at Arroyo, kung saan inilipat ang mga
maralita mula sa Pasay, Paranaque, Marikina at Tondo ay nagaganap din muli
ang bantang pagpapaalis dahil sa kawalan ng kakayanan ng mga residente na
magbayad ng buwanang hulog para sa halaga ng lupa at bahay,”
(It is saddening that even at Pabahay 2000 (Housing 2000) and Belvedere
Homes, housing projects of former President Ramos and President Arroyo,
where urban poor communities from Pasay, Paranaque, Marikina, and Tondo
were relocated, there are threats of forcible displacement of the
residents because they cannot afford to pay the monthly amortizations for
the land and house.), Kadamay-Cavite’s Elvie Luza said.
Most urban poor
communities are forcibly displaced because of the implementation of
government projects like fishports, lengthening of the Light Rail Transit
(LRT), expansion of industrial zones and establishment of commercial hubs,
as well as due to privately-owned projects such as posh housing
subdivisions, coastal city bay terminal and memorial parks, the group
added. Bulatlat
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