‘Battlefield’ Bicol

The NSCB places Bicol’s 2003 poverty incidence at 48.4 percent. But the NSCB bases this on a very low national poverty threshold of an income of P12,475 ($243.42) per person annually or P34.18 ($0.66) per person per day.

Based on data from the National Wages and Productivity Commission (NWPC), the living wage for a family of six – the average Filipino family – in the Bicol Region was P472 ($9.21) daily in 2003. It has since risen to P628 ($12.25) daily as of May 2006, NWPC data further show.

When computed using NWPC data, poverty incidence in Bicol would surely be higher than the figure given by the NSCB. Using the NSCB’s computations, a family of six in Bicol earning only P205 ($4) per day is not considered poor.

Atrocities against the people

Aside from the poverty they face everyday, Mang Ricky and Aling Melba also have stories about their bad experience in the hands of state forces.

Y’ong mga sundalo, pag napadaan dito, nagtuturo ng mga NPA daw, tinatakot, sinasaktan” (When soldiers come here, they go around accusing people of being NPA guerrillas, then threaten and hurt them), Mang Ricky said.

Mang Ricky himself became a victim of government soldiers who suspected him of being an NPA guerrilla in 1981, he said. At around 5 a.m. one day, they roused him from sleep; snatched him from his hut; and kept him in their custody until about 6 p.m. While in their custody, he said, he was repeatedly beaten. Aside from the physical abuse, he said he was also psychologically tortured. “Pinapatakbo nga ako, e. Pinapatakbo. E karamihan d’on, pag tumakbo ka, babarilin ka” (They tried to make me run. Usually when they make you run and you run, they shoot you), he said.

Aling Melba, meanwhile, experienced soldiers suddenly barging inside her hut just last May. “Mga alas-5 ng madaling-araw ‘yon. Basta pumasok na lang nila sa amin. Naghalungkat ho, ewan ko kung ano’ng hinahanap nila. Wala namang sinasabi, basta may hinahanap lang daw sila. E ang mga anak ko naman…lahat tulog pa nang dumating sila. Pinaikutan y’ong bahay namin. Y’ong mga bata, nagsilabasan na. Natakot” (It was about 5 a.m. They just barged in. They searched the hut, I didn’t know what they were looking for. They didn’t say what it was, just that they were looking for something. My children…were all asleep when they barged in. They surrounded our hut. The children went out, they were terrified), she said.

The soldiers stayed until 10 a.m., Aling Melba said, and one of them even cooked and ate there.

Natatakot talaga kami pag dumarating sila. Kasi ‘yon nga ho, pinapasok nila kami sa bahay, hindi lang kami ang pinasok nila nang basta-basta” (We get scared whenever they come. Because they just barge into huts, we’re not the only ones whose huts they just barged into), she said.

Prospects in the battle

That Arroyo named Bicol as one of the critical areas in her government’s “all-out war” against the Left means that there will be a step-up in the deployment of troops in the region.

Meanwhile, in her State of the Nation Address (SoNA) for this year, Arroyo divided the Philippines into five “super-regions,” each with corresponding economic plans: the North Luzon Agribusiness Quadrangle, the Metro Luzon Urban Beltway, Central Philippines, Mindanao, and the Cyber Corridor.

“Central Philippines has the competitive edge in tourism in its natural wonders and the extraordinary hospitality of its people,” Arroyo said in her SoNA. “The area sweeps across Palawan and Romblon, the Visayas and Bicol, plus the northern Mindanao islands of Camiguin, Siargao and Dapitan. Top billed by Boracay, Cebu, Bohol and Palawan, it attracts more than half of the foreign tourists to the Philippines. It is also the center of geothermal power in the country, which we continue to develop. The priority here is tourism investments. Coming soon for superstar Boracay are an instrument landing system for the Kalibo airport and a P3-billion private investment in a San Jose, Romblon airport, plus good roads to spillover destinations all over Panay.”

The Arroyo administration apparently hopes to quell the long-running armed conflict with the two-pronged approach of military might and economic “development.”

But unless human rights are respected and economic plans translate into real change in the conditions of the people, winning the hearts and minds of the likes of Mang Ricky, Aling Irma, and Aling Melba is going to be a tall order for the government. Bulatlat

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