POOLED REPORT
Clueless on Cha-cha People’s Initiative
Signatures exchanged for sardines, P20,
Philhealth cards
Bulatlat
provincial correspondents interviewed barangay (village) officials and
residents who were clueless about issues related to changing the 1987
Constitution. Local officials, however, implemented the people’s
initiative for charter change, fearful also that they may lose their jobs
if they do not do what they were told. Residents, for their part, signed
the petition in exchange for money and other goodies.
By BULATLAT
TEAM
The
government-endorsed people’s initiative for charter change has adopted
creative, albeit deceptive, ways in gathering signatures. Bulatlat
correspondents in different provinces interviewed barangay (village)
officials who gathered the signatures and residents who signed the forms.
A number of barangay
officials reported to be only following instructions from the Department
of Interior and Local Government (DILG). Residents, on the other hand,
said that they signed the people’s initiative even if they do not have
sufficient knowledge of charter change. There were others, however, who
claimed that they were deceived into signing.
In the interviews,
residents identified the barangay officials as the ones spearheading the
signature gathering for the proposed changes in the 1987 Constitution.
Several officials said that they were ordered by the mayor or the DILG.
In exchange for their
signatures, the residents were given sardines, P20 ($0.39, based on an
exchange rate of P51.125 per US dollar) and even barangay financial aid.
Deceptions galore
In Barangay
Mabini, Basey,
Samar,
a barangay councilor who requested anonymity reported that the president
of the Association of Barangay Captains (ABC) called for a meeting to
distribute forms for the signature campaign. The barangay officials were
merely told to gather signatures in support of changing the form of
government.
Another
barangay councilor, this time from Barangay Sta. Fe,
Leyte,
said that weeks before the nationwide barangay assembly on March 25, they
were called to an assembly in
Cebu. All
transportation and hotel expenses were shouldered by the DILG. The forms
for the signature campaign were reportedly distributed there.
In Barangay Zone 1
and 2, a nun said that her brother and sister were deceived into signing
the forms. A barangay representative went from house to house in the early
morning of March 25 to gather signatures. They were told that Philippine
Health Insurance Corporation (Philhealth) cards will be given to them upon
signing. After signing, they were told that it was actually for the
purpose of changing the form of government.
Some residents of Zones 2 and 4 of the
same municipality also shared that they were given P20 ($0.39) for signing
the forms.
In Dulag, Leyte, all
areas held barangay assemblies except Rizal village. During that activity,
a DILG representative discussed the issue of charter change.
In Mt.
Province, residents interviewed by
Northern Dispatch complained that their signatures were also
solicited without any explanation of its purpose.
“Basta sinabi
nilang may meeting dahil utos daw ni mayor. May multa ang absent sa
meeting kaya pumunta kami. Noong nasa meeting na kami, may ipinapapirma sa
amin. Tungkol daw sa constitution yun. Hindi ko naman naiintindihan
kaya di ako pumirma pero yung iba pumirma,” (They told us that there
was a meeting called by the mayor. Then at the meeting, they made us sign
forms. But I didn’t understand what it was all about so I did not sign
but the others did.) said a female voter from Abarriongan, Sto. Nino,
Cagayan.
“The signature
campaign is a farce,” one of the residents said.
In Mt.
Province, those who initiated the
signature campaign were identified to be barangay officials and the
Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG), with support from the
governor’s office. Residents of Cagayan Valley said that mayors of
different towns called on all barangay officials to gather their
respective residents.
Support from the Governor
In time for the
holding of barangay assemblies, each barangay received financial aid
amounting to P3,000 ($58.68) from Leyte Governor Jericho “Icot” Petilla.
He said that there was nothing wrong with the financial aid because they
are mandated by law to provide P2,500 ($48.90) per barangay yearly. He
added that the provincial government is yet to give last year’s subsidy.
Petilla denied that
barangay assemblies were used as a way to gather signatures, saying “that
was not the major agenda in the barangay assembly.”
This was, however,
countered by residents who claimed that the people’s initiative was the
major agenda, and in some cases the only issue discussed.
For fear of losing their jobs
In Barangays 3, 4,
37, and Airport-Singcang in Bacolod
City, barangay officials have been gathering signatures since March 25,
asking residents if they are in favor of charter change.
Local voters
interviewed by Bulatlat said that local officials told them to sign
without bothering to explain what they were signing. Others said they were
even scolded by the local officials when they asked questions.
“If you don’t want to
sign, it’s up to you,” the voters were told. Some village officials
admitted that the forms were delivered to them by DILG employees. The
local DILG office denied it.
In Barangay
Calumanggan, Bago City (15 kms. south of Bacolod) local residents told
Bulatlat that on March 25 and 26, a team of barangay health workers (BHWs)
went to the areas asking people to sign the forms, the content of which
was not explained to them. They were just told to check whether or not
they are in favor of charter change. Others were assured by the health
workers that it was merely an opinion survey by the Commission on
Elections (Comelec).
Some BHWs admitted to
the residents that they did not fully agree with the people’s initiative
for charter change but had to do it because they might lose their jobs, or
lose the scholarships of some of their children.
The same was true for
some barangay officials in the interior barangays in Manapla town, around
50 kms north of Bacolod, who admitted to Bulatlat that they were
against charter change but were forced to implement the signature campaign
because they might lose the support of higher officials.
Against charter
change
In some interior
villages in the towns of Valladolid and San Enrique and in the cities of
Bago and La Carlota (all south of Bacolod), barangay officials reported
that only a few people signed up for charter change in barangay centers on
March 25. They noted that people did not show any interest, while others
would tell them, “We will sign if it is for the resignation of Gloria (Macapagal-Arroyo).”
Negros local
officials also expressed anti-charter change sentiments. “I don’t
understand why the government keeps on denying that this is their
initiative, not the people’s initiative, because it is very clear that
government people are the ones roaming around and telling people to sign
without even educating them on the content of the charter amendments and
the forms they are supposed to sign,” Valladolid Mayor Ricardo Presbitero,
Jr. said
Presbitero suspected
that the government officials’ reason for pushing through with the
so-called people’s initiative is to perpetuate themselves in power.
Negros Occidental
Governor Joseph Marañon said that the amendments in the Constitution were
not presented clearly to the people and the barangay assemblies held do
not reflect the sentiment of the majority. He said that government
officials should not take part in the people’s initiative, and that the
people should be left alone to decide.“I did not go around promoting
(charter change), I didn’t even sign.”
Provincial Board
Member Francis Tuvilla said that the event was not a legitimate people’s
initiative.“The barangay assembly which is a venue for listening to the
people was instead used to impose the vested interest of the ruling
coalition upon the people.” Tuvilla added that the event was disempowering
instead of empowering. “Clearly not a people’s initiative but a selfish
motive,” said Tuvilla
Mobilization fund
The Comelec office in
Mt.
Province reportedly received a memorandum
from the national office on March 29 to verify the signatures gathered by
the officials and the DILG.
Barangay officials in
Mt.
Province reportedly said that the
signature campaign was for the holding of the 2007 elections. Other
residents in areas where anti-Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo (GMA) sentiments are
strong were invited to sign the petition, claiming it is intended to
change the president.
Barangay councilor
Reginald Uggaddan of Centro, Tumauini, Isabela, said some of his
co-officials gave away one can of sardines and P20 for each person who
would sign the form. “This move only aggravates our already worsened
political and economic crises. This is GMA’s desperate move to maneuver
administration toward her gain.”
A Northern
Dispatch source from Mt.
Province claimed that a mobilization fund
for the signature campaign was given by the DILG national office to their
provincial office. As of press time, Northern Dispatch tried to
contact the DILG Provincial Officer and the Comelec-CAR regional director
but to no avail.
Synchronized
assemblies
Felipe Gelle,
secretary general of the Negros chapter of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan
or New Patriotic Alliance) condemned the use of government funds,
resources and personnel for the signature campaign. Gelle said that DILG
Memorandum Circular 2006-25 issued by Sec. Ronaldo Puno set the
synchronized convening of the barangay assemblies.
“It seems that
Speaker de Venecia and illegitimate President Gloria Arroyo want to
resurrect the ghost of the 1973 Marcos trick of convening a people’s
assembly to legalize the 1973 Constitution. It was merely through a
process of ‘viva voce’ and raising of hands that the constitution was
approved and later affirmed by the Marcos-controlled Supreme Court, Gelle
said.
Gelle called on the
people not to sign the petition or to allow the DILG personnel and local
government officials to use the barangay assembly for this scheme. He also
called on the local public officials to take a stand against charter
change which was “only in the self-serving interest of traditional
politicians to entrench themselves in power.”
Reports from Karl G. Ombion (Negros),
Johann Arpon (Eastern Visayas), Arthur Allad-iw and Michael Agonoy
(Northern Dispatch) / Bulatlat
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