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Philippines
Outrage in the Philippines over killing of plantation workers
By Terry Cook
24 December 2004
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The Philippine government of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo
is facing a public outcry over violence meted out to farmers,
plantation workers and their representatives in the ongoing labour
dispute at the Hacienda Luisita Inc near Tarlac City. The plantation
and associated sugar mill are owned and run by the Conjuangcos-Aquino
family, relatives of former president Cory Aquino.
Feelings were further inflamed after the cold-blooded execution
of Marcelino Beltran, the chairman of the farm workers organisation
Alyansa ng mga Magbubukid ng Tarlac on December 8. Beltran was
a key witness in a Senate and House inquiry into the killing of
12 workers and two small children in a military-police operation
on November 26 to break up a blockade by 6,000 workers at the
plantations sugar mill.
Hundreds of workers were badly injured during the brutal attack.
Scores of vehicles owned by the strikers, as well as foodstuffs
and other personal belongings, were destroyed. The operation involved
more than 1,000 police and military personnel backed by a bulldozer,
two V-150 armored personnel carriers and water cannon mounted
on four fire trucks.
Beltran, who was at the picket line on the day of the assault,
was gunned down outside his home in the remote village of Barangay
San Sotero by an assailant wearing an army uniform. The dying
man told his wife that soldiers did the shooting.
As he was being taken to hospital in a tricycle, men in army fatigues
stopped the vehicle and demanded to know if the wounded man was
Beltran.
Six members of the House of Representatives have issued a statement
condemning the murder. They described it as a well-planned
and well-executed operation to silence Beltran, and declared
the violence against workers and farmers was the direct
consequence of the obstinacy and continuing reign of the Cojuangcos
over the Hacienda Luisita.
It is not known if the order to kill Beltran came from the
military top brass or if the government was involved in the assassination.
However, it is clear that evidence presented to the congressional
inquiry and widely reported in the media was proving to be a political
embarrassment.
In late November, a graphic video recording of the police-military
assault was presented by United Luisita Workers Union (ULWU)
and the Central Azucarera De Tarlac Labor Union (CATLU)the
two unions involved in the dispute.
The video showed large numbers of police and military attacking
the unarmed picketers with water cannon and teargas, and ramming
an Armed Personnel Carrier (APC) into the barricades. Union spokesmen
said that the water from the high-powered water cannons was laced
with metal dust and chemicals.
Even more shocking, the video caught the dying moments of workers
and their supporters who had been cut down by a hail of bullets.
The dead and injured, drenched in blood, lay crumpled on the ground.
Evidence has also been presented that directly challenges the
government and military claims that army personnel could not have
been involved in the shootings as they were not carrying firearms.
According to earlier official statements, the shots were fired
from towers inside the plantation complex and surrounding fields.
Francisco Lintag, the sheriff sent by the Department of Labor
and Employment (DOLE) to enforce the order to restore operations
at the sugar mill, said in a sworn statement to the National Bureau
of Investigation that he had seen, soldiers rushing toward
the strikers while firing their firearms upward. Lintag
said that, when the firing stopped, he saw people being carted
off in ambulances to hospital.
Lintags evidence confirming that soldiers discharged
firearms was particularly damaging to the governments attempts
to blame the shootings on guerrilla fighters from the New Peoples
Army (NPA)an accusation the NPA has strenuously denied.
Government and military spokesmen have also attempted to blame
the workers for the violence claiming that they were armed and
fired at the police and troops. No evidence has been provided
to support the allegations which workers representatives
have denied.
Government order
Following the killings, President Arroyo has attempted to distance
herself from the attack, posturing as neutral in the dispute.
There is no doubt, however, that the government is directly responsible.
Arroyos Labor Secretary Patricia Sto Tomas issued the
Assumption of Jurisdiction Order that authorised the
huge police-military operation against the blockade and the use
of full force. Tomas justified the decision to intervene
by declaring the national interest is clearly affected by
the dispute.
The so-called national interest, however, coincided with the
needs of the influential Cojuangco-Aquino family to end a costly
and potentially politically damaging dispute at the Hacienda Luisita.
The CATLU, the union representing mill workers, is seeking
a 100-peso ($US1.79) increase in the daily wage. The ULWU, covering
5,000 plantation workers, is demanding the reinstatement of 327
farm workers dismissed in October, including the union president
and vice president. The management has so far refused to negotiate
on the reinstatements and has opposed the pay demand.
The plantation management, other major landowners and the government
were particularly alarmed, however, at a demand for long-outstanding
changes to the current law to ensure the redistribution of land
to farm and plantation workers.
Members of the Cojuangco family purchased the sugar mill and
the plantation in 1958 with funds supplied by the Central Bank
of the Philippines and the Government Service Insurance System
on the condition that the estate would be divided among tenants.
Having acquired the funds, the family blocked any land redistribution
by mounting legal challenges to court decisions awarding land
to the tenants.
Former president Aquino came to power in 1986 on the wave of
opposition to the Marcos dictatorship. She promised to redistribute
land and implemented the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform program
(CARP) to break up large sugar plantations such as Hacienda Luisita.
But CARP contained a loophole known as the Stock Distribution
Option (SDO) that allowed large landowners to evade actual land
redistribution by classifying farm workers and tenants as stockholders
or co-owners.
Studies by academics James Putzel and Saturnino Borras Jr show
that the Cojuangco family, for example, manipulated the SDO by
creating a number of spin-off corporations related to sugar-cane
production, transportation, milling, and marketing.
Putzel and Borras point out that only one of these newly created
corporations, the Hacienda Luisita Inc (HLI), was subject to land
reform. The family then declared only 4,900 hectares of the entity
as land assets while the more expensive portions... located
near roads and residential/commercial areas were segregated and
declared the property of the other Cojuangco corporations outside
HLI. The HLI owners also excluded land improvements such
as roads, irrigation canals, culverts, bridges, and water reservoir,
thus further reducing the value of transferable stocks.
The purpose of this accounting manipulation was
to depress the land value to about only one-third of the HLIs
total value. As a result, the Cojuangco family, with the backing
of an incumbent president, was able to maintain control of the
corporation and over the entire hacienda.
The stockholdings of the tenant farmers and plantation workers
are of little worth and tenants are not even permitted to plant
vegetable gardens on any part of the hacienda. As well, hundreds
of hectares, included in the SDO, have been reclaimed with no
compensation to the farm workers. Others have lost their livelihood
as wage labourers after being displaced by mechanisation.
It is precisely to maintain this state of affairs and to defend
their profits that the wealthy landowners were determined to ruthlessly
crush any movement for the abolition of SDO and for genuine land
redistribution. The repressive measures used in the Hacienda Luisita
dispute, with the aid of forces provided by President Gloria Arroyo,
are not new.
About one year after Cory Aquino was elected president, police
killed 13 farmers involved in a demonstration demanding land reform.
The Aquino government whitewashed the infamous incidentknown
as the Mendiola Massacre. No one was jailed and the police commanders
involved were promoted to higher posts.
While President Gloria Arroyo may yet be forced to roll a few
lesser heads over the November 26 massacre, she will do all in
her power to deflect blame from the government, exonerate the
military chiefs and protect the wealthy Conjuangco-Aquino family.
See Also:
Philippines government to
withdraw troops from Iraq
[16 July 2004]
Arroyo sworn in for second
term as Philippine president
[2 July 2004]
Philippine election reveals
widespread political alienation
[10 May 2004]
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