Friday, July 24, 2015

Lumad won't go home if the military continue to operate in the community - tribal leader



Duterte, Del Rosario to tackle Talaingod problem

By Ivy C. Tejano
April 27, 2014


DAVAO CITY Mayor Rodrigo Duterte will be sitting down with Davao del Norte Governor Rodolfo del Rosario along with evacuees from Talaingod, Davao del Norte, some progressive groups, and military officials in the city tomorrow, to address issues that caused the Manobo-tribes to vacate their land.

The mayor, in an interview, said he and the provincial governor scheduled the meeting tomorrow at around 3 p.m. Duterte added that he will try to find a solution to their problem with Davao del Norte Governor Rodolfo del Rosario.

Over a hundred Ata-Manobo residents of Talaingod have sought temporary residence at the Haran House of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP) for almost a month now after claiming militarization of their villages and military abuses.

"I have requested [from the military and the Talaingod town evacuees] to have a meeting. Let us find out what ails everybody. I also invited governor del Rosario; he might want to share a moment with us in solving this problem," Duterte said.

"We need to talk. Hindi naman puwedeng ganyan na lang. We need to hear from both sides before we come up with a solution or agreement on what is best for all," Duterte added.

In a separate interview, del Rosario echoed the same reaction. He said the local government cannot conclude anything until the issue has been discussed. He also admitted that he requested the Davao City mayor to help them on the matter.

"When I got this chance talking with Mayor Duterte… we both agreed to meet, to sit down and talk about the problem on how we can settle this with those people [evacuees]. We will try to work something out at sana nga okay ang kinalabasan," del Rosario said.

The Salugpongan Ta Tatanu Ig Kanogon (Unity in Defense of Ancestral Land), Pasaka (Confederation of Lumad Organizations in Southern Mindanao), and other organizations, including lumads, urged the local government to pull out the military from the communities instead.

Groups issued such call following the alleged aerial bombing, massive harassment, and encampment in places where soldiers were not supposed to put up camps. Others from their tribes have sought refuge in Bukidnon, Northern Mindanao.

Datu Duloman, spokesperson of Salugpongan ‘Ta Tanu Ig Kanogon, said that while they long to go home after weeks of staying at the Haran House, they will not do so if the military continue to operate in the community. He added that they do not need the relief goods from the government but to have a peaceful community.

Talaingod town Mayor Basilio A. Libayao earlier denied the accusations of the militant organizers against the local government unit and military. He said there are no reports of harassments and aerial bombing that has been committed by the military in the area.

Colonel Harold Cabreros, commander of the Philippine Army's 1003rd Brigade, also said the residents sought the assistance of their troops from the 60th Infantry Battalion (60IB), 68th IB, and Special Forces, following the presence of the New People's Army (NPA), who installed camps in some areas of Talaingod town.

The Municipal Council of Talaingod declared a state of calamity last April 1 and has allotted an initial amount of P500,000 to cater the needs of the evacuees. But the militant organizations started moving out the evacuees after the declaration, which is an act considered by Libayao as an insult to his constituency.

Aerial bombing, massive harassment, and military encampments caused internal displacement of lumads



Duterte, guv: Stop Army ops in 11 lumad sitios

By Ivy C. Tejano
April 30, 2014
Sunstar Davao

THE residents of Talaingod in Davao del Norte belonging to the Ata-Manobo tribe will be escorted by civilian government officials on May 1 and 2 to bring them home following the agreement that military operations in 11 sitios of barangay Palma Gil in Talaingod will be suspended.

This was the agreement reached on Monday in a meeting that started at 3:15 p.m. and was still ongoing as of presstime at the Grand Men Send Hotel in Davao City.

The meeting was attended by the Talaingod evacuees, the leaders of the United Church of Christ of the Philippines who have been giving shelter to the lumads since April 4 in Davao City, and local and military officials, with Mayor Duterte Davao del Norte Governor Rodolfo del Rosario, and Talaingod Mayor Basilio A. Libayao.

At the same time, another meeting was going on in a different function room regarding a similar problem in Paquibato District of Davao City, but this meeting started a bit later.

The Talaingod lumads belonging to the Ata-Manobo tribe led by the Salugpongan Ta Tatanu Ig Kanogon (Unity in Defense of Ancestral Land) and Pasaka (Confederation of Lumad Organizations in Southern Mindanao) remained firm in their stand that they will only go back to their villages if the military stop their operations.

Datu Dulomon Dawsay, spokesperson of the evacuees said, the military have set up camps in sitio Dolianog, Tulugan, and Igang in barangay Pamla Gil, Talaingod.

Colonel Harold Cabreros, commander of the Philippine Army's 1003rd Brigade, in his presentation said that the reason they are in the area is because of an NPA encampment there, as he showed slides of a recent operations where they were even able to recover cash believed to be fund of the rebels.

Duterte said that the military and the rebels will always be where the other are, but since the problem involves evacuees, then he, with the concurrence of Gov. del Rosario, can only order the military to suspend operations in order to bring the residents home safely.

He said the best he can do with regards the rebels is to appeal to them to suspend operations in Talaingod as well.

In an interview with del Rosario around 6 p.m. Monday, he said, that it was agreed on that the military will pack up their operations in all 11 sitios where they are presently encamped today and that he will expect no military camps there, including those in the barangay center and schools.

The evacuees will then be escorted solely by civilian officials on May 1-2.

He said it was agreed that not one policeman or military will escort the local officials who will be escorting the evacuees to their homes.

Mayor Libayao, meanwhile, assured that should the residents not want to return to their remote villages, their town has relief assistance ready for them.

The lumads who have sought refuge in the city claim aerial bombing, massive harassment, and encampment in places where soldiers were not supposed to put up camps.

Libayao had earlier denied these claims but insists it is the rebels’ presence in the area that has made it necessary for the military to operate there.

Beyond the claims and counter-claims, Mayor Duterte raised his appeal again for the resumption of peace negotiations between the communist rebels and the National Government to bring peace to areas like Talaingod, that are victimized by the never-ending conflict.

Mining and plantation companies will claim our ancestral lands - lumad spokesperson



Tribal leaders urge Duterte to mediate in negotiations

By Ruji Peter S. Abat
April 25, 2014
Sunstar Davao

TRIBAL leaders, who are part of the evacuees from Talaingod, Davao del Norte, re-echoed their call to halt the militarization in their homeland but this time, they want Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte to intervene in the negotiations.

Leader of the Ata Manobo tribe in Barangay Palma Gil in Talaingod and spokesperson for Salugpongan Ta Tanu Igkanogon, Datu Duloman Dawsay told Sun.Star Davao in an interview that he has been very grateful of Duterte for welcoming the evacuees in the city yet he would appreciate him more if the mayor assists them in getting back to their homeland.

"Kaniadto pa gyud dako ug tabang si Mayor Duterte sa amoa apan iya ming natagad kaniadtong namakwit mi tong 1994. Pero unta matabangan pud niya mi ug usab sa among pagpauli pero una una sa gyud nga pahawaon ang militar sa among lugar (Mayor Duterete has helped us before when he gave attention to us when we evacuated in 1994. But we hope that he can help us again in getting back home as long the military are pulled out from our area)," Dawsay said.

He also said that they have yet to personally talk to Duterte as well as Talaingod town Mayor Basilio Libayao and the closest that they got to the government was through the Provincial Board and the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP)-Davao.

"Relief goods are nothing compared to what we are experiencing here and what we have left there. We cannot live in the city and we have left our farms there. We need to get home before our livelihood will be destroyed there," Dawsay added.

Spokesperson for the Pasaka (Confederation of Lumad Organizations in Southern Mindanao) Isidro Andao, in a separate interview, lambasted the intervention of NCIP-Davao claiming that they were suggested to accept the offers of mining companies and plantations in their areas.

"Ang ilang pamaagi sa amoang konsultasyon kay ilang ming padawaton sa mining ug sa laing plantasyon kay mao daw na ang makapalambo sa mga lumad pero dili namo na madawat kay ila gihapon pangkuhaon ang among yutang kabilin (Their suggestion in our consultation was that we should accept the offers of the mining and plantation companies since that will lead to the progress of the lumads but we will not accept that because they will still claim our ancestral lands)," Indao said.

He added that there has still been a conflict between the provisions of the Indigenous Peoples' Rights Act (Ipra) of 1997 and the People's Small-Scale Mining Act of 1991, thus, there should be amendments that will truly enforce the Ipra.

The lumad "goddess" is a traitor


Lumad 'goddess' storms sanctuary of threatened IPs

By Inday Espina-Varona
07/24/2015
ABS-CBN News

North Cotabato 2nd district Rep. Nancy Catamco calls herself a "Diwata" -- a goddess -- of Mindanao's lumad peoples.

To the threatened indigenous people of Davao del Norte and surrounding provinces, however, she is a traitor. The chair of the House of Representatives Committee on Indigenous Peoples, Catamco, has launched a unique campaign to "rescue" internal refugees -- by delivering them to their tormentors.

Catamco, cops, and the Alamara paramilitary group stormed on July 23 the Haran Mission House in Davao City of United Church of Christ of the Philippines (UCCP).

The sprawling compound has served for 21 years as sanctuary for lumad fleeing military abuses in Talaingod and Kapalong towns, Davao del Norte.

Fifteen refugees were hurt when truncheon-wielding cops forced down the gate of the UCCP Haran compound and destroyed the temporary shelters of IP folk. Lumad resistance and the intervention of Davao City Vice Mayor Paolo Duterte prevented greater violence.

The raid occurred as children were busy with informal science lessons.

The tension lasted for the better half of a day and included a chase of a mother and daughter “rescued” by state security forces who had snipped through the sanctuary’s barbed wire fence. The rescued pair and their chasing patriarch were the only ones who decided to stay with regional social workers.

Catamco was in the thick of the disturbance, the third incident since she started visiting lumad refugees, on invitation of the Save Our Schools network.

'BRUTAL' BEHAVIOR

The UCCP bishops condemned “the illegal and violent conduct,” including the “brutal” beating of pastors by cops with truncheons and steel shields.

“We are outraged at this show of excessive force more so because the PNP did not have any warrant to enter and search the Church facility, which is a private property,” the UCCP said at a press conference.

Church leaders accused Catamco of failing to heed the demands of the Ata-Manobo for an end to military presence near their schools and homes.



On her first visit, lumad – thinking Catamco was an ally of militant lawmakers who had publicized their plight – gave her a warm welcome.

The atmosphere turned stormy on the second day of dialogue, when she started insulting lumad leaders, demanding their immediate return to Talaingod and Kapalong.

Accusing Catamco and cops of bad faith, UCCP said: “Just a few hours prior to the violent incident, the Church facilitated a dialogue with DSWD and NCIP, and came up with resolutions that they would just attend to the needs of the women and children. But even while the resolution was being firmed out, the PNP terrorized the evacuees with their presence in full riot gear, the presence of paramilitary group ALAMARA, demolition team, fire trucks and military trucks, and then proceeded to destroy the gate and forcibly entered the church premises.”

The lumad and their supporters were ready for the storm because Catamco had earlier vowed she would make sure they returned to their mountain villages.

Her first encounter with the lumad at Haran was friendly. After a brief meeting in the company of Makabayan lawmakers, Catamco had promised to come back with officials of the Department of Social Word and Development, and the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples and the Commission on Human Rights.

But she also arrived with Army generals, the very sector that lumad blame for their plight.

It was in the aftermath of that round when Catamco hurled her first vow to force the lumad back home -- where members of their tribe had been murdered, arrested, ambushed and where soldiers have taken over the only schools that have served the needs of lumad children.

On Thursday, Catamco flexed her political muscle.

The lawmaker had earlier claimed the existence of the Alamara paramilitary needed to be verified. She arrived with the very militia whose existence she had disavowed.

No less than the refugee parents of the Alamara forces confirmed their identities and affiliation. Among the Alamara members was Perut Malibato of Sitio Patel, Barangay Gupitan, Kapalong, Davao del Norte.

It was a tearful reunion between Perut and his parents, Celia and Anayak, and younger brother, Alvin.

Refugee leaders allowed Perut to talk with his family. He tried to convince them to return. They refused, reiterating the condition that earlier angered Catamco – they would return only if systems of reforms guarantee a halt to military abuses.

Duterte agreed to escort Catamco on one more round of the sanctuary. Refugees were asked if they wanted to leave with her or stay on.

The representative wheedled another talk with lumad leaders, singling out Bai Bibyaon Bigkay, a woman Salugpungan leader who had led the welcome committee during Catamco’s first visit.

But Bai Bibyaon, the first woman council head of the Salugpungan, ripped into the congresswoman, accusing her of using guile to create a false picture of lumad forced by outside groups to become refugees.

The tribal leader was referring to Catamco’s first dialogue, wherein she asked who among the lumad wanted to return home. Many hands were raised. But lumad said the agreement was premised on an end to militarization of their communities.

That angered Catamco who, in a second dialogue, warned that the datus in Haran were endangering their traditional leadership status by fleeing. Taking pride in her lumad grandparents, the congresswoman said lumad never abandon territory.

Audio tapes of the dialogues show Catamco wanting an immediate return of lumad to their communities. In contrast, she insisted that solutions to their complaints need to be processed.

In an interview with ABS-CBNnews.com, Catamco said the lumad refugees need to trust the government to resolve their problems, including the military generals she brought to the first few dialogues.

The lawmaker said she was only trying to help lumad and hinted they were being held against their will.

“They wanted pull out of military troops but that cannot be done immediately… there needs to be a process,” Catamco said.

Asked why she was insisting on a homecoming with no safety guarantees, Catamco said the military would assure the safety of the lumad.

But the military is accused of being the main tormentor of the lumad. SOS gave Catamco the data before she joined their fact-finding mission.

Across a swathe of Mindanao’s lushest lands, indigenous children are losing schools and homes. They are also losing parents, whether to the gun or to prison or to flight from threats and harassment.

Close to 3,000 indigenous children from border villages of Davao Oriental, Compostela Valley, Bukidnon and the Agusan provinces are affected by the Department of Education delay in giving permits to their alternative schools.

The military often describes these small, private havens, mostly run by rural missionaries and other faith-based groups, as support infrastructure of communist rebels. The government has a novel solution to the problem.

“They want to embed soldiers and paramilitary forces in these institutions,” said Piya Macliing Malayao, secretary general of KATRIBU (Kalipunan ng mga Katutubong Mamamayan ng Pilipinas), which is part of the SOS network.

Rights violations against children in Mindanao increased from 23 incidents in 2013 to 64 last year, according to the Children’s Rehabilitation Center. In the first four months of 2015, the network has documented 19 incidents, involving thousands of children.

The Rural Missionaries of the Philippines (RMP) reports that 23 indigenous leaders have been killed from October 2014 to June this year, in the Northern Mindanao region alone.

“That is almost three lives mercilessly put out every month,” said the the national inter-diocesan and inter-congregational organization that works with threatened lumad, indigenous peoples in Mindanao.

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Forcing the lumad to go back to their villages would not help in addressing the main issues or their demands


Head of house IP panel blasted for 'insulting' lumad says refugees held in 'concentration camp'


By: Lira Dalangin-Fernandez
July 18, 2015
InterAksyon.com

MANILA, Philippines -- Lawmakers from the Makabayan bloc and religious leaders blasted the chairwoman of the House of Representatives’ committee on national cultural communities for “insulting” displaced Ata-Manobo who have sought refuge from militarization at a church compound in Davao City this week.

Sought for her side, Catamco, a Bagobo-Manobo, stood her ground and alleged the lumad are being held under duress at the UCCP compound, which she likened to a “concentration camp” where the indigenous people “are being treated inhumanely.”

In audio files uploaded to the Internet, North Cotabato Representative Nancy Catamco is heard speaking in an angry voice during what was supposed to be a dialogue with the lumad at the United Church of Christ in the Philippines Haran compound.

In one of the files, she raises her voice when a man says they would rather die in the evacuation center than return to their militarized communities.

“Okay, you want to die here? Okay, you want to die here? He said that. You want to die? Alright, those who want to die here, raise your hands. Raise your hands! You want this? Really?” she said.

Saying she only wanted to help solve the lumad’s problems, she went on to say she “cannot understand seeing the children here stinking (baho) like this …”

She also insinuates that the lumad are being held against their will and said if they were genuine evacuees, they should be staying with the Department of Social Welfare and Development, not the church compound.

In another file, she dismisses a man’s assertion that they were seeking a dialogue, saying many dialogues had been held in the past “and yet you keep returning here.”

She also justified the continued military presence in hinterland communities, saying it was needed to protect heavy equipment from being burned by rebels and asking if the lumad were willing to take on the responsibility of preventing this.

In comments sent to InterAksyon about the incident, Catamco said: "Hindi ito healthy at lalong hindi makatao. Imagine, pinagsiksikan sila sa makeshift tents, walang maayos na tulugan, makain at palikuran; and worst, ayaw silang pauwiin at naka-kandado ang gate na walang basta-basta makapasok (This is not healthy and more than that, inhuman. Imagine, they are crammed into makeshift tents, with no proper beds, food or toilets; and worst, they are prevented from returning home and the gates locked to prevent anyone from entering). You visit them and see for yourself."

Catamco had been invited, together with party-list Representatives Luz Ilagan of Gabriela, Carlos Zarate of Bayan Muna and Terry Ridon of Kabataan, by the Save our Schools Network to join a fact-finding mission to investigate human rights violations allegedly committed by the military and paramilitary groups against the lumad in Southern Mindanao.

On July 13, the mission went to Cateel, Davao Oriental and visited a lumad school. The following day the lawmakers met with the evacuees and their datu and other leaders at the UCCP Haran compound, where the Ata-Manobo aired their complaints, including what they said were vilification campaigns mounted by the military and milities against them, volunteer teachers and groups who support them.

At the July 14 meeting, said the Makabayan lawmakers, Catamco suggested they meet again the next day so she could invite officials of the National Commission of Indigenous Peoples.

However, aside from NCIP representatives, Catamco also took with her military officers and other government agencies and told the evacuees to return home, the activist lawmakers said.

They said Catamco humiliated the evacuees when she told them, “Panguli na ‘mo kay baho na kayo ‘mo diri. (You should go home because you are already stinking here).”

"She tried to entice the evacuees to go home by telling them packed lunch and buses had been prepared for them," they added.

The Makabayan lawmakers also accused Catamco of disrespecting Zarate when she cut him off, saying, "I'm not talking to you," when he tried to raise a point during their dialogue. This prompted Zarate to walk out.

"The so-called dialogue turned into a mockery. Ultimately it failed to address the issues of militarization being raised by the evacuees. Her words and deeds were no different in effect from what the military have been inflicting on the lumad: threats, intimidation, harassment, and ridicule," the Makabayan bloc said.

In a separate statement, the UCCP-Southeast Mindanao Jurisdictional Area said it felt "insulted by the fact that she disrespected the sanctuary by misleading us of her true intentions of dragging the issue beyond humanitarian aspect."

The “UCCP Peace Sanctuary is a prophetic witness and humanitarian effort of the church for the lost, the last and the least of our people. It is a place purposely created to accommodate individuals or communities that were deprived, neglected, exploited, harassed, and suppressed with their rights to peace, respect and free as a community,” Bishop Hamuel Tequis of UCCP SEMJA said in the statement.

“Forcing the lumad to go back to their villages would not help in addressing the main issues or their demands. Certain government officials and agencies are just making the situation worse, the fact that they are public servant they should act as genuine servants to the people," he added.

Catamco made derogatory and humiliating statements against the evacuees, their tribal leaders and support groups


Leftist-Catamco clash heats up

By Maricel Cruz
July 19, 2015
Manila Standard Today

THE left-leaning Makabayan Bloc in the House of Representatives continued to lash at North Cotabato Rep. Nancy Catamco on Saturday, accusing her of “egregious disrespect for the sensitivities of Mindanao’s indigenous people” during a supposed dialogue in Davao City.

Bayan Muna Rep. Neri Colmenares denounced Catamco’s “unilateral decision” to inviting to the dialogue military officials whom he said were the ones harassing and intimidating tribesmen and forced them to seek sanctuary in places like the Haran Compound in Davao City.

“Instead of facilitating the dialogue and evincing empathy towards the lumads (tribesmen), Rep. Catamco made derogatory and humiliating statements against the evacuees, their tribal leaders and support groups,” Makabayan said in a statement.

“She gruffly stopped Rep. Carlos I. Zarate when he tried to raise a point, telling him ‘I’m not talking to you.’ That prompted him to walk out of the dialogue, followed by the lumads and their supporters,” the group added.

The group said Catamco, along with Reps. Luz Ilagan of Gabriela, Carlos Zarate of Bayan Muna and Terry Ridon of Kabataan party-list were supposed to be the only ones invited by the non-government Save our Schools Network to join an investigative mission on the harassment and other human rights violations purportedly perpetrated by the military.

But in a text message to The Standard, Catamco denied the accusations of the Makabayan Bloc.

“It’s not true. They are liars. They detain the IPs in Haran Compound. The dialogue was properly documented. We have video footage for the whole event,” Catamco said.

“The Haran Compound is not a sanctuary is not a sanctuary for the Ips, as they are saying. This is like a concentration camp. They are being treated inhumanely. This is not healthy and even more inhumane,” Catamco said.

“Imagine, they were crammed in make-shift tents with no proper beddings, food or toilets. And worse, they were not allowed to go home and the gate was padlocked. You visit them and see for yourself;” Catamco said.

The Makabayan Bloc said last July 13, the mission went to Cateel, Davao Oriental and visited a school established by the lumads.

The following day the four legislators met with the evacuees and their leaders at the United Church of Christ Philippines’ Haran Compound in Davao City, the group said.

The Makabayan Bloc said the evacuees presented several concerns to them, including the military and paramilitary harassments and vilification campaign against the lumads, volunteer teachers and their support groups

“At that meeting Rep. Catamco suggested that they meet again the following morning and she would bring along officials of the National Commission of Indigenous Peoples. The lumad leaders welcomed her suggestion.

“...Rep. Catamco further humiliated the evacuees when she uttered, “Panguli na mo kay baho na kayo mo diri. (You should go back to your homes because you are already stinky here).”

She tried to entice the evacuees to go home by telling them packed lunch and buses had been prepared for them.

“Worse, Rep. Catamco went on questioning the datus if they were really tribal leaders, because according to her myopic view, “leaders should not leave their communities.” And she maliciously asked several participants in the dialogue if they were members of the NPA or of NGOs,” the Makabayan Bloc charged.

It was like she came here to us, to insult our children, to tell us that we are not real leaders


LP solon draws flak for saying IPs ‘stinky’

July 19, 2015
Inquirer Mindanao
Inquirer.net

DAVAO CITY—North Cotabato Rep. Nancy Catamco, chair of the House committee on cultural minorities, drew flak from various groups here for allegedly insulting tribal people during a dialogue with members of a tribe who fled fighting between communist rebels and government soldiers.

The dialogue was initially attended by Bayan Muna Rep. Carlos Isagani Zarate and Gabriela Rep. Luz Ilagan and other government and military officials.

It was aimed at addressing the lumad evacuees’ call for a pullout of soldiers from the tribal community.

During the dialogue, Catamco, a member of the ruling Liberal Party, said the evacuation site stank and the children probably have not taken a bath.

She also questioned the legitimacy of lumad leaders.

“She was so arrogant,” one of the lumad leaders said.

“She said our children have become stinky. She only came to insult us and our children,” said Datu Kailo Buntolan, one of the lumad leaders.

“She also said we are not lumad leaders. It was like she came here to us, to insult our children, to tell us that we are not real leaders,” said Buntolan.

Buntolan said Catamco called also the lumad leaders “inefficient” because they could not persuade their people, numbering about 700, to return home.

“But why would we persuade them to go home if this is the safest place for them now?” he said.

Catamco, said Buntolan, had become the mouthpiece of the military, which had been insisting that the tribal people return to their homes.

“There was no assurance that the military, which has been abusing our people, will be made to leave and she wants us home?” Buntolan said, adding that it was if Catamco wants to expose them to further abuse.

Datu Jimboy Mandagit, another lumad leader, said the tribe’s experience with Catamco was painful.

Reacting to the allegations, Catamco said she had been misunderstood.

She said she was carried away during the dialogue because it was painful for her to see the condition of the lumad children in the ill-equipped Haran Evacuation Center, which is being run by the United Church of Christ of the Philippines.

“Even if they were IPs (indigenous peoples), they did not want this,” Catamco said.

She said she did not insult anyone because when she said stinky, she was referring to the evacuation center.

“I never said any derogatory statement against them,” she added.

Catamco also said she had suspected that the evacuation was staged and that the lumad in the evacuation center were being used by militants to support a bid to remove soldiers from Talaingod and other areas.

She said she was challenging Zarate and Ilagan to let the evacuees return home or at least turn them over to the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) “if they are really evacuees.”

Catamco claimed the lumad at Haran were now akin to prisoners because they were being padlocked inside the facility.

“They can call me arrogant or anything if they want, for all I care. Mine is that they have to let the IPs go home or turn over them to the DSWD so they could get real help,” Catamco said.

But UCCP Bishop Hamuel Tequis denied Catamco’s claim, saying Haran was “purposely created to accommodate individuals or communities that were deprived, neglected, exploited, harassed, and suppressed.”

Tequis said the lumad had taken refuge “in our Church and UCCP will always provide sanctuary to those who are suppressed and deprived of their dignity as a human being.”

Catamco, representing North Cotabato’s second district in the House of Representatives, was closely identified with Aaron Foundation Philippines Inc., a nongovernment organization that would later figure in the fertilizer scam that rocked the administration of then President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo following the 2004 presidential election.

“She’s the point person of Aaron Foundation Inc., which I know she owned,” former North Cotabato Rep. Bernardo Piñol Jr. said.

Catamco had denied any direct link with Aaron, saying her association with the foundation, if any, was that the NGO being a client of Perzebros, a foliar fertilizer distribution company that she and her former husband owned. Allan Nawal and Carlo Agamon, Inquirer Mindanao

Catamco allowed her true prejudices to surface and maligned the already suffering Ata-Manobo


Inexcusable blunder and a clear violation of the UNDRIP

By Gingging Avellanosa-Valle
July 19, 2015
Sunstar Davao

IF AN ordinary citizen happens to “degrade” a person in authority, such act would constitute an unforgivable offense, such that it could even cost the life of the wrong doer. The person would probably be immediately imprisoned or detained in some “correctional” facility or worse. But if a government functionary who is supposed to be a “servant” of public interest wrongs the ordinary person or people, a reproach can never be said by those are at the receiving end of the insult. Their “position” in society, of course, spells the difference.

In a capitalist, decadent society, the servant becomes the master, because the master has no power whatsoever, even if he or she was the ones responsible for putting the servant in their place.

Such was the irony that was graphically displayed by the supposed chairperson to a House Committee on the Indigenous Peoples whose mandate is to serve the interests of the Indigenous Peoples and not to discriminate and hurl insults on their person.

Unfortunately, the representative was so ignorant of her duty that she could do nothing but brag about her feelings of disgust and contempt against the people she claims to be her kind.

It is a BIG shame, because by doing so, the Committee being headed by that irresponsible chairperson have degraded and defiled their duty and has tacitly refused to heed the call of the “United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) resolution adopted by the General Assembly... taking note of the recommendation of the Human Rights Council contained in its resolution 1/2 of 29 June 2006,1 by which the Council adopted the text of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples… by which it decided to defer consideration of an action on the Declaration to allow time for further consultations thereon, and also decided to conclude its consideration before the end of the sixty-first session of the General Assembly, (and henceforth) …adopts the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as contained in the annex to the present resolution.”

Contained in this particular document of UNDRIP, which was also signed by the Republic of the Philippines as member country to the United Nations, are the following acknowledgements: “Reaffirming that indigenous peoples, in the exercise of their rights, should be free from discrimination of any kind, concerned that indigenous peoples have suffered from historic injustices as a result of, inter alia, their colonization and dispossession of their lands, territories and resources, thus preventing them from exercising, in particular, their right to development in accordance with their own needs and interests, recognizing the urgent need to respect and promote the inherent rights of indigenous peoples which derive from their political, economic and social structures and from their cultures, spiritual traditions, histories and philosophies, especially their rights to their lands, territories and resources, recognizing also the urgent need to respect and promote the rights of indigenous peoples affirmed in treaties, agreements and other constructive arrangements with States…"

It added: “Recognizing that the situation of indigenous peoples varies from region to region and from country to country and that the significance of national and regional particularities and various historical and cultural backgrounds should be taken into consideration, solemnly proclaims the following United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as a standard of achievement to be pursued in a spirit of partnership and mutual respect.”

Under the same declaration, the UNDRIP further stated among others, on “Article 14 1. Indigenous peoples have the right to establish and control their educational systems and institutions providing education in their own languages, in a manner appropriate to their cultural methods of teaching and learning. 2. Indigenous individuals, particularly children, have the right to all levels and forms of education of the State without discrimination. 3. States shall, in conjunction with indigenous peoples, take effective measures, in order for indigenous individuals, particularly children, including those living outside their communities, to have access, when possible, to an education in their own culture and provided in their own language…”

Moreover, the UN declaration further stated on “Article 15 1. Indigenous peoples have the right to the dignity and diversity of their cultures, traditions, histories and aspirations which shall be appropriately reflected in education and public information. 2. States shall take effective measures, in consultation and cooperation with the indigenous peoples concerned, to combat prejudice and eliminate discrimination and to promote tolerance, understanding and good relations among indigenous peoples and all other segments of society.”

But sadly, Representative Nancy Catamco, chairperson to the Committee on Indigenous Peoples, conveniently IGNORED these facts and allowed her true prejudices to surface and maligned the already suffering Ata-Manobo who are only trying to survive with the assistance of well-meaning organizations and civilians after government agents chose to trample on their rights as a people.

Truly, it is a big SHAME, as she further demeans the IPs with her insensitivity by giving out school bags to their children whom she openly insulted, with big pictures of herself and her family pasted on it.

Unwittingly though, she gave the Ata-Manobo something to remind themselves of her foul-smelling mouth and rudeness which is being recorded in history as unprecedented and ultimate maleficence!

Monday, July 20, 2015

WATCH: Datu Tungig Mansumuy-at testifies at the International People's Tribunal 2015


Datu Tungig Mansimuy-at testimony as witness-victim during the 1st day session of the International Peoples Tribunal 2015. Assisted by Atty. Josalee Deinla.

Friday, July 17, 2015

FLASHBACK to 2014: Datu Doloman Dawsay explains why they sought refuge in Davao City


The Manobos left heavily militarized villages last April 1, 2014 to seek sanctuary at Davao City. Continuous military operations and harassment displaced more than 1,300 individuals from the sitios of Pongpong, Nalubas, Bagang, Bayabas, Saso, Lasakan, Sambolongan and Bugni of Barangay Palma Gil, Talaingod, Davao del Norte. After a month, they returned to their communities following the military's promise on withdrawal of troops.

A year later, the same problem of human rights violations arising from militarization occur causing the Manobos to left again to seek sanctuary in Davao City and to air their grievances against the military.

Lumads would rather die in Davao City than die at the hands of the soldiers in their villages




Bastos? Lawmaker insults lumads, calls them ‘stinky’

By NewsDesk
July 17, 2015

A LAWMAKER from North Cotabato is now drawing flak after she lost her temper in the middle of a dialogue that she had with members of tribal communities to address the presence of soldiers in their villages in Davao del Norte and parts of Bukidnon province.

The dialogue held in Davao City Wednesday turned ugly when Rep. Nancy Catamco, the chair of the House Committee on Indigenous Peoples, turned from emotional to being offensively heavy-handed and crass.


Photo by Kilab Multimedia
She did not only berate lumad leaders who attended the dialogue for refusing to go home to their villages, but also took a jab at how they supposedly stink. During the dialogue held at UCCP Haran, Catamco brought representatives of the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples, Commission on Human Rights, and the military.

The presence of the soldiers brought discomfort to the lumads as they accuse them of harassment, the reason why left their villages.

During the dialogue, a leader told Catamco that they would rather die in Davao City than die at the hands of the soldiers in their villages.

The statement sparked a barrage of insulting comments from the lawmaker.

“That is what you want? So you want to die here? Those who want to die here may raise your hands,” an apparently agitated Catamco said.



She also lamented at how the lumads, especially the children, stink in Haran. At least 700 Manobos, including schoolchildren, are sheltered in UCCP Haran since May.

The dialogue collapsed even when it was later transferred to a hotel in downtown Davao.

Bayan Muna Rep. Carlos Zarate, who attended the dialogue, expressed his disbelief over how Catamco conducted the process. He later walked out saying it was no longer healthy, noting how the lawmaker from North Cotabato kept on interrupting the lumads as she insisted that they go back to their villages.

“I already cautioned her, this is not a dialogue but a monologue,” Zarate said. “If you’re facilitating and you’re emotional, you can’t be objective anymore.”

Rep. Luzviminda Ilagan also expressed her dismay over how Catamco handled the dialogue. She said the lumads were surprised that military officials arrived at the dialogue, since there was an agreement that only NCIP representatives will be invited to listen to the complaints of the lumads.

“Dismayed is the mildest, and apprehensive because the leaders were exposed, and very disappointed because that is not how you are supposed to conduct a dialogue,” said Ilagan, a Dabawenya who represents Gabriela Women’s Party. “You must not fan conflict when you are facilitating a dialogue. I pity the leaders who became helpless because she was not listening to them.”


Photo by Bai Ali Indayla
Datu Kailo Bantulan, a leader of the lumads, they left the dialogue feeling down and insulted.

“Kung gusto niyang mutabang maminaw siya kanamo kay kami ang nakasinati sa maong abuso (If she wants to help, she should listen to us, it is us who experienced abuse),” he said.

Bantulan said more than simply returning to their homes, they want a written agreement with the military that soldiers should stay away from their houses, farms and schools.

The leaders of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP) expressed concern over the conduct of Catamco.

“UCCP Peace Sanctuary is a prophetic witness and humanitarian effort of the church for the lost, the last and the least of our people,” said UCCP Bishop Hamuel Tequis. “It is a place purposely created to accommodate individuals or communities that were deprived, neglected, exploited, harassed, and suppressed with their rights to peace, respect and free as a community.”

He reminded the lawmaker that forcing the lumads to go back — while in fear — will not address their issues and demands.

Government officials, he said, must not make the situation worse as public servants should “act as genuine servants to the people.”

UCCP, he said, will continue extending help to the IPs.

“We encourage the LGU’s and government agencies to do also with no single amount of hatred and bitterness, but rather by love and acceptance,” he said.

In a text message, Catamco denied she meant to insult the lumads.

“It was not alluded to anyone but it was the place that going smelly (sic),” Catamco said. “They can call me arrogant or anything they want, I don’t care.”| JMT, NewsDesk

Catamco is the spokesperson of the military -- tribal leader


Photo by Kilab Multimedia

Congresswoman insulted, deceived us — Lumads

By JOHN RIZLE L. SALIGUMBA
July 17, 2015
Davao Today

DAVAO CITY — Leaders of lumads who evacuated to Davao City starting May because of alleged Army harassment in their areas said a legislator insulted their leaders, deceived them into a dialogue and are forcing them to go home despite threats in their lives.

“We were happy to learn that she will be visiting us and will bring along the NCIP (National Commission on Indigenous Peoples) so we can have a dialogue, but she deceived us. She brought along the military not thinking how we would feel,” said Datu Kaylo Bontulan, a leader of indigenous people group Salugpungan Ta’Tanu Igkanugon (Salugpungan).

Bontulan said Second District Representative Nancy Catamco appeared before their evacuation center in Haran compound of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines in Davao City Tuesday.

“But we did not agree on bringing the military and other agencies. She violated our agreement, she deceived us,” said Bontulan in a press conference afternoon of Wednesday, after a series of dialogues initiated by Catamco failed.

On Wednesday morning, Catamco arrived with Army officials and officers of the NCIP, the Commission on Human Rights and the Department of Social Welfare and Development.

Lumads from three Manobo indigenous communities surrounded her: the Manobos of Salugpungan from Talaingod, Davao del Norte, Manobos from IP group Karadyawan from Kapalong, Davao del Norte and Manobos from the Kasilo organization from the province of Bukidnon.

“I want to listen to the people,” said Catamco holding the microphone inside the Haran compound.

Catamco randomly picked from among the crowd and gave them the microphone.

Two of those she handed the microphone said they “want to go home” and that they be assured “that the military will not lay a hand on us.”

Catamco then asked “kinsa sa inyo ang gusto na muoli (who among you want to go home)?”

Many raised their hands.

Leaders from the three groups of Lumads wanted to interrupt while Catamco went on to offer those who raised their hands a bus ride and food packs.

Datu Duloman Dawsay, spokesperson of Salugpungan looked-on frustrated in between coughs.

Asked what he thought about the then ongoing dialogue, he sat in a plastic chair, took a deep breath and said “we cannot go home without being assured of our security.”

“Too many fell victim to atrocities of the military. They must leave our communities,” he said.

Bayan Muna Representative Karlos Zarate approached Catamco to suggest that a separate dialogue with leaders be done instead.

Catamco agreed and arranged for a venue in a nearby hotel while her staff were giving away school bags.

The dialogue proceeded in the afternoon only to end by a walkout by the Lumads and both parties calling for separate press conferences.

Catamco with the Army officers and government agency heads and representatives remained at the hotel while Zarate and Gabriela Partylist Representative Luzviminda Ilagan joined the Lumads in a separate venue.

“It was a fiasco, not a dialogue,” said Ilagan who helped Catamco talked with the Lumads.

Ilagan said she and Zarate reminded Catamco that ground rules should be set in a dialogue.

“Rules have to bet so each side can be given time to speak. We were supposedly there to listen,” she said.

Ilagan said both dialogues became “useless”.

“Each of us was there because we had the intention to help, but this not the way a dialogue should be done,” said Ilagan.

“The dialogue in the morning failed as the Lumads were not comfortable with the presence of the military who they say threatened and harassed them in their communities,” she said.

Ilagan said “those from the government agencies were also caught off-guard.”

“The Lumads were asking these agencies what actions they have done with the Lumad’s situation,” she said.

Zarate, meanwhile, said he told Catamco that, “it is important that we always consult the Lumads and that we in the end respect their decision.”

“When I spoke in the dialogue that even us in Congress cannot dictate the Lumads to go home just because they are dirty she was apparently slighted,” said Zarate.

Zarate said he made it clear to Catamco that they cannot make quick results and that he suggested a “timeline” for it.

“The Lumads repeated to her that if they are made secure, they will go home and she said that what the Lumads want like the pullout of the Army is not possible right away,” he said.

Zarate said Catamco balked at him and said “why are you answering my question? It is not you I asked.”

Zarate said he understands the “emotional” stage of Catamco.

“We are both members of Congres and she probably has good intentions, in fact we all wanted a quick solution but the security of Lumads must have a solution as it was not solved in previous dialogues with Mayor (Rodrigo) Duterte,” he said.

Datu Mintroso Malibato, Karadyawan spokesperson, said since the dialogue in the morning “Catamco questioned us as leaders of the community and have cut us short in our speech.”

“She did it again in the afternoon. She only wants to listen to herself,” Malibato said.

Datu Jimboy, chairperson of Kasilo, said “we hoped that she can help us make the military be accountable to what they did to us, but she was the one who spoke for them.”

“She was forcing us to say that we must go home no matter what but she did not ask the (Army) generals when they would pull-out their soldiers from our communities,” he said.

Datu Jimboy said “she kept on repeating her point that we should go home so we walked out of the dialogue.”

Benito Bay-ao, a Salugpungan Council member said “what she (Nancy) did to us is deception.”

“We are happy that she is here because she is also a Lumad, but he called us dirty and in the dialogue she harassed us like what the military did to us,” said Bay-ao.

Bay-ao said “her feelings for us Lumads is not real.”

“What we asked is that we Lumads not be armed and the soldiers be pulled-out from our communities. We were peaceful before they came,” he said.

“She has taken our voice like what the soldiers are also doing. She is a lap dog of the military,” said Bay-ao.

“Nakaminos gyud na siya sa amoa (she is looking down on us),” he said.

“Maybe she wants to ake credit in solving our problems as a Congresswoman. We would put her in high esteem if she solve our problems even if she is not in congress anymore,” said Bontulan.

“We do not want to face such Congressmen anymore who is clearly biased,” he said.

In a press conference, Catamco said “we want to tell the IP leaders that the government is ready.”

“If the soldiers has committed violations, let them undergo a process. All I want is to bring them home,” she said.

Catamco said she was “full of anger,” and is “emotionally desperate” because of the situation of the Lumads in Haran.”

“I cannot bear in my conscience that I will go back to Manila while this is their siutation, that I have done nothing,” she said.

Catamco said that she has been successful in other IP areas with the same situation “because there is no support group.”

She said she would file a resolution before congress “that the IPs will be sent home or else the civic organizations will answer for it.”

Bontulan, however, said “we are not open to her anymore.”

“We do not want to talk with such congressmen who has clearly taken sides,” he said.

“Catamco is the spokesperson of the military,” he said.(davaotoday.com)

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Mga suportang grupo ng mga nagbakwit na mga lumad ginigipit ng gobyerno


Panggigipit sa mga Lumad binira ng lady solon

By Aries Cano
July 14, 2015
Abante Online

Tinuligsa ni Gabriela Women’s Partylist Rep. Luzviminda Ilagan ang nangyayaring panggigi­pit laban sa mga tagapagtaguyod ng kapakanan at karapatan ng mga katutubong Lumad.

Ayon sa lady solon, masyadong garapal ang paniniil kontra sa child rights advocates at human rights defenders na nangunguna sa kampanya para masagkaan ang mili­tarisasyon sa mga eskuwelahan ng mga Lumad.

Maituturing aniyang political persecution at harassment ang mga binabalandrang kaso ng kidnapping at human trafficking laban sa mga tagapagtanggol ng mga Lumad.

Nabatid na kasama sa mga kinasuhan sina Gabriela Southern Minda­nao Secretary General Mary Ann Sapar at Salinlahi Alliance for Child­ren Secretary General Kharlo Manano.

Ang dalawang nabanggit na kinasuhan ay kapwa kaalyado ng Save Our Schools Network.

Bukod kina Sapar at Manano sinampahan din ng kaso sina Rev. Jurie Jaime, Sheena Duazo, Hanimay Suazo, Ryan Lariba, Tony Salubre, Jimong Marciano, Jaja Necosia, Pedro Arnaldo­, Kerlan Fanagel, Sr. Stella Matutina, Sr. Restita Miles, Isidro Andao, Riuz Valle at iba pa.

Sinasabing pasimuno sa pagkakaso ang Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG).

“The CIDG specifically singled out acti­vists involved in the campaign to demilitarize the Lumad schools. They accused activist leaders and child rights advocates of trafficking and kidnapping Lumad children and families who have evacuated to Davao City and in some instances, brought their appeal to save Lumad schools from being occupied and damaged by AFP elements to government offices in Manila. These acts do not cons­titute trafficking or kidnapping. The charges filed are ridiculous and totally baseless,” paghahayag ni Ilagan.

Pinaliwanag ng Gabriela solon na buwan ng Nobyembre ng nakalipas na taon nang ipara­ting ng Save Our Schools Network ang pagdurusa ng mga katutubo sa mga miyembro ng Mababang Kapulungan ng Kongreso.

Maliban dito, nagkaroon din, aniya, ng mga dayalogo sa pagitan ng Department of Education (DepEd) at nagkaroon din ng pag-uusap sa pagitan ni Bishop Romulo Valles ng Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP).

"Kining pag-abot ni Cong. Nancy nakita namo na dili ni pag-sulbad sa among mga problema sa lumad"


Gabriela Partylist Rep. Luz Ilagan listens intently as Datu Kaylo Buntolan (right) expresses his dismay on North Cotabato Rep. Nancy Catamco for allegedly insulting lumad leaders during a dialogue with IPs and government agencies. (Caption by Sunstar Davao. Photos by Seth de los Reyes and Bai Ali Indayla)

Lawmaker hit for 'insulting' lumads

July 16, 2015
Sunstar Davao
Published in the Sun.Star Davao newspaper on July 17, 2015.

THE chair of the House committee on national cultural minorities, a body tasked to look into the welfare of lumad communities, has been criticized for allegedly uttering derogatory and humiliating statements toward evacuees during a dialogue Wednesday at UCCP Haran Evacuation Center in Davao City.

North Cotabato Representative Nancy Catamco has been described by lumad leaders and various groups as arrogant and does not fit to a public office.

During the dialogue, the congresswoman reportedly commented on the foul smell at the evacuation center and questioned the legitimacy of the lumad leaders.

Catamco presided over the dialogue attended by representatives of different government agencies and lumad victims of forcible evacuation from the areas of Talaingod and Kapalong in Davao del Norte and San Fernando in Bukidnon, together with their support groups.

Catamco, identifying herself with the indigenous peoples, referred to them as "mabaho" during a dialogue supposed to address the issue of human rights violations by the military in lumad areas.

Catamco even asked the lumad children if they had already taken a bath and if they used soap and shampoo, adding that she does not want to go back to Manila without sending them back to their homes.

She added she cannot afford to see children and other evacuees staying in a place with foul odor.

The evacuation center has been housing around 700 lumads since May, as they refused to go home due to continuous military presence in the area.

It has been reported that the said dialogue was divided into two parts, wherein the other one was held in Haran because of the military officers Catamco invited without asking permission from the lumads.

Insulted

Lumad leaders, in a separate interview, criticized the Catamco-initiated dialogue, saying it was a "slap" on their faces.

"Kining pag-abot ni Congresswoman Nancy nakita namo na dili ni pag-sulbad sa among mga problema sa lumad kung dili dako ni siya na pag-sagpa sa among nawong (We are looking at the coming of Congresswoman Nancy as something that will not solve the problem of the lumads but this is a big slap on our faces)," said Datu Kailo Buntolan, a tribal council leader from Kapalong.

"Mu-ingon siya nga dili niya kaya muuli sa Manila, na hantod kanus-a ning mga bata na manimaho na sila. Murag ni-anhi lang siya sa amua para magsaway sa amoang kabataan, para mag-ingon sa amua nga dili daw mi mga leader (She was saying she can't leave without sending us back home. that our children have already turned smelly. It was like she came here to us, to insult our children, to tell us that we are not leaders)," Buntolan added.

He said that even if they were not appointed by the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples, they were chosen by their community as leaders.

During the heated discussion, Catamco called the lumad leaders as inefficient as they do not want to let their community members to go home immediately.

In their defense, Buntolan said that even during the second set of dialogue at Apo View Hotel on the same day, she did not give them the chance to speak for themselves and their community.

"Among pag-sabot, nakita namo sa among pulong na usa kini ka spokesperson sa mga sundalo diha sa EastMinCom (Eartern Mindanao Command), so nganong maka-ingun man ta ana, usahay inig isa namo ka-estorya putulon, wala mi naka lugar na pwede mi makaestorya sa taas na pag-estorya (We see her as a spokesperson of the EastMinCom, why did we say that, it is because every time we talk, she would cut it)," he said.

He added that they all want to go home but they want an assurance the military forces in the area will be pulled out.

It was previously reported that the lumad leaders, together with committee on IP members Partylist Representatives Luzviminda Ilagan of Gabriela and Karlos Zarate of Bayan Muna, walked out during the dialogue.

Miscommunication

During the first dialogue Wednesday, Catamco failed to inform the lumad communities that she had also invited military officers which resulted to their dismay.

Datu Jimboy Mandagit from Bukidnon said that what she did resulted in a bigger problem in their community.

"Kining mga lumad na akong gidala, dili ni sila kasabot ug bisaya mao to ang hinungdan na kung makakita ni sila ug military, mahadlok ni sila (These lumads whom I brought here, do not understand Bisaya. That is why, every time they see military forces, they are scared)," Mandagit said.

Bontulan said they do not see sincerity in Catamco's efforts as she was forcing them to go home right away on that day.

"We feel that she wants to take pride on her name by giving solution to our problems that is why she is forcing us to go home as soon as possible," he said in vernacular.

Emotional

In a separate media interview, Catamco said that she was just "emotional" during the dialogue. She said what she had wanted was to put an end to what the lumad evacuees are going through at Haran.

"It's just that maybe I was just so emotional because gusto ko sana masolusyonan na eh. It's not fair hindi po hustisya ito para sa mga IPs na nandito sa Haran," she said.

"Kahit siguro sinong tao yan, kahit ang IP walang silang pinag-aralan, ignorante sila pero hindi po nila gugustuhin ang ganitong sitwasyon," she added.

She also said that she requested some military officers, namely, Army's 1003rd Brigade commander Colonel Harold Cabreros and deputy commander of the Eastern Mindanao Command Brigadier General Alexander Balutan, to come to the dialogue in order to answer the concerns of the lumads.

Pull-out cannot be granted

Despite the lumad leader's request to pull out the military forces in their area, Balutan said they cannot do such since they are supposed to guard the equipment for the projects being constructed in the area.

He said it is for the lumads to experience the services of the government. (KGL/With CCC)

Pakinggan kung paano makitungo si Rep. Nancy Catamco sa mga lumad



Basahin ang kwento dito.




Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Belgian Tine van Rompuy signs petition to end military attacks on schools


Petition initiated by Save Our Schools Network have already gathered 700+ signatures from various human rights, children's rights, and indigenous people's rights advocates all over the world including Belgian nurse and political leader Tine Van Rompuy. It calls for DepEd to look into and end military attacks on lumad (IP) schools.

A Wikipedia entry describes Tine Van Rompuy as follows:
Christine Francine Wilhelmina "Tine" Van Rompuy (born 28 August 1955, in Leuven) is a Belgian nurse, politician and syndicalist, member of the Workers Party of Belgium, a small leftist party in Belgium. Van Rompuy is the sister of Herman Van Rompuy, EU's first full-time president of the European Council, and the Flemish politician Eric Van Rompuy. She earned her diploma as a psychiatric nurse in 1977. From 1977 to 1995 she worked as a psychiatric nurse in the head Psycho-Social Center of the Brothers of Charity in Leuven. Since 2004 she is head nurse at the Central Patient Transport Service at the University Hospital of Leuven.

In 2009, Van Rompuy helped to design an election campaign poster showing her brother, Prime minister Herman Van Rompuy, dressed as a circus clown. This attracted some attention, and according to some media reports, they have not spoken since. However, Van Rompuy said on her personal weblog that she is "happy that [her] brother will be president of Europe", and that she would give him a "little box" with a message that "the 2 % who are the richest, pay a tax of 2% on their wealth".

Sign the Petition here.

Lumads dismayed by military presence at dialogue


Lumads dismayed by military presence at dialogue

By Kriztja Marae G. Labrador
July 15, 2015
Sunstar Davao

WHAT was supposedly a mediation to resolve issues confronting lumads from Talaingod, Kapalong, and Bukidnon areas with members of concerned government agencies turned out to be a confrontation, as it resulted in verbal exchange between tribal leaders and members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP).

The dialogue, held at UCCP Haran Evacuation Center, was organized by North Cotabato Representative Nancy Catamco and participated in by Partylist Representatives Luzviminda Ilagan of Gabriela, Karlos Zarate of Bayan Muna, and officials from the National Commission on Indigenous People's (NCIP), Department of Social Welfare and Development, and the Commission on Human Rights.

The evacuation center has been housing around 700 lumads from the areas since May, as they refused to go home due to continuous military presence in the area.

During the dialogue, Catamco told lumad evacuees that the main purpose of the initiative was to send them back home. But she failed to inform lumads ahead of time that officers from the AFP were to join the dialogue.

"Hindi ito dialogue, confrontation na. May trauma sila tapos binigla ninyo," Zarate told Catamco at the sidelines of the dialogue.

"That is not how to conduct a dialogue, kung dialogue unta dili nimo paawayun ang mga tao (you do not make people quarrel) and I also pity the leaders who became helpless who were not able to assert so it became a monologue not a dialogue," Ilagan said in a separate interview, adding there should be a consent from the lumads before bringing the military to join the said dialogue.

But members of the AFP represented by Army's 1003rd Brigade commander Colonel Harold Cabreros and deputy commander of the Eastern Mindanao Command Brigadier General Alexander Balutan said during the dialogue that this call of the lumads is not possible as of the moment, as the military's role in the area is to protect the equipment of the projects being constructed in the said area.

At the middle of the supposed mediation, Ilagan, and Zarate suggested to conduct another dialogue in a separate area in order to avoid further commotion.

"The reason we suggested we go elsewhere to conduct a dialogue for us to come up with something productive naa tay maresolve dili lang tong heightened emotions, agitated imung audience naturally government agencies were made to feel defensive na what have you been doing na naa lang man pud," Ilagan said.

As of press time Wednesday, lumad leaders, together with militant group members Ilagan and Zarate, walked out during their second dialogue together with Catamco and AFP officers held at Apo View Hotel.



Lumads say paramilitary men remain as threat

By Christine Joice Cudis
July 15, 2015
Sunstar Davao

AROUND 700 lumads at the UCCP Haran Evacuation Center are still not convinced to go back to their particular places until assured that the presence of the Alamara be pulled out from their communities.

"Ma'am kung gusto namo muuli, makauli mi karon dayon, ang among problema dili mi luwas didto sa amoang lugar kay naay military (We can go home anytime we want Ma'am. Our problem is we are not safe in our own community because of the presence of the military there)," said a lumad when asked by Representative Nancy Catamco why they still choose to stay even after offered the permit to operate (PTO).

Brigadier General Alexander Balutan, deputy commander of the Eastern Mindanao Command, said they cannot pull out the military force in the area since they are supposed to guard the construction of roads.

He said it is for the lumads to experience the services of the government.

The Department of Public Works and Highways is spending an estimate of P14 billion on the roads, buildings, and infrastructures on areas near the lumad communities in Kapalong, Talaingod, and Bukidnon.

The military is guarding the construction of these projects to protect the equipment and to ensure that the projects will be completed.

"Binabantayan namin yung project from the NPA. Kasi ang nangyayari ay extortion," Brigadier General Balutan said.

He said the NPA is afraid that if the government will provide the people better goods, they (people) will eventually side with them.

This earned a mouthful from Gabriela Partylist Representative Luzviminda Ilagan.

"Who's development are we talking about? Para kanino yang kalsada, para kanino yang malalaking project? May papasok nga kasi na mga malalaking kompanya, kailangan ba ng lumad ng malapad na sementado na kalsada, farm to market road will be okay pero hindi yun ang ginagawa eh," she said.

Ilagan said the lumads' problem is easy to understand. "Simple lang naman ang request ng lumad sector, which is to pull out the Alamara, stop organizing the Alamara," she said.

Alamara is a paramilitary group composed of indigenous peoples themselves organized by the military to harass their fellow lumads.

Ilagan clarified that it is not the job of the military to guard backhoes and other equipment for construction but to secure the safety of the people from external threats.

"Isa na kami ka bulan ug kapin pero dili gyud kami makauli kay hadlok kami"

Lumad group decries killings, seeks gov’t help


By Pamela Jay F. Orias
July 15, 2015
Sunstar Cagayan de Oro

A GROUP from Higaonon tribe in Cabanglasan town in Bukidnon stormed the offices of National Commission on Indigenous (NCIP) and Commission on Human Rights (CHR) demanding an inquiry into the killing of tribe members allegedly by a paramilitary group based in the area.

Kalumbay, a lumad organization, documented seven deaths in Cabanglasan, three in San Fernando, and 11 other cases this year in the province of Bukidnon.

"This is really a pressing concern and there is a need to immediately address the problem since these are deaths and their rights have been stepped on ug dapat immediate gyud kay lisud kaayo mubalik na pud sila didto sa ilaha unya mao lang gihapon ang sitwasyon," said Gary Ben Villocino of Kalumbay.

The group left Cabanglasan and sought refuge at the provincial capitol in Malaybalay in June.

"Pero isa na kami ka bulan ug kapin pero dili gyud kami makauli kay hadlok kami, ug wala pa gihapoy hustisya sa among lugar," said Diden Landasan, a Higaonon.

She said they were compelled to come to the city, hoping that government agencies could put a stop to the killings. “Naningkamot gyud mi na makaanhi taliwala sa kagutom ug sa kalisod para lang mapahibalo namo ang among sitwasyon," she said.
Romulo dela Mance and Butsoy Salusad, the leaders of the paramilitary group who allegedly committed the killings in Cabanglasan, were issued a warrant of arrest in June after being charged with murder and attempted murder.

The two are still at large and continue to harass people in Cabanglasan, Kalumbay said.

Landasan said the dela Mance are coercing the tribesmen into join the paramilitary.

"We would like the NCIP to release a public statement condemning the killings and also, we want your office to conduct investigation to finally impose sanctions to this paramilitary regarding the matter," the statement further reads.

NCIP's regional director was not available, but the group was able to express their demands
.
According to Kalumbay, the CHR has verbally committed to help in the investigation.



Monday, July 13, 2015

Fear of military abuse force tribal folks out of their school


Red tag keeps Manobo kids fearful of school
Philippine Daily Inquirer
July 12, 2015

DAVAO CITY — An indigenous people’s (IP) group in Davao del Norte is staying away from its school for fear of soldiers that leaders of the group said had turned the school and homes into barracks, an accusation that the military flatly denied.

The Department of Education (DepEd) had given the school, which became controversial after the military accused it of being run by communist guerrillas, a permit to operate as an educational institution.

But the tribal folk who are supposed to be serviced by the school refuse to send their children back to their classes.

“They’re (soldiers) staying in our houses and schools, that’s why, we fled,” said Datu Doloman Dawsay, a Manobo leader and an official of the group Salugpongan Ta íTanu Igkanugon, which operates an IP’s school in Sitio Nalubas in Barangay Palma Gil in the town of Talaingod.

“The permit is not enough to protect our children against military attacks, we still urge (DepEd Davao Director Alberto) Escobarte to look into these schools under attack,” said Dawsay.

Salugpongan was among the groups that set up camp outside the DepEd regional office here last month, following threats by the government to close down several IP schools for lack of permits to operate.

After the release of some of the permits, protesters dismantled their camps but still refused to go home for fear of soldiers occupying civilian facilities in their communities. The military denied this.

Dawsay said the tribal folk would continue to take refuge in a church compound here until the government orders the soldiers to leave the tribal communities.

Dawsay said members of the Manobo tribe from Sitio Nalubas in Barangay Palma Gil and Sitio Tibucag in Barangay Dagohoy in Talaingod fled their homes and sought refuge in Davao City since the second week of May, allegedly because of harassment from the military, who have accused those operating the school of being members or supporters of the communist New People’s Army (NPA).

Capt. Alberto Caber, spokesperson of the military’s Eastern Mindanao Command, however, denied reports that soldiers are encamped in houses and civilian facilities in Talaingod.

“That’s not true,” Caber said.

Germelina Lacorte, Inquirer Mindanao

Saturday, July 11, 2015

PH government worsens lumad situation by criminalizing lumad rights advocacy


Cases against activists lodged after IP’s mass evacuation

By JOHN RIZLE L. SALIGUMBA
July 11, 2015
Davao Today

DAVAO CITY – Leaders of lumad (indigenous people) evacuees from Davao del Norte province appeal to authorities that they be allowed to protest for their rights after support groups assisting them were charged with violations of Republic Act (RA) 267 or Kidnapping, Serious Illegal Detention and Anti-trafficking in persons Act.

Datu (tribal leader) Kaylo Bontulan, representative of Salugpungan Ta Ta’Tanu Igkanugon (Unite to Save the Ancestral Land) said, “we have learned a lot in our 20 years of struggle to not know what we are doing.”

“What do they think of us lumads, that we are incapable of finding ways to liberate ourselves from our predicaments?” said Bontulan.

He said “it is our right to protest what we think is bad for us. It is our right leave our homes because we are in constant danger of military men who accuse us of being rebels.”

Bontulan, who appeared agitated while answering questions in a press conference on Thursday, raised his voice as he said, “those who accuse must know first the context of our bakwit (mass evacuation).”

He said “bakwit is our highest political statement to put forward our concerns.”

During the press conference, Sheena Duazo of militant group Bayan Southern Mindanao said a complaint was filed against her and other individuals who supported Salugpungan’s evacuees.

Duazo showed Davao Today of their notes on the details of the case.

She said the complaint against them is under docket number XI-02-INV-15-E-1848 filed before the City Prosecutor’s Office.

Included in the complaint are Rev. Jurie Jaime, Sheena Duazo, Hanimay Suazo, Ryan Lariba, Tony Salubre, Jimong Marciano, Mary Ann Sapar, Jaja Necosia, Pedro Arnaldo, Kerlan Fanagel, Sr. Stella Matutina, Sr. Restita Miles, Isidro Andao, Kharlo Manano, Riuz Valle and many John Does.

The charge against Duazo and the other individuals are violation of Republic Act (RA) 267 or Kidnapping, Serious Illegal Detention and RA 9208 or the Anti-trafficking in persons Act of 2003 as amended by RA 10364 or the Expanded Anti-trafficking of Persons Act of 2012.

Duazo said the complainant is the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) and that the address indicated is the Haran House of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP), where the Lumads sought refuge.

Bontulan denied the allegations and said “we were not forced to go here, nor are we being held against our will by these people who we consider as our support groups.”

“Twenty years ago, it was Haran who took us when we left our homes because our leader chose to fight against a logging company. We are not new to this,” he said.

The lumads occupy the vacant lot of the Haran compound. From the compound’s main gate, the leaders put-up another gate leading to the more or less 5-meter wide and 20-meter long unpaved strip of land.

The lumads live in raised platform bamboo beds covered with trapal (durable tarpaulins usually used in agriculture), arranged in such a way that a walk path is created at the center.

Trees and thick vegetation on the left side and the end of the array of houses make them feel like they are “home”, said Salugpungan spokesperson Datu Doloman Dawsay.

Lumads collectively take care of free-range chickens that roam about with their loyal hunting dogs.

During their evacuation in 1994, UCCP leaders and Salugpungan made a pact of friendship, the product was a historical marker erected at the base of a mango trunk inside the Haran compound.

A conference room was later erected beside the now productive mango tree. The UCCP leadership named the conference room “Salugpungan Hall.”

Bontulan said tribal leader have come-up with a set of “rules” inside the Haran compound “to protect the children from getting outside and get hit by passing cars and from individuals who want to take advantage of our situation.”

“If you think of it, the support groups, these individuals even cook our food for us. How can it be that we are aggrieved,” said Bontulan.

Bishop Hamuel Tequis, bishop of UCCP Southeastern Mindanao Jurisdiction, however said “we feel that we have not given them our best.”

“They left their comfortable homes, and we the church, should have given them at least what is similar to a real house but they still live in tent makeshifts. We pray we can give more,” he said.(davaotoday.com)

Friday, July 10, 2015

PH Catholic bishops urged to follow Pope in supporting IP rights


PH Catholic bishops urged to follow Pope in supporting IP rights

By Inday Espina-Varona
July 10, 2015
ABS-CBNnews.com

MANILA - Religious and secular groups working for the protection of Philippine indigenous peoples are urging the country’s bishops to take up Pope Francis’ challenge to safeguard the vulnerable against "unfettered" development.

"The Catholic Church and its leaders in the Philippines should follow Pope Francis call to support the struggles of indigenous peoples and all victims of development that only further enrich wealthy clans and corporations and clans," Clemente Bautista, national coordinator of the environmental group Kalikasan told ABS-CBNnews.com.


Nardy Sabino, secretary-general of the Promotion of Church People's rights, echoed Bautista's call and praised the Pope's display of "humility in accepting lapses in the Catholic Church's treatment of indigenous peoples. "

"It is also a call to the faithful to journey with indigenous peoples and defend the sanctity of life," he added.

The Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines is holding its plenary assembly this weekend.

For the Rural Missionaries of the Philippines (RMP), the Pope’s message gives hope that the Vatican could prod the country’s church leaders to step up the campaign against human rights violations in areas eyed by big mining, logging and plantation firms.

The RMP is a national inter-diocesan and inter-congregational organization that works with threatened lumad, indigenous peoples in Mindanao. It said 23 indigenous leaders have been killed from October 2014 to June this year, in the Northern Mindanao region alone.

“That is almost three lives mercilessly put out every month,” said the group that was founded in 1960 by the Association of Major Women Religious Superiors of the Philippines (AMWRSP). Twenty of the victims were Bukidnon province and three from neighboring Misamis Oriental.

Kalikasan’s Bautista said more than 30 of the 48 environmental activists killed under President Benigno Aquino III’s administration were indigenous leaders.

More environmentalists have been slain under the incumbent government than in the nine years of the Macapagal-Arroyo administration, according to Kalikasan.

Both Kalikasan and the RMN linked most deaths to reprisals for IP opposition to mining operations.

Indigenous people activists stood out at Davao City’s Almendras Gym Thursday night, where farewell rites were held for slain New People’s Army (NPA) commander Leoncio Pitao, known as Parago.

Hundreds of IPs trekked down from Talaingod, Davao Oriental and Compastela Valley, areas where more than 3,000 lumad children have stopped school because of military operations and delayed issuance of government permits for their alternative learning institutions.

Many of these small, isolated schools serve lumad communities and are managed by church groups like the RSM and its allies.

A delegation from the Save Our Schools alliance is currently doing a round of dialogues with government offices and legislators, hoping to stop threats against teachers and students of lumad learning centers.

It handed the Commission on Human Rights a list of the schools reportedly under threat from government soldiers and para-military groups.

“The unabated rise of number of schools being attacked has resulted to the violation of the right to education of not less than 5,000 lumad children all over Mindanao,” said Kharlo Manano, SOS Network lead convener and secretary-general of Salinlahi Alliance for Children’s Concerns. He also expressed hope that Church leaders would send a delegation to join a fact-finding mission to Talaingod and other lumad areas next week.

Bautista said Pope Francis’ apology “justifies and supports the struggle of our indigenous peoples to defend their lands against the resource plunder and ecological destruction by foreign and private corporations.”

He urged Philippine bishops to also help peasant and fisherfolk in opposing large scale mining, agricultural plantations, commercial logging and dirty coal power plants, linking these to land-grabbing and other human rights violations and intense environmental degradation in rural communities.

Sabino said the Pope would give new strength to the struggle of the lumad and other ethnic groups in the Philippines, including Muslims.

"The Pope shows the road to peace since it is well known that conflict in IP areas and other rural communities are usually rooted in the struggle to protect ancestral lands and to assert their right to self-determination," he said.