Category: BAYAN USA

Eyewitnesses to the Philippines Election

nlgThe National Lawyers Guild (NLG)
UCLA Labor Center
UCLA Institute for Research on Labor and Employment (IRLE)
BAYAN USA

PRESENT:

Eyewitnesses to the Philippines Election: A report-back and discussion from the People’s International Observers Mission (PIOM), Philippines

Wednesday, July 7, 2010, 6:30 PM – 8:00 PM

UCLA Downtown Labor Center
675 South Park View Street
Los Angeles, CA 90057

Members of the NLG delegation to the Philippines invite you to join as we discuss our observations from the 2010 Philippines elections and talk about next steps in organizing against human rights abuses in the Philippines.

The delegation witnessed:

  • Military intimidation
  • Widespread irregularities
  • High potential for fraud
  • Voter machine breakdowns
  • Gun battles inside the polls

Despite the widespread irregularities, propensity for fraud and election violence, Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino has been declared president-elect and Incumbent Gloria Arroyo and Imelda Marcos, widow of the former dictator Ferdinand Marcos, won seats in the House of Representatives.

Please join NLG delegates as we give a presentation, discuss our findings, and talk about our plans to push U.S. policymakers to take heed of the human rights situation in the Philippines.

Through Performance, Students and Community Members Call for Clean and Fair Elections and an End to Oplan Bantay Laya in the Philippines

Contacts:
Kuusela Hilo
Vice Chair, BAYAN-USA
vc@bayanusa.org

Daya Mortel
Southwest Regional Coordinator, BAYAN-USA
sc@bayanusa.org

University of California, Los Angeles – Community members and students called for clean and fair elections in the Philippines and an end to human rights violations with two events on campus–Fowler Out Loud and Power in Numbers.  AnakBayan Los Angeles, Habi Arts, and Sisters of GABRIELA, Awaken (SiGAw), all member organizations of BAYAN USA, collaborated with students Diane Valencia, Lorenzo Perillo, and student groups Samahang Pilipino and members of PAGaSA to present an evening of performance.

During Fowler Out Loud, SiGAw performed excerpts from their show Pasanin Mo Pasanin Ko: Bridging the Struggle of Filipinas.  Members addressed the issue of violence against women through narratives, poems, and song.  Terrie Cervas, SiGAw member and Vice Chair of GABRIELA-USA, stated, “Here in the US, Filipinas face multiple forms of violence, such as rape, discrimination, sexual harassment and more.  Filipinas back home face similar forms of violence and they also suffer under the violence perpetrated by the government.  Over 200 women have fallen as victims to the human rights violations committed by the administration of Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (GMA).  It’s because of the repressive government and depressed economy that over 3,000 Filipinos leave the country everyday, majority of whom are women.”

UCLA students similarly explored the issues of human rights injustices through dance at workshops conducted with Habi Arts co-founding member and Filipina-American torture survivor Melissa Roxas.  The workshops resulted in a collaborative piece with Melissa, choreographers Lorenzo and Nico, and UCLA dancers.  The final performance presented was a movement piece that expressed the profound effect of human rights violations on individuals and the community.  The dance was accompanied by narration and projected images of victims of human rights violations in the Philippines.   Roxas stated, “our aim of the collaborative piece was to speak about human rights injustices by pushing the boundaries of traditional dance.  For many of the students, this was the first time that they were learning about the human rights situation in the Philippines and it was also the first time they were learning to dance and move beyond the confines of traditional dance.  I was told by the dancers that they were profoundly moved by the whole process.  It also provided an opening for what I hope will be a continuing conversation about the human rights situation in the Philippines.”

The Fowler Out Loud event ended with a People’s March, with audience members and performers chanting and marching along a path marked by signs exposing election related fraud and violence in the Philippines.  People poured into Moore hall, the venue for Power in Numbers. BAYAN-USA organized Power in Numbers as a national concert tour, aimed to build awareness and opposition to the election related violence that has intensified with the approaching May 10 elections in the Philippines.  Organizers also called on audience members to spread the word and get out the vote for progressive partylists and senatorial candidates, such as Liza Maza, Satur Ocampo, Anakpawis, GABRIELA Women’s Partylist, and Kabataan Partylist.

The Los Angeles leg of the Power in Numbers concert featured the talents of musicians E.K.H, K.See, Divine Daughters, Shining Sons, L.U.V, and DJs ET and Em-One. The event also featured the UCLA premiere screening of “Sounds of a New Hope,” a documentary film by UCLA alumnus Eric Tandoc.  The film chronicles the life of Filipino-American MC Kiwi and the growing use of hip-hop as an organizing tool in the people’s movement for national liberation and democracy in the Philippines.

AnakBayan Los Angeles member, Nikole Cababa stated, “The Los Angeles concert was held at UCLA to inspire students and the local community to put international pressure on the Philippine government to conduct fair elections and refrain from using violence to suppress democratic rights.”

GMA’s administration has received widespread criticism for rampant human rights violations from the international community, which recently included groups such as the World Council of Churches.  Investigations by UN Special Rapporteur Philip Alston have linked enforced disappearances, torture, and other gross human rights violations to the Philippine military, with no persecution of the perpetrators by the GMA administration. The Armed Forces of the Philippines has implemented Oplan Bantay Laya (OBL), a counter-insurgency program that the government touts will defeat the armed revolutionary movement by 2010.  In reality, OBL stands as the Philippine government’s bloodiest and most vicious counter-insurgency program to date, targeting both the revolutionary armed struggle and the legal democratic movement.

Currently the Philippine government receives the largest amount of US military aid in Asia. BAYAN-USA has initiated a campaign, calling for the end of US military aid to the Philippines.  During the Power in Numbers concert, audience members signed postcards in support of the campaign, which call to uphold human rights and democracy.  The postcards will be delivered to Congressman Howard Berman, the chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee.  BAYAN-USA calls on all concerned community members to support the campaign and urge Congressman Berman to end military aid to the Philippines. More information can be obtained by contacting info@bayanusa.org.

STOP THE KILLINGS!
END OPLAN BANTAY LAYA!
END US MILITARY AID TO THE PHILIPPINES!

BAYAN-USA is an alliance of progressive Filipino groups in the US representing organizations of students, scholars, women, workers, and youth. As the only international chapter of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN-Philippines), BAYAN-USA serves as an information bureau for the national democratic movement of the Philippines and as a campaign center for anti-imperialist Filipinos in the US.

Closing Night of Papo de Asis’ Art Exhibit, Talk By Human Rights Leader, and Film Screening

Please join us in the closing night of Papo de Asis’ Art Exhibit.  The exhibit will coincide with an event to commemorate the Philippine-American War (February 4, 1899) which will include a talk by Marie Hilao-Enriquez, Chairperson of the leading human rights alliance in the Philippines, KARAPATAN; and a film screening of the short, “This Bloody Blundering Business.”

Thursday, February 11, 2010, 7:00 PM
(during Downtown Los Angeles Art Walk)

Fernando’s Hideaway
519 S Spring St (between 5th St and 6th St)
Los Angeles, CA 90013

Free event but donations are welcome!

event_2010-02-08

Emergency Action Alert! Release the 43 Illegally Detained Community Health Workers Now!

Tuesday, February 9, 2010, 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM

Philippine Consulate
3600 Wilshire Blvd (between Harvard and Kingsley)
Los Angeles, CA 90010


Contact: Rhonda Ramiro
Secretary-General, BAYAN-USA
secgen@bayanusa.org

BAYAN-USA Condemns Illegal Abduction and Detention of Health Workers in Rizal

The alliance of 14 Filipino American organizations known as BAYAN-USA strongly condemns the Philippine police and military’s illegal raid and abduction of 43 community health workers and doctors who were conducting health skills training in Morong, Rizal, Philippines on Saturday, February 6.  The health workers and doctors administer health services to poor communities, and were participating in a First Responders Training, sponsored by the Community Medicine Foundation, Inc. (COMMED) and Council for Health and Development (CHD). Their personal belongings, as well the training materials used, were all confiscated by the military.

According to reports by the media and the human rights alliance KARAPATAN, approximately 300 soldiers and police of the Southern Luzon Command of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and the Rizal Philippine National Police (PNP) forcibly entered the farmhouse of Dr. Melecia Velmonte at 6:15 AM. The training participants were then lined up, violently frisked, blindfolded, and taken to Camp Capinpin, headquarters of the 202nd Infantry Brigade, AFP.  The health workers have been held incommunicado since then, and have been denied their right to legal counsel.  A team from the Commission on Human Rights was also blocked from seeing the detainees.

“We denounce the PNP and AFP’s illegal abduction and detention of health professionals,” stated Bernadette Ellorin, BAYAN-USA Chair. “It is contemptible that the government arrested these health care providers while they were undergoing training in ‘first response,’ especially in light of the government’s failure to provide this type of critical care during disasters like typhoon Ondoy.”

KARAPATAN reported that the AFP and PNP illegally used a search warrant naming a person who was not the owner of the home, nor specifying an exact address.  Moreover, the military declared that the victims were members of the New People’s Army because of explosives allegedly found inside the compound, even though witnesses said that the military conducted the search of the compound’s premises only after all of the victims and residents were already outside the buildings. Witnesses also said that the military brought in with them plastic bags with the GMA Kapuso logo printed on it.

“The government is sending the message that Filipino doctors and nurses are welcome to go abroad to work, but they are labeled rebels if they stay in the Philippines to serve the poor,” said Ellorin.  “This falls right in line with President Arroyo’s bloody counter-insurgency program Operation Plan Bantay Laya 2, which has terrorized innocent people with extra-judicial killings, abductions, disappearances, torture and mass arrests.”

BAYAN-USA makes the following demands:

  1. The immediate release of the health workers who are illegally arrested and illegally detained at Camp Capinpin, Tanay, Rizal.
  2. The government to ensure the safety of the victims and that they are not harmed; their belongings be returned immediately to them.
  3. The immediate formation of an independent fact-finding and investigation team composed of representatives from human rights groups, the Church, local government, and the Commission on Human Rights that will look into raid and illegal arrest of the health workers conducting health skills training in Morong, Rizal.
  4. The military to stop the labeling and targeting of human rights defenders as “members of front organizations of the communists” and “enemies of the state.”
  5. The Philippine Government to be reminded that it is a signatory to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and that it is also a party to all the major Human Rights instruments, thus it is bound to observe all of these instruments’ provisions.

Upholding Human Rights, Life and Dignity Arts Exhibit and Open Mic

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