Press
Statement
September 21, 2015
Bagong
Alyansang Makabayan – Southern Mindanao
For
reference: Sheena Duazo, Secretary General – BAYAN-SMR
0947-344-1625
It's
still Martial Law with attacks on Lumads
It
was 43 years ago that Martial Law was declared by Ferdinand Marcos that plunged
the country into a state ran by the military with a high count of killings,
tortures, arrests and disappearances.
The
people ousted Marcos in 1986 with the calls, “Sobra Na, Tama Na” and “Never
again” to the repression of the people and barbarity of militarism. Yet, the
recent spate of killings of the Lumads and displacements of Lumad communities
all over Mindanao in recent months, makes us wonder is it really never again?
We
have seen in the recent months the bloodiest events in Mindanao under the
Aquino administration including:
·
The
Pangantucan, Bukidnon Massacre on August 18 where a 15-year old and a blind
78-year old were among five lumads shot dead by the military on an allegation
that these lumads were NPA rebels
·
The
killing of Alcadev school director Emerito Samarca, community leader Dionel
Campos and Bello Sinzo last September 1 in Han-ayan, Surigao del Sur by the
paramilitary Magahat-Bagani Force.
·
The
Paquibato incident last June 14 where soldiers strafed the house of
lumad leader Aida Seisa, which resulted to the death of Datu Ruben Enlog.
·
The
assassination of peasant leader and former barangay kagawas Joel Gulmatico shot
dead in front of his house in Arakan, North Cotabato on August 18
·
The
illegal arrests and detention of 15 lumads including a minor in White Culaman,
Bukidnon who were brought to a military headquarters in Cagayan de Oro via
helicopter.
It's
not only the horror of killings that have gripped Lumad communities. Soldiers
and paramilitaries place communities under their vise-like grip, such as in the above-mentioned
barangays where they threaten
families, community school teachers, tagging them as NPA supporters, and the schools
as funded by rebels.
What
is more enraging is the Aquino administration's refusal to even acknowledge and
act on the killings of Lumads and the attacks of Lumad communities and schools.
President Aquino's mere response is to declare that is no government policy to kill lumads. While soldiers and their spawn from
the lumad paramilitary go on with their twisted tales that it is
the NPA who killed the teacher and leaders in Han-ayan, and that the victims are NPA rebels or
sympathizers.
But
why is this happening? The lumads themselves know the answer. "The people in power do not want
the Lumad to prosper, to become educated so that they will further their
capacity to protect their ancestral land. They do not want this to happen,
because if this happens, their mining conglomerates will never be
allowed," says Michelle Campos, daughter of Dionel Campos.
What
is happening here is the government deliberately attacking Lumads and its
institutions including schools and groups supporting the Lumads. It is their
counter-insurgency Oplan Bayanihan that perpetrates the state of fear not only
to silence the rights of the Lumads, but also to clear out communities which
lie on bio-diversity areas and rich mineral deposits favorable to large-scale
mining and agribusiness.
But
it is through persistence through what we see in the Lumads now to continue
their resistance against those who kill their people and plunder their lands.
We stand with the Lumads, farmers and other people in resisting the undeclared
Martial Law gripping the communities in Mindanao. The calls for justice and
protection of Lumads continue to swell as seen in the public clamor online and
in various forms of protest actions from Davao, Butuan to Manila.
We
continue with our stand with the Lumads to save their community schools. We
urge for justice by dismantling paramilitary groups, pullout military in Lumad
communities, and bring the perpetrators of Lumad killings to justice.
Let
us put our collective strength to stand with Lumads and other oppressed sectors
to say enough and never again to Martial rule and impunity in the country.
No comments:
Post a Comment