DAGUIOMAN, Abra – Cause-oriented
groups and students from the University of the Philippines assailed municipal
officials here for branding them members of the New People’s Army saying they
were “practically detained” in municipal grounds and harassed by a police
officer.
This was
bared by the Cordillera Human Rights Alliance saying barring development
workers from implementing projects especially in poorest communities not only
violates the their rights but the people's right to development.
Audrey
Beltran, CHRA deputy secretary general told a press conference May 23 in Baguio
City the Daguioman municipal council approved a resolution barring development
workers from the Center for Development Programs in the Cordillera (CDPC) from
implementing their projects in the town.
She said
the CHRA received reports from CDPC staff
how the town council called them to a meeting to supposedly to discuss
their proposed projects in Dagioman.
During the
council meeting, town officials reportedly labeled them as NPAs and told them
they cannot continue with their projects.
Beltran
said local government officials should recognize needs of their municipality and the people's
right to economic development.
Beltran
said directly associating CDPC staff as members of the NPA was wrong because it
removes them from the protection of the law that could lead to more human
rights violations against them.
“The
presence of the NPA in Dagioman or in Abra is an indication of the poverty and
lack of government services in the province and vilifying development workers
is not the answer,” Beltran said.
Beltran
urged local officials to call for resumption of
peace negotiations between the government and the Communist Party of the
Philippines (CPP)-National Democratic Front of Philippines (NDFP)-NPA towards a
just and lasting peace.
She said
the suspended peace talks was second substantive agenda on peace process on
socio-economic reforms to correct unequal distribution of wealth and end
chronic poverty.
Jane
Yap-eo, executive director of CDPC said the CDPC staff and interns from the
University of the Philippines Manila were in the area to continue profiling of
communities because it was being considered for development projects.
She said
the CDPC implements projects in support to agriculture and other livelihood
projects identified by community folks.
“The
projects are identified by the people based on their needs. We provide
technical and financial support and educational and organizing assistance to set
up the projects to equip the community to manage and sustain the projects.”
Yap-eo
added they were also conducting research on climate change adaptation and pest
management of the communities.
“For
almost three decades now, CDPC had been to many far-flung communities in the
Cordillera. We choose to service the least accessible and most neglected
communities, villages that are not reached by government services because they
are the ones who need assistance the most. And by doing this we have been vilified
as members of the NPA but this is the first time that a municipal council
barred us from serving their communities,” she said.
Yap-eo
said vilification and harassment was not new to CDPC staff because they
encountered this in almost all of their areas of implementation but she said
harassment escalated in recent years.
“The
harassment against our staff has escalated since 2012 and we now fear for our
lives. Especially with the recent killing of our colleague William Bugatti in
Ifugao last March. Like us he was vilified and harassed, included in a military
target and later was extrajudicially killed,” she said.
Yap-eo
said escalating harassment and vilification is disrupting the work of CDPC
staff and causing them emotional stress.
“But this
does not mean we will give up on the people of Daguioman. We will continue to
engage town officials and make them realize that we are a legitimate
non-government organization working for genuine development. The people of
Daguioman need us,” she said.
John Carlo
Mercado, one of the CDPC interns from UP Manila said it was wrong to label UP
students as NPAs.
He
said a police officer present in the
council meeting harassed them. “The same police officer made hasty and
dangerous generalization that UP students are NPAs.”
Mercado
added while they expected to be branded as NPAs because they were UP students,
they did not know the gravity of it until they experienced it in Daguioman. “We
were really shocked. We were practically detained in the municipal grounds
after the council meeting. We were followed and harassed by the police
officer,” he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment