BEHIND THE SCENES
Alfred P. Dizon
BAGUIO
CITY – It still remains to be seen if the Department of Education would be able
to implement the K-12 program, which adds two years to secondary education
curriculum.
This
considering private schools are still in a quandary on how to comply with the
program, as according to their officials, they have not yet been given final
directives by the DepEd on specific rules on its implementation.
It
is wait and see for them until the end of the year on how to go about with it.
While
this is so,the DepEd and other government agencies were ordered Tuesday to
answer a petition before the Supreme Court (SC) of various groups to stop the
implementation of the K-12 program.
The
SC ordered the DepEd, Commission on Higher Education (CHED) and Department of
Labor and Employment (DOLE) to comment within 10 days from receipt of notice on
the petition of the Council of Teachers and Staff of Colleges and Universities
of the Philippines assailing the legality of Republic Act 10533 (creating the
K-12 program) and its implementing rules and regulations.
The
petitioners alleged that RA 10533 violated the rights of education workers to
full protection of labor, promotion of full employment and equality of
employment opportunities, enshrined in the Constitution.
More
than 70,000 college teachers and non-teaching personnel stand to lose their
jobs as a result of the full implementation of the program in 2016, they added.
The
additional two years in senior high school would cause a lag of two years in
enrollment at the tertiary level by 2016, they said.
The
petitioners also questioned the joint guidelines dated May 30, 2014, DepEd Memo
No. 2 issued in January 2015 and House of Representatives Bill No. 5493 filed
on Feb. 23, 2015.
The
orders had no basis under the K-12 Law when they provided for compensation
(upon transfer to senior high school) and retrenchment of workers, they added.
Petitioners
said the issuances are contrary to law and jurisprudence as education workers
are forced to suffer such forms of unjust labor practices.
HB
5493 failed to include the fundamental labor rights of affected workers under
Article XIII, Section 3 of the Constitution that “the State shall afford full
protection to labor, local and overseas, organized and unorganized, and promote
full employment and equality of employment opportunities for all, petitioners
added.
Petitioners
said the Constitution provides that the State shall guarantee the rights of all
workers to self-organization, collective bargaining and negotiations and
peaceful concerted activities, including the right to strike in accordance with
law.
***
(Hereunder
is a statement sent by Abigael Anongos, secretary general of the Cordillera
Peoples Alliance on the first year anniversary of the killing of a human rights
worker in Ifugao)
We remember William Bugatti on his first
death anniversary. A year ago on March 25, 2014, suspected State assassins
killed William in cold blood in Bolog, Kiangan, Ifugao. William was
a devoted human rights and indigenous people’s rights defender.
A year after the incident, justice
remains elusive. No single perpetrator has been arrested and made answerable to
the murder of William. The continuing culture of impunity under the BS Aquino
regime to victims of extrajudicial killings and other forms of human rights
violations is outrageous and calls for condemnation.
William was family man, jolly, and
committed to his work as an organizer, human rights and indigenous peoples’
rights defender. His work brought him to far flung communities of Ifugao and in
the Cordillera region. He patiently joined and organized peasants into local
people’s organizations for sustainable agriculture and strengthening of
indigenous practices of cooperation. As a human rights defender, he visited
communities and victims for human rights education and documentation of human
rights violations. He also visited and facilitated jail visits for political
detainees in Ifugao.
William’s death greatly affected his
colleagues and the communities he served. But most of all, William’s killers
robbed his family a loving father and husband. With his death, communities are
also denied of his services as an organizer, leader and educator. Life for his
family is never the same. His wife was forced to work as an OFW to provide food
on the table and the daily needs of their three young children. The once
happy family is now struggling to live their normal lives.
William is neither a criminal nor a
terrorist as portrayed by suspected intelligence operatives of the State.
Worst, even after his death, the political vilification continues.
As we remember William, the Cordillera
Peoples Alliance and the Ifugao Peasant Movement join his family and community
in calling for justice and State accountability for his death. William will
always be remembered as hero of our people whom he served with dedication and
perseverance. No amount of political vilification can tarnished his contributions
in changing a better world for all.
Lastly, we also call for the immediate
stop of the heightened political vilification and surveillance of members and
leaders of people’s organizations, barangay officials, environmental and
indigenous people’s advocates in Ifugao by suspected intelligence operatives of
the Armed Forces of the Philippines. These accusations are all are malicious,
baseless and unfounded.
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