‘WON got it all wrong’
>> Tuesday, July 23, 2019
BEHIND
THE SCENES
Alfred
P. Dizon
(Jeannette
Ribaya-Cawiding, regional coordinator of Alliance of Concerned
Teachers – Cordillera Administrative Region writes this week’s piece)
This is a message for
peace.
With the Duterte
administration’s termination of the Peace Process, the President signed EO 70
on Dec. 4, 2018 to form the national task force to end local communist armed
conflict.
This body
will implement the National Integrated Security Plan (NISP) 2019-2022 or the
Whole-of-Nation Approach (WON) that aims to attain “an inclusive and
sustainable peace”.
In the past
few weeks, the National Intelligence Coordinating Agency (NICA) has been giving
briefings on this in the Cordillera: first, with the Regional Development
Council of National Economic Development Authority- Cordillera Administrative
Region (NEDA-CAR) last June 17; then, with the information officers of all
regional line agencies last June 19; and, more recently with the NCIP committee
of indigenous peoples concerns (CIPC) last July 2. Similar information campaign has also started
in schools like the one held at SLU last July 8.
The
Whole-of-Nation Approach framework posits that insurgency is the cause of
poverty and “unpeace” in the country. It
claims that one of the strategies of the Communist Party of the Philippines-New
People’s Army- National Democratic Front (CPP-NPA-NDF) is the “infiltration” of
government institutions and agencies like the NCIP, National Food Authority and
University of the Philippines.
Another is
the use of progressive people’s organizations as fronts, like the Alliance of
Concerned Teachers (ACT) and the Confederation for Unity, Recognition and
Advancement of Government Employees (COURAGE).
But, during
these briefings, government representatives stood their ground and questioned
them, for instance, how come their Constitutionally-mandated right to unionize
and to struggle for just pay and decent and sustainable jobs is now considered
communist.
An agency
representative at the CIPC expressed disbelief that ACT, which has been
fighting for salary increase and the welfare of teachers, is communist. In the same meeting, a proposed resolution
condemning and disallowing the red-tagging and vilification of these agencies
and the legal progressive people’s organizations, as these are rights violations,
was adopted.
As a member
and organizer for ACT, we raise the same questions and condemnation. With the President’s expressed recognition of
the vital role of teachers in nation-building and development therefore
promising already for the 6th time this year, increased pay for teachers, is it
wrong for ACT to persistently push him to fulfill this promise?
Is it a crime
to assert the correct implementation of the Election Service Reform Act (ESRA),
which we pushed in Congress so that teachers would receive sufficient election
honorarium, and health and legal benefits last elections? Is our clamor to replace the burdensome and
irrelevant evaluation system, the Results-based Performance Management System –
Professional Performance Standard or Teachers (RPMS-PPST which ate up our
summer vacation), with the more practical Performance Appraisal System for
Teachers (PAST), not a valid demand? Are
our lobbying efforts for the amendment of the Continuing Professional
Development (CPD) Law which resulted in the reduction of required CPD units
(from 45 to 15 for 3 years) and the crediting of all trainings to protect us
from being preyed upon by lucrative private service providers with PRC
connections, an anti-government act? Is not our call for the retention of
Filipino and Panitikan as mandatory subjects in the tertiary level part of our
rightful duty to inculcate nationalist education among our youth?
But for
these, ACT has been profiled since November last year (experienced here in
Baguio by schools under the jurisdiction of Police Station 2 and in Apayao),
was subject to state negative electioneering (“Huwag iboto ang ACT Partylist –
Komunistang Partylist!”) and fake news that ACT Partylist was disqualified and
I, as third nominee, was tagged as a CPP-NPA-NDF member. And with these, the
state has opened us up as targets of state attacks in various forms.
ACT, since
1982 nationally and since 1989 in CAR, has consistently led and won many gains
for teachers’ and education welfare. But
the state has also consistently turned its back on teachers and education,
giving some measly economic benefits and recognizing democratic rights when
already very pressured; but many times, resorting to maligning, vilifying and
criminalizing dissent when it cannot respond to the teachers’ just demands.
Now, the
government is rallying everyone (whole nation) against its enemy (the
CPP-NPA-NDF), sowing alarm that this enemy has been so keen for having reached
50 years of revolution. But, it has also
equated and lumped all struggling for food, freedom, jobs and justice with this
enemy.
And it is
this poverty and injustice gripping teachers and all sectors that has bred
protest and civil war. Therefore, war
must be waged against poverty and injustice and not against dissent.
But this, WON
stubbornly negates. For this, WON
therefore, will never WIN!
0 comments:
Post a Comment