Small
farmers and indigenous groups in the Philippines have been struggling for
decades against big companies, corrupt officials and influential families to
get land once promised to them.
The
land-hungry business interests are dangerous adversaries for small indigenous
groups in the Philippines. In the past, they have not shied away from
politically-motivated murder, violent intimidation and brutal kidnappings.
Human rights activists, who support the small farmers, live in constant fear.
Despite
death threats and actual attacks, activists like Jessielyn Colegado from the
indigenous group, PADATA, continue to fight for the rights of poor Filipinos.
Colegado, a mother of five children, is demanding the return of land that once
belonged to her ancestors. A rancher named Ernesto Villalon refuses to leave,
even though he has no tenant or lease agreement for the land.
Jessielyn
Colegado and other activists have been the targets of Villalon's security
guards. "They threaten us and burn our houses down. They kill our people
and steal everything we own. They want us to go away," she says.
Law ignored
with impunity
A law
passed in 1997 is supposed to protect the rights of the indigenous farmers. The
Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA) states that the "right to property
and control of the biological and natural resources within the ancestral
areas" are to be ensured.
However,
Danilo Gaban, project coordinator for Negros Island in the Task Force Mapalad
(TFM), says there have been no real changes in implementing the land reform.
"Of the planned 1.2 million hectares of land (3 million acres), the
government so far has only dispersed 20 percent," he says.
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| Security guards try to intimidate activists by burning houses down |
Rainer
Werning, from the Institute for Oriental and Asian Studies in Bonn, points out
that the problem goes back to the old, traditional social structures.
"The
social and political composition of the Philippine government is such that
there is a conspicuous commingling of capitalist structures on the one hand and
feudalistic elements on the other," he notes.
Even the
family of current president, Benigno Aquino, owns roughly 7,000 hectares of
land (17,500 acres) at its Hacienda Luisita in northern Manila. According to
the IPRA land reform act, this property was also supposed to be distributed to
small farmers. Despite a ruling by the Philippines Supreme Court, however, the
redistribution has yet to take place.
German
assistance
There is
some hope that at least the human rights situation could improve. The German
International Peace Observers Network (IPON) has been offering support to
Jessielyn Colegado and Danilo Gaban. Founding member Anne Lanfer has been
working with the Filipinos since 2004.
![]() |
| Despite the law, wealthy landowners have not returned land |
"Simply
the fact that international people are present with observer t-shirts has
helped reduce the potential for violence and removed the feeling among the
perpetrators that they are not being watched," she says.
Another
task is maintaining dialogue with international government organizations and
agencies. The German Foreign Ministry, for example, has said that it would put
the case of the Filipino human rights activists on the agenda at the next
meeting of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva at the end of May.
However,
even if Jessielyn Colegado is hopeful that rancher Villalon will be forced to
vacate her ancestral property this year, she is not so sure the situation for
many other small farmers and indigenous peoples fighting for their own land
will improve. The stumbling blocks put in their way by the powerful companies,
corrupt officials, political leaders with special interests and influential
families are simply too large.
As long as
the rule of law is not invoked in the Philippines, as long as the corruption
continues and the intricate power structures are not dismantled, the country's
disenfranchised small farmers will continue to fear for their lives and
struggle with their livelihoods.
Author: Gero Simone /gb
Editor: Sarah Berning




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