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Official Publication
                                                 of the Center for Environmental
                                                 Concerns Philippines

                                         Helping communities address environmental challenges
                                         September-December 2010
                                         ISSN 0117-0864




                                    Contents
                                     2    Justice	


                                     3    Human	rigHts,	food	security	top	
                                          concerns	in	cec	educational	
                                          discussions


                                     4    leonard	co:	Bringing	knowledge	
                                          of	tHe	forests	to	tHe	people


                                     8    encountering	tHe	trutH:	
                                          tHe	kananga	3	killings


                                    11    a	Bloodstained	History:	tHe	19tH	iB’s	
                                          record	of	rigHts	violations


                                    13    renew	training	Bares	environmental	
                                          proBlems	of	urBan	poor	communities


                                    14    tHe	envicore	engagement:	save	
                                          tHe	world,	take	tHe	crasH	course


                                    17    anti-slapp	Bill	of	2010	campaign	
                                          kicks-off	witH	cultural	nigHt


                                    17    cec	pilots	first	luzon-wide	
                                          envicore	training


                                    18    asia-pacific	environmental	
                                          educators,	activists	unite	
                                          on	gloBal	warming




Leonard Co
                                    20    education	for	cHange	and	
                                          sustainaBle	people’s	development


                                    22    give	it	a	face


december 29, 1953-november 15, 2010 24
                                          landlessness	and	carper,	
                                          culprits	in	world	‘foodless’	day
EdItorIal




                                                                Justice
                        I  t is a simple word, yet one most elusive in these troubling times.

                             On November 15, 2010, the Philippines lost one of its most respected experts in ethno-botany and
                        taxonomy: Leonard Co. Along with farmer Julius and common sense at the very least. It is unaccept-
                        Borromeo and forest guard Sofronio Cortez, Co was able to just write off the killings as a tragic aber-
                        gunned down by troops in the forests of Kananga, ration. As human rights groups pointed out, the
                        Leyte while on fieldwork. The 19th Infantry Battal- killing of Co and his team is not an isolated case,
                        lion, instead, blames the deaths of Co and his team a freak accident. Many other educators, teach-
                        on an encounter with rebels, denying their culpa- ers, researchers, and health workers who have
                        bility in the incident. Yet, as facts on the case con- set aside opportunities for career and monetary
                        tinue to unravel, more and more evidence and testi- advancement to work in rural communities have
                        monies point out to the military as the sole culprit been falsely accused of being terrorists, harassed,
                        responsible for the killing.                           illegally detained, and even killed. Many farmers
                             It is ironic that one of our best experts on have been gunned down by soldiers on mere suspi-
                        forest species and biodiversity conservation was cion of being rebels. More ominously, other envi-
                        killed during this juncture of two globally envi- ronmental advocates have been deliberately tar-
                        ronmental events: 2010, the International Year geted by death squads in the past few years.
                        of Biodiversity and 2011, the International Year           There is no justice if we allow this climate of
  A country is only     of Forests. The statement of the Philippine Native impunity to fester. Co’s killing fits into a lengthy list
                        Plant Conservation Society, an organization that of extrajudicial killings (EJKs) over the past ten years,
   as wealthy as its    Co was very much a part of, underscores a chill- crossing over two Presidential administrations.
                        ing truth: How can this champion of conservation           Co’s killing is one of the first EJKs to occur
  resources and its     suffer at the hands of his supposed guardians?         under the new Aquino administration. The thou-
                             There is clearly no justice in that, and no jus- sands of deaths and killings that have occurred
     people. In this    tice in the way that things have been.                 with disturbing regularity are not incidental; there
                             There is no justice in letting environmental is a system that is responsible for the regular recur-
   era of vanishing     advocates be slaughtered. A country is only as rence of impunity, for the continuous bloodshed.
 natural resources      wealthy as its resources and its people. In this           The challenge now, not just for Co’s family, peers,
                        era of vanishing natural resources due to plunder and colleagues but also for all Filipinos, is to pursue
     due to plunder     and destruction, the killing of scientists and envi- justice on both a case to case and policy-wide basis:
                        ronmentalists like Co are crimes doubly heinous. seeking accountable the hands that pulled the trig-
   and destruction,     Those who stand by the protection of the envi- ger to the masterminds who imposed policies that
                        ronment and people’s welfare are also the first to have turned military troops into a mercenary, mer-
       the killing of   be felled in the face of ignorance and impunity.       ciless army, considering civilians as mere expend-
                             There is no justice in mere forgetting and sim- ables. There will be more like Co, Borromeo, and
      scientists and    ply accepting the lack of accountability in the kill- Cortez unless these realities are addressed.
environmentalists       ings of the Kananga Three. The killing of Co, Cor-         We must pursue Co’s killers and hold them
                        tez and Borromeo is a blatant violation of basic accountable for the crime. And we must do what
 like Co are crimes     human rights, international rules of engagement we can to help change this climate of impunity
                        and the treatment of civilians by armed forces, prevailing for nearly a decade. Only then can jus-
    doubly heinous.     elementary security protocols, and even humanity tice be truly served.
NEwS




Human	rigHts,
food	security	top	
concerns	in	cec	                                                                                           “KA DANING” explains how genu-



educational	discussions
                                                                                                           ine land reform can address food
                                                                                                           insecurity (left), while a protester
                                                                                                           warns that killings will continue
                                                                                                           for as long as impunity reigns
                                                                                                           (right).
rog amoN
                                                                                                             From January 21, 2001
H    uman rights and food security were among this quarter’s topics in Talakayan sa
     Kubo, CEC’s monthly educational discussions.                                                            to June 30, 2010 which
    Danilo Ramos, Secretary-General of the                   December’s Talakayan sa Kubo zoomed             is the end of Arroyo’s
Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (KMP) dis-              in on the issue of the Human Rights Situa-          intensely repressive rule,
cussed Food Security and the Philippine                  tion in the Philippines. Thaddeus Ifurung
Peasant Situation in the October session of              of Karapatan said that President Aquino’s
                                                                                                             a total of 1,206 people
Talakayan sa Kubo. Ramos said that the Phil-             Daang Matuwid is not a far cry from GMA’s           have been victims of EJK,
ippines’ agrarian and agricultural policies con-         blood-stained regime. A statement from              153 of whom are women
tinue to drag citizens into deeper poverty and           Karapatan reads, “We see no glimmer of
hunger. The country is the world’s number one            change and his straight path is marred by the
                                                                                                             and 475 are human rights
rice net importer and the National Food Associ-          blood of victims of political killings.”            defenders. There are a
ation merely acts as a trader for imported rice.             “There were 18 victims killed during the        total of 206 victims of
    Instead of offering solutions, the Aquino            last six months of Macapagal-Arroyo. There
government has recorded violations of peas-              are now at least 25 victims of extra-judi-          enforced disappearance,
ant rights that tolled 13 victims of extrajudicial       cial killings (EJK’s) barely five months after      31 of whom are women
killings (EJK) last year, 2 enforced disappear-          Aquino took over (July 1 – November 30,
ances and five accused of trumped-up charges.
                                                                                                             and 68 are human
                                                         2010).” Aquino’s government has been deaf
    KMP reported that 80% of farmers at the              to the insistent call for the immediate release     rights defenders. More
province are landless and are systematically             of 43 health workers much less to the clamor        than 2000 have been
subjected to exploitative conditions such as             for justice for the death of the country’s top
high land rent, usury, underpricing, low wages           botanist Leonardo Co and his two compan-
                                                                                                             arbitrarily arrested for
and even harassment brought about by mili-               ions. In spite of the dispiriting culture of        their political beliefs.
tarization. The persistent oppression of our             impunity, it is the people’s responsibility to
food producers coupled with unpredictability             defend human rights, justice and democracy
of weather patterns caused by climate change             and end the horrors of continuing state vio-
                                                                                                             - Karapatan Monitor,
aggravates the country’s food insecurity.                lence and repression,” Karapatan said.                 July- September 2010
FEaturES




           leonard	co:
           Bringing	knowledge	of
           tHe	forests	to	tHe	people
           lISa Ito-tapaNg


           T
                hey did not realize it then, but when the military fired upon the team of Leon-
                ardo L. Co in the forests of Kananga, Leyte, they felled one of the most pas-
                sionate scholars and protectors of our country’s forests, one among a rare and
           endangered breed of scientists for the Filipino people.
               An ethno-botanist and plant taxonomist, the        year old daughter, Linnaea Marie, was named
           56-year old Co was in Kananga as a consultant          after Carl Linnaeus, the Swedish botanist known
           on biodiversity for a reforestation project. At        as the father of modern taxonomy.
           the time of his death, Co was also serving as a
           museum researcher and lecturer for the Univer-         filipino-cHinese	Heritage
           sity of the Philippines Institute of Biology (UP           Leonardo Legaspi Co was born in Manila on
           IB). He is married to Glenda F. Co. Their eight-       December 29, 1953. His father, Lian Sing Co



                                                              4
immigrated to the Philippines from mainland               ural Science Research Center-Ministry of Natural
China as a young man and married Emelina                  Resources. Leaving Manila soon after this stint,
Legaspi from Taguddin, Ilocos.                            Co continued his research and immersion with
    Co was the eldest child and the sole son in a         grassroots communities in the mountains of the
Chinese-Filipino household. He grew up in Caloo-          Cordillera region.
can City, learning Fookien and Mandarin in addi-
tion to English and Filipino. Joaquin Sy, in his          people’s	scientist	and	professor
tribute, recalls the young Co as one who excelled             In 1981, Co and other advocates founded a
in Chemistry at the Philippine Chinese High               Baguio-based NGO, named Community Health,
School, becoming involved in the student council          Education, Services and Training in the Cordil-
and the student paper, where he wrote a column            lera Region (Chestcore), a community health
under the pen name Siling Labuyo.                         group working across six provinces. Chestcore
    Co entered UP in 1972 as a Chemical Engi-             was able to document 122 medicinal plants in the
neering major, but later on shifted to Botany. This       region, complete with their scientific and com-
was perhaps a result of his taking on an interest         mon names, descriptions, illustrations and their
in plants (particularly ferns) and started trek-          nutritional and medicinal values. They worked
king and mountain hiking. His colleagues recalled         with indigenous peoples communities to “system-
that Co was inspired by his high school biology           atize the knowledge of the masses about medici-
teacher, Benito Tan, who became an internation-           nal plants for basic health care,” Casambre said.
ally-recognized moss taxonomist.                              Co offered his knowledge of traditional Chi-
                                                          nese and herbal medicine and scientific expertise
Botanist	for	tHe	masses                                   to the indigenous peoples of the Cordillera, whose
    It was at UP where Co pursued his passion for         remote and poor communities have been neglected
science and service to the people. He would be            for most part by the national government. The
involved in organizations which merged his vari-          Cordillera Peoples Alliance and the Tongtongan
ous interests, such as the UP Botanical Society,          Ti Umili said in separate statements that Co was
the Samahan ng mga Mag-aaral sa Pilipino and              a “great scientist who devoted his life to practicing
the UP Mountaineers.                                      science and health for the people,” enduring “diffi-
    Rey Casambre, Director of the Philippine              cult travel along rocky mountain roads, even trek-
Peace Center, recalled that Co also “belonged then        king up many steep trails on foot to reach commu-
to a group of bright and dedicated activists” who         nities where government health and social services
were undergrad majors or graduates of botany              did not reach” and training local health workers on
or zoology. The group was part of a network of            the use of medicinal plants and the practice of acu-
Filipino scientists who were “committed to using          puncture, so that they could attend to their com-
their scientific and technical knowledge and skills       munity’s health needs.”
to serve the Filipino people, resisting the Marcos            By 1989, Co and Chestcore published a book
dictatorship, and struggling for an independent,          entitled “Common Medicinal Plants in the Cordil-
genuinely democratic and just society.”                   lera Administrative Region: A Trainor’s Manual to
                                                                                                                  CALL FOR JUSTICE GROWS:
    Among the group’s projects was a survey of            Community-Based Health Programs (CBHP),” as a
                                                                                                                  Some of the 40 native trees planted
Philippine medicinal plants. For at least five            resource book for upland communities seeking            by the Co family and supporters of
years, Co and this team dedicated their time to           more accessible sources of medicine for common          the Justice for Leonard Co Move-
completing this study. By 1977, they compiled             illnesses. Dr. Eleanor Jara, director of a national     ment marking the 40th day of his
                                                                                                                  death.
and published this wealth of material, through            health NGO, wrote that this book eventually
the UP Botanical Society, into a 193-page illus-          served as an “invaluable reference to more than
trated publication entitled “A Manual on Some             50 CBHPs nationwide” and “paved the way for
Philippine Medicinal Plants.” As many rural Filipi-       the documentation of medicinal plants in CBHP
nos did not have access to medical services and           areas.”
goods—a reality prevailing up to the present—
such research helped promote the use of local and         legendary	plant	taxonomist
readily-accessible herbal medicines by grassroots             Upon returning from the Cordillera, Co con-
communities. It is now considered a pioneering            tinued to work in the field of biodiversity conser-
and seminal work.                                         vation, establishing himself as a top-notch plant
    From 1976 to 1981, Co also served as a                taxonomist and among the best in his field.
research assistant for an inventory of endangered             In 1988, he became a pharmacologist at the
and rare plant and animal species by the UP Nat-          Acupuncture Therapeutic and Research Center in
TREE OF HOPE. Bereaved parents Lian Seng
                                                                                  and Emelina Co, expect no less than the fruits
                                                                                  of justice from what they have planted. Together
                                                                                  with Co’s wife, Glenda, they recently filed murder
                                                                                  raps against 38 soldiers of the Philippine Army.




                       Manila. Afterwards, he worked as a field botanist          its hidden order and where one would see just
                       for Conservation International-Philippines (CI)            endless green, he would expound on the complex
                       and as a freelance consultant for various environ-         interrelationships between one living thing to
                       mental impact assessment projects. At CI, he con-          another; He possessed firsthand knowledge that
                       ducted biodiversity monitoring in the forests of           can never be found in any literature,” the PNPCSI
                       Sierra Madre, Palawan, and Eastern Mindanao.               attested in a statement.
                           In 2000 to the last few months of his life, Co              He also engaged government as a represen-
                       became involved as the principal investigator for          tative of the CSO sector, becoming part of the
                       a 16-hectare biodiversity research facility project        Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau’s Philippine
                       in Palanan, Isabela by the UP IB, CI, Arnold Arbo-         Plant Conservation Committee (responsible for
                       retum of Harvard University, and the Center for            compiling the national “Red List” of threatened
                       Tropical Forest Science of the Smithsonian Tropi-          plants) in 2004 and National Wild Flora Council
                       cal Research Institute. He later on co-authored a          (a technical body for policy-making related to the
                       book related to this in 2006, entitled “The Forest         sustainable use of plant resources) in 2008.
      He provided a    Trees of Palanan, Philippines: A Study in Population            Co did not finish his Botany degree in UP
                       Ecology.”                                                  until 2008, 32 years after he entered the Univer-
    glimpse into its       Co joined many other environmental and pro-            sity. Yet this delay in attaining complete academic
   (forests) hidden    fessional organizations, such as the Wildlife Con-
                       servation Society of the Philippines and Laksam-
                                                                                  credentials never deterred him from becoming
                                                                                  one of the major experts in his field. From 1977
   order and where     buhay Conservation, Inc. In 2007, he founded the
                       Philippine Native Plant Conservation Society, Inc.
                                                                                  to 2009, his researches led him to co-author six
                                                                                  books and 13 articles in peer-reviewed publica-
one would see just     (PNPCSI), an NGO devoted to the conservation               tions, including researches on the Rafflesia auran-
                       of indigenous Philippine plants and their natu-            tia (Rafflesiaceae), vaccimium (Ericeae), Xanthoste-
  endless green, he    ral habitats. Through this, he was able to mobilize        mon fruticosus (Myrtaceae), and Philippine ferns.
                       many plant enthusiasts to support the cause of                  Dr. Perry Ong, Director of the UP IB, describes
    would expound      biodiversity conservation and pursue the practice          Co as “a world-class plant taxonomist bar none.”
    on the complex     of taxonomy.
                           “Few can realize the herculean task that Leon-
                                                                                  “He might not have had the formal appointment as
                                                                                  a professor but people considered him one because
 interrelationships    ard Co set out to undertake. He spent a lifetime
                       exploring and gathering precious data on the rap-
                                                                                  of their recognition of his scholarly outputs...His
                                                                                  swordplay with the living greats in plant taxonomy
between one living     idly diminishing forested regions of the country;          is legendary wherein he was able to argue with
                       No one understood our native forest dynamics               these icons and they could only nod in agreement
  thing to another.    the way that he did; He provided a glimpse into            and accept his analysis..[The international commu-



                                                                              6
nity] expressed that Leonard’s death is a great loss
to the world of plant taxonomy,” Ong wrote in an               leonard	co’s	companions
article for the Philippine Star.
    Co’s expertise was such that fellow scientists             W     hen he set out to accomplish his survey within the forests of the EDC complex Leon-
                                                                     ard Co was accompanied by a four-man team team composed of forester Ronino Gibe,
                                                               forest guard Sofronio Cortez, and peasant guides Policarpio Balute and Julius Borromeo.
had a plant named after him: the Rafflesia Leon-
ardi, discovered by an Agta native in Cagayan Val-             When the military started shooting at their group from the ridge, Gibe and Balute man-
                                                               aged to take cover behind some trees; Cortez and Borromeo were killed along with Co.
ley, in 2008. With large orange-red flowers, it is
one of the eight endemic species of rafflesia in               Julius	Borromeo
the Philippines.                                                    A member of Tongonan Farmers Association,
                                                               Julius Licayan Borromeo was the only breadwinner
a	nation’s	loss                                                and a father of six children, the youngest being only
    Co was felled at a time when his life’s work               six years old.
was beginning to see fruition, at a point when                      He was among the contractual guides and assis-
                                                               tants commissioned for Co’s five-day fieldwork. Hired
he was in a position to accomplish even greater
                                                               by the EDC for P200 ($4.46) a day, Julius’ income for
things. His killing on November 15, 2010                       this particular job order was the highest that he would
abruptly cut short his work to document and save               be supposedly bringing home, a Bulatlat.com interview
the country’s remaining forest resources and bio-              with Estelita Bayo, Borromeo’s godmother, revealed.
diversity from extinction, plunder, and destruc-               Teresa, Borromeo’s widow, recalled in that interview
tion. Yet his spirit persists in the resolve to carry          that Borromeo left home early at 7 o’clock on Novem-
on with what him and his peers have set out to                 ber 15, forgoing breakfast as he carried an umbrella
accomplish.                                                    and sack for gathering leaves. Unknown to them both,
    A person is remembered by the way he has                   Borromeo’s first day on this job order would be the
                                                               very last day of his life.
changed the lives of others. I did not have the
privilege of meeting Leonard Co when he was still              sofronio	cortez
alive. But witnessing the flowing words and tears                   Sofronio Cortez worked as a forest guard and was a
of his peers, his students, and his loved ones leaves          regular employee of EDC for the past 26 years. The 50-
me with the conviction that our country has lost               year old Cortez and his wife, Arsenia, have three chil-
a person most extraordinary: an uncompromis-                   dren: Sonny Arnan and Sheryl Ara Mae finished college
ing scientist who purely and passionately pursued              while Sam Ariel was in his last year of high school.
the love of knowledge, a mentor who fired up peo-                   On the morning of November 15, Arsenia recalled
ple with a passion for taxonomy and a wonder for               in a media report, Cortez left his home in his usual uni-
                                                               form—a long-sleeved polo and a raincoat with the EDC
what the earth has to offer, and a teacher whose
                                                               logo—which he always wore whenever he worked in
depth and breadth of expertise and commitment                  the forest within the EDC complex. His last text mes-
inspired many others to follow in his footsteps.               sage to his wife was sent at past nine in the morning,
    An iskolar ng bayan (scholar of the people) in             a few hours before the incident. The couple would have
the very real sense of the word, the example of                celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary on January
Co’s life again redefines our understanding of                 19 this year.
honor and excellence, the University’s motto:
                                                               references:
honor in serving the people and protecting our                 • Umil, Anne Marxze D., Widows of other victims in Kananga 'Murders' call for justice. 4
natural wealth; integrity that foremost defines                  December 2010. http://bulatlat.com/main/2010/12/04/widows-in-kananga-murders-
the standards of excellence and distinction on                   call-for-justice/
one’s own terms and not that of others.                        • Gabieta, Joey A. “Wife of slain forest guard seeks justice”, Leyte Samar Daily Express http://
    During the wake, the elder Co shared that he                 leytesamardaily.net/2010/11/slain-forest-guard-widow-seeks-justice/
tried to impart to his son two valuable lessons:               • Gabieta, Joey A. “Kin of farmers killed with botanist demand impartial probe,” Philip-
a passion for books, and helping his fellowmen.                  pine Daily Inquirer, http://services.inquirer.net/mobile/10/12/04/html_output/xml-
Looking back at his short but fruitful life, one can             html/20101120-304322-xml.html
say that the younger Co imbibed a fervor for learn-
ing and a firm commitment to share that wisdom
with others and spent his life practicing this in the       yet comprehensive manner that the student can-
classroom, the communities, and the forests.                not help but imbibe the same passion,” the PNPSCI
    His colleagues described Co best. “A teacher at         said of Co. That is perhaps the best honor that one
heart, he imparted knowledge freely. He taught              can give to a mentor: affirming how one’s words,
intensely, convincingly, provocatively. He knew             ideas, and practice have lit the fire of learning and
and loved his subject with ardor and conviction             change in other’s minds and hearts.
and taught in an intrinsically colorful, even poetic,                                     (continued on page 15)



                                                        7
encountering	tHe	trutH:	
                                             tHe	kananga	3	killings
                                             lISa Ito-tapaNg


                                             O
                                                    n November 15, 2010, the Philippines lost one of its finest ethnobotanists
                                                    and taxonomists, Leonardo Co and his teammates, forest guard Sofronio
                                                    Cortez and farmer Julius Borromeo, to a hail of bullets in the forests of the
                                             Manawan-Kananga Watershed in Leyte province. This article recounts the ordeal of
                                             Co and his team, as reconstructed by previous media reports and by the November
                                             26 independent fact-finding mission led by Agham and the Justice for Leonard Co
                                             Movement.
   AT RISK. Map showing the forested
   area of Kananga, Leyte, where the             At the time of his death, Co and his team              food and tools. The team had just finished mark-
   killings took place. Declared by the      were in the area to collect specimen seedlings of          ing a mayapis, syzigium and tanguile tree when a
   local government in 2009 as an            endangered trees as part of a reforestation project
   area where “forest resources and
                                                                                                        heavy rainshower prompted them to stop. They
   wildlife habitat are at risk,” the case   for the Lopez-owned Energy Development Corp                planned to go back to the nursery of the geother-
   of Co, Borromeo and Cortez proves         (EDC) in the Leyte Geothermal Production Field,            mal plant facility and texted driver of the EDC
   that even environmental defenders         the world’s largest wet steamfield. Katungod               service vehicle to fetch them.
   face even deadlier risks.                 Sinirangan Bisayas, a local human rights organi-               They were still waiting when the rain abated
                                             zation, said that the incident happened within             at around 11:15 a.m; Co decided to resume the
                                             the vicinity of the EDC-PNOC, of the Mahi-aw               survey. The fourth tree that they set out to iden-
                                             Plant where there are camps of a special Citizens          tify was an interesting case, and the five men
                                             Armed Forces Geographical Unit (CAFGU) unit                gathered all around it for a closer inspection.
                                             and a 19th Infantry Battalion (IB) team.                       That was the last tree that Co, Cortez, and
                                                                                                        Borromeo would ever survey. At around three
                                             co	and	company:	fieldwork	in	kananga’s	forests             in the afternoon, their three lifeless bodies, rid-
                                                 Co arrived at the EDC in Kananga, Leyte on             dled with bullets, were carried by soldiers back to
                                             November 9. As a biodiversity consultant for               pad 403 and later on transported to the V. Rama
                                             EDC’s reforestation project, it was Co’s respon-           Funeral Homes by the EDC. Balute and Gibe,
                                             sibility to identify and collect rare seedling spec-       shaken from their ordeal, were brought to a hos-
      The fourth tree                        imens along with his team. From November 10
                                             to 13, Co and his guides were able to conduct
                                                                                                        pital in Ormoc City.

   that they set out                         their fieldwork in three different pads within             military:	casualties	of	a	“crossfire”
                                             the EDC territory. A pad is an area where geo-                 Initial media reports later quoted the local
  to identify was an                         thermal steam is piped from the ground to the              police and army as saying that the killings of
                                             EDC plant. Co’s team and his guides took the
   interesting case,                         day off on November 14, the day of Manny Pac-
                                                                                                        the three men was the “unfortunate” result of a
                                                                                                        “legitimate military operation” in the forest area,
   and the five men                          quiao’s successful boxing bout against Antonio
                                             Margarito.
                                                                                                        where troops reportedly sighted and pursued
                                                                                                        New People’s Army (NPA) rebels.
gathered all around                              On the early morning of November 15, Mon-
                                             day, Co and four of his team mates left the geo-               According to the police blotter of the
        it for a closer                      thermal plant staff house to resume fieldwork in           Kananga Police Station, 38 troops from the
                                             pad 403, reportedly a choice site for collecting           19th IB troops, led by First Lieutenant Ronald
    inspection. That                         forest samples.                                            Odchimar and 2nd Lieutenant Cameron Perez,
                                                 They reached the pad at around 9:30 a.m.
    was the last tree                        and started their survey. It was a small, efficient
                                                                                                        reportedly engaged in a firefight with around
                                                                                                        ten persons with long firearms, at Sitio Mahiao,
     that Co, Cortez,                        team: Co and Cortez would examine trees and
                                             their leaves to identify their species. Policarpio
                                                                                                        Barangay Lim-ao. In the course of clearing oper-
                                                                                                        ations, the troops “found out (sic) three dead
       and Borromeo                          Balute, a peasant guide, measured their diameter.
                                             Ronino Gibe, a forester, was in charge of record-
                                                                                                        bodies.” The military also reportedly received
                                                                                                        intelligence information about NPA sightings on
 would ever survey.                          ing the data observed. Borromeo brought their              November 12 and subsequently communicated



                                                                                                    8
this to the EDC. The 19th IB supposedly started              out and saw soldiers in camouflage approaching
conducting operations in the vicinity on Sunday,             them from both sides. He broke cover and raised
November 14.                                                 his arms.
    In a press statement on November 17, 19th IB                  “May isa pa palang buhay dito (There is one
Commanding Officer Federico Tutaan said that                 more here alive),” a soldier ordered him to come
their troops observing the area spotted around               out at gunpoint. Crying and shaking in fear, Gibe
“seven men carrying high-powered firearms,”                  pleaded for medical help for his companions. Co
who opened fire upon sensing the government                  and Cortez lay motionless while Borromeo was
troops around 30 meters away. A ten-minute                   moaning in pain.
exchange of gunfire reportedly ensured, wound-                    “Wala na, ‘di na aabot sa ospital kasama mo
ing “an determined number” of rebels and reach-              (It’s gone, your companion will not make it to the
ing the civilians “incidentally located within the           hospital),” another soldier told Gibe.
line of fire.”                                                    A soldier asked Gibe about his other two
                                                             “armed” companions and asked the latter to show       AN INDEPENDEN T FACT
                                                                                                                   FINDING MISSION led by
survivors:	we	were	tHe	only	ones	tHere                       his weapons. Gibe denied that he or any other         scientists’ group Agham concluded
   However, doubts quickly surfaced as to                    member of his team were armed.                        that no crossfire took place,
whether a crossfire indeed occurred. Testimo-                                                                      contrary to what the military
nies by Co’s surviving crew, as well as subsequent               “P...ina, natalay tayo!” one soldier exclaimed.   claims, and demanded a speedy
                                                                                                                   and impartial investigation by
inspections of the area, pointed out otherwise:              Gibe was ordered to lie down on the ground while      government authorities.
that Co’s team was alone in the area and was                 the troops took away his cellphone and GPS unit.
never caught in a clash between government and               Gibe identified himself as an EDC employee,
rebel forces.                                                explaining his group’s purpose and activities in
                                                             the area and the identities of Co and Borromeo.
     Balute, a farmer who served as one of the               Gibe was instead further interrogated about the
team’s local guides, recalled how they were closely          equipment he had on hand, including his notes
studying the fourth tree when a rapid burst of               and the map the team had, as well as his contacts
gunfire from unseen shooters erupted around 30               from the EDC. He again asked for help for his
to 40 meters behind the team.                                companions. By this time, Borromeo was already
     “Doon lang galing sa may itaas lahat at isa             bleeding, telling Gibe that he was hit near the
lang ang direksyon, (All shots came from one                 heart. Gibe pleaded to the soldiers to help Bor-
direction, which is from above)” Balute was                  romeo.
quoted as saying. He denied hearing any exchange                 “Wag kang maingay! Ligtas ka na! (Don’t be
of shots that indicated a gunfight between oppos-            noisy! You’re already saved!),” another soldier
ing sides.                                                   told Gibe to shut up. It was around one in the
     Co and his team mates dropped to the ground,            afternoon.
with only tree branches and roots for cover. They                Gibe remained lying face down for about two
pleaded for the shooting to stop. “Maawa kayo,               hours while the troops met and talked among
hindi kami kalaban! (Have mercy, we are not                  themselves from a disance. He was then asked          TREE CRIES EVIDENCE: The fact
                                                                                                                   finding team examines the large
enemies),” the survivors recalled Co pleading for            to stand up and answer the same questions they
                                                                                                                   tree from where Gibe took cover.
mercy. He was already crying out in pain, having             asked him earlier. The soliders asked Gibe if he      Six bullet marks were found, their
sustained a shot in the back.                                knew about the military’s operations in the area,     trajectories coming from the van-
     “Dia lang diay mo!” (“So there you are!”),              saying that it was impossible for Gibe’s group        tage point where the military posi-
                                                                                                                   tioned themselves.
someone from the group that fired at Co’s team               to miss the three armed men the soldiers were
shouted back. They were continously assaulted by             observing for thirty minutes. Gibe said that his
rapid gunfire and big explosions.                            group did not see anyone and again asked for
     Balute decided to flee the site because he was          held for Borromeo.
positioned at the back of a big tree; the four were              The troops then gave first aid to Borromeo,
still lying face down on the ground. Gibe, mean-             and called his condition peklat (scar). At this
while, managed to creep towards another large                point, Gibe asked for his cellphone and called his
tree and hide behind its buttress. Gibe dared not            superiors from EDC to relay details of the inci-
peep out of his hiding place for fear of being shot.         dent. He was then ordered by troops to proceed
His companions were no longer responding to his              back to pad 403. It was around two in the after-
calls; one by one, they fell silent as gunfire riddled       noon.
the ground for around twenty more minutes.                       The walk down was the last time Gibe saw
     When the firing finally stopped, Gibe peeped            Borromeo alive. Borromeo was laid on a sack and
brought down by the soldiers. At around three          despite Gibe and Borromeo’s repeated requests,
                       in the afternoon, an EDC service vehicle arrived       the 19th IB troops likewise failed to provide imme-
                       to send Gibe to a hospital in Ormoc. He later          diate medical attention and hospital treatment to
                       learned that Borromeo died while at the pad.           Borromeo, which prolonged his agony and ulti-
                                                                              mately led to his death.
        The culprits   scientists:	no	signs	of	a	crossfire
                           Around ten days after the killing, an inde-
                                                                                  The FFM team recommended specific actions
                                                                              related to the 19th IB and the EDC. All military
        accountable    pendent citizens fact-finding mission (FFM) was        personnel connected to the chain of command
                       organized from November 26 to 28 to gather tes-        related to the shooting must be included in the
      for the crimes   timonies and other relevant information on the         investigation and filing of charges, their firearms
                       case. Led by Agham-Advocates of Science and            secured and surrendered to the proper authori-
    have to be made    Technology for the People and the Justice for          ties. The liability of the troops who failed to give
     accountable for   Leonard Co Movement, the 33-member team
                       composed of scientists, experts, environmental
                                                                              Borromeo immediate medical attention and evac-
                                                                              uation must also be pursued. The EDC, on the
 this transgression    advocates, human rights workers, and journalists
                       gathered testimonies, documentation and obser-
                                                                              other hand, must fully cooperate into clarifying
                                                                              their communication, security coordination pro-
   of human rights;    vations from people involved in the incident, the      tocols. All documents that would further shed
                       local police, the 19th IB, and the EDC staff. The      light on the truth must be made available.
the truth should be    team documented the findings from their inter-             The case has just began, but life will never
                       views.                                                 be the same for the loved ones of the “Kananga
  pursued up to the        They went back to the site of the killing and      Three,” after that fateful morning on November
           very end.   to the ridge where the soldiers supposedly shot
                       it out with rebel troops. Among the significant
                                                                              15. Borromeo and Cortez were both laid to rest
                                                                              on November 25 by their families in Leyte. They
                       observations noted in the site was that the direc-     left behind six and three children, respectively. Co
                       tion of the bullet marks on the trees originated       was cremated on November 23 in Quezon City.
                       from a vantage point on the ridge above Co and         Part of his ashes have been scattered over a dita
                       his team. The direction of the bullet marks was        tree at the University of the Philippines, home
                       bearing downwards and mainly concentrated in           to Co’s humble yet beloved herbarium. His only
                       the area where Co’s team was standing.                 child, still a young girl, will have to learn to love
                           Tree number four, where the group gathered         the trees of this country without her father. Their
                       around for one last time, was hit three times. The     families and colleagues continue to seek answers
                       large tree that saved Gibe from certain death had      to the unresolved questions behind their deaths.
                       six bullet marks on it. In contrast, the team did      The full extent of circumstances that have led to
                       not observe any bullet marks on the trees from         the 19th IB’s killing of Co, Cortez, and Borromeo
                       the ground looking up to the ridge or from any         have yet to be affirmed by the government bodies
                       side.                                                  tasked to investigate the case.
                           The only consistent explanation for these key          Grief can know no closure without truth and
                       observations, the team concluded, would be that        justice. The culprits accountable for the crimes
                       the military was positioned on top of the ridge        have to be made accountable for this transgres-
                       and firing towards Co’s team. There was no indi-       sion of human rights; the truth should be pur-
                       cation of any crossfire. By waiting for at least an    sued up to the very end. Only then can we begin
                       hour before bringing Co’s team down to pad 403,        to overcome the impunity that killed three good
                       Kananga.
                                                                              men, one rainy morning in the silent forests of


                       references:
                       • The Report of the Fact Finding Mission on the Killings of Leonardo Co, Sofronio Cortez and Julius
                         Borromeo in Kananga, Leyte, December 8, 2010.
                       • How It Happened: Death of a Botanist (Talk of the Town), Philippine Daily Inquirer, 25 December
                         2010, http://opinion.inquirer.net/inquireropinion/talkofthetown/view/20101225-310935/Death-
                         of-a-botanist
                       • Pazzibugan, Donna. ‘Bullets did not come from soldiers,’ says AFP commander on crossfire casual-
                         ties”, Philippine Daily Inquirer. http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/nation/view/20101117-
                         303787/Bullets-did-not-come-from-soldiers-says-AFP-commander-on-crossfire-casualties
                       • http://www.energy.com.ph/our-projects/geothermal/?pTab=operations
                       • Roa, Elvie. “Slain botanist heard begging for mercy.”, Philippine Daily Inquirer. 11 November 2010.


                                                                             10
a	Bloodstained	History:	
tHe	19tH	iB’s	record	of	
rigHts	violations
U
        nknown to many, the army unit involved in the killing of Leonard Co, Sof-
        ronio Cortrez, and Julius Borromeo has been dubbed by human rights groups as the
        “Massacre Battalion’ for being implicated in at least three previous mass killings of civilians
in Region 8.

    The 19th Infantry “Commando” Battalion (IB)            By July 1, 2002, the 19th IB transferred to its new
was activated during the Marcos dictatorship on            headquarters to Brgy. Aguiting, Kananga, Leyte.
31 October 1973, at the height of the secessionist         Camps and strategic detachments were later on
movement. It was assigned to combat operations             established throughout Northern Leyte.
in Maguindanao, Sultan Kudarat, Buluan and
Mariano Marcos, and Lanao del Sur, before being            tHe	first	kananga	massacre
transferred to Northern Samar in 1985. The 19th                In between five to six a.m. on April 16, 2003,
IB is currently under the jurisdiction of the 8th          residents of farming communities in Brgy. San
Infantry Division (ID) of the Philippine Army in           Isidro and Brgy. Bagabao, Kananga awoke to a
Eastern Visayas (EV).                                      volley of gunfire emanating from a hill in Sitio
    A closer scrutiny of the 19th IB’s track record        Mahayhay, San Isidro. Farmers sent their wives
in Northern Samar also reveals that there were             and children to the nearby sitio to avoid being hit
at least two more massacres perpetuated by ele-            by stray bullets.
ments of this battalion against civilians, where               Farmers Allan Collarte, Roy Collarte, and
victims were either similarly written off as being         Mateo Tequilla were discussing the situation          There were at least
caught in the crossfire or were suspected rebels.          when they were approached by soldiers in a rice
                                                           field, who shot at them after they sensed danger      two more massacres
massacre	in	nortHern	samar                                 and ran away to safety. Tequilla was left behind
    The earliest documented massacre happened              and forced at gunpoint to be interrogated and         perpetuated by
in January 28, 1999, when patrolling elements
strafed the house of a peasant family in Sitio
                                                           accused of being a rebel. Other residents who
                                                           were left behind in the sitio overheard cries of
                                                                                                                 elements of this
Mogus, Brgy. Capacungan, Palapag, Northern
Samar. Ermito Nuguit, 52 years old, was killed
                                                           people—including a woman and a child—plead-
                                                           ing or in pain, followed by gunshots.
                                                                                                                 battalion against
along with his pregnant wife, Delia, and their                 When the firing stopped at around 9 a.m., res-    civilians, where
three sons. The army later claimed that it was an          idents and barangay tanods approached the inci-
encounter with New People’s Army (NPA) rebels.             dent site and collected the bodies of nine civil-     victims were either
                                                           ians from the army troops in the place. The dead
deployment	to	nortHern	leyte                               included a pregnant woman, four minors, and a         similarly written off
    In November 2001, the 19th IB moved from
Northern Samar to Zamboanga City and Jolo in
                                                           former barangay councilor who was the chairper-
                                                           son of the local farmers association. The bodies
                                                                                                                 as being caught in
order to augment military operations against the
MNLF. Returning to EV in March 2002, the 19th
                                                           were brought to the Kananga Municipal Hall at
                                                           1:30 p.m. Injuries indicated that the victims were
                                                                                                                 the crossfire or were
IB established temporary base in Ormoc, Leyte.             shot at close range and sustained contusions,         suspected rebels.

                                                      11
burns, and bludgeoning by hard objects.                  breakfast in a hut near the contested rice lands
    A preliminary inquiry was initiated by local         when they were shot at by men in bonnets and
human rights organizations on April 18 and a             ski masks. The farmers shouted that they were
national fact-finding mission was held from May          civilians but were still attacked with gunfire and
30 to June 3, 2003 on the incident. These inves-         hand grenades. When the firing stopped, armed
tigations concluded that victims were civilians          men in military gear ordered the survivors to lie
belonging to people’s organizations who “sum-            down and admit that they were rebels. Their pleas
marily executed despite their immobility and             for immediate medical attention were ignored.
helplessness.” These also concluded that the 19th        Local police were prevented from responding to
IBPA Command undertook armed military oper-              the incident.
ations in any area of their choice without the               Col. Louie Dagoy admitted that the 19th IB
required coordination and courtesy accorded to           was responsible for the attack but claimed that
the concerned local officials and also committed         this was a legitimate encounter between the
other HRVs against residents and witnesses.              army and the rebels. The army also filed criminal
                                                         charges of illegal possession of firearms and ille-
under	tHe	‘ButcHer’                                      gal assembly against the surviving farmers. Eight
    The 8th ID was among the army units placed           farmers were detained pending resolution of the
directly under Major General Jovito S. Palparan,         court cases and have reported receiving death
known among activist groups as the “Butcher”             threats during this period. One died in jail. The
due to his record of racking up human rights vio-        charges of illegal possession were dismissed in
lations in areas where he was deployed. Palparan         2006 while the other case continues in court.
served as the Commanding General of the 8th ID               This massacre was included in the list of
from February 10 to August 25, 2005, and has             charges filed by HUSTISYA, Desaparecidos,
been credited for “reducing the insurgency prob-         SELDA, and BAYAN against the administration
lem in Samar by 80 percent.”                             of former Pres. Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to the
                                                         Permanent People’s Tribunal second session in
tHe	second	massacre	in	palo,	leyte                       the Philippines held at the Hague, The Nether-
    Shortly after Palparan’s stint in EV, the 19th IB    lands in March 2007.
was implicated in the November 21, 2005 massa-
cre of eight civilians in Palo, Northern Leyte. The      prelude	to	tHe	tHird	massacre
victims were among the 50 farmers participating              In 2007, Lieutenant Col. Henry Bumiltac,
in a “balik uma” (back to farm) activity after hav-      commanding officer of the 19th IB declared the
ing successfully won a landgrabbing case filed by        towns of Kananga, Palompon, Tabango, Matagob,
members of the San Agustin Farmer Beneficiaries          Isabel and Merida, as well as some parts of Ormoc
Multi-Purpose Cooperative with the Department            City as “completely free” of the insurgency. Media
of Agrarian Reform against landlord Pedro Mar-           reports in 2008 and 2009 cited Army officials’
gallo.                                                   statements that they were winning the campaign
    At around 5 a.m., the farmers were preparing         against insurgency.
references:
• 19th (MASSACRE) Infantry Battallion Strikes Again. Press Statement by KATUNGOD-Sinirangan
  Bisayas-KARAPATAN, 18 November 2010.
• History of 19th IB. http://www.8thinfantrydivision.org/19thHistory.html
• KARAPATAN Fact-finding reports and documentation on the Kananga and Palo massacres.
• Press Statement by the 19th Infantry Battallion “Commando” on the 3 civilians killed in the crossfire.
  17 November 2010. http://www.samarnews.com/news2010/nov/a698.htm Accessed
• Repression and Resistance: Permanent People's Tribunal Second Session on the Philippines. IBON
  Books, 2007.
• Profile of the 19th ID, http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/phillipines/19in.htm
• Jovito S. Palparan, Jr. www.gmanews.tv, 23 February 2007, http://www.gmanews.tv/story/31867/
  Jovito-S-Palparan-Jr
• Gabieta, Joey A. “Leyte free of communist rebels by yearend—military”, Philippine Daily Inquirer,
  21 November 2007. http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/regions/view/20071121-102312/
  Leyte_free_of_communist_rebels_by_yearend--military. Accessed 19 December 2010.
• 19th IB blogsite, http://19ib.blogspot.com/
• 8th ID blog site, http://8idphilarmy2.blogspot.com/


                                                        1
NEwS




renew	training	Bares	
environmental	proBlems	
of	urBan	poor	communities	
ChE domINguEz aNd lISa Ito


P
      ollution-triggered diseases, flooding, lack of viable housing projects, and un-
      safe and unsanitary relocation areas remain as major environment-related
      concerns among the Philippine urban poor sector, revealed a recent Restora-
tion Ecology Workshop (RENEW) training by the Center for Environmental Con-
cerns-Philippines.
     RENEW is CEC’s basic environmental educa-               • Lack of basic social services: These include ser-
tion course. This RENEW training was co-orga-                  vices related to health, sanitation, water, and
nized with the Kalipunan ng Damayang Mahi-                     waste collection and segregation services. Imple-
hirap (Kadamay), a national federation of urban                mentation of public projects, such as sewerage
poor organizations. It was held last November 13               systems, is inefficient and defective. Social ser-
to 14, at the Bahay Daluyan of St. Theresa’s Col-              vices are scarce and often commercialized.
lege in Quezon City.                                         • Food insecurity: Food has to be purchased com-
     The RENEW workshop gathered 21 partici-                   mercially due to lack of areas to grow or forage
pants, mostly community and youth leaders from                 for food.
urban poor communities in Quezon City, Caloo-                • Impacts of land use conversion: Agricultural
can City and Montalban, and Kadamay national                    areas are increasingly being converted into
staff members.                                                  relocation sites or other non-agricultural
     Through the course workshops, participants                 uses, displacing already landless peasants and
shared the environmental situation of urban poor                increasing the rural poor diaspora into urban
communities, stressing the persistence of the fol-              centers.
lowing realities:                                            • Culture of commercialization: Consumption
• Problems related to housing woes: Some relo-                  of non-essential goods is encouraged and also
  cation areas, such as Montalban, are located in               contributes to the increase of domestic and
  geohazard sites, deforested and landslide-prone               plastic waste.
  areas, or near large dam projects vulnerable to            • Diseases arising from exposure to pollution:
  flooding. Housing projects are already congested              Including air, water, and noise pollution. There
  and face problems related to sanitation, spread               is widespread incidence of communicable and
  of pests such as rats, mosquitoes, and fleas as               infectious diseases (such as dengue) due to
  well as lack of access to medicinal plants.                   urban congestion, flooding, and lack of sani-
• Flooding of urban poor communities due to riv-                tation services. Some areas are also concerned
  ers, creeks and waterways clogged with waste.                 about the impacts of improper infectious waste
• Disaster unpreparedness: Urban poor commu-                    disposal of hospitals.
  nities are vulnerable to disasters related to the          • Lack of occupational safety: Employment is rare
  impacts of floods, landslides, earthquakes, fires,            and often comes in the form of dirty and dan-
  heat waves, and lack of water services. There is a            gerous jobs.
  lack of a comprehensive and effective flood control        • Lack of educational opportunities
  program and disaster preparedness programs.                • Constant threat of demolitions


                                                        1
NEwS
       Timed with Int’l Human Rights Day

       anti-slapp	Bill	of	2010	campaign	kicks-off	
       witH	cultural	nigHt
       ChEamSoN BooNgalINg


       T
             o strengthen its advocacy and                   criticisms against any initiative of the former.
             lobby work, CEC explores various                    Currently there is no comprehensive anti-
             forms of educating and mobilizing               SLAPP mechanism in the Philippines, whether
       supporters in comprehensive yet enter-                in the country’s substantive and procedural law.
                                                             House Bill (HB) 3593 or the Anti-SLAPP Act of
       taining ways. “SLAPP Us Not! A night of
                                                             2010, aims to define SLAPPs, prohibit the fil-
       art and music in defense of the environ-              ing of such harassment suits, and provide mea-
       ment and human rights” was a venue to                 sures for its dismissal. It was introduced in the
       showcase such creativity from artists,                15th Congress by representatives from partyl-
       poets, and musicians who gathered to                  ists Bayan Muna, Anakpawis, Gabriela Women’s
       support the Anti-SLAPP Bill of 2010.                  Party, Kabataan and ACT Teachers and was filed
                                                             last November 2010.
           Recent years have seen the rise in number of          The event held on December 7 in Vinzon’s
       Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation       Hall, UP Diliman was attended by a diverse audi-
       or SLAPP cases initiated by influential entities      ence from students to urban poor community
       against non-governmental organizations, peo-          members. In time for the international human
       ple’s organizations, local community groups, and      rights day on December 10, the event under-
       individuals in an attempt to intimidate the latter    scored that environment protection is not sepa-
       into discontinuing their protests, opposition, or     rate from the defense of human rights.


       cec	pilots	first	luzon-wide	envicore	training
       ChE domINguEz


       C
            EC-Philippines kicked off the Lu-                and sharing sessions on campaign, research and
            zon leg of its pilot Environmental               networking strategies.
            Cadres Course (EnviCore) from                        Participants welcomed the opportunity to be
       October 11 to 16 at the Women and Ecol-               oriented with different aspects of environmen-
       ogy Wholeness Farm in Mendez, Cavite.                 tal education, research, and advocacy work (see
                                                             related article, The EnviCore Engagement).
            Participants of this second batch included           Among the recommendations of participants
       representatives from the Computer Professionals       was the affirmation of the EnviCore solidarity
       Union, Scientists and Technologists for the People    night and the various workshops as a venue for
       (Agham), Agham Youth, the Cordillera Develop-         learning, the need for video-documentation of the
       ment and People’s Center, Cordillera Peoples Alli-    training, tackling of more case studies for discus-
       ance, Bukal Batangas, and Save the Valley Serve       sions, and the dissemination of written presenta-
       the People chapters in Isabela and Cagayan Val-       tions by the resource speakers as materials for re-
       ley.                                                  echo sessions among the graduates’ organizations
            EnviCore was conceptualized and developed        and communities.
       as a second-level course and a response to the            The first EnviCore training was piloted by
       need to develop the capacity of environmental         CEC from June 29 to July 4 at the Maryridge
       cadres and workers of CEC and its network part-       Convent and Training Center, Tagaytay City. Par-
       ners. Its modules include updates on the national     ticipants from the pilot batch came from eleven
       and global environmental situation, reviews of        national environmental and sectoral organiza-
       basic ecological concepts, frameworks of analysis,    tions, representing urban poor, peasant women,
       use of research tools and environmental investiga-    fisher folk, indigenous peoples, women, and
       tive missions, introduction to environmental laws,    youth.



                                                            14
FEaturES

                                                                                                                  CEC shares the reflections of
                                                                                                                  one of EnviCore’s graduates: a
                                                                                                                  piece on how today’s youth and
                                                                                                                  professionals can learn about
                                                                                                                  and contribute to environmen-
                                                                                                                  tal awareness and advocacy.




tHe	envicore	engagement:
save	tHe	world,	take	tHe	
crasH	course
“[S]aving humanity and saving the earth. You can’t expect to achieve one without the other, and neither is pos-
sible under the existing system.” – John Bellamy Foster

By lEoN dulCE


H
         old up a flashcard with the word “environmentalism” to a high school class
         and ask them what it means. You will hear the usual motherhood statements
         of saving Mother Nature and caring for the environment. Ask them to give
concrete examples of environmentalism, and you’ll get just about the same broad
strokes: proper waste segregation and disposal, tree-planting, coastal clean ups, and
living a more eco-friendly lifestyle.
                                                                                                                      EnviCore was
    Having never accepted the approach of pro-           member regional organizations hailing from
moting individual lifestyle changes made popu-           Bicol, Marinduque, and other regions. We decided             conceptualized
lar by mass media, every encounter I had with
the environmental movement was always with
                                                         to conduct a big forum on the biggest concerns
                                                         of their hometowns, which through consultation
                                                                                                                      and developed as a
a doubtful look and taken with a grain of salt.
It was only in the later parts of my stint as an
                                                         were identified mainly as the practices of ram-
                                                         pant deforestation and mining.
                                                                                                                      second-level course
activist in the University of the Philippines did            In search of resource speakers who have a                and a response to
I encounter a different brand of environmental           genuine understanding of the situation in the
activism, one that I would discover later to be of       grassroots communities, we came upon the Cen-                the need to develop
the principles, concepts and strategies embodied         ter for Environmental Concerns – Philippines
in the Environmental Cadres Course (EnviCore)            (CEC Phils) and the Kalikasan People’s Network               the capacity of
training course I would be taking years later (see
related article on page 14).
                                                         for the Environment. The presentations were a
                                                         refreshing break from the beauty pageant proc-
                                                                                                                      environmental
first	encounter
                                                         lamations we usually hear: presented was a com-
                                                         prehensive overview of both quantitative and
                                                                                                                      cadres and workers
    We were organizers then in the Student Alli-         qualitative data on our natural resources and its            of CEC and its
ance for the Advancement of Democratic Rights            exploitation by big transnational corporations.
in UP, and we were helping to consolidate our                It was the first time we were exposed to the             network partners.

                                                      1
economic and political ramifications of these          their capacities in organizing effective and sus-
                         environmentally destructive practices, and the         tainable campaigns and developing projects on
                         first time we were presented with a concrete array     environmental issues and concerns.
                         of solutions both in the long-term and short-              Excited for a closer encounter with the con-
                         term. The discourse looked at the issues from the      crete methodologies of progressive environmen-
                         perspective of poor and vulnerable people and          tal advocacy, and hoping to finally be its imple-
                         communities: the impacts, after all, primarily         mentor in the sector of ICT, I embarked with
                         affected the economically marginalized.                other delegates from around Luzon to an eco-
                                                                                farm in Cavite for a focused, if not bordering on
                         fast	forward                                           hermetic, study. Envicore here we come! We were
                             Onwards to 2010, I am now working in the           a mixed bunch of youths and students, indig-
                         Computer Professinals’ Union (CPU), a non-gov-         enous people’s leaders, scientists and develop-
                         ernment organization of information and com-           ment workers, but all were involved to an extent
                         munications technology (ICT) professionals,            in environmental activism. Coming as an ICT
                         students and advocates. We serve as a bridge           activist, I was easily one of the participants who
                         between the ICT community and the broad mass           weren’t your usual fold of environmental advo-
                         movements in the Philippines, mobilizing its           cates.
                         members and volunteers to provide technical                We were trained in basic ecological concepts
                         services to its network of non-government and          to have a sufficient scientific framework as basis
                         people’s organizations, as well as to have a direct    for the setting of our guiding principles in our
                         involvement in their campaigns and other activi-       campaigns, projects, training and education. The
                         ties.                                                  national and international environmental situa-
                             CPU has long worked with other progres-            tion was also imparted to give participants the
                         sive science  technology organizations, includ-       social contexts that have shaped modern trends
                         ing those involved in environmental advocacy. It       in the environmental movement. We were also
                         started to have a deeper engagement in the envi-       given specific inputs on climate change science
                         ronmental movement beyond providing techni-            and policy trends.
                         cal services in its participation in the national          It was in here that I fully appreciated the
                         grassroots conference on climate change orga-          people-oriented perspective that environmental
                         nized by the CEC–Phils and the Philippine Cli-         activism should subscribe to: nature is no mere
                         mate Watch Alliance (PCWA), which we officially        wonder, but a resource that the majority of Fili-
                         joined shortly thereafter.                             pinos rely on for their survival and livelihood. As
  It was in here that        Leading the operations of multimedia docu-
                         mentation and serving as technical partner in
                                                                                ecologist John Bellamy Foster puts it, the more
                                                                                effective advocates of environmental sustain-
  I fully appreciated    PCWA’s different involvements, CPU finally ven-        ability in the world are the ones with a pro-peo-
                         tured into its own environmental project with          ple principle under their belts, such as Bolivian
the people-oriented      the Global Green Grants Fund-supported Green-          socialist President Evo Morales.
                         bot Philippines, a project that aims to produce an
     perspective that    online web portal that documents case studies of       for	tHe	people
      environmental      environmental issues around the nation, starting
                         with the particular cases of coastal ecosystems in
                                                                                    With the framework down pat, delegates were
                                                                                then equipped with skills and tools in the day-
     activism should     Bohol, Sorsogon and Negros, and a manual for
                         environmental activists on useful online tools for
                                                                                to-day operations of an environmental advocacy
                                                                                organization: there were sessions on legal work,
subscribe to: nature     their campaigns, education and organizing.             policy advocacy, networking, issue profiling and
                                                                                research, and planning campaigns. Despite dele-
 is no mere wonder,      for	tHe	environment                                    gates having different campaigns, activities and
                             Then the opportunity came for CPU to finally       projects appropriate to their own lines of work,
 but a resource that     get its formal training in the area of environmen-     everyone still benefited from understanding how
      the majority of    tal advocacy and education: CEC Phils invited
                         us to participate in their second Environmental
                                                                                the entire operation works. It enabled us to see
                                                                                the context where our ICT projects fit in the big
Filipinos rely on for    Cadres’ Course (or EnviCore for short) for Luzon-
                         based organizations. It is a comprehensive six-
                                                                                picture of the Philippine environmental move-
                                                                                ment, for instance.
   their survival and    day course that aims to integrate environmental            One would realize after going through Envi-
                         perspectives in the work of advocates from dif-        Core that everything is connected when it comes
           livelihood.   ferent sectors of society. It also aims to develop     to environmental advocacy. Every human activ-



                                                                               16
ity, after all, has an impact on and is affected
by changing trends in the environment. For us
ICT activists, the dream of having a competitive
domestic software and hardware manufacturing
industry has a stable and modernized agricul-
ture as its prerequisite. Where else will we get the
raw materials for production and the operational
requirements such as food, health care and shel-
ter if our agricultural production remains stunted
and import-dependent?
    On the flipside, every sector can also contrib-
ute to the struggle for the people and the envi-
ronment. We can help cause-oriented organiza-
tions and campaigns related to the environment               can help popularize campaigns through engaging
be more efficient by providing them with appro-              visual communication. Business graduates can
priate computer tools and technologies, and                  help generate resources to help sustain projects
training them in its optimal usage. Scientists can           and campaigns.
help concretize studies and investigations on dif-               The possibilities that we must make possible
ferent environmental impacts. Cultural workers               are endless.
    Leon Dulce is the new media coordinator of the Computer Professionals’ Union. He pursues his interests in
design, writing, technology and activism online and offline, all in service to the people’s struggles.

Leonard Co
(continued from page 7)
     Sustained by sheer passion and sharpened                intense taxonomist who played the harmonica,
through practice, the value of Co’s vast and                 the humblest of musical instruments, and who
almost encyclopedic expertise was that it did not            considered the hymns of struggle and national
remain lodged in repositories or libraries, com-             liberation as music to the ears.
fortable in being proprietary and profitable. We                 Losing Leonard Co to a hail of bullets is a
shall always be grateful to Co and his colleagues            great injustice, an irreparable loss to his family,
who labored during the days of the dictatorship              the University and the country.
to make health and knowledge an attainable real-                 The following days will be filled with battles
ity for the most dispossessed of communities,                against forgetting, against apathy and against
and who continued to pursue the protection of                injustice. By engaging in these struggles, we can
our national patrimony in the years thereafter.              fully honor a National Treasure and a true scien-
We shall always recall with respect the quirky,              tist for the people.

references:
• Curriculum Vitae of Leonardo L. Co (as of November 3, 2010)
• Sy, Joaquin. “Si Leonard Co aka 许 许 许,” 21 November 2010
• Casambre, Rey Claro. “Remembering Leonard Co.” Pinoy Weekly, 18 November 2010. http://pinoy-
  weekly.org/new/2010/11/remembering-leonard-co/
• Jara, Dr. Eleanor. “The Special Place that CBHPs had in Leonard’s heart.” Letter to the Editor, Philip-
  pine Daily Inquirer. 14 December 2010. http://www.inquirer.net/specialfeatures/theenvironmen-
  treport/view.php?db=1article=20101214-308825
•Barcelona, Julie. “Rafflesia Leonardi—Honoring an Unsung Hero of Philippine Botany” http://juliebarce-
  lona.blogspot.com/
• Picana, Thom. “Cordillera NGOs mourn Co, salute him as a ‘scientist of the people.’” www.gmanews.tv,
  21 November 2010,
• Vigil, Lorna. “The Last Dodo of Botany” http://www.upibalon.com/story/up%E2%80%99s-plant-man-
  extraordinaire-0
• Ong, Perry S., Phd. “The genius of Leonardo L. Co: The people’s scientist and professor,” Star Science, The Phil-
  ippine Star http://www.philstar.com/Article.aspx?articleId=639525publicationSubCategoryId=75
• Umil, Anne Marxze D. “Leonard Co: Scientist for the People.” Bulatlat. 20 November 2010.
http://bulatlat.com/main/2010/11/20/leonard-co-scientist-for-the-people/


                                                        17
NEwS




                          asia-pacific	environmental	
                          educators,	activists	unite	
                          on	gloBal	warming
                          lISa Ito-tapaNg


                          E
                                nvironmental educators and representatives of non-government and peoples
                                organizations from the Philippines, Australia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, India,
                                South Korea, Japan, and Uzbekistan gathered in Manila for the first Forum
                          on Climate Change and Environmental Education in Asia-Pacific: Building Capacities for
                          Sustainable People’s Development in the Region from December 14 to 15, 2010 at the
                          Bayview Park Hotel, Manila.

   Literacy is not just       The event was organized by the Climate
                          Change Learning Initiative Mobilizing Action for
                                                                               a platform for solidarity and sharing of learning
                                                                               resources among educators and grassroots orga-
reading, writing, and     Transforming Environments in the Asia-Pacific        nizations across the region.
                          (CLIMATE Asia-Pacific) and hosted by the Center          Dr. Jose Roberto Guevara, President of the
so on. We now should      for Environmental Concerns-Philippines (CEC-         Asia-South Pacific Association for Basic and Adult
                          Phils), with the support of DVV International.       Education, and former Executive Director of CEC,
 be able read the new     The conference also included an exhibition of        stressed the need to advocate for a “different edu-
    world: the climate    environmental education materials and solidar-
                          ity night among participants.
                                                                               cation in a ‘climate changed’ world.”
                                                                                   “Literacy is not just reading, writing, and so
       changed world.         The forum emphasized the relevance and
                          urgency of Education for Sustainable Devel-
                                                                               on. We now should be able read the new world:
                                                                               the climate changed world. It is understanding
                          opment (ESD) in the context of addressing the        the complexity of climate change, beyond the
                          challenges and impacts of global warming, par-       technical and scientific focus, beyond adaptation
                          ticularly on the poor and marginalized sectors in    and mitigation. It is to understand the need for
                          the Asia-Pacific region. In December 2002, the       justice and political focus that informs our action
                          United Nations (UN) General Assembly declared        and empowers us to act,” Guevara said.
                          the years 2005 to 2014 as the UN Decade of Edu-          “Transformation is the end goal: not just of
                          cation for Sustainable Development, designating      the self but of the society and the system that has
                          UNESCO as the lead agency.                           brought us to this situation. We must not be vic-
                                                                               tims, forced to adapt to climate change. We must
                          esd	in	a	‘climate-cHanged	world’                     understand and challenge the root causes of cli-
                              CEC-Phils Executive Director Frances Quimpo      mate change and demand just responses,” Gue-
                          introduced the CLIMATE Asia-Pacific network as       vara concluded.



                                                                              18
“It’s the urgency that’s new,” Guevara stressed,          to the Convention on Biodiversity, a non-binding
“We have a decade to focus on ESD, but do we                 treaty ongoing since 1993 which, like the Kyoto
have a decade to act?”                                       Protocal, has yet to be signed by the United
                                                             States. Elenita Dano, Program Manager of the
evolving	definition	of	esd	and	development                   Erosion Technology and Conservation Group,
    The conference’s keynote speaker, ACT Teach-             presented updates on the climate negotiations in
ers Partylist Representative Antonio Tinio, also             Cancun, Mexico, summarizing the developments
emphasized the role of education in the current              as a continuation of Copenhagen, which provided
environmental crisis. Tinio and Guevara both                 the foundation for the current climate regime.
acknowledged the changing definitions of ESD
and sustainable development, considering these               common	tHreads
as a tool that could work for or against the peo-
ple’s welfare.
                                                                 The afternoon panel focused on ESD case
                                                             studies and the regional challenges of these
                                                                                                                  Transformation is
    Tinio cautioned that powerful multilateral
organizations have historically played a major
                                                             efforts. Yuka Ozawa, Program Officer of the Edu-
                                                             cation Cooperation Division of the Asia-Pacific
                                                                                                                  the end goal, not
role in appropriating the term ‘sustainable devel-           Cultural Center for UNESCO in Japan, shared          just of the self but
opment’ and aligning it with neoliberal policy               their experiences in coming up with the Tokyo
agendas. These, he said, were reflected in the               Declaration of Hope and the “HOPE” (holistic,        of the society and
country’s privatization of the educational system            ownership-based, participatory, and empower-
and the liberalization of investments that have              ing) evaluation approach as a learning process.      the system that has
severely depleted natural resources.
    “We educators should critically address the
                                                                 Teresita Vistro of the Asia Peasant Women’s
                                                             Network focused on agriculture and ESD, dis-
                                                                                                                  brought us to this
concept of sustainable development: who sus-
tains it? What kind of development? Develop-
                                                             cussing the impacts of climate change on regional
                                                             agriculture and rural populations, especially
                                                                                                                  situation.
ment for whom?” Tinio said.                                  women. She articulated their education agenda
                                                             as supporting farmers knowledge, sustainable
gloBal	context	of	climate	cHange	policies                    adaptation and mitigation practices, the need to
    The morning of the conference featured a                 address destructive farming practices, building
panel on updates in environmental situations and             resilience of communities, and integration with
contexts. Dr. Giovanni Tapang, AGHAM Chair-                  broader issues of human rights and social justice.
person, highlighted the impacts of global warm-              Dominic D’ Souza, Associate Director of Laya in
ing in the Asia-Pacific region, stressing that it has        Vishakhapatnam, India, discussed forestry and
worsened the existing impacts of globalization,              ESD, spanning fundamental concerns related to
especially among the most vulnerable or margin-              science, political economy, ethics, and action.
alized segments of the population.
    Atty. Elpidio Peria, legal consultant for                experience	sHaring
the Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau of                      The second day of the conference featured
the Department of Environment and Natural                    two simultaneous panel sessions on case studies
Resources, shared updates and agendas related                                         (continued on page 23)


                                                        1
education	for	cHange	
and	sustainaBle	people’s	
development
This conference statement was drafted and affirmed by participants of the Forum on Climate
Change and Environmental Education in Asia-Pacific last December 14 to 15, 2010 in Manila,
Philippines.




W
         e, educators, learners and leaders of civil society, environmental and peo-
         ple’s organizations from the Asia-Pacific region, gather to collectively af-
         firm our solidarity and unity to advance education and learning initiatives
towards climate justice and sustainable people’s development.
    Global warming has caused immense devasta-          corporate greed and the quest for profit, which
tion across the Asia-Pacific region, the largest and    fail to address the current crisis of unsustainable
most populous continent worldwide with more             overproduction and overconsumption which has
than four billion people. More and more com-            contributed to the unprecedented levels of man-
munities have experienced firsthand the impacts         made GHG emissions into our atmosphere.
of global warming, such as changes in tempera-               Whose lives are at stake in the climate crisis?
ture and rainfall, flooding, freshwater scarcity,       All of our lives are at stake but some are more
infestations and epidemics, landslides, stronger        endangered than others. The tillers of our lands;
droughts and typhoons. Our region is home to            the nurturers of our seas, forests and mountains;
among the most destitute communities of the             the toiling peoples, such as peasants and farm-
globe, left to fend for survival amidst poverty and     ers, indigenous peoples, fisherfolks, urban poor,
massive illiteracy.                                     workers, women and children. Never at any other
    The extreme vulnerability of our peoples to         moment has the situation been as critical as it is
disasters, displacement and death is not merely         today. Never has the danger to our ecosystems,
due to our geographic contexts: it is rooted in         communities, and cultures been as pronounced
the historic and systemic denial of the people’s        and real.
rights—to land and water, to rights and liveli-              What can be done in the face of such looming
hood, and to a healthful ecology—spawned by             and widespread suffering? As educators, learn-
unsustainable models and paradigms of develop-          ers, and leaders, we recognize that our educa-
ment.                                                   tion work needs to explicitly address the politics
    The current environmental and socio-politi-         of global warming and motivate informed action
cal policies, programs, and systems, instituted         for a sustainable and just future.
and implemented by governments and states in
the region have instead ravaged our ecosystems,         a.	education	for	a	climate-cHanged	world
livelihoods, and ways of living.                            Education is central to surviving in a climate-
    While the Asia-Pacific region has some of the       changed world. It is a vital requisite to leading
world’s highest GHG emitters, majority of the           the widest number of people to defend, protect,
most vulnerable peoples in the world to climate         and rehabilitate the integrity of creation and our
change are also from the region.                        ecosystems. It can transform individual perspec-
    The current climate negotiations, controlled        tives and lifestyles into systems and structures of
by powerful leaders and nations from the Annex          governance. Through education, we are enabled
I countries who represent the world’s top emit-         to envision possibilities towards a more viable
ters, have repeatedly refused to recognize gen-         future and empowered to transform them into
uine solutions to lower greenhouse gas emis-            reality.
sions (GHG) to the levels needed to stabilize               What kind of education is critical to redefin-
the world’s climate. Instead, these negotiations        ing sustainability that prioritizes the people’s
have largely peddled false solutions to the cri-        needs and their environments, as well as the
sis. These are dangerous experiments, driven by         welfare of future generations? One that is dem-


                                                       0
ocratic and anchored on science, historical reali-          • In terms of method, the development of popu-
ties, respect for local and indigenous knowledge,             lar, participatory, and accessible approaches and
and concrete plans for action towards gender                  information, education, and campaign materials
equality, justice and peace. One that is:                     and tools must be supported.
• Inclusive, which can reach the widest num-
  ber of government, non-government, and pri-               B.	from	education	to	collective	people’s	action
  vate sectors and embrace the contributions of             Effective education must go beyond facilitating
  sectors such as women, youth, and differently-            understanding and towards translating aware-
  abled persons.                                            ness into collective action, into altering our
• Owned by the people, created with consulta-               current ways of thinking and doing to achieve
  tion from the grassroots, prioritizing the peo-           sustainable people’s development. In a climate-
  ple’s participation in learning, and involving the        changed world, education is about advancing
  basic sectors of our societies, such as indigenous        social change. Thus, we call for and affirm the fol-
  peoples, fisher folk, farmers, and workers.               lowing actions:
• Rights-based, which will uphold and promote               • The need to support people and communi-
  the pursuit of basic human rights, as enshrined             ties asserting their rights to livelihood, a
  in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,               sound environment, and protection of pat-
  and indigenous people’s rights to ancestral lands           rimony. Community and grassroots voices must
  and self-determination, as upheld in United                 be heard in the global negotiations on agricul-
  Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous             ture, biodiversity, climate change, and forests.
  Peoples.                                                  • The urgent need to demand justice, respon-
• Rooted in the people's knowledge, prac-                     sibility and accountability from Annex I
  tices, and community science, which                         countries, which are the world's biggest
  respects, promotes, and integrates traditional              emitters.
  wisdom and socio-political systems for sustain-           • The need for government accountability,
  able development.                                           transparency, and support. Accountability
• Threads in the perspective of gender in                     and transparency should be exercised in deci-
  analysing and dealing with global warming                   sion-making on matters of environmental and
  impacts.                                                    public concern and responses to global warm-
• Mass-based and directed towards pursuing                    ing. State support should be given for programs
  social change and collective action.                        which build the capacities of the poorest and
  How are we to go about creating such educa-                 most vulnerable communities. Recognition
  tional structures for sustainable people’s devel-           must be given to the role of civil society and
  opment? The challenge is how to support such a              people’s organizations in the development and
  vision of learning, in terms of content, method,            implementation of educational policy and pro-
  and access:                                                 grams in response to global warming.
• In terms of content, education must nurture a             •The need to reject market-based mecha-
  critical understanding of the roots and solution            nisms, frameworks, and false solutions to
  to the crisis of sustainability, emphasizing the            climate change which do not reduce GHG
  responsibility of developed countries on global             emissions and support the further exploi-
  warming. It must support genuine solutions                  tation and corporate control of the people's
  that prioritize the people’s needs over corporate           natural resources.
  greed and build the resiliency of Asia-Pacific            • The need to uphold the people’s rights and
  grassroots communities by working to reduce                 knowledge over corporate interests in the
  their vulnerabilities.                                      agriculture and fisheries sectors. We oppose
• In terms of access, there must be comprehen-                biopiracy, seed patenting, massive privatization
  sive and participatory measures to integrate                and conversion of agricultural lands and coastal
  such education into all aspects of developmen-              waters and other fishing areas for ecotourism
  tal learning, from formal to non-formal. It must            and other commercial and industrial purposes
  be accessible for youths, adults, and families.             and other corporate mechanisms to further
  Support and access to environmental education               privatize the commons. Instead, support must
  should be given to marginalized sectors in the              be channelled to the promotion and develop-
  rural and urban areas, to the poor whose lives              ment of traditional varieties, organic farming,
  are dependent on nature and are most adversely              local climate change adaptation technologies
  affected by climate change impacts.                                                     (continued on page 24)



                                                       1
INSIghtS
Reflection from CEC’s volunteer
interns from the Development
Traineeship Program of AIESEC
(Association     Internationale
des Étudiants en Sciences
Économiques et Commerciales)




                                  give	it	a	face
                                  Only two percent of old-growth Philippine forests are left. Thousands of squatters will be displaced and lose their
                                  homes. Typhoons destroy thousands of houses. Logging destroys millions of hectares in the Amazonian rain forests.
                                  Increasing carbon dioxide emissions threaten the global climate. Every six seconds, a child dies of hunger. Every
                                  week, another endangered species vanishes.

                                  lINda praCEjuS


                                  S
                                         ounds horrible, doesn’t it? But does it really touch you? Do you really feel what
                                         these numbers mean? These must be huge, but these seem to be random facts
                                         which are hard to imagine or to connect to real life.
                                       At least, that is what happens to me. Whenever          torn away from the home where they grew up,
                                  I hear facts about climate change or news like “200          where they saw their children growing up. Sud-
                                  people in Afghanistan died because of an earth-              denly, these odd crowds were no longer just face-
                                  quake,” a part of me feels sorry. Still, if I don’t put a    less strangers. They were very friendly people,
                                  lot of effort in imagining what that could mean, it is       inviting me into their houses, talking to me about
                                  no more than just numbers far away from my daily             their lives, their fears—sharing what little they
       If we want to              life here in Manila.                                         had with me and making me really feel welcome.
                                       The same happened to me when I heard about              Every time I read about them now, it’s no longer
  encourage people                the “squatters.” Although I have seen enough poor            just a mass of strangers that I see in my imagina-
                                  people in the street and the poor constructions they         tion, but it’s people I really like.
to join our struggle              call their houses, it was something far away from me.            Needless to say, I have already been against the
                                  Reading the newspaper, all I ever read about them            dislocation program before. But now that I have a
for equitable living              gave me a rather negative impression: they seemed to         connection these people, it touches me a lot more.
                                  be a dubious crowd of people, occupying places that
     conditions and               the government needs for further “development”
                                                                                               My will to fight for their rights has multiplied ten-
                                                                                               fold. Sure, I’d also have fought without ever meeting
     against climate              of Metro Manila. Just a faceless crowd without any
                                  individual thoughts, not even to mention feelings.
                                                                                               them, just because I am generally against injustice.
                                                                                               But now I’m sure my efforts will be a lot stronger,
    change, we have                    When I heard that some thousands of those
                                  squatters were going to be displaced, a moral part
                                                                                               motivated by the feelings I have for these people,
                                                                                               who I now call my friends.
   to give them the               of me said that this is very bad and I felt sorry. But,
                                  because of having no personal relations, for me it
                                                                                                   To see how my feelings changed after the “squat-
                                                                                               ters“ became my friends made me think about how
possibility to really             was just bad news about this anonymous, alien mass
                                  of faceless people.
                                                                                               urban people feel for nature. I grew up in the country-
                                                                                               side and nature has always been a huge part of my life,
 feel the need for a                   That totally changed when Ryan took me to               so helping to conserve the environment seemed to me
                                  Barangay Pinahan, one of those “squatter” com-               to be as natural as cleaning the teeth in the evening.
             change.              munities which face the threat of being dislocated,          Talking to people who didn’t care always left me with
this huge question mark above my head how igno-                  feel the need for a change. Take them to the “squat-
rance and heartlessness could somehow be possible.               ters”, of which they have only heard bad things in the
     But now I begin to understand. It’s a totally dif-          news, and let them see that they are people like you
ferent thing fighting for something that you know by             and me. Take them to the forest, let them breathe the
heart or some injustice that you think is really bad, but        fresh air, hear the river flowing, listen to the birds
you have no direct connection to. Many of the people             singing, and feel the value of undamaged nature.
we think are cold and don’t care about the world might           What should they care about a random, unimaginable
actually have a very good morality – they just never             number of some trees far away from them if they have
had the possibility to really feel the need for a change.        never had any good “tree-experience.” Give the squat-
     If we want to encourage people to join our strug-           ters a face, let the people feel the forest and many
gle for equitable living conditions and against climate          more people will be motivated to fight for justice and
change, we have to give them the possibility to really           a healthy environment. It’s all about awareness.
Linda Pracejus is finishing a BS degree in Management of biological and environmental resources at the University
of Vienna. She is in the Philippines as a CEC intern and volunteer through the AIESEC Development Traineeship
Program.


GLobaL WarminG
(continued from page 19)
on environmental education programs.                             and is considered as the “center of the center of
     Jung Kyung Il from the Korea Environmental                  marine shorefish biodiversity” worldwide.
Education Center, established in February 2000                       Hasan Masum of the Coastal Development
to develop education programs, researches, and                   Partnership in Bangladesh focused on the chal-
training for teachers and NGO activists, shared                  lenges on ESD and climate change education
their initiatives to forge partnerships between                  among coastal populations, stressing the poten-
local government, NGOs, and community resi-                      tial of converting traditional community knowl-
dents. CEC’s Training and Community Services                     edge and practices into appropriate and relevant
Coordinator Ricarido Saturay shared the center’s                 information for climate change policy and plan-
two-decade experiences in creating and develop-                  ning. Paul Santos shared the story of the Kalin-
ing its core education module, the Restoration                   gap Marikina Watershed, a Church-initiated com-
Ecology Workshop since 1990.                                     munity-based project in Bgy. San Jose, Antipolo
    Some panelists focused on the links between                  City integrating watershed rehabilitation and
education and advocacy work. Clemente Bautista,                  protection with sustainable farming systems and
Jr. of Kalikasan People’s Network for the Envi-                  sloping agroforest land technologies.
ronment (KPNE), a national campaign network,
shared their experience in strengthening Filipino                Building	solidarity
environmental mass movements and promoting                           The conference was capped by the presenta-
sustainable development from the point of view                   tion and plenary discussion of the conference
of people’s organizations. Aleksandra Povarich                   statement (please see text of the statement on page
of the Uzbekistan Youth Environment Network,                     20) and a ritual of affirmation and solidarity
a union of more than 180 youth and environ-                      among participants.
mental organizations, shared their various pro-                      “Our educators in the climate change advo-
grams and projects. Jane Yap-eo of the Center for                cacy network and social movements gave us sig-
Development Program Networks in the Cordil-                      nificant insights and political agitation by telling
lera, a network of 12 NGOs based in the north-                   the world of their accomplishments and break-
ern Philipppines, shared the contexts of their                   throughs in environmental education work and
education practices among indigenous peoples                     inspire many to work hard for the cause of the
and their struggle for defense of land, life, and                people and the environment,” concluded KPNE
resources.                                                       Chairperson and national fisherfolk leader Fer-
    Other panelists shared their experiences in                  nando L. Hicap in his closing remarks.
community-based conservation programs. Ricky                         Hicap expressed optimism that CLIMATE
Nunez of Conservation International shared the                   Asia-Pacific would help “set the stage for more
center’s experience in using education to promote                dynamic and active participation of the people
the protection and conservation of the Verde                     and social movements in the region to struggle
Island passage off the coast of Luzon. The area con-             and advocate for a better and free world for the
tains among the country’s richest fishing grounds                majority of the poor people across the globe.”
FeedbaCk
September-december 010
ISSN 0117-0864

        Official Publication of the
        Center for Environmental
        ConcernsPhilippines


the CENtEr For
ENvIroNmENtal
CoNCErNS-phIlIppINES is a
SEC registered non-government
organization promoting patriotic,
scientific, and people-oriented
environmental education,
research, and advocacy work
with grassroots communities and
sectors.

Office Address: #26 Matulungin
Street, Barangay Central, Diliman,
Quezon City 1100 PHILIPPINES
                                      landlessness	and	
Telefax: (632) 920 9099
Website: www.cecphils.org
Email: info@cecphils.org              carper,	culprits	in	
Writers:
rog amoN,
ChEamSoN BooNgalINg,
ChE domINguEz,
                                      world	‘foodless’	day
                                      ChEamSoN BooNgalINg



                                      “I
lEoN dulCE,
lISa Ito-tapaNg,                              t’s World ‘Foodless’ Day in the Philippines as peasants are still landless and
and lINda praCEjuS
                                              are continuously displaced by landlords and land-grabbers that make use of
Publication design and layout:                the anti-peasant provisions of CARPer.”
r. jordaN p. SaNtoS
                                          This according to the Kilusang Magbubukid             Latest data in 2010 reveals 32.9 percent of
Photo credits:
aNthoNy arBIaS,
                                      ng Pilipinas (KMP), who along with KMP-Negros         the population are below the poverty line, a swift
arkIBoNg BayaN,                       and KASAMA-TK (KMP Southern Tagalog) and              increase of 9.67 percent from 30 percent in 2009.
CEC arChIvES,                         other peasant supporters, held a protest in front     Meanwhile, a national survey early this year
kalIkaSaN pEoplE’S                    of the Department of Agrarian Reform office in        showed 21.1 percent, or an estimated 4 million
NEtwork For thE
ENvIroNmENt,
                                      Quezon City last October 16 to mark the glob-         Filipino families, have suffered from hunger in
lISa Ito-tapaNg, and                  ally-observed World Food Day.                         recent months.
tudla produCtIoNS                         Peasant groups blamed massive landlessness            Protesters cooked symbols of CARPer, tag-
                                      and the implementation of the Comprehen-              ging it as “inedible to farmers” to show that the
Send your comments, inquiries,
write-ups, and contributions to
                                      sive Agrarian Reform Program Extension with           law has not solved land reform neither food secu-
rea@cecphils.org.                     Reforms or CARPer, as culprits to the continu-        rity problems. Instead, farmers pushed for the
                                      ous poverty and hunger experienced by Filipi-         passage of House Bill 3745 or Genuine Agrarian
This publication is made              nos.                                                  Reform Bill.
possible through the support
of DVV International.                 eduCation For ChanGe
                                      (continued from page 21)
                                         and capacity-building of peasants, fisher folks        common efforts towards genuine sustainable
                                        and indigenous peoples. We further uphold the           people’s development.
                                        protection and advancement of the traditional           To advance our aspirations for education
                                        knowledge of indigenous peoples.                        and action for sustainable people’s devel-
                                      • The need to sustain our advocacy of climate             opment, we affirm our urgent commitment
                                        justice. Therefore, we continue our initiatives         to building people’s solidarity and unity as
                                        to exchange resources, experiences, and link our        a response to the global crisis of climate
                                                                                                change.
                                      Climate Change Learning Initiative Mobilizing Action for Transforming Environments in Asia Pacific (CLI-
                                      MATE Asia Pacific)


                                                                                           4

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Cec feedback03

  • 1. Official Publication of the Center for Environmental Concerns Philippines Helping communities address environmental challenges September-December 2010 ISSN 0117-0864 Contents 2 Justice 3 Human rigHts, food security top concerns in cec educational discussions 4 leonard co: Bringing knowledge of tHe forests to tHe people 8 encountering tHe trutH: tHe kananga 3 killings 11 a Bloodstained History: tHe 19tH iB’s record of rigHts violations 13 renew training Bares environmental proBlems of urBan poor communities 14 tHe envicore engagement: save tHe world, take tHe crasH course 17 anti-slapp Bill of 2010 campaign kicks-off witH cultural nigHt 17 cec pilots first luzon-wide envicore training 18 asia-pacific environmental educators, activists unite on gloBal warming Leonard Co 20 education for cHange and sustainaBle people’s development 22 give it a face december 29, 1953-november 15, 2010 24 landlessness and carper, culprits in world ‘foodless’ day
  • 2. EdItorIal Justice I t is a simple word, yet one most elusive in these troubling times. On November 15, 2010, the Philippines lost one of its most respected experts in ethno-botany and taxonomy: Leonard Co. Along with farmer Julius and common sense at the very least. It is unaccept- Borromeo and forest guard Sofronio Cortez, Co was able to just write off the killings as a tragic aber- gunned down by troops in the forests of Kananga, ration. As human rights groups pointed out, the Leyte while on fieldwork. The 19th Infantry Battal- killing of Co and his team is not an isolated case, lion, instead, blames the deaths of Co and his team a freak accident. Many other educators, teach- on an encounter with rebels, denying their culpa- ers, researchers, and health workers who have bility in the incident. Yet, as facts on the case con- set aside opportunities for career and monetary tinue to unravel, more and more evidence and testi- advancement to work in rural communities have monies point out to the military as the sole culprit been falsely accused of being terrorists, harassed, responsible for the killing. illegally detained, and even killed. Many farmers It is ironic that one of our best experts on have been gunned down by soldiers on mere suspi- forest species and biodiversity conservation was cion of being rebels. More ominously, other envi- killed during this juncture of two globally envi- ronmental advocates have been deliberately tar- ronmental events: 2010, the International Year geted by death squads in the past few years. of Biodiversity and 2011, the International Year There is no justice if we allow this climate of A country is only of Forests. The statement of the Philippine Native impunity to fester. Co’s killing fits into a lengthy list Plant Conservation Society, an organization that of extrajudicial killings (EJKs) over the past ten years, as wealthy as its Co was very much a part of, underscores a chill- crossing over two Presidential administrations. ing truth: How can this champion of conservation Co’s killing is one of the first EJKs to occur resources and its suffer at the hands of his supposed guardians? under the new Aquino administration. The thou- There is clearly no justice in that, and no jus- sands of deaths and killings that have occurred people. In this tice in the way that things have been. with disturbing regularity are not incidental; there There is no justice in letting environmental is a system that is responsible for the regular recur- era of vanishing advocates be slaughtered. A country is only as rence of impunity, for the continuous bloodshed. natural resources wealthy as its resources and its people. In this The challenge now, not just for Co’s family, peers, era of vanishing natural resources due to plunder and colleagues but also for all Filipinos, is to pursue due to plunder and destruction, the killing of scientists and envi- justice on both a case to case and policy-wide basis: ronmentalists like Co are crimes doubly heinous. seeking accountable the hands that pulled the trig- and destruction, Those who stand by the protection of the envi- ger to the masterminds who imposed policies that ronment and people’s welfare are also the first to have turned military troops into a mercenary, mer- the killing of be felled in the face of ignorance and impunity. ciless army, considering civilians as mere expend- There is no justice in mere forgetting and sim- ables. There will be more like Co, Borromeo, and scientists and ply accepting the lack of accountability in the kill- Cortez unless these realities are addressed. environmentalists ings of the Kananga Three. The killing of Co, Cor- We must pursue Co’s killers and hold them tez and Borromeo is a blatant violation of basic accountable for the crime. And we must do what like Co are crimes human rights, international rules of engagement we can to help change this climate of impunity and the treatment of civilians by armed forces, prevailing for nearly a decade. Only then can jus- doubly heinous. elementary security protocols, and even humanity tice be truly served.
  • 3. NEwS Human rigHts, food security top concerns in cec “KA DANING” explains how genu- educational discussions ine land reform can address food insecurity (left), while a protester warns that killings will continue for as long as impunity reigns (right). rog amoN From January 21, 2001 H uman rights and food security were among this quarter’s topics in Talakayan sa Kubo, CEC’s monthly educational discussions. to June 30, 2010 which Danilo Ramos, Secretary-General of the December’s Talakayan sa Kubo zoomed is the end of Arroyo’s Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (KMP) dis- in on the issue of the Human Rights Situa- intensely repressive rule, cussed Food Security and the Philippine tion in the Philippines. Thaddeus Ifurung Peasant Situation in the October session of of Karapatan said that President Aquino’s a total of 1,206 people Talakayan sa Kubo. Ramos said that the Phil- Daang Matuwid is not a far cry from GMA’s have been victims of EJK, ippines’ agrarian and agricultural policies con- blood-stained regime. A statement from 153 of whom are women tinue to drag citizens into deeper poverty and Karapatan reads, “We see no glimmer of hunger. The country is the world’s number one change and his straight path is marred by the and 475 are human rights rice net importer and the National Food Associ- blood of victims of political killings.” defenders. There are a ation merely acts as a trader for imported rice. “There were 18 victims killed during the total of 206 victims of Instead of offering solutions, the Aquino last six months of Macapagal-Arroyo. There government has recorded violations of peas- are now at least 25 victims of extra-judi- enforced disappearance, ant rights that tolled 13 victims of extrajudicial cial killings (EJK’s) barely five months after 31 of whom are women killings (EJK) last year, 2 enforced disappear- Aquino took over (July 1 – November 30, ances and five accused of trumped-up charges. and 68 are human 2010).” Aquino’s government has been deaf KMP reported that 80% of farmers at the to the insistent call for the immediate release rights defenders. More province are landless and are systematically of 43 health workers much less to the clamor than 2000 have been subjected to exploitative conditions such as for justice for the death of the country’s top high land rent, usury, underpricing, low wages botanist Leonardo Co and his two compan- arbitrarily arrested for and even harassment brought about by mili- ions. In spite of the dispiriting culture of their political beliefs. tarization. The persistent oppression of our impunity, it is the people’s responsibility to food producers coupled with unpredictability defend human rights, justice and democracy of weather patterns caused by climate change and end the horrors of continuing state vio- - Karapatan Monitor, aggravates the country’s food insecurity. lence and repression,” Karapatan said. July- September 2010
  • 4. FEaturES leonard co: Bringing knowledge of tHe forests to tHe people lISa Ito-tapaNg T hey did not realize it then, but when the military fired upon the team of Leon- ardo L. Co in the forests of Kananga, Leyte, they felled one of the most pas- sionate scholars and protectors of our country’s forests, one among a rare and endangered breed of scientists for the Filipino people. An ethno-botanist and plant taxonomist, the year old daughter, Linnaea Marie, was named 56-year old Co was in Kananga as a consultant after Carl Linnaeus, the Swedish botanist known on biodiversity for a reforestation project. At as the father of modern taxonomy. the time of his death, Co was also serving as a museum researcher and lecturer for the Univer- filipino-cHinese Heritage sity of the Philippines Institute of Biology (UP Leonardo Legaspi Co was born in Manila on IB). He is married to Glenda F. Co. Their eight- December 29, 1953. His father, Lian Sing Co 4
  • 5. immigrated to the Philippines from mainland ural Science Research Center-Ministry of Natural China as a young man and married Emelina Resources. Leaving Manila soon after this stint, Legaspi from Taguddin, Ilocos. Co continued his research and immersion with Co was the eldest child and the sole son in a grassroots communities in the mountains of the Chinese-Filipino household. He grew up in Caloo- Cordillera region. can City, learning Fookien and Mandarin in addi- tion to English and Filipino. Joaquin Sy, in his people’s scientist and professor tribute, recalls the young Co as one who excelled In 1981, Co and other advocates founded a in Chemistry at the Philippine Chinese High Baguio-based NGO, named Community Health, School, becoming involved in the student council Education, Services and Training in the Cordil- and the student paper, where he wrote a column lera Region (Chestcore), a community health under the pen name Siling Labuyo. group working across six provinces. Chestcore Co entered UP in 1972 as a Chemical Engi- was able to document 122 medicinal plants in the neering major, but later on shifted to Botany. This region, complete with their scientific and com- was perhaps a result of his taking on an interest mon names, descriptions, illustrations and their in plants (particularly ferns) and started trek- nutritional and medicinal values. They worked king and mountain hiking. His colleagues recalled with indigenous peoples communities to “system- that Co was inspired by his high school biology atize the knowledge of the masses about medici- teacher, Benito Tan, who became an internation- nal plants for basic health care,” Casambre said. ally-recognized moss taxonomist. Co offered his knowledge of traditional Chi- nese and herbal medicine and scientific expertise Botanist for tHe masses to the indigenous peoples of the Cordillera, whose It was at UP where Co pursued his passion for remote and poor communities have been neglected science and service to the people. He would be for most part by the national government. The involved in organizations which merged his vari- Cordillera Peoples Alliance and the Tongtongan ous interests, such as the UP Botanical Society, Ti Umili said in separate statements that Co was the Samahan ng mga Mag-aaral sa Pilipino and a “great scientist who devoted his life to practicing the UP Mountaineers. science and health for the people,” enduring “diffi- Rey Casambre, Director of the Philippine cult travel along rocky mountain roads, even trek- Peace Center, recalled that Co also “belonged then king up many steep trails on foot to reach commu- to a group of bright and dedicated activists” who nities where government health and social services were undergrad majors or graduates of botany did not reach” and training local health workers on or zoology. The group was part of a network of the use of medicinal plants and the practice of acu- Filipino scientists who were “committed to using puncture, so that they could attend to their com- their scientific and technical knowledge and skills munity’s health needs.” to serve the Filipino people, resisting the Marcos By 1989, Co and Chestcore published a book dictatorship, and struggling for an independent, entitled “Common Medicinal Plants in the Cordil- genuinely democratic and just society.” lera Administrative Region: A Trainor’s Manual to CALL FOR JUSTICE GROWS: Among the group’s projects was a survey of Community-Based Health Programs (CBHP),” as a Some of the 40 native trees planted Philippine medicinal plants. For at least five resource book for upland communities seeking by the Co family and supporters of years, Co and this team dedicated their time to more accessible sources of medicine for common the Justice for Leonard Co Move- completing this study. By 1977, they compiled illnesses. Dr. Eleanor Jara, director of a national ment marking the 40th day of his death. and published this wealth of material, through health NGO, wrote that this book eventually the UP Botanical Society, into a 193-page illus- served as an “invaluable reference to more than trated publication entitled “A Manual on Some 50 CBHPs nationwide” and “paved the way for Philippine Medicinal Plants.” As many rural Filipi- the documentation of medicinal plants in CBHP nos did not have access to medical services and areas.” goods—a reality prevailing up to the present— such research helped promote the use of local and legendary plant taxonomist readily-accessible herbal medicines by grassroots Upon returning from the Cordillera, Co con- communities. It is now considered a pioneering tinued to work in the field of biodiversity conser- and seminal work. vation, establishing himself as a top-notch plant From 1976 to 1981, Co also served as a taxonomist and among the best in his field. research assistant for an inventory of endangered In 1988, he became a pharmacologist at the and rare plant and animal species by the UP Nat- Acupuncture Therapeutic and Research Center in
  • 6. TREE OF HOPE. Bereaved parents Lian Seng and Emelina Co, expect no less than the fruits of justice from what they have planted. Together with Co’s wife, Glenda, they recently filed murder raps against 38 soldiers of the Philippine Army. Manila. Afterwards, he worked as a field botanist its hidden order and where one would see just for Conservation International-Philippines (CI) endless green, he would expound on the complex and as a freelance consultant for various environ- interrelationships between one living thing to mental impact assessment projects. At CI, he con- another; He possessed firsthand knowledge that ducted biodiversity monitoring in the forests of can never be found in any literature,” the PNPCSI Sierra Madre, Palawan, and Eastern Mindanao. attested in a statement. In 2000 to the last few months of his life, Co He also engaged government as a represen- became involved as the principal investigator for tative of the CSO sector, becoming part of the a 16-hectare biodiversity research facility project Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau’s Philippine in Palanan, Isabela by the UP IB, CI, Arnold Arbo- Plant Conservation Committee (responsible for retum of Harvard University, and the Center for compiling the national “Red List” of threatened Tropical Forest Science of the Smithsonian Tropi- plants) in 2004 and National Wild Flora Council cal Research Institute. He later on co-authored a (a technical body for policy-making related to the book related to this in 2006, entitled “The Forest sustainable use of plant resources) in 2008. He provided a Trees of Palanan, Philippines: A Study in Population Co did not finish his Botany degree in UP Ecology.” until 2008, 32 years after he entered the Univer- glimpse into its Co joined many other environmental and pro- sity. Yet this delay in attaining complete academic (forests) hidden fessional organizations, such as the Wildlife Con- servation Society of the Philippines and Laksam- credentials never deterred him from becoming one of the major experts in his field. From 1977 order and where buhay Conservation, Inc. In 2007, he founded the Philippine Native Plant Conservation Society, Inc. to 2009, his researches led him to co-author six books and 13 articles in peer-reviewed publica- one would see just (PNPCSI), an NGO devoted to the conservation tions, including researches on the Rafflesia auran- of indigenous Philippine plants and their natu- tia (Rafflesiaceae), vaccimium (Ericeae), Xanthoste- endless green, he ral habitats. Through this, he was able to mobilize mon fruticosus (Myrtaceae), and Philippine ferns. many plant enthusiasts to support the cause of Dr. Perry Ong, Director of the UP IB, describes would expound biodiversity conservation and pursue the practice Co as “a world-class plant taxonomist bar none.” on the complex of taxonomy. “Few can realize the herculean task that Leon- “He might not have had the formal appointment as a professor but people considered him one because interrelationships ard Co set out to undertake. He spent a lifetime exploring and gathering precious data on the rap- of their recognition of his scholarly outputs...His swordplay with the living greats in plant taxonomy between one living idly diminishing forested regions of the country; is legendary wherein he was able to argue with No one understood our native forest dynamics these icons and they could only nod in agreement thing to another. the way that he did; He provided a glimpse into and accept his analysis..[The international commu- 6
  • 7. nity] expressed that Leonard’s death is a great loss to the world of plant taxonomy,” Ong wrote in an leonard co’s companions article for the Philippine Star. Co’s expertise was such that fellow scientists W hen he set out to accomplish his survey within the forests of the EDC complex Leon- ard Co was accompanied by a four-man team team composed of forester Ronino Gibe, forest guard Sofronio Cortez, and peasant guides Policarpio Balute and Julius Borromeo. had a plant named after him: the Rafflesia Leon- ardi, discovered by an Agta native in Cagayan Val- When the military started shooting at their group from the ridge, Gibe and Balute man- aged to take cover behind some trees; Cortez and Borromeo were killed along with Co. ley, in 2008. With large orange-red flowers, it is one of the eight endemic species of rafflesia in Julius Borromeo the Philippines. A member of Tongonan Farmers Association, Julius Licayan Borromeo was the only breadwinner a nation’s loss and a father of six children, the youngest being only Co was felled at a time when his life’s work six years old. was beginning to see fruition, at a point when He was among the contractual guides and assis- tants commissioned for Co’s five-day fieldwork. Hired he was in a position to accomplish even greater by the EDC for P200 ($4.46) a day, Julius’ income for things. His killing on November 15, 2010 this particular job order was the highest that he would abruptly cut short his work to document and save be supposedly bringing home, a Bulatlat.com interview the country’s remaining forest resources and bio- with Estelita Bayo, Borromeo’s godmother, revealed. diversity from extinction, plunder, and destruc- Teresa, Borromeo’s widow, recalled in that interview tion. Yet his spirit persists in the resolve to carry that Borromeo left home early at 7 o’clock on Novem- on with what him and his peers have set out to ber 15, forgoing breakfast as he carried an umbrella accomplish. and sack for gathering leaves. Unknown to them both, A person is remembered by the way he has Borromeo’s first day on this job order would be the very last day of his life. changed the lives of others. I did not have the privilege of meeting Leonard Co when he was still sofronio cortez alive. But witnessing the flowing words and tears Sofronio Cortez worked as a forest guard and was a of his peers, his students, and his loved ones leaves regular employee of EDC for the past 26 years. The 50- me with the conviction that our country has lost year old Cortez and his wife, Arsenia, have three chil- a person most extraordinary: an uncompromis- dren: Sonny Arnan and Sheryl Ara Mae finished college ing scientist who purely and passionately pursued while Sam Ariel was in his last year of high school. the love of knowledge, a mentor who fired up peo- On the morning of November 15, Arsenia recalled ple with a passion for taxonomy and a wonder for in a media report, Cortez left his home in his usual uni- form—a long-sleeved polo and a raincoat with the EDC what the earth has to offer, and a teacher whose logo—which he always wore whenever he worked in depth and breadth of expertise and commitment the forest within the EDC complex. His last text mes- inspired many others to follow in his footsteps. sage to his wife was sent at past nine in the morning, An iskolar ng bayan (scholar of the people) in a few hours before the incident. The couple would have the very real sense of the word, the example of celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary on January Co’s life again redefines our understanding of 19 this year. honor and excellence, the University’s motto: references: honor in serving the people and protecting our • Umil, Anne Marxze D., Widows of other victims in Kananga 'Murders' call for justice. 4 natural wealth; integrity that foremost defines December 2010. http://bulatlat.com/main/2010/12/04/widows-in-kananga-murders- the standards of excellence and distinction on call-for-justice/ one’s own terms and not that of others. • Gabieta, Joey A. “Wife of slain forest guard seeks justice”, Leyte Samar Daily Express http:// During the wake, the elder Co shared that he leytesamardaily.net/2010/11/slain-forest-guard-widow-seeks-justice/ tried to impart to his son two valuable lessons: • Gabieta, Joey A. “Kin of farmers killed with botanist demand impartial probe,” Philip- a passion for books, and helping his fellowmen. pine Daily Inquirer, http://services.inquirer.net/mobile/10/12/04/html_output/xml- Looking back at his short but fruitful life, one can html/20101120-304322-xml.html say that the younger Co imbibed a fervor for learn- ing and a firm commitment to share that wisdom with others and spent his life practicing this in the yet comprehensive manner that the student can- classroom, the communities, and the forests. not help but imbibe the same passion,” the PNPSCI His colleagues described Co best. “A teacher at said of Co. That is perhaps the best honor that one heart, he imparted knowledge freely. He taught can give to a mentor: affirming how one’s words, intensely, convincingly, provocatively. He knew ideas, and practice have lit the fire of learning and and loved his subject with ardor and conviction change in other’s minds and hearts. and taught in an intrinsically colorful, even poetic, (continued on page 15) 7
  • 8. encountering tHe trutH: tHe kananga 3 killings lISa Ito-tapaNg O n November 15, 2010, the Philippines lost one of its finest ethnobotanists and taxonomists, Leonardo Co and his teammates, forest guard Sofronio Cortez and farmer Julius Borromeo, to a hail of bullets in the forests of the Manawan-Kananga Watershed in Leyte province. This article recounts the ordeal of Co and his team, as reconstructed by previous media reports and by the November 26 independent fact-finding mission led by Agham and the Justice for Leonard Co Movement. AT RISK. Map showing the forested area of Kananga, Leyte, where the At the time of his death, Co and his team food and tools. The team had just finished mark- killings took place. Declared by the were in the area to collect specimen seedlings of ing a mayapis, syzigium and tanguile tree when a local government in 2009 as an endangered trees as part of a reforestation project area where “forest resources and heavy rainshower prompted them to stop. They wildlife habitat are at risk,” the case for the Lopez-owned Energy Development Corp planned to go back to the nursery of the geother- of Co, Borromeo and Cortez proves (EDC) in the Leyte Geothermal Production Field, mal plant facility and texted driver of the EDC that even environmental defenders the world’s largest wet steamfield. Katungod service vehicle to fetch them. face even deadlier risks. Sinirangan Bisayas, a local human rights organi- They were still waiting when the rain abated zation, said that the incident happened within at around 11:15 a.m; Co decided to resume the the vicinity of the EDC-PNOC, of the Mahi-aw survey. The fourth tree that they set out to iden- Plant where there are camps of a special Citizens tify was an interesting case, and the five men Armed Forces Geographical Unit (CAFGU) unit gathered all around it for a closer inspection. and a 19th Infantry Battalion (IB) team. That was the last tree that Co, Cortez, and Borromeo would ever survey. At around three co and company: fieldwork in kananga’s forests in the afternoon, their three lifeless bodies, rid- Co arrived at the EDC in Kananga, Leyte on dled with bullets, were carried by soldiers back to November 9. As a biodiversity consultant for pad 403 and later on transported to the V. Rama EDC’s reforestation project, it was Co’s respon- Funeral Homes by the EDC. Balute and Gibe, sibility to identify and collect rare seedling spec- shaken from their ordeal, were brought to a hos- The fourth tree imens along with his team. From November 10 to 13, Co and his guides were able to conduct pital in Ormoc City. that they set out their fieldwork in three different pads within military: casualties of a “crossfire” the EDC territory. A pad is an area where geo- Initial media reports later quoted the local to identify was an thermal steam is piped from the ground to the police and army as saying that the killings of EDC plant. Co’s team and his guides took the interesting case, day off on November 14, the day of Manny Pac- the three men was the “unfortunate” result of a “legitimate military operation” in the forest area, and the five men quiao’s successful boxing bout against Antonio Margarito. where troops reportedly sighted and pursued New People’s Army (NPA) rebels. gathered all around On the early morning of November 15, Mon- day, Co and four of his team mates left the geo- According to the police blotter of the it for a closer thermal plant staff house to resume fieldwork in Kananga Police Station, 38 troops from the pad 403, reportedly a choice site for collecting 19th IB troops, led by First Lieutenant Ronald inspection. That forest samples. Odchimar and 2nd Lieutenant Cameron Perez, They reached the pad at around 9:30 a.m. was the last tree and started their survey. It was a small, efficient reportedly engaged in a firefight with around ten persons with long firearms, at Sitio Mahiao, that Co, Cortez, team: Co and Cortez would examine trees and their leaves to identify their species. Policarpio Barangay Lim-ao. In the course of clearing oper- ations, the troops “found out (sic) three dead and Borromeo Balute, a peasant guide, measured their diameter. Ronino Gibe, a forester, was in charge of record- bodies.” The military also reportedly received intelligence information about NPA sightings on would ever survey. ing the data observed. Borromeo brought their November 12 and subsequently communicated 8
  • 9. this to the EDC. The 19th IB supposedly started out and saw soldiers in camouflage approaching conducting operations in the vicinity on Sunday, them from both sides. He broke cover and raised November 14. his arms. In a press statement on November 17, 19th IB “May isa pa palang buhay dito (There is one Commanding Officer Federico Tutaan said that more here alive),” a soldier ordered him to come their troops observing the area spotted around out at gunpoint. Crying and shaking in fear, Gibe “seven men carrying high-powered firearms,” pleaded for medical help for his companions. Co who opened fire upon sensing the government and Cortez lay motionless while Borromeo was troops around 30 meters away. A ten-minute moaning in pain. exchange of gunfire reportedly ensured, wound- “Wala na, ‘di na aabot sa ospital kasama mo ing “an determined number” of rebels and reach- (It’s gone, your companion will not make it to the ing the civilians “incidentally located within the hospital),” another soldier told Gibe. line of fire.” A soldier asked Gibe about his other two “armed” companions and asked the latter to show AN INDEPENDEN T FACT FINDING MISSION led by survivors: we were tHe only ones tHere his weapons. Gibe denied that he or any other scientists’ group Agham concluded However, doubts quickly surfaced as to member of his team were armed. that no crossfire took place, whether a crossfire indeed occurred. Testimo- contrary to what the military nies by Co’s surviving crew, as well as subsequent “P...ina, natalay tayo!” one soldier exclaimed. claims, and demanded a speedy and impartial investigation by inspections of the area, pointed out otherwise: Gibe was ordered to lie down on the ground while government authorities. that Co’s team was alone in the area and was the troops took away his cellphone and GPS unit. never caught in a clash between government and Gibe identified himself as an EDC employee, rebel forces. explaining his group’s purpose and activities in the area and the identities of Co and Borromeo. Balute, a farmer who served as one of the Gibe was instead further interrogated about the team’s local guides, recalled how they were closely equipment he had on hand, including his notes studying the fourth tree when a rapid burst of and the map the team had, as well as his contacts gunfire from unseen shooters erupted around 30 from the EDC. He again asked for help for his to 40 meters behind the team. companions. By this time, Borromeo was already “Doon lang galing sa may itaas lahat at isa bleeding, telling Gibe that he was hit near the lang ang direksyon, (All shots came from one heart. Gibe pleaded to the soldiers to help Bor- direction, which is from above)” Balute was romeo. quoted as saying. He denied hearing any exchange “Wag kang maingay! Ligtas ka na! (Don’t be of shots that indicated a gunfight between oppos- noisy! You’re already saved!),” another soldier ing sides. told Gibe to shut up. It was around one in the Co and his team mates dropped to the ground, afternoon. with only tree branches and roots for cover. They Gibe remained lying face down for about two pleaded for the shooting to stop. “Maawa kayo, hours while the troops met and talked among hindi kami kalaban! (Have mercy, we are not themselves from a disance. He was then asked TREE CRIES EVIDENCE: The fact finding team examines the large enemies),” the survivors recalled Co pleading for to stand up and answer the same questions they tree from where Gibe took cover. mercy. He was already crying out in pain, having asked him earlier. The soliders asked Gibe if he Six bullet marks were found, their sustained a shot in the back. knew about the military’s operations in the area, trajectories coming from the van- “Dia lang diay mo!” (“So there you are!”), saying that it was impossible for Gibe’s group tage point where the military posi- tioned themselves. someone from the group that fired at Co’s team to miss the three armed men the soldiers were shouted back. They were continously assaulted by observing for thirty minutes. Gibe said that his rapid gunfire and big explosions. group did not see anyone and again asked for Balute decided to flee the site because he was held for Borromeo. positioned at the back of a big tree; the four were The troops then gave first aid to Borromeo, still lying face down on the ground. Gibe, mean- and called his condition peklat (scar). At this while, managed to creep towards another large point, Gibe asked for his cellphone and called his tree and hide behind its buttress. Gibe dared not superiors from EDC to relay details of the inci- peep out of his hiding place for fear of being shot. dent. He was then ordered by troops to proceed His companions were no longer responding to his back to pad 403. It was around two in the after- calls; one by one, they fell silent as gunfire riddled noon. the ground for around twenty more minutes. The walk down was the last time Gibe saw When the firing finally stopped, Gibe peeped Borromeo alive. Borromeo was laid on a sack and
  • 10. brought down by the soldiers. At around three despite Gibe and Borromeo’s repeated requests, in the afternoon, an EDC service vehicle arrived the 19th IB troops likewise failed to provide imme- to send Gibe to a hospital in Ormoc. He later diate medical attention and hospital treatment to learned that Borromeo died while at the pad. Borromeo, which prolonged his agony and ulti- mately led to his death. The culprits scientists: no signs of a crossfire Around ten days after the killing, an inde- The FFM team recommended specific actions related to the 19th IB and the EDC. All military accountable pendent citizens fact-finding mission (FFM) was personnel connected to the chain of command organized from November 26 to 28 to gather tes- related to the shooting must be included in the for the crimes timonies and other relevant information on the investigation and filing of charges, their firearms case. Led by Agham-Advocates of Science and secured and surrendered to the proper authori- have to be made Technology for the People and the Justice for ties. The liability of the troops who failed to give accountable for Leonard Co Movement, the 33-member team composed of scientists, experts, environmental Borromeo immediate medical attention and evac- uation must also be pursued. The EDC, on the this transgression advocates, human rights workers, and journalists gathered testimonies, documentation and obser- other hand, must fully cooperate into clarifying their communication, security coordination pro- of human rights; vations from people involved in the incident, the tocols. All documents that would further shed local police, the 19th IB, and the EDC staff. The light on the truth must be made available. the truth should be team documented the findings from their inter- The case has just began, but life will never views. be the same for the loved ones of the “Kananga pursued up to the They went back to the site of the killing and Three,” after that fateful morning on November very end. to the ridge where the soldiers supposedly shot it out with rebel troops. Among the significant 15. Borromeo and Cortez were both laid to rest on November 25 by their families in Leyte. They observations noted in the site was that the direc- left behind six and three children, respectively. Co tion of the bullet marks on the trees originated was cremated on November 23 in Quezon City. from a vantage point on the ridge above Co and Part of his ashes have been scattered over a dita his team. The direction of the bullet marks was tree at the University of the Philippines, home bearing downwards and mainly concentrated in to Co’s humble yet beloved herbarium. His only the area where Co’s team was standing. child, still a young girl, will have to learn to love Tree number four, where the group gathered the trees of this country without her father. Their around for one last time, was hit three times. The families and colleagues continue to seek answers large tree that saved Gibe from certain death had to the unresolved questions behind their deaths. six bullet marks on it. In contrast, the team did The full extent of circumstances that have led to not observe any bullet marks on the trees from the 19th IB’s killing of Co, Cortez, and Borromeo the ground looking up to the ridge or from any have yet to be affirmed by the government bodies side. tasked to investigate the case. The only consistent explanation for these key Grief can know no closure without truth and observations, the team concluded, would be that justice. The culprits accountable for the crimes the military was positioned on top of the ridge have to be made accountable for this transgres- and firing towards Co’s team. There was no indi- sion of human rights; the truth should be pur- cation of any crossfire. By waiting for at least an sued up to the very end. Only then can we begin hour before bringing Co’s team down to pad 403, to overcome the impunity that killed three good Kananga. men, one rainy morning in the silent forests of references: • The Report of the Fact Finding Mission on the Killings of Leonardo Co, Sofronio Cortez and Julius Borromeo in Kananga, Leyte, December 8, 2010. • How It Happened: Death of a Botanist (Talk of the Town), Philippine Daily Inquirer, 25 December 2010, http://opinion.inquirer.net/inquireropinion/talkofthetown/view/20101225-310935/Death- of-a-botanist • Pazzibugan, Donna. ‘Bullets did not come from soldiers,’ says AFP commander on crossfire casual- ties”, Philippine Daily Inquirer. http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/nation/view/20101117- 303787/Bullets-did-not-come-from-soldiers-says-AFP-commander-on-crossfire-casualties • http://www.energy.com.ph/our-projects/geothermal/?pTab=operations • Roa, Elvie. “Slain botanist heard begging for mercy.”, Philippine Daily Inquirer. 11 November 2010. 10
  • 11. a Bloodstained History: tHe 19tH iB’s record of rigHts violations U nknown to many, the army unit involved in the killing of Leonard Co, Sof- ronio Cortrez, and Julius Borromeo has been dubbed by human rights groups as the “Massacre Battalion’ for being implicated in at least three previous mass killings of civilians in Region 8. The 19th Infantry “Commando” Battalion (IB) By July 1, 2002, the 19th IB transferred to its new was activated during the Marcos dictatorship on headquarters to Brgy. Aguiting, Kananga, Leyte. 31 October 1973, at the height of the secessionist Camps and strategic detachments were later on movement. It was assigned to combat operations established throughout Northern Leyte. in Maguindanao, Sultan Kudarat, Buluan and Mariano Marcos, and Lanao del Sur, before being tHe first kananga massacre transferred to Northern Samar in 1985. The 19th In between five to six a.m. on April 16, 2003, IB is currently under the jurisdiction of the 8th residents of farming communities in Brgy. San Infantry Division (ID) of the Philippine Army in Isidro and Brgy. Bagabao, Kananga awoke to a Eastern Visayas (EV). volley of gunfire emanating from a hill in Sitio A closer scrutiny of the 19th IB’s track record Mahayhay, San Isidro. Farmers sent their wives in Northern Samar also reveals that there were and children to the nearby sitio to avoid being hit at least two more massacres perpetuated by ele- by stray bullets. ments of this battalion against civilians, where Farmers Allan Collarte, Roy Collarte, and victims were either similarly written off as being Mateo Tequilla were discussing the situation There were at least caught in the crossfire or were suspected rebels. when they were approached by soldiers in a rice field, who shot at them after they sensed danger two more massacres massacre in nortHern samar and ran away to safety. Tequilla was left behind The earliest documented massacre happened and forced at gunpoint to be interrogated and perpetuated by in January 28, 1999, when patrolling elements strafed the house of a peasant family in Sitio accused of being a rebel. Other residents who were left behind in the sitio overheard cries of elements of this Mogus, Brgy. Capacungan, Palapag, Northern Samar. Ermito Nuguit, 52 years old, was killed people—including a woman and a child—plead- ing or in pain, followed by gunshots. battalion against along with his pregnant wife, Delia, and their When the firing stopped at around 9 a.m., res- civilians, where three sons. The army later claimed that it was an idents and barangay tanods approached the inci- encounter with New People’s Army (NPA) rebels. dent site and collected the bodies of nine civil- victims were either ians from the army troops in the place. The dead deployment to nortHern leyte included a pregnant woman, four minors, and a similarly written off In November 2001, the 19th IB moved from Northern Samar to Zamboanga City and Jolo in former barangay councilor who was the chairper- son of the local farmers association. The bodies as being caught in order to augment military operations against the MNLF. Returning to EV in March 2002, the 19th were brought to the Kananga Municipal Hall at 1:30 p.m. Injuries indicated that the victims were the crossfire or were IB established temporary base in Ormoc, Leyte. shot at close range and sustained contusions, suspected rebels. 11
  • 12. burns, and bludgeoning by hard objects. breakfast in a hut near the contested rice lands A preliminary inquiry was initiated by local when they were shot at by men in bonnets and human rights organizations on April 18 and a ski masks. The farmers shouted that they were national fact-finding mission was held from May civilians but were still attacked with gunfire and 30 to June 3, 2003 on the incident. These inves- hand grenades. When the firing stopped, armed tigations concluded that victims were civilians men in military gear ordered the survivors to lie belonging to people’s organizations who “sum- down and admit that they were rebels. Their pleas marily executed despite their immobility and for immediate medical attention were ignored. helplessness.” These also concluded that the 19th Local police were prevented from responding to IBPA Command undertook armed military oper- the incident. ations in any area of their choice without the Col. Louie Dagoy admitted that the 19th IB required coordination and courtesy accorded to was responsible for the attack but claimed that the concerned local officials and also committed this was a legitimate encounter between the other HRVs against residents and witnesses. army and the rebels. The army also filed criminal charges of illegal possession of firearms and ille- under tHe ‘ButcHer’ gal assembly against the surviving farmers. Eight The 8th ID was among the army units placed farmers were detained pending resolution of the directly under Major General Jovito S. Palparan, court cases and have reported receiving death known among activist groups as the “Butcher” threats during this period. One died in jail. The due to his record of racking up human rights vio- charges of illegal possession were dismissed in lations in areas where he was deployed. Palparan 2006 while the other case continues in court. served as the Commanding General of the 8th ID This massacre was included in the list of from February 10 to August 25, 2005, and has charges filed by HUSTISYA, Desaparecidos, been credited for “reducing the insurgency prob- SELDA, and BAYAN against the administration lem in Samar by 80 percent.” of former Pres. Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to the Permanent People’s Tribunal second session in tHe second massacre in palo, leyte the Philippines held at the Hague, The Nether- Shortly after Palparan’s stint in EV, the 19th IB lands in March 2007. was implicated in the November 21, 2005 massa- cre of eight civilians in Palo, Northern Leyte. The prelude to tHe tHird massacre victims were among the 50 farmers participating In 2007, Lieutenant Col. Henry Bumiltac, in a “balik uma” (back to farm) activity after hav- commanding officer of the 19th IB declared the ing successfully won a landgrabbing case filed by towns of Kananga, Palompon, Tabango, Matagob, members of the San Agustin Farmer Beneficiaries Isabel and Merida, as well as some parts of Ormoc Multi-Purpose Cooperative with the Department City as “completely free” of the insurgency. Media of Agrarian Reform against landlord Pedro Mar- reports in 2008 and 2009 cited Army officials’ gallo. statements that they were winning the campaign At around 5 a.m., the farmers were preparing against insurgency. references: • 19th (MASSACRE) Infantry Battallion Strikes Again. Press Statement by KATUNGOD-Sinirangan Bisayas-KARAPATAN, 18 November 2010. • History of 19th IB. http://www.8thinfantrydivision.org/19thHistory.html • KARAPATAN Fact-finding reports and documentation on the Kananga and Palo massacres. • Press Statement by the 19th Infantry Battallion “Commando” on the 3 civilians killed in the crossfire. 17 November 2010. http://www.samarnews.com/news2010/nov/a698.htm Accessed • Repression and Resistance: Permanent People's Tribunal Second Session on the Philippines. IBON Books, 2007. • Profile of the 19th ID, http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/phillipines/19in.htm • Jovito S. Palparan, Jr. www.gmanews.tv, 23 February 2007, http://www.gmanews.tv/story/31867/ Jovito-S-Palparan-Jr • Gabieta, Joey A. “Leyte free of communist rebels by yearend—military”, Philippine Daily Inquirer, 21 November 2007. http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/regions/view/20071121-102312/ Leyte_free_of_communist_rebels_by_yearend--military. Accessed 19 December 2010. • 19th IB blogsite, http://19ib.blogspot.com/ • 8th ID blog site, http://8idphilarmy2.blogspot.com/ 1
  • 13. NEwS renew training Bares environmental proBlems of urBan poor communities ChE domINguEz aNd lISa Ito P ollution-triggered diseases, flooding, lack of viable housing projects, and un- safe and unsanitary relocation areas remain as major environment-related concerns among the Philippine urban poor sector, revealed a recent Restora- tion Ecology Workshop (RENEW) training by the Center for Environmental Con- cerns-Philippines. RENEW is CEC’s basic environmental educa- • Lack of basic social services: These include ser- tion course. This RENEW training was co-orga- vices related to health, sanitation, water, and nized with the Kalipunan ng Damayang Mahi- waste collection and segregation services. Imple- hirap (Kadamay), a national federation of urban mentation of public projects, such as sewerage poor organizations. It was held last November 13 systems, is inefficient and defective. Social ser- to 14, at the Bahay Daluyan of St. Theresa’s Col- vices are scarce and often commercialized. lege in Quezon City. • Food insecurity: Food has to be purchased com- The RENEW workshop gathered 21 partici- mercially due to lack of areas to grow or forage pants, mostly community and youth leaders from for food. urban poor communities in Quezon City, Caloo- • Impacts of land use conversion: Agricultural can City and Montalban, and Kadamay national areas are increasingly being converted into staff members. relocation sites or other non-agricultural Through the course workshops, participants uses, displacing already landless peasants and shared the environmental situation of urban poor increasing the rural poor diaspora into urban communities, stressing the persistence of the fol- centers. lowing realities: • Culture of commercialization: Consumption • Problems related to housing woes: Some relo- of non-essential goods is encouraged and also cation areas, such as Montalban, are located in contributes to the increase of domestic and geohazard sites, deforested and landslide-prone plastic waste. areas, or near large dam projects vulnerable to • Diseases arising from exposure to pollution: flooding. Housing projects are already congested Including air, water, and noise pollution. There and face problems related to sanitation, spread is widespread incidence of communicable and of pests such as rats, mosquitoes, and fleas as infectious diseases (such as dengue) due to well as lack of access to medicinal plants. urban congestion, flooding, and lack of sani- • Flooding of urban poor communities due to riv- tation services. Some areas are also concerned ers, creeks and waterways clogged with waste. about the impacts of improper infectious waste • Disaster unpreparedness: Urban poor commu- disposal of hospitals. nities are vulnerable to disasters related to the • Lack of occupational safety: Employment is rare impacts of floods, landslides, earthquakes, fires, and often comes in the form of dirty and dan- heat waves, and lack of water services. There is a gerous jobs. lack of a comprehensive and effective flood control • Lack of educational opportunities program and disaster preparedness programs. • Constant threat of demolitions 1
  • 14. NEwS Timed with Int’l Human Rights Day anti-slapp Bill of 2010 campaign kicks-off witH cultural nigHt ChEamSoN BooNgalINg T o strengthen its advocacy and criticisms against any initiative of the former. lobby work, CEC explores various Currently there is no comprehensive anti- forms of educating and mobilizing SLAPP mechanism in the Philippines, whether supporters in comprehensive yet enter- in the country’s substantive and procedural law. House Bill (HB) 3593 or the Anti-SLAPP Act of taining ways. “SLAPP Us Not! A night of 2010, aims to define SLAPPs, prohibit the fil- art and music in defense of the environ- ing of such harassment suits, and provide mea- ment and human rights” was a venue to sures for its dismissal. It was introduced in the showcase such creativity from artists, 15th Congress by representatives from partyl- poets, and musicians who gathered to ists Bayan Muna, Anakpawis, Gabriela Women’s support the Anti-SLAPP Bill of 2010. Party, Kabataan and ACT Teachers and was filed last November 2010. Recent years have seen the rise in number of The event held on December 7 in Vinzon’s Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation Hall, UP Diliman was attended by a diverse audi- or SLAPP cases initiated by influential entities ence from students to urban poor community against non-governmental organizations, peo- members. In time for the international human ple’s organizations, local community groups, and rights day on December 10, the event under- individuals in an attempt to intimidate the latter scored that environment protection is not sepa- into discontinuing their protests, opposition, or rate from the defense of human rights. cec pilots first luzon-wide envicore training ChE domINguEz C EC-Philippines kicked off the Lu- and sharing sessions on campaign, research and zon leg of its pilot Environmental networking strategies. Cadres Course (EnviCore) from Participants welcomed the opportunity to be October 11 to 16 at the Women and Ecol- oriented with different aspects of environmen- ogy Wholeness Farm in Mendez, Cavite. tal education, research, and advocacy work (see related article, The EnviCore Engagement). Participants of this second batch included Among the recommendations of participants representatives from the Computer Professionals was the affirmation of the EnviCore solidarity Union, Scientists and Technologists for the People night and the various workshops as a venue for (Agham), Agham Youth, the Cordillera Develop- learning, the need for video-documentation of the ment and People’s Center, Cordillera Peoples Alli- training, tackling of more case studies for discus- ance, Bukal Batangas, and Save the Valley Serve sions, and the dissemination of written presenta- the People chapters in Isabela and Cagayan Val- tions by the resource speakers as materials for re- ley. echo sessions among the graduates’ organizations EnviCore was conceptualized and developed and communities. as a second-level course and a response to the The first EnviCore training was piloted by need to develop the capacity of environmental CEC from June 29 to July 4 at the Maryridge cadres and workers of CEC and its network part- Convent and Training Center, Tagaytay City. Par- ners. Its modules include updates on the national ticipants from the pilot batch came from eleven and global environmental situation, reviews of national environmental and sectoral organiza- basic ecological concepts, frameworks of analysis, tions, representing urban poor, peasant women, use of research tools and environmental investiga- fisher folk, indigenous peoples, women, and tive missions, introduction to environmental laws, youth. 14
  • 15. FEaturES CEC shares the reflections of one of EnviCore’s graduates: a piece on how today’s youth and professionals can learn about and contribute to environmen- tal awareness and advocacy. tHe envicore engagement: save tHe world, take tHe crasH course “[S]aving humanity and saving the earth. You can’t expect to achieve one without the other, and neither is pos- sible under the existing system.” – John Bellamy Foster By lEoN dulCE H old up a flashcard with the word “environmentalism” to a high school class and ask them what it means. You will hear the usual motherhood statements of saving Mother Nature and caring for the environment. Ask them to give concrete examples of environmentalism, and you’ll get just about the same broad strokes: proper waste segregation and disposal, tree-planting, coastal clean ups, and living a more eco-friendly lifestyle. EnviCore was Having never accepted the approach of pro- member regional organizations hailing from moting individual lifestyle changes made popu- Bicol, Marinduque, and other regions. We decided conceptualized lar by mass media, every encounter I had with the environmental movement was always with to conduct a big forum on the biggest concerns of their hometowns, which through consultation and developed as a a doubtful look and taken with a grain of salt. It was only in the later parts of my stint as an were identified mainly as the practices of ram- pant deforestation and mining. second-level course activist in the University of the Philippines did In search of resource speakers who have a and a response to I encounter a different brand of environmental genuine understanding of the situation in the activism, one that I would discover later to be of grassroots communities, we came upon the Cen- the need to develop the principles, concepts and strategies embodied ter for Environmental Concerns – Philippines in the Environmental Cadres Course (EnviCore) (CEC Phils) and the Kalikasan People’s Network the capacity of training course I would be taking years later (see related article on page 14). for the Environment. The presentations were a refreshing break from the beauty pageant proc- environmental first encounter lamations we usually hear: presented was a com- prehensive overview of both quantitative and cadres and workers We were organizers then in the Student Alli- qualitative data on our natural resources and its of CEC and its ance for the Advancement of Democratic Rights exploitation by big transnational corporations. in UP, and we were helping to consolidate our It was the first time we were exposed to the network partners. 1
  • 16. economic and political ramifications of these their capacities in organizing effective and sus- environmentally destructive practices, and the tainable campaigns and developing projects on first time we were presented with a concrete array environmental issues and concerns. of solutions both in the long-term and short- Excited for a closer encounter with the con- term. The discourse looked at the issues from the crete methodologies of progressive environmen- perspective of poor and vulnerable people and tal advocacy, and hoping to finally be its imple- communities: the impacts, after all, primarily mentor in the sector of ICT, I embarked with affected the economically marginalized. other delegates from around Luzon to an eco- farm in Cavite for a focused, if not bordering on fast forward hermetic, study. Envicore here we come! We were Onwards to 2010, I am now working in the a mixed bunch of youths and students, indig- Computer Professinals’ Union (CPU), a non-gov- enous people’s leaders, scientists and develop- ernment organization of information and com- ment workers, but all were involved to an extent munications technology (ICT) professionals, in environmental activism. Coming as an ICT students and advocates. We serve as a bridge activist, I was easily one of the participants who between the ICT community and the broad mass weren’t your usual fold of environmental advo- movements in the Philippines, mobilizing its cates. members and volunteers to provide technical We were trained in basic ecological concepts services to its network of non-government and to have a sufficient scientific framework as basis people’s organizations, as well as to have a direct for the setting of our guiding principles in our involvement in their campaigns and other activi- campaigns, projects, training and education. The ties. national and international environmental situa- CPU has long worked with other progres- tion was also imparted to give participants the sive science technology organizations, includ- social contexts that have shaped modern trends ing those involved in environmental advocacy. It in the environmental movement. We were also started to have a deeper engagement in the envi- given specific inputs on climate change science ronmental movement beyond providing techni- and policy trends. cal services in its participation in the national It was in here that I fully appreciated the grassroots conference on climate change orga- people-oriented perspective that environmental nized by the CEC–Phils and the Philippine Cli- activism should subscribe to: nature is no mere mate Watch Alliance (PCWA), which we officially wonder, but a resource that the majority of Fili- joined shortly thereafter. pinos rely on for their survival and livelihood. As It was in here that Leading the operations of multimedia docu- mentation and serving as technical partner in ecologist John Bellamy Foster puts it, the more effective advocates of environmental sustain- I fully appreciated PCWA’s different involvements, CPU finally ven- ability in the world are the ones with a pro-peo- tured into its own environmental project with ple principle under their belts, such as Bolivian the people-oriented the Global Green Grants Fund-supported Green- socialist President Evo Morales. bot Philippines, a project that aims to produce an perspective that online web portal that documents case studies of for tHe people environmental environmental issues around the nation, starting with the particular cases of coastal ecosystems in With the framework down pat, delegates were then equipped with skills and tools in the day- activism should Bohol, Sorsogon and Negros, and a manual for environmental activists on useful online tools for to-day operations of an environmental advocacy organization: there were sessions on legal work, subscribe to: nature their campaigns, education and organizing. policy advocacy, networking, issue profiling and research, and planning campaigns. Despite dele- is no mere wonder, for tHe environment gates having different campaigns, activities and Then the opportunity came for CPU to finally projects appropriate to their own lines of work, but a resource that get its formal training in the area of environmen- everyone still benefited from understanding how the majority of tal advocacy and education: CEC Phils invited us to participate in their second Environmental the entire operation works. It enabled us to see the context where our ICT projects fit in the big Filipinos rely on for Cadres’ Course (or EnviCore for short) for Luzon- based organizations. It is a comprehensive six- picture of the Philippine environmental move- ment, for instance. their survival and day course that aims to integrate environmental One would realize after going through Envi- perspectives in the work of advocates from dif- Core that everything is connected when it comes livelihood. ferent sectors of society. It also aims to develop to environmental advocacy. Every human activ- 16
  • 17. ity, after all, has an impact on and is affected by changing trends in the environment. For us ICT activists, the dream of having a competitive domestic software and hardware manufacturing industry has a stable and modernized agricul- ture as its prerequisite. Where else will we get the raw materials for production and the operational requirements such as food, health care and shel- ter if our agricultural production remains stunted and import-dependent? On the flipside, every sector can also contrib- ute to the struggle for the people and the envi- ronment. We can help cause-oriented organiza- tions and campaigns related to the environment can help popularize campaigns through engaging be more efficient by providing them with appro- visual communication. Business graduates can priate computer tools and technologies, and help generate resources to help sustain projects training them in its optimal usage. Scientists can and campaigns. help concretize studies and investigations on dif- The possibilities that we must make possible ferent environmental impacts. Cultural workers are endless. Leon Dulce is the new media coordinator of the Computer Professionals’ Union. He pursues his interests in design, writing, technology and activism online and offline, all in service to the people’s struggles. Leonard Co (continued from page 7) Sustained by sheer passion and sharpened intense taxonomist who played the harmonica, through practice, the value of Co’s vast and the humblest of musical instruments, and who almost encyclopedic expertise was that it did not considered the hymns of struggle and national remain lodged in repositories or libraries, com- liberation as music to the ears. fortable in being proprietary and profitable. We Losing Leonard Co to a hail of bullets is a shall always be grateful to Co and his colleagues great injustice, an irreparable loss to his family, who labored during the days of the dictatorship the University and the country. to make health and knowledge an attainable real- The following days will be filled with battles ity for the most dispossessed of communities, against forgetting, against apathy and against and who continued to pursue the protection of injustice. By engaging in these struggles, we can our national patrimony in the years thereafter. fully honor a National Treasure and a true scien- We shall always recall with respect the quirky, tist for the people. references: • Curriculum Vitae of Leonardo L. Co (as of November 3, 2010) • Sy, Joaquin. “Si Leonard Co aka 许 许 许,” 21 November 2010 • Casambre, Rey Claro. “Remembering Leonard Co.” Pinoy Weekly, 18 November 2010. http://pinoy- weekly.org/new/2010/11/remembering-leonard-co/ • Jara, Dr. Eleanor. “The Special Place that CBHPs had in Leonard’s heart.” Letter to the Editor, Philip- pine Daily Inquirer. 14 December 2010. http://www.inquirer.net/specialfeatures/theenvironmen- treport/view.php?db=1article=20101214-308825 •Barcelona, Julie. “Rafflesia Leonardi—Honoring an Unsung Hero of Philippine Botany” http://juliebarce- lona.blogspot.com/ • Picana, Thom. “Cordillera NGOs mourn Co, salute him as a ‘scientist of the people.’” www.gmanews.tv, 21 November 2010, • Vigil, Lorna. “The Last Dodo of Botany” http://www.upibalon.com/story/up%E2%80%99s-plant-man- extraordinaire-0 • Ong, Perry S., Phd. “The genius of Leonardo L. Co: The people’s scientist and professor,” Star Science, The Phil- ippine Star http://www.philstar.com/Article.aspx?articleId=639525publicationSubCategoryId=75 • Umil, Anne Marxze D. “Leonard Co: Scientist for the People.” Bulatlat. 20 November 2010. http://bulatlat.com/main/2010/11/20/leonard-co-scientist-for-the-people/ 17
  • 18. NEwS asia-pacific environmental educators, activists unite on gloBal warming lISa Ito-tapaNg E nvironmental educators and representatives of non-government and peoples organizations from the Philippines, Australia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, South Korea, Japan, and Uzbekistan gathered in Manila for the first Forum on Climate Change and Environmental Education in Asia-Pacific: Building Capacities for Sustainable People’s Development in the Region from December 14 to 15, 2010 at the Bayview Park Hotel, Manila. Literacy is not just The event was organized by the Climate Change Learning Initiative Mobilizing Action for a platform for solidarity and sharing of learning resources among educators and grassroots orga- reading, writing, and Transforming Environments in the Asia-Pacific nizations across the region. (CLIMATE Asia-Pacific) and hosted by the Center Dr. Jose Roberto Guevara, President of the so on. We now should for Environmental Concerns-Philippines (CEC- Asia-South Pacific Association for Basic and Adult Phils), with the support of DVV International. Education, and former Executive Director of CEC, be able read the new The conference also included an exhibition of stressed the need to advocate for a “different edu- world: the climate environmental education materials and solidar- ity night among participants. cation in a ‘climate changed’ world.” “Literacy is not just reading, writing, and so changed world. The forum emphasized the relevance and urgency of Education for Sustainable Devel- on. We now should be able read the new world: the climate changed world. It is understanding opment (ESD) in the context of addressing the the complexity of climate change, beyond the challenges and impacts of global warming, par- technical and scientific focus, beyond adaptation ticularly on the poor and marginalized sectors in and mitigation. It is to understand the need for the Asia-Pacific region. In December 2002, the justice and political focus that informs our action United Nations (UN) General Assembly declared and empowers us to act,” Guevara said. the years 2005 to 2014 as the UN Decade of Edu- “Transformation is the end goal: not just of cation for Sustainable Development, designating the self but of the society and the system that has UNESCO as the lead agency. brought us to this situation. We must not be vic- tims, forced to adapt to climate change. We must esd in a ‘climate-cHanged world’ understand and challenge the root causes of cli- CEC-Phils Executive Director Frances Quimpo mate change and demand just responses,” Gue- introduced the CLIMATE Asia-Pacific network as vara concluded. 18
  • 19. “It’s the urgency that’s new,” Guevara stressed, to the Convention on Biodiversity, a non-binding “We have a decade to focus on ESD, but do we treaty ongoing since 1993 which, like the Kyoto have a decade to act?” Protocal, has yet to be signed by the United States. Elenita Dano, Program Manager of the evolving definition of esd and development Erosion Technology and Conservation Group, The conference’s keynote speaker, ACT Teach- presented updates on the climate negotiations in ers Partylist Representative Antonio Tinio, also Cancun, Mexico, summarizing the developments emphasized the role of education in the current as a continuation of Copenhagen, which provided environmental crisis. Tinio and Guevara both the foundation for the current climate regime. acknowledged the changing definitions of ESD and sustainable development, considering these common tHreads as a tool that could work for or against the peo- ple’s welfare. The afternoon panel focused on ESD case studies and the regional challenges of these Transformation is Tinio cautioned that powerful multilateral organizations have historically played a major efforts. Yuka Ozawa, Program Officer of the Edu- cation Cooperation Division of the Asia-Pacific the end goal, not role in appropriating the term ‘sustainable devel- Cultural Center for UNESCO in Japan, shared just of the self but opment’ and aligning it with neoliberal policy their experiences in coming up with the Tokyo agendas. These, he said, were reflected in the Declaration of Hope and the “HOPE” (holistic, of the society and country’s privatization of the educational system ownership-based, participatory, and empower- and the liberalization of investments that have ing) evaluation approach as a learning process. the system that has severely depleted natural resources. “We educators should critically address the Teresita Vistro of the Asia Peasant Women’s Network focused on agriculture and ESD, dis- brought us to this concept of sustainable development: who sus- tains it? What kind of development? Develop- cussing the impacts of climate change on regional agriculture and rural populations, especially situation. ment for whom?” Tinio said. women. She articulated their education agenda as supporting farmers knowledge, sustainable gloBal context of climate cHange policies adaptation and mitigation practices, the need to The morning of the conference featured a address destructive farming practices, building panel on updates in environmental situations and resilience of communities, and integration with contexts. Dr. Giovanni Tapang, AGHAM Chair- broader issues of human rights and social justice. person, highlighted the impacts of global warm- Dominic D’ Souza, Associate Director of Laya in ing in the Asia-Pacific region, stressing that it has Vishakhapatnam, India, discussed forestry and worsened the existing impacts of globalization, ESD, spanning fundamental concerns related to especially among the most vulnerable or margin- science, political economy, ethics, and action. alized segments of the population. Atty. Elpidio Peria, legal consultant for experience sHaring the Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau of The second day of the conference featured the Department of Environment and Natural two simultaneous panel sessions on case studies Resources, shared updates and agendas related (continued on page 23) 1
  • 20. education for cHange and sustainaBle people’s development This conference statement was drafted and affirmed by participants of the Forum on Climate Change and Environmental Education in Asia-Pacific last December 14 to 15, 2010 in Manila, Philippines. W e, educators, learners and leaders of civil society, environmental and peo- ple’s organizations from the Asia-Pacific region, gather to collectively af- firm our solidarity and unity to advance education and learning initiatives towards climate justice and sustainable people’s development. Global warming has caused immense devasta- corporate greed and the quest for profit, which tion across the Asia-Pacific region, the largest and fail to address the current crisis of unsustainable most populous continent worldwide with more overproduction and overconsumption which has than four billion people. More and more com- contributed to the unprecedented levels of man- munities have experienced firsthand the impacts made GHG emissions into our atmosphere. of global warming, such as changes in tempera- Whose lives are at stake in the climate crisis? ture and rainfall, flooding, freshwater scarcity, All of our lives are at stake but some are more infestations and epidemics, landslides, stronger endangered than others. The tillers of our lands; droughts and typhoons. Our region is home to the nurturers of our seas, forests and mountains; among the most destitute communities of the the toiling peoples, such as peasants and farm- globe, left to fend for survival amidst poverty and ers, indigenous peoples, fisherfolks, urban poor, massive illiteracy. workers, women and children. Never at any other The extreme vulnerability of our peoples to moment has the situation been as critical as it is disasters, displacement and death is not merely today. Never has the danger to our ecosystems, due to our geographic contexts: it is rooted in communities, and cultures been as pronounced the historic and systemic denial of the people’s and real. rights—to land and water, to rights and liveli- What can be done in the face of such looming hood, and to a healthful ecology—spawned by and widespread suffering? As educators, learn- unsustainable models and paradigms of develop- ers, and leaders, we recognize that our educa- ment. tion work needs to explicitly address the politics The current environmental and socio-politi- of global warming and motivate informed action cal policies, programs, and systems, instituted for a sustainable and just future. and implemented by governments and states in the region have instead ravaged our ecosystems, a. education for a climate-cHanged world livelihoods, and ways of living. Education is central to surviving in a climate- While the Asia-Pacific region has some of the changed world. It is a vital requisite to leading world’s highest GHG emitters, majority of the the widest number of people to defend, protect, most vulnerable peoples in the world to climate and rehabilitate the integrity of creation and our change are also from the region. ecosystems. It can transform individual perspec- The current climate negotiations, controlled tives and lifestyles into systems and structures of by powerful leaders and nations from the Annex governance. Through education, we are enabled I countries who represent the world’s top emit- to envision possibilities towards a more viable ters, have repeatedly refused to recognize gen- future and empowered to transform them into uine solutions to lower greenhouse gas emis- reality. sions (GHG) to the levels needed to stabilize What kind of education is critical to redefin- the world’s climate. Instead, these negotiations ing sustainability that prioritizes the people’s have largely peddled false solutions to the cri- needs and their environments, as well as the sis. These are dangerous experiments, driven by welfare of future generations? One that is dem- 0
  • 21. ocratic and anchored on science, historical reali- • In terms of method, the development of popu- ties, respect for local and indigenous knowledge, lar, participatory, and accessible approaches and and concrete plans for action towards gender information, education, and campaign materials equality, justice and peace. One that is: and tools must be supported. • Inclusive, which can reach the widest num- ber of government, non-government, and pri- B. from education to collective people’s action vate sectors and embrace the contributions of Effective education must go beyond facilitating sectors such as women, youth, and differently- understanding and towards translating aware- abled persons. ness into collective action, into altering our • Owned by the people, created with consulta- current ways of thinking and doing to achieve tion from the grassroots, prioritizing the peo- sustainable people’s development. In a climate- ple’s participation in learning, and involving the changed world, education is about advancing basic sectors of our societies, such as indigenous social change. Thus, we call for and affirm the fol- peoples, fisher folk, farmers, and workers. lowing actions: • Rights-based, which will uphold and promote • The need to support people and communi- the pursuit of basic human rights, as enshrined ties asserting their rights to livelihood, a in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, sound environment, and protection of pat- and indigenous people’s rights to ancestral lands rimony. Community and grassroots voices must and self-determination, as upheld in United be heard in the global negotiations on agricul- Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous ture, biodiversity, climate change, and forests. Peoples. • The urgent need to demand justice, respon- • Rooted in the people's knowledge, prac- sibility and accountability from Annex I tices, and community science, which countries, which are the world's biggest respects, promotes, and integrates traditional emitters. wisdom and socio-political systems for sustain- • The need for government accountability, able development. transparency, and support. Accountability • Threads in the perspective of gender in and transparency should be exercised in deci- analysing and dealing with global warming sion-making on matters of environmental and impacts. public concern and responses to global warm- • Mass-based and directed towards pursuing ing. State support should be given for programs social change and collective action. which build the capacities of the poorest and How are we to go about creating such educa- most vulnerable communities. Recognition tional structures for sustainable people’s devel- must be given to the role of civil society and opment? The challenge is how to support such a people’s organizations in the development and vision of learning, in terms of content, method, implementation of educational policy and pro- and access: grams in response to global warming. • In terms of content, education must nurture a •The need to reject market-based mecha- critical understanding of the roots and solution nisms, frameworks, and false solutions to to the crisis of sustainability, emphasizing the climate change which do not reduce GHG responsibility of developed countries on global emissions and support the further exploi- warming. It must support genuine solutions tation and corporate control of the people's that prioritize the people’s needs over corporate natural resources. greed and build the resiliency of Asia-Pacific • The need to uphold the people’s rights and grassroots communities by working to reduce knowledge over corporate interests in the their vulnerabilities. agriculture and fisheries sectors. We oppose • In terms of access, there must be comprehen- biopiracy, seed patenting, massive privatization sive and participatory measures to integrate and conversion of agricultural lands and coastal such education into all aspects of developmen- waters and other fishing areas for ecotourism tal learning, from formal to non-formal. It must and other commercial and industrial purposes be accessible for youths, adults, and families. and other corporate mechanisms to further Support and access to environmental education privatize the commons. Instead, support must should be given to marginalized sectors in the be channelled to the promotion and develop- rural and urban areas, to the poor whose lives ment of traditional varieties, organic farming, are dependent on nature and are most adversely local climate change adaptation technologies affected by climate change impacts. (continued on page 24) 1
  • 22. INSIghtS Reflection from CEC’s volunteer interns from the Development Traineeship Program of AIESEC (Association Internationale des Étudiants en Sciences Économiques et Commerciales) give it a face Only two percent of old-growth Philippine forests are left. Thousands of squatters will be displaced and lose their homes. Typhoons destroy thousands of houses. Logging destroys millions of hectares in the Amazonian rain forests. Increasing carbon dioxide emissions threaten the global climate. Every six seconds, a child dies of hunger. Every week, another endangered species vanishes. lINda praCEjuS S ounds horrible, doesn’t it? But does it really touch you? Do you really feel what these numbers mean? These must be huge, but these seem to be random facts which are hard to imagine or to connect to real life. At least, that is what happens to me. Whenever torn away from the home where they grew up, I hear facts about climate change or news like “200 where they saw their children growing up. Sud- people in Afghanistan died because of an earth- denly, these odd crowds were no longer just face- quake,” a part of me feels sorry. Still, if I don’t put a less strangers. They were very friendly people, lot of effort in imagining what that could mean, it is inviting me into their houses, talking to me about no more than just numbers far away from my daily their lives, their fears—sharing what little they If we want to life here in Manila. had with me and making me really feel welcome. The same happened to me when I heard about Every time I read about them now, it’s no longer encourage people the “squatters.” Although I have seen enough poor just a mass of strangers that I see in my imagina- people in the street and the poor constructions they tion, but it’s people I really like. to join our struggle call their houses, it was something far away from me. Needless to say, I have already been against the Reading the newspaper, all I ever read about them dislocation program before. But now that I have a for equitable living gave me a rather negative impression: they seemed to connection these people, it touches me a lot more. be a dubious crowd of people, occupying places that conditions and the government needs for further “development” My will to fight for their rights has multiplied ten- fold. Sure, I’d also have fought without ever meeting against climate of Metro Manila. Just a faceless crowd without any individual thoughts, not even to mention feelings. them, just because I am generally against injustice. But now I’m sure my efforts will be a lot stronger, change, we have When I heard that some thousands of those squatters were going to be displaced, a moral part motivated by the feelings I have for these people, who I now call my friends. to give them the of me said that this is very bad and I felt sorry. But, because of having no personal relations, for me it To see how my feelings changed after the “squat- ters“ became my friends made me think about how possibility to really was just bad news about this anonymous, alien mass of faceless people. urban people feel for nature. I grew up in the country- side and nature has always been a huge part of my life, feel the need for a That totally changed when Ryan took me to so helping to conserve the environment seemed to me Barangay Pinahan, one of those “squatter” com- to be as natural as cleaning the teeth in the evening. change. munities which face the threat of being dislocated, Talking to people who didn’t care always left me with
  • 23. this huge question mark above my head how igno- feel the need for a change. Take them to the “squat- rance and heartlessness could somehow be possible. ters”, of which they have only heard bad things in the But now I begin to understand. It’s a totally dif- news, and let them see that they are people like you ferent thing fighting for something that you know by and me. Take them to the forest, let them breathe the heart or some injustice that you think is really bad, but fresh air, hear the river flowing, listen to the birds you have no direct connection to. Many of the people singing, and feel the value of undamaged nature. we think are cold and don’t care about the world might What should they care about a random, unimaginable actually have a very good morality – they just never number of some trees far away from them if they have had the possibility to really feel the need for a change. never had any good “tree-experience.” Give the squat- If we want to encourage people to join our strug- ters a face, let the people feel the forest and many gle for equitable living conditions and against climate more people will be motivated to fight for justice and change, we have to give them the possibility to really a healthy environment. It’s all about awareness. Linda Pracejus is finishing a BS degree in Management of biological and environmental resources at the University of Vienna. She is in the Philippines as a CEC intern and volunteer through the AIESEC Development Traineeship Program. GLobaL WarminG (continued from page 19) on environmental education programs. and is considered as the “center of the center of Jung Kyung Il from the Korea Environmental marine shorefish biodiversity” worldwide. Education Center, established in February 2000 Hasan Masum of the Coastal Development to develop education programs, researches, and Partnership in Bangladesh focused on the chal- training for teachers and NGO activists, shared lenges on ESD and climate change education their initiatives to forge partnerships between among coastal populations, stressing the poten- local government, NGOs, and community resi- tial of converting traditional community knowl- dents. CEC’s Training and Community Services edge and practices into appropriate and relevant Coordinator Ricarido Saturay shared the center’s information for climate change policy and plan- two-decade experiences in creating and develop- ning. Paul Santos shared the story of the Kalin- ing its core education module, the Restoration gap Marikina Watershed, a Church-initiated com- Ecology Workshop since 1990. munity-based project in Bgy. San Jose, Antipolo Some panelists focused on the links between City integrating watershed rehabilitation and education and advocacy work. Clemente Bautista, protection with sustainable farming systems and Jr. of Kalikasan People’s Network for the Envi- sloping agroforest land technologies. ronment (KPNE), a national campaign network, shared their experience in strengthening Filipino Building solidarity environmental mass movements and promoting The conference was capped by the presenta- sustainable development from the point of view tion and plenary discussion of the conference of people’s organizations. Aleksandra Povarich statement (please see text of the statement on page of the Uzbekistan Youth Environment Network, 20) and a ritual of affirmation and solidarity a union of more than 180 youth and environ- among participants. mental organizations, shared their various pro- “Our educators in the climate change advo- grams and projects. Jane Yap-eo of the Center for cacy network and social movements gave us sig- Development Program Networks in the Cordil- nificant insights and political agitation by telling lera, a network of 12 NGOs based in the north- the world of their accomplishments and break- ern Philipppines, shared the contexts of their throughs in environmental education work and education practices among indigenous peoples inspire many to work hard for the cause of the and their struggle for defense of land, life, and people and the environment,” concluded KPNE resources. Chairperson and national fisherfolk leader Fer- Other panelists shared their experiences in nando L. Hicap in his closing remarks. community-based conservation programs. Ricky Hicap expressed optimism that CLIMATE Nunez of Conservation International shared the Asia-Pacific would help “set the stage for more center’s experience in using education to promote dynamic and active participation of the people the protection and conservation of the Verde and social movements in the region to struggle Island passage off the coast of Luzon. The area con- and advocate for a better and free world for the tains among the country’s richest fishing grounds majority of the poor people across the globe.”
  • 24. FeedbaCk September-december 010 ISSN 0117-0864 Official Publication of the Center for Environmental ConcernsPhilippines the CENtEr For ENvIroNmENtal CoNCErNS-phIlIppINES is a SEC registered non-government organization promoting patriotic, scientific, and people-oriented environmental education, research, and advocacy work with grassroots communities and sectors. Office Address: #26 Matulungin Street, Barangay Central, Diliman, Quezon City 1100 PHILIPPINES landlessness and Telefax: (632) 920 9099 Website: www.cecphils.org Email: info@cecphils.org carper, culprits in Writers: rog amoN, ChEamSoN BooNgalINg, ChE domINguEz, world ‘foodless’ day ChEamSoN BooNgalINg “I lEoN dulCE, lISa Ito-tapaNg, t’s World ‘Foodless’ Day in the Philippines as peasants are still landless and and lINda praCEjuS are continuously displaced by landlords and land-grabbers that make use of Publication design and layout: the anti-peasant provisions of CARPer.” r. jordaN p. SaNtoS This according to the Kilusang Magbubukid Latest data in 2010 reveals 32.9 percent of Photo credits: aNthoNy arBIaS, ng Pilipinas (KMP), who along with KMP-Negros the population are below the poverty line, a swift arkIBoNg BayaN, and KASAMA-TK (KMP Southern Tagalog) and increase of 9.67 percent from 30 percent in 2009. CEC arChIvES, other peasant supporters, held a protest in front Meanwhile, a national survey early this year kalIkaSaN pEoplE’S of the Department of Agrarian Reform office in showed 21.1 percent, or an estimated 4 million NEtwork For thE ENvIroNmENt, Quezon City last October 16 to mark the glob- Filipino families, have suffered from hunger in lISa Ito-tapaNg, and ally-observed World Food Day. recent months. tudla produCtIoNS Peasant groups blamed massive landlessness Protesters cooked symbols of CARPer, tag- and the implementation of the Comprehen- ging it as “inedible to farmers” to show that the Send your comments, inquiries, write-ups, and contributions to sive Agrarian Reform Program Extension with law has not solved land reform neither food secu- rea@cecphils.org. Reforms or CARPer, as culprits to the continu- rity problems. Instead, farmers pushed for the ous poverty and hunger experienced by Filipi- passage of House Bill 3745 or Genuine Agrarian This publication is made nos. Reform Bill. possible through the support of DVV International. eduCation For ChanGe (continued from page 21) and capacity-building of peasants, fisher folks common efforts towards genuine sustainable and indigenous peoples. We further uphold the people’s development. protection and advancement of the traditional To advance our aspirations for education knowledge of indigenous peoples. and action for sustainable people’s devel- • The need to sustain our advocacy of climate opment, we affirm our urgent commitment justice. Therefore, we continue our initiatives to building people’s solidarity and unity as to exchange resources, experiences, and link our a response to the global crisis of climate change. Climate Change Learning Initiative Mobilizing Action for Transforming Environments in Asia Pacific (CLI- MATE Asia Pacific) 4