Buhay at bahay, itindig: A run for Yolanda victims

Text and Photos by Cong B. Corrales

THOUSANDS of people from all walks of life huffed and puffed and took part in the benefit run for the supertyphoon victims at the Quezon City Memorial Circle last weekend, but the more challenging part of Yolanda Run: Buhay at bahay, Itindig has only just begun.

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Concerned citizens gathered before the break of dawn at the Quezon Memorial Circle in Quezon City Sunday morning for a three kilometer run to raise funds for the rebuilding and reconstruction efforts for communities devastated by supertyphoon Yolanda.

Interestingly, most of the volunteers were hardly the athletic types. There were, of course, those who looked splendidly fit in their running attire; most, however, could just pass off as people recently roused from bed – sleepy but sincere, drowsy yet determined. Volunteers included differently abled people, and even elderly citizens who ambled along.

Despite the difficulty of pounding through three kilometers of pavement, everyone knew though that the more massive and more difficult tasks of rebuilding lives and communities devastated by super typhoon Yolanda is only beginning, as this project will require all citizens and civil servants to stay the course of the unraveling narrative of Yolanda’s survivors.

“We cannot, all, be repacking food packs. Kaya reconstruction ang tutok natin (That’s why we have focused on reconstruction.) Actually, people have begun rebuilding but we want to help communities rebuild away from danger areas,” National Anti-Poverty Commission (NAPC) Secretary Jose Eliseo Rocamora said.

“Quite literally, we will be rebuilding houses and reconstructing communities. Hence, we partnered with Habitat for Humanity,” added Rocamora.

Buhay at Bahay, Itindig Natin is different from other reconstruction efforts in that it is a people-centered reconstruction project. Rocamora says that past calamities across the globe has “taught us that 80% of the reconstruction of houses are done by the owners themselves.”

“We are also raising funds to guarantee emergency employment for the survivors and they will be hired for the reconstruction efforts,” says Rocamora.

“This way reconstruction becomes more efficient, cheaper and faster. We’ve seen the survivors have started or are starting repairing their houses. Dapat tulungan na, ayaw natin na doon din sa high risk areas magrebuild yung mga survivors (We should help them rebuild not in the same high risk areas),” he points out.

Rocamora says that there are two main components to reconstruction: removal and disposal of debris and securing the land tenurial status of the survivors especially the informal settlers.

“Government should focus on these before reconstruction. Government should buy these lands. If it cannot issue land titles, (then) at least give the survivors land use rights na matagal-tagal na panahon (for a longer time),” he says.

The reconstruction efforts–specifically construction of dwellings–will mainly consist of reconstruction kits and building of core houses.

Gina Delos Reyes Virtuso of the Habitat for Humanity says they have categorized Yolanda as a level 2 calamity which means “(we are) all hands on deck.”

Habitat for Humanity’s initial targets for the reconstruction efforts will be giving out 50,000 cleaning kits worth Php2,000 each, 30,000 shelter repair kits worth Php15,000 each and constructing 10,000 core houses valued at Php120,000 each.

Rocamora says rebuilding goes beyond construction of houses. Damaged and lost sources of livelihood, largely agriculture and fishing, have to be restored. Houses need to be built where there is access to farms and common resources from which people subsisted (bays, water sources, forest resources, market places, fish landing sites).

Fishing boats and gear were destroyed. The latest figure of overall damage to agriculture is P10.59 billion, according to the Department of Agriculture.

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(contributed photo)
 

“The worst hit islands – Leyte, Samar and Biliran – belong to one of our poor regions. Approximately four out of ten families are poor (37% poverty incidence),” Rocamora points out.

“The figures are staggering. The depth and scale of the destruction brought by Yolanda that is becoming to be considered as the world’s worst typhoon continue to reel us, all of us. We are here to help and contribute what we have to a post-typhoon surge of sustained support – skills, expertise, a little money. It’s us, common folk who want to help our own,” he adds.

The NAPC reconstruction project Yolanda Run: Buhay at Bahay, Itindig is in partnership with:

  • Habitat for Humanity, a non-government agency with a track record of rebuilding homes and communities with vigor and expertise;
  • The Alliance of Seven, which is composed of local government units in Metro Manila cities/towns that had been ravaged by typhoon Ondoy (Marikina, Quezon City, Pasig, Antipolo, San Mateo, Montalban, and Cainta);
  • Operation Compassion Philippines, a non-government agency that attends to orphans and communities displaced by calamities and disasters;
  • and the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism.

Maguindanao Year 4: PCIJ docus on media murders in campus tour

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IN COMMEMORATION of the fourth anniversary of the Ampatuan massacre, the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ), together with other media organizations such as the Freedom Fund for Filipino Journalists (FFFJ) and the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP), has been holding a series of documentary screenings in various colleges and universities.

On November 15, the PCIJ partnered with the Journalism Club of the University of the Philippines – Diliman for the first leg of the campus roadshow. About forty to fifty students – a mix of freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors – attended the activity, which showcased the PCIJ documentary “Angkan Inc.”. The documentary features the clans of Maguindanao and the dynamics of history, culture, tradition, and politics in the province that gave rise to influential political families such as the Ampatuan clan, whose patriarch has been tagged as the mastermind in the 2009 Maguindanao Massacre where 58 people, including 32 journalists, were murdered.

The Angkan, Inc. documentary was produced by the PCIJ with assistance from the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

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The second leg of the campus roadshow was held at the Centro Escolar University last November 18, where about a hundred Mass Communication students attended. PCIJ Multimedia Director Ed Lingao served as the main speaker for the activity. He presented PCIJ documentaries on media killings and the culture of impunity. Among the cases discussed were the killings of Marlyn Esperat, the first journalist to expose the P700 million fertilizer fund scam where former President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo was implicated, and Palawan environmental broadcaster Gerry Ortega.

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The third leg was held at the University of the Philippines – Los Banos last November 19. The documentary showing and discussion were attended not only by UPLB students, but also by high school and college students from nearby towns and cities. With theme,”Clan Feuds and the Press: Maguindanao Massacre Four Years After” , the forum featured the Angkan Inc. documentary and discussions from FFFJ Legal Counsel Atty. Prima Jesusa Quinsayas and Ed Lingao.

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Images from 2013 barangay polls

MILLIONS OF FILIPINOS trooped to their polling precincts today to elect the officials of the smallest local government unit in the country – the barangay.

While barangay elections are sometimes dismissed by some as insignificant, the barangay is the closest government unit that the ordinary Filipino will ever get to interact with in his lifetime. At the village level, barangay officials are, for many Filipinos, the only real face of governance in an archipelago so fragmented along ethnic, cultural, geographical, and political lines.

In fact, Section 38 of the Omnibus Election Code provides that “the barangay election shall be non-partisan and shall be conducted in an expeditious and inexpensive manner” in order to shield them from the influence of political parties that may try to use them as part of their campaign machineries.

But it is really at the barangay level that the political machine works; any political operator worth his salt knows that the allegiance of the village chiefs is key in capturing local, and eventually, national positions.

On Monday, the country’s 54 million registered voters come out for yet another political fiesta, where the stakes may appear smaller, although they really strike closer to home.

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Elections in the Philippines have always been family affairs, both from the side of the candidates and their political parties (or their political clans), and from the point of view of the voters who bring their children, grandchildren, and pets.

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And of course, there were the usual problems of voters unable to find their names in the voters list. For the barangay elections, the Commission on Elections had decided to revert to the manual voting and counting. In the last May 2013 national and local elections, the Comelec had used the Precinct Count Optical Count or PCOS machines.

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What this also means is that the counting in some precincts may last long into the night, especially in areas where there are many voters per precinct. This also raises the possibility of more heated exchanges between losing candidates and the Board of Election Inspectors, as the candidates may try to challenge the manual count.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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But if some dismiss the barangay elections, there are those who appear committed to make their ballot count. This senior citizen came to the voting precinct in Quezon City despite her difficulty walking, as evidenced by the walker she strapped on to the tricycle she was riding after casting her ballot.

 

 

 

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On the other hand, this disabled fellow hobbled around in front of the voting precinct on his one good leg, distributing sample ballots unmindful of the difficulty, and of the fact that his activity was also illegal.

‘EDSA Tayo’ rally against pork

By Ed Lingao

THOUSANDS OF FILIPINOS again took the streets Wednesday in a continuing show of opposition to the pork barrel funds or the Priority Development Assistance Funds (PDAF) granted to lawmakers and select members of the executive branch.

The protesters gathered at the EDSA People Power monument at the corner of EDSA and Ortigas in Pasig City for what they called a prayer vigil cum peace rally against the abuse of pork barrel funds.

The rally kicked off with a novena followed by a holy mass at the EDSA Shrine. Later in the afternoon, anti-pork barrel academics such as former National Economic and Development Authority head Winnine Monsod and former National Treasurer Leonor Briones will deliver briefings on the nature of the pork barrel funds and how they are abused or misused by government officials to perpetuate patronage politics.

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The police, however, got into a scuffle with some protesters who tried to unfurl anti-pork barrel banners and flags. The police insist that the Shrine is a no-rally zone, and the permit given to organizers of the event was only for a prayer vigil. Protesters however insisted on their right to free expression, resulting in some heated exchanges.

Policemen were also visible in large numbers around the EDSA Shrine, enforcing a no-backpack policy because of fears that criminal elements could take advantage of the event.

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