Monday, April 04, 2011
Morong 43 file formal charges against GMA and military officials behind their arrest
Saturday, April 02, 2011
MORONG 43 HEALTH WORKERS to file 1st case vs GMA et. al. on grave human rights violations
1 April 2011
The Morong 43 will file countercharges against former President Gloria Macapacal-Arroyo and other top military and police officials for their illegal arrest, torture and detention on April 4, 2011, 11:00 a.m. at the Quezon City Hall of Justice. The National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers and the Public Interest Law Center, counsels for the Morong 43, and leaders of Free the 43 Health Workers Alliance, Karapatan, and SELDA will accompany them in the said filing.
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Saturday, March 26, 2011
Appeals court upholds ruling against director of PGH
In a decision promulgated March 18, the appellate court’s Special Sixteenth Division affirmed the resolution of the Quezon City Regional Trial Court that granted a writ of preliminary injunction on Dr. Rolando Enrique D. Domingo from assuming his post as director of PGH.
In his stead, the trial court ordered Dr. Jose C. Gonzales to continue serving as the director of the hospital in Manila.
The issue started after the University of the Philippines (UP) Board of Regents elected Mr. Gonzales as PGH director effective Jan. 1, 2010 until Dec. 31, 2012, in its meeting on Dec. 18, 2009. Mr. Gonzales took his oath of office on Dec. 21, 2009.
However, one of the regents, Abraham F. Sarmiento, contested the appointment of Mr. Gonzales, saying that there were irregularities in the election after the student regent of UP in Los Baños, Laguna was allowed to vote despite his being not qualified to do so.
Mr. Sarmiento had also claimed that the then chairman of the board had a high stake in the case.
The Board of Regents afterwards decided to declare as null and void the appointment of Mr. Gonzales and held another round of voting, during which Mr. Domingo was named the new PGH director.
Mr. Gonzales was informed of his dismissal on Feb. 26, 2010, during which Mr. Domingo assumed the position.
Mr. Gonzales haled the issue to the trial court, which eventually issued an injunction.
In its decision, the appellate court upheld the trial court ruling on three points: the applicant is entitled to the injunction, Mr. Domingo’s stay in office will probably bring injustice to Mr. Gonzales, and that Mr. Domingo could be performing acts in violation of the rights of Mr. Gonzales. -- NRM
BusinessWorld Online Edition |Appeals court upholds ruling against director of PGH
Monday, March 21, 2011
Magtiwala sa tunay na kinatawan ng mga kawani sa BOR
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| Jossel I. Ebesate National Executive Vice President All U.P. Workers Union |
U.P. at P.G.H. Bilang Unibersidad at Ospital ng Bayan, at Para sa Bayan
ni G. Jossel I. Ebesate
Sa mga nakuhang aral sa karanasan ng ating unang Staff Regent, ating mithiin na tuluyan nang pawiin ang diskriminasyon sa loob ng pamantasan lalo na sa pagkakaloob ng mga benepisyo at mga karapatan bilang kawani. Ang UP at PGH bilang mga pampublikong institusyon ay dapat maging huwarang institusyong mapagkalinga sa mga kawani nito, at kumikilala sa karapatang pantao ng may pagkakapantay-pantay. Bilang bukod tanging ”national university” nararapat lamang na maging huwaran at moog rin ito sa pagharap sa mga isyu ng bayan at sa pagbibigay ng de-kalidad at abot-kayang serbisyo sa Sambayanan.
Bilang kinatawan ng kawani at REPS sa BOR, tungkulin ng Staff Regent na maghapag ng mga patakaran kaugnay ng kagalingan at karapatan ng ating hanay, makibahagi sa pag-apruba ng mga patakaran na may kinalaman sa buong unibersidad, tumindig sa mga apela ng mga kawani, REPS at faculty sa Lupon bilang pinakahuling antas ng pagdedesisyon sa loob ng unibersidad. Titiyakin nating magampanan ito nang lubusan sa pamamagitan ng konsultasyon sa mga kawani at REPS sa iba't ibang campus ng UP.
Sa partikular, nais nating isulong ang mga sumusunod, sa loob ng dalawang taon:
- Magkaroon ng makatarungan at makatotohanang position classification at salary scale na may makabuluhang pagtaas ng sahod para sa lahat ng mga administratibong kawani at REPS, simula sa Salary Grade 1. Kasama na ang pagkakaroon ng sariling career path ng mga kawani at REPS, at ang awtomatikong promosyon sa mga nagkaroon ng doktorado o Ph.D, tulad ng ginagawad sa mga faculty.
- Siguraduhin ang malinaw at makatarungang pamantayan sa pagbibigay ng mga benepisyo sa lahat na mga kawani ng unibersidad. Kasama nito ang pagkakaroon ng pantay na hatian ng budget para sa lahat ng sektor (faculty, admin, reps) tuwing magkakaroon ng merit promotion at sapat na pondo para sa lahat na mga kwalipikado sa “sagad award”.
- Pagtitiyak na ang nilalaman ng Collective Negotiation Agreement (CNA) na nilagdaan sa pagitan ng UP Administration, ang All UP Workers Union at ng All UP Academic Employees Union (para sa mga REPS) ay maipapatupad at mapalawak pa. Kasama ang paggiit sa implementasyon ng mga benepisyo sa ilalim ng Magna Carta of Public Health Workers.
- Patuloy sa pakikibaka para magkaroon ng additional two-week sick leave (na pwedeng ma-monetize kapag di nagamit) ang mga kawani at REPS katulad ng naibigay sa faculty.
- Maisaayos ang kalidad ng serbisyo ng mga UP Health Service Clinics sa iba’t-ibang Constituent Units sa pamamagitan ng integrasyon ng mga klinikang ito sa mga Residency Program ng ilang departamento/service units ng PGH at Kolehiyo ng Medisina.
- Pagpapatibay sa demokratikong partisipasyon ng lahat ng sektor sa unibersidad sa pagbabalangkas ng mga polisiyang may kinalaman sa kagalingan at interes ng mga sektor at ng buong unibersidad. Halimbawang istruktura ay ang Pamantasang Asambleya.
- Pagbibigay ng makabuluhang pansin sa kalagayan ng mga empleyadong kaswal at kontraktwal, lalo na ang umaabot na sa 10 taon sa serbisyo o higit pa subalit patuloy na pinagkaitan ng regular aytem.
- Pagkakaroon ng mahusay na staff development program at sapat na staff development fund para sa mga kawani at REPS.
- Patuloy na pagsusulong na ang Unibersidad ng Pilipinas ay unibersidad ng Sambayanang Pilipino at kritikong panlipunan; at ang Philippine General Hospital bilang ospital ng bayan.
- Sa pakikipagtulungan sa Department of Pediatrics ng PGH/Kolehiyo ng Medisina, isulong ang pagtatayo ng UP Integrated School sa UP Manila bilang laboratory school nito, at magsilbing dagdag na benepisyo para sa mga anak ng mga kawani, REPS at faculty.
Ika-7 Manila Chapter Assembly matagumpay na ginanap
Ang ika-7 Chapter Assembly ay dinaluhan nina UP Manila Vice Chancellor for Administration Orlino Talens at PGH Director Jose Gonzales bilang mga panauhing pandangal na kung saan nagbigay din sila ng mga mensahe. Ang Secretary General ng Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN) na si Renato Reyes ang pangunahing tagapagsalita kung saan tinalakay nya ang mga kasalukuyang pang-ekonomiya at pampulitikang kaganapan sa bansa at ang matinding atake nito sa kabuhayan nga mamamayan lalo na ang tuloy-tuloy na pagtaas ng presyo ng langis at mga bilihin subalit ang tugon ng pamahalaan sa ilalim ni Pnoy ay mas lalong pasakit sa pamamagitan ng programang public-private partnership. Ito'y walang iba kungdi ang matagal na nating nilalabanang pribatisasyon, medyo pinamulitian lang para mas katanggap-tanggap sa mamamayan. Pero kung ito'y masusing pag-aralan ay mas masahol pa sa mga nakaraang programng pribatisasyon ng mga nakaraang rehimen.
Samantala, kasama sa ginanap na asambleya ay ang pagpili ng mga bagong opisyal ng chapter na manunungkulan ng tatlong (3) taon simula Abril 2011. Sila ang mga sumusunod:
Pangulo - Benjamin Santos (SOJR)
Pangalawang Pangulo - Ma. Rita Sevilla (CENICU)
Kalihim - Rosalina Cruz (DOPS)
Ingat-yaman - Eliseo Estropigan (OETS)
Tagasuri - Josefina Castillo (Internal Audit)
PRO - Elenita Jamison (Ward 4)
Para sa tatlong Board of Directors ay napagkasunduan ng kapulungan na ipanukala ang amyenda sa Konstitusyon ng Unyon para gawing kinatawang sektoral pero pangkalahatan ang eleksiyon sa mga Board of Directors. Ito ay para mas magkaroon ng boses sa loob ng Chapter Executive Board and lahat na sektor sa UP Manila/PGH. Napagkasunduan din na pangalangan at mag-eleksiyon na upang maisakatuparan kaagad ang pagbabago dahil wala namang nakikitang balakid at siguradong maipasa ito kung ipapanukala sa ika-7 Pangkalahatang Asambleya sa ika 7-8 ng Abril 2011. Ang mga sumusunod ang nahalal na Sectoral Board of Directors sa susunod na tatlong taon:
Sa PGH:
Nursing - Yolanda Trapani (Ward 4)
Administrative - Ernesto Ragudos (Grounds)
Paramedical - Karen Faurillo (MSSD)
NA/WA - Francisca Mangundayao (Ward 7)
UW - Edgardo Faldas (Ward 15)
UP Manila:
CAD/NIH - Elizabeth Ladeza (HRDO)
Acad Units - Freddie Waje (CPH)
Napagkasunduan na ang panunumpa sa tungkulin ng mga bagong halal na opisyales ay gaganapin na lang sa ika-8 ng Abril 2011 sa ika-7 Pangkalahatang Asambleya ng unyon sa UP-SOLAIR.
Dahil sa kakapusan ng oras, napagkasunduan din ng kapulungan na ang 60 delegado ng chapter para sa ika-7 Pangkalahatang Asambleya na may hatiang 40 mula sa PGH at 20 mula sa UP Manila ay papangalanan na lang ng mga Sektoral Board of Directors at isumite sa Pangulo ng chapter para sa memorandum at paghingi ng official time.
Ang kasalukuyang Pambansang Pangalawang Pangulong Tagapagpaganap (National Executive Vice President) at Kalihim ng chapter na si Jossel Ebesate ang nagpadaloy sa panukalang amyenda sa Konstitusyon at eleksiyon ng mga bagong opisyales samantalang ang Pangalawang Pangulo ng chapter na si Ma. Rita Sevilla ang siyang nagpadaloy ng buong programa.
Ang pulong ay nagtapos ng lagpas sa ika-5 ng hapon sa pamamagitan ng pagbibigay ng souvenir t-shirt at meryenda sa mga dumalong kasapi.
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Students, faculty call for removal of UP Cebu dean | Philippine Collegian
Students, faculty members and staff from UPCC launched a series of protests on March 1, 8 and 11 to call for the removal of Avila.
Avila was accused of undermining student participation in the governance of the UPCC when he removed the student representative position inthe College Executive Committee (ExeCom), the highest policy-making body of UPCC.
Also, Avila is said to have breached the principle of democratic governance when he disregarded the College Security Committee’s recommendation of rehiring fifteen security personnel, said Nagkahiusang Kusog sa Estudyante Spokesperson and incoming UPCC Student Council Vice Chairperson Kristian Jacob Abad Lora.
Avila allegedly abused his discretionary powers when he denied the appeal for tenure of qualified faculty and filled up administrative and academic positions without holding a democratic search process, said UPCC Computer Science Professor Chito Patiño.
Aside from violating the UP Charter, the dean also breached provisions of the Republic Act No. 3019 or the Anti-graft and Corrupt Practices Act when he did not act on complaints of graft and corruption against UPCC Budget Officer Alsidry Sharif and Administrative Officer Ernesto Pineda, said Patiño.
“The UP-cherished values of collegiality, informed debate, and democratic governance must be upheld [but] this is not possible with Avila and his cohorts in the college’s midst. [They] should go,” said Lora.
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Editoryal: Pangwakas na Puna | Philippine Collegian
Editoryal: Pangwakas na Puna | Philippine Collegian
Saturday, February 12, 2011
An Egyptian Voice of Democracy Says, Tell Old Pharaoh, Go
An Egyptian Voice of Democracy Says, Tell Old Pharaoh, Go
Friday, February 11, 2011
New Way to Measure Poverty Denounced as Deceptive, Can Undermine Calls for Better Wages - Bulatlat
Independent think-tank Ibon Foundation said that the government’s latest labor force survey pegs unemployment at 2.80 million in October 2010, slightly higher than the 2.72 million reported in the same period last year. The number of the unemployed could very well be pegged at 4.16 million instead, the economic research group said. The difference, it pointed out, is caused by the recently revised definition of unemployment and an estimate approximating the previous definition for comparability with previous years.
Ibon Foundation added that while the reported creation of over a million jobs from last year is welcome, the quality of over half these jobs leaves much to be desired. Out of the one million new jobs created, some 515,000 were in the economy’s lowest earning sectors: agriculture (201,000 jobs), wholesale and retail trade (251,000) and private households (62,000).
The stubbornness of high unemployment and rising underemployment despite the government’s declaration of a “scintillating” 6.5 percent economic growth in the third quarter affirms that joblessness remains a serious cause for concern.
Based on Ibon’s analysis, there is a problem if the economy is consistently able to register growth and deliver corporate profits but unable to create enough jobs and raise wages. The situation highlights the need for urgent reforms in the domestic economy and address its inability to create regular and productive jobs, the group said.
Indifference
Gaite said that this latest move of the Aquino administration to alter the poverty index by bringing the poverty line lower proves its indifference to the woeful plight of the common Filipino.
“It also shows Aquino’s complete inability to intervene and halt the unabated price hikes. The government’s systematic abandonment of its responsibility to provide accessible commodities and services for the people could very well lead to widespread discontent and protests,” he said.
New Way to Measure Poverty Denounced as Deceptive, Can Undermine Calls for Better Wages - Bulatlat
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Beyond the Swindle of the Corporate University: Higher Education in the Service of Democracy
"In spite of being discredited by the economic recession of 2008, neoliberalism, or market fundamentalism as it is called in some quarters, has once again returned with a vengeance. The Gilded Age has come back with big profits for the rich and increasing impoverishment and misery for the middle and working class. Political illiteracy has cornered the market on populist rage, providing a political bonus for those who are responsible for massive levels of inequality, poverty, and sundry other hardships. As social protections are dismantled, public servants are denigrated and public goods such as schools, bridges, health care services and public transportation deteriorate, the Obama administration unapologetically embraces the values of economic Darwinism and rewards its chief beneficiaries: mega banks and big business. Neoliberalism - reinvigorated by the passing of tax cuts for the ultra rich, the right-wing Republican Party taking over of the House of Representatives and an ongoing successful attack on the welfare state - proceeds, once again, in zombie-like fashion to impose its values, social relations and forms of social death upon all aspects of civic life.(1)
With its relentless attempts to normalize the irrational belief in the ability of markets to solve all social problems, neoliberal market fundamentalism puts in place policies designed to dismantle the few remaining vestiges of the social state and vital public services. More profoundly, it has weakened if not nearly destroyed those institutions that enable the production of a formative culture in which individuals learn to think critically, imagine other ways of being and doing and connect their personal troubles with public concerns. Matters of justice, ethics and equality have once again been exiled to the margins of politics. Never has this assault on the democratic polity been more obvious, if not more dangerous, than at the current moment when a battle is being waged under the rubric of neoliberal austerity measures on the autonomy of academic labor, the classroom as a site of critical pedagogy, the rights of students to high quality education, the democratic vitality of the university as a public sphere and the role played by the liberal arts and humanities in fostering an educational culture that is about the practice of freedom and mutual empowerment.(2)
Memories of the university as a citadel of democratic learning have been replaced by a university eager to define itself largely in economic terms. As the center of gravity shifts away from the humanities and the notion of the university as a public good, university presidents ignore public values while refusing to address major social issues and problems.(3) Instead, such administrators now display corporate affiliations like a badge of honor, sit on corporate boards and pull in huge salaries. A survey conducted by The Chronicle of Higher Education reported that "19 out of 40 presidents from the top 40 research universities sat on at least one company board."(4) Rather than treated as a social investment in the future, students are now viewed by university administrators as a major source of revenue for banks and other financial institutions that provide funds for them to meet escalating tuition payments. For older generations, higher education opened up opportunities for self-definition as well as pursuing a career in the field of one's choosing. It was relatively cheap, rigorous and accessible, even to many working-class youth. But as recent events in both the United States and Britain make clear, this is no longer the case. Instead of embodying the hope of a better life and future, higher education has become prohibitively expensive and exclusionary, now offering primarily a credential and, for most students, a lifetime of debt payments. Preparing the best and the brightest has given way to preparing what might be called Generation Debt.(5)
What is new about the current threat to higher education and the humanities in particular is the increasing pace of the corporatization and militarization of the university, the squelching of academic freedom, the rise of an ever increasing contingent of part-time faculty and the view that students are basically consumers and faculty providers of a salable commodity such as a credential or a set of workplace skills. More strikingly still is the slow death of the university as a center of critique, vital source of civic education and crucial public good. Or, to put it more specifically, the consequence of such dramatic transformations has resulted in the near death of the university as a democratic public sphere. Many faculty are now demoralized as they increasingly lose their rights and power. Moreover, a weak faculty translates into one governed by fear rather than by shared responsibilities, and one that is susceptible to labor-bashing tactics such as increased workloads, the casualization of labor and the growing suppression of dissent. Demoralization often translates less into moral outrage than into cynicism, accommodation and a retreat into a sterile form of professionalism. What is also new is that faculty now find themselves staring into an abyss, either unwilling to address the current attacks on the university or befuddled over how the language of specialization and professionalization has cut them off from not only connecting their work to larger civic issues and social problems, but also developing any meaningful relationships to a larger democratic polity.
As faculty no longer feel compelled to address important political issues and social problems, they are less inclined to communicate with a larger public, uphold public values, or engage in a type of scholarship that is available to a broader audience.(6) Beholden to corporate interests, career building and the insular discourses that accompany specialized scholarship, too many academics have become overly comfortable with the corporatization of the university and the new regimes of neoliberal governance. Chasing after grants, promotions and conventional research outlets, many academics have retreated from larger public debates and refused to address urgent social problems. Assuming the role of the disinterested academic or the clever faculty star on the make, these so-called academic entrepreneurs simply reinforce the public's perception that they have become largely irrelevant. Incapable, if not unwilling, to defend the university as a democratic public sphere and a crucial site for learning how to think critically and act with civic courage, many academics have disappeared into a disciplinary apparatus that views the university not as a place to think, but as a place to prepare students to be competitive in the global marketplace."
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Aktibismo sa panahon ng administrasyong Aquino | Rising Sun
Oo, walang masama sa globalisasyon, kung ikaw ay nabibilang sa nakatataas na uri ng ating lipunan. Pero malinaw sa napakaraming pag-aaral ang negatibong epekto ng globalisasyon sa mahihirap – kawalan ng subsidyo mula sa gobyerno, maliit na suweldo, kawalan ng kaseguruhan sa trabaho, pagbaha ng mga imported na produkto, pagpatay sa agrikultural na produksyon. Napakahaba ng listahan ng masamang kahihinatnan, pero pilit na sinasagot ito ng mga nasa kapangyarihan sa pamamagitan ng isang teknikal na termino – safety nets.
Simple lang naman ang lohika ng safety nets sa konteksto ng globalisasyon. Maaaring masagasaan ang interes ng mga manggagawa, magsasaka at iba pang sektor basta’t siguraduhin lang na mabibigyan sila ng alternatibong kabuhayan. Sa unang tingin, walang masama rito. Pero katulad ng relokasyon sa mga maralitang tagalungsod na biktima ng demolisyon, hindi isinasaalang-alang ang kalagayan ng mga nasagasaan dahil sila ay napupunta sa sitwasyon ng kawalan. - Danny Arao
Aktibismo sa panahon ng administrasyong Aquino | Rising Sun
Saturday, October 02, 2010
Aquino Asked, Prioritize Public Health Instead of Fraudulent Loans and War vs Filipinos - Bulatlat
Aquino Asked, Prioritize Public Health Instead of Fraudulent Loans and War vs Filipinos - Bulatlat
Friday, October 01, 2010
Pagbubukas ng FMAB, Pagbagsak ng Kalidad ng Serbisyo sa PGH
Mapapansin natin na hindi pa bukas ang mga klinika para sa mga doktor. Mistulang pyesta sa dami ng tarpulin na halos mismong PGH na ang nagbebenta ng kanilang serbisyo.
Sa mga nagdaang mga araw, napag- alaman natin na malaki ang ibinaba ng kita ng ating Main Pharmacy bunga na rin ng biglaang paglipat ng main gate sa harap ng Oblation para sa pedestrian. Sa Laboratory, diumano ay marami ng procedures ang hindi nagagawa dahil sa kawalan ng reagent. Pati ang ating CT Scan ay normal procedures na lang ang kayang gawin at ang mga special procedures ay sa ibang clinic o ospital na inire-refer ng ilan nating mga doctor, ang ilan ay direktang sinasabi sa mga pasyente na sa FMAB ipagawa ang kanilang diagnostic procedure.
Nagkataon lang ba ito sa pagbubukas ng FMAB o ito na ang sitwasyon ng PGH sa mga susunod na mga araw?
Sa simple nating pagsusuri,malinaw na ang pagpasok ng isang pribadong ospital (FMAB) sa loob ng compound ng PGH gamit ang mga klinika ng PGH Consultants bilang pantakip sa kanilang pagkamal ng kita. At sa pakipagkutsabahan na rin ng ilang administrador ng PGH at UP Manila ay unti-unting papatayin o papahinain ang mga serbisyo ng PGH katulad ng pharmacy, laboratory, radiology at iba pang diagnostic/treatment units. Maliban dito malaki ang posibilidad na ang mga sumusunod ay mangyayari pa sa darating na panahon bunga ng kasalukuyang sitwasyon.
a) Pagbabawas ng Job Order/ Casual/Contractual na mga kawani (lalo na sa Pharmacy) at pagbabawas o pagkawala ng sabsidyo ng libreng antibiotic para sa mga pasyente sa charity dahil sa kakulangan ng kita sa PGH Pharmacy.
b) Kakulangan ng pondo para sa mga dagdag benepisyo ng mga kawani
k) Paglalagay ng bayad sa mga dating libre at pagdaragdag ng bayarin sa mga dati ng may bayad na mga serbisyong ibinibigay ng PGH
d) Tuluyang pagpasok ng pribatisasyon bilang negosyo imbes na libreng serbisyo sa mga pampublikong ospital katulad ng PGH.
Kami sa All UP Workers Union ay kinukondena ang mga administrador ng PGH at UP Manila na tahasang nakikipagsabwatan sa mga pribadong mamumuhunan tulad ng sa FMAB upang gawing negosyo ang serbisyong dapat sana ay libreng ibinibigay sa mamamayan sa abot ng kanilang kakayanan. Nakakalungkot at nakakagalit isiping kita at tubo na ang motibasyon ng ilan sa ating mga administrador sa kanilang paglilingkod sa PGH at UP.
ANG ATING MGA PANAWAGAN:
• BENEPISYO AT KASEGURUHAN SA TRABAHO, IPAGLABAN!
• SERBISYO SA TAO, WAG GAWING NEGOSYO !
• BADYET PANGKALUSUGAN, DAGDAGAN WAG BAWASAN!
• MGA ABUSADONG OPISYAL, TANGGALIN SA PUWESTO!
• DE KALIDAD at ABOT KAYANG SERBISYONG PANGKALUSUGAN, IALAY SA MAMAMAYAN!
All U.P. Workers Union – Manila
Ika-1 ng Oktubre 2010
Justice for Nurse-rape victim, Justice for All Nurses & Health Workers
PRESS STATEMENT
October 1, 2010
Reference: Mr. Jossel I. Ebesate, RN
Secretary-General
Mobile No: 09189276381
We, nurses and health workers from different hospitals and health institutions nationwide, condemn the rape of Florence, a nurse in South Upi, Maguindanao. We call for immediate and swift justice for the nurse rape victim. We call for justice for all nurses and health workers.
It is indeed commendable that she chose to serve in rural area where nurses are needed most. In taking the road less taken, she became a victim of a crime and injustice.
Like Florence, many nurses and health workers endure injustice under the present situation. After painstaking years of studying nursing and passing the licensure examination, many nurses end up as job-orders or contractual, without benefits and with pay below that of a nurse with plantilla. Worse many nurses become volunteers, without salaries and even paying the hospital for the supposed “training” and “experience”. This is not what a licensed nurse should endure.
Nurses and other health workers employed as regular employees receive low salaries, inadequate benefits, if any at all, and suffer from understaffing, inhumane conditions at work, and repression.
Those health workers who chose to stay to serve the people are even illegally arrested for trumped-up charges, just like the case of Morong 43.
This is not what should happen to those who serve the people.
Because of these, nurses and other health workers are not encouraged to stay in the country, much more work in the rural areas.
We see that the government is remiss in two counts. First it failed to ensure the safety of nurses and other health care providers, be in rural or urban areas. Second, and more importantly, the government lends deaf ear to calls to provide adequate jobs, salaries, benefits and better working conditions to all health workers. The Department of Labor’s Nurses Assigned to Rural Areas (NARS) program, which Florence participated in, did not give permanent job and adequate remuneration for nurses. Six months of work, with allowance below that received by a plantilla- holder nurse in a government hospital, is not fair and just.
The Filipino patients in the end suffer from inadequate staff and health services.
We call for swift justice for the nurse rape victim. We hope that impartial investigation and trial will convict the wrong-doers.
We call for justice for all nurses and health workers. We call for adequate jobs, salaries, benefits and better working conditions for all health workers who have heroically decided to stay in the country and serve the Filipino people. We call on the government to release the 43 health workers and protect the welfare, rights and safety of all health care providers. This will redound to better services to the people. #
Friday, July 30, 2010
Smoke and Mirrors
By Carol Pagaduan-Araullo
“Pnoy the Magician” in bright yellow. This was how activists depicted President Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino in effigy in last Monday’s annual State-of-the-Nation street demonstration. They were proven prescient in more ways than one as soon as Mr. Aquino started delivering his SONA that turned out to be vintage smoke-and-mirrors demagoguery.
Rather than lead the people to an understanding of the true state of the nation, his seemingly straightforward rhetoric was used instead to conjure illusions and deceive not unlike the way a magician uses optical illusions to create believability while actually performing tricks.
The main trick is to continue to appear as the harbinger of the “change that people can believe in” that worked well enough to get Mr. Aquino elected.
However, despite the effort to make the Aquino regime appear poised to undertake far-reaching reforms in government, in the economy, in resolving armed conflicts and even in turning around public sentiment from pessimism to hopefulness, cynicism to unity and cooperation, Mr. Aquino’s SONA only confirms that there is nothing new, innovative, not to mention any attempt at a radical break from the past, in his prescriptions.
Rather, what we heard are more of the same policies and programs of old dressed up to dazzle and give false hopes.
Once more corruption is presented as the overarching problem. Mr. Aquino’s speech used simple and folksy language to whip up the public’s hatred for corrupt politicians and other government officials by laying out more horror stories from the previous regime: Mrs. Arroyo’s pampering her province with government funds to boost her congressional bid; the over-procurement of imported rice at the cost of billions of pesos which was then left to rot in government warehouses; MWSS top officials wallowing in pelf and privilege while the country suffers a water crisis.
Salacious new details these but nothing surprising. Why not tell us the progress in case build-up on the biggest corruption scandals that plagued the Arroyo administration? Why is the Truth Commission still nowhere in sight, much less near to having Mrs. Arroyo and her partners in crime brought to the bar of justice?
Mr. Aquino stated categorically that his administration would not tolerate murderers and plunderers. He crowed about solving “50% of the cases of extralegal killings” that occurred soon after his assuming office or three out of six reported cases with the identification of suspects.
Assuming this to be true, however, his complete silence on government’s current counterinsurgency or COIN program as the underlying cause of most of the killings as pointed out by independent international human rights bodies places in serious doubt Mr. Aquino’s earnestness in putting a stop to and solving these murders by state security forces.
More specifically, the lack of immediate action to disband the legalized private armies called “civilian volunteer organizations” that the military uses to augment its COIN operations, renders Mr. Aquino’s boast inconsequential in ending criminal impunity. Such a reign of impunity gave rise to the still unresolved Maguindanao massacre on top of the more than a thousand unsolved extrajudicial killings in almost a decade of Oplan Bantay Laya.
It is not surprising that Mr. Aquino’s take on the peace talks reveals his apparently shallow and short-sighted view about armed conflicts and how to resolve them. His insistence on a permanent ceasefire as a precondition to the resumption of the talks with the CPP/NPA/NDF and his insinuation that the NDF has not made any worthwhile proposal on the matter indicates either ignorance of what has previously transpired or a dangerously militarist mindset intent on throwing a monkey wrench on the talks rather than in undertaking the fundamental reforms needed to attain a just and lasting peace.
Stopping corrupt practices, judicious use of government resources, and so-called private-public partnership are touted as the strategy to lift up the economy and miraculously solve all other related problems such as massive unemployment and underemployment, the budget deficit, decrepit social services as well as crumbling public infrastructure.
Mr. Aquino completely and conveniently overlooks genuine land reform not just as a basic social justice measure but a question of breaking free from a backward, semi-feudal agricultural economy.
He is completely mum about neoliberal policies that destroyed whatever was left of manufacturing, further undermined agricultural development and food self-sufficiency and rendered the domestic economy more than ever vulnerable to the vagaries of the international market as shown in the recent regional and global financial crises.
We can safely presume that his macro-economic policy framework will not depart from those of all his predecessors including Mrs. Arroyo.
So much ado about how Mrs. Arroyo wasted public funds for narrow political ends leaving the Aquino government with little left to undertake vital programs and services. But he says not a word about the P300 billion pesos automatically set aside for debt payments considering many of these are onerous debts that date back to the Marcos dictatorship as well as to graft-ridden Arroyo regime.
Ibon Data Bank puts forward concrete doable measures to address the fiscal deficit but apparently Mr. Aquino does not countenance any of them.
These include implementing increases in tariffs and withdrawing huge incentives given to foreign investors. IBON estimates government losses of around P200 billion in potential revenues each year because of tariff reduction. Fiscal incentives to foreign investors have in turn led to huge tax losses estimated by the Finance Department to be around P43 billion.
Mr. Aquino has a fondness for using the metaphor of crossroads to describe his administration’s core values and trajectory. He likens a leader’s choice to taking the straight path of “good governance” or the crooked one so dishonorably exemplified by the Arroyo regime. What all this clever use of metaphors has been concealing all along is the truth that corruption is not the root cause of our nation's poverty and hardship.
It is the wanton exploitation and oppression of our people by foreign powers, mainly the US, with the collaboration of the local ruling elite. Together they appropriate the social wealth produced by our people's labor. Together they impose and implement socio-economic and political programs and policies that deliberately favor foreign capital and their local agents while relegating our economy -- our local industries and agriculture -- to backwardness and dependency.
All this magic may serve to deceive and even entertain our hungry and suffering masses. But they will not forever drive away the pangs of hunger, the homelessness and the scourge of disease. No matter how many SONAs repeat the same deceptive tricks and clever lies, more and more in the streets, in homes, factories, fields and mountains, will see the through the smoke and mirrors, see the truth and find the real path to freedom, democracy, progress and peace. #



