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Thursday, April 08, 2010

Bishops to AFP: Respect rights of ‘Morong 43’ - Nation - GMANews.TV

In a statement signed by its president Tandag Bishop Nereo Odchimar, the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) branded the “illegal arrest and continued detention" of the 43 workers as a “serious threat to the civil liberties of the Filipino people."

“The CBCP follows with grave concern the shifting accusations of the military against the health workers, the conflicting positions of government authorities on the legitimacy of the arrest and detention, and the seeming lack of regard of the AFP for human rights and the rule of law," Odchimar said.

He added the CBCP is worried about the workers’ well-being, saying their detention in Camp Capinpin, a military camp in Tanay, Rizal, makes them vulnerable to abuses, torture, threats and intimidation.

“Sustained exposure to psychosomatic strains may eventually break the fortitude and resistance of the Morong 43 into admitting under duress the accusations made against them," he said.

Bishops to AFP: Respect rights of ‘Morong 43’ - Nation - GMANews.TV - Official Website of GMA News and Public Affairs - Latest Philippine News

Sunday, April 04, 2010

Tuloy pa rin ang Kalbaryo sa PGH Dahil sa Pang-aabuso sa Kapangyarihan ng Administrasyong Roman

Ika-4 Abril 2010

Sa pagdiriwang natin ngayong araw ng Pasko ng Pagkabuhay, nakakalungkot na tayo sa Philipppine General Hospital (PGH) at sa University of the Philippines (UP) sa pangkalahatan ay nababalot pa rin ng agam-agam at lungkot. Ang pagtanggal ng representasyon ng mga estudyante sa UP-Board of Regents, ang pagtanggal ng nakaupong PGH Director ng walang due process, ang pagpapatupad ng mga polisiya ng walang pag-uusap ng mga kinaukulan, ay ilan lamang sa mga mapang-api at pang-aabuso sa poder na isinagawa ng Administrasyong Roman na direktang sumisira sa reputasyon ng ating pamantasan at paglabag sa mga demokratikong prinsipyo na pinanday ng mga lider estudyante at mga patriyotikong kaguruan ng pamantasan may ilang henerasyon na ang nakaraan. Ang pinagpipitagang pamanang ito ay hindi natin kailan man hahayaang kalimutan at tanggalin ng isang Presidente lamang. Sa isang kumunidad, lalo pa’t pang-akademya, ang anumang tahakin nito ay naayon sa pangkalahatang pagpapasya, hindi ng iilan, at hindi ng Administrasyon lamang.

Kayat, kasabay ng mass leave ng mga PGH consultant/doktor, ang All UP Workers Union ay nanawagan ng picket-vigil ng mga kawani, kasama ang mga kaguruan at estudyante simula ng Lunes, ika-5 ng Abril 2010, sa pasukan ng PGH Main Lobby upang ipahayag at idiin ang pagkondena sa mali at abusadong pamamalakad ng Administrasyong Roman.

Mariin din nating kinukondena ang mga pananakot na ginagawa ng huwad na Direktor Domingo ng PGH tulad ng inilabas na Memorandum No. 2010-24 at ng CSC MC No. 6 s. 1987. Nais nating linawin na ang kilos protesta ng mga kawani ng UP-PGH at mga estudyante ay hindi isang strike kundi isang paggampan ng malayang pamamahayag na ginagantiya sa ilalim ng ating Saligang Batas (Sec. 4, Art. III). Wala ring mangyayaring temporary stoppage o disruption of public service dahil marami namang pasukan at labasan ang ospital.

Ang unyon ay nanawagan sa ating mga pasyente at sa publiko ng inyong pang-unawa, hindi po namin inaabandona ang aming simumpaang tungkuling maglingkod sa Sambayanan, ito ay temporaryong sagabal lamang upang idiin ang aming protesta.

Nanawagan din tayo sa ating kapwa kawani, tayo ay magkaisa, huwag nating hayaang magkawatak-watak ang ating hanay dahil sa pamumulitika at pang-aabuso sa poder ng UP Board of Regents at ng Administrasyong Roman. Ang pananahimik sa mga pangyayaring ito sa ating ospital at pamantasan ay pagpapayag na rin sa kanilang pagsaula sa mga demokratikong prinsipyo, sa kasiguruhan sa trabaho at sa due process. Dapat nating isipin na kung nagagawa nilang tanggalin sa puwesto ng walang dahilan ang isang opisyal katulad ng PGH Director, mas lalo nila itong magagagawa sa mga ordinaryong kawani.

Nananawagan din tayo sa mga doktor, kaguruan at mga opisyal ng iba’t-ibang kolehiyo ng UP Manila, hindi po sapat ang mga palihim na suporta, kailangang hayagan tayong manindigan para sa katotohanan, hustisya at demokratikong prinsipyo.

Itaguyod ang mga demokratikong prinsipyo ng konsultasyon, representasyon, at pagkakapantay-pantay! Ipaglaban ang kaseguruhan sa trabaho at due process!

Ipaglaban ang karapatan ng mamamayan sa edukasyon at serbisyong pangkalusugan!

Sa Lunes, ika-5 ng Abril 2010, sumama sa Kilos-Protesta, 7:00-10:00 AM, at Picket-Vigil (buong araw), PGH Flagpole/Main Lobby.

IBALIK ANG TAMA! ANG U.P. AT P.G.H. PARA SA BAYAN!

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

PGH doctors go on mass leave - INQUIRER.net

MANILA, Philippines – Around 60 doctors of Philippine General Hospital (PGH), the teaching hospital of the University of the Philippines’ College of Medicine (UPCM), went on mass leave starting Monday to protest the removal of Dr. Jose Gonzales as PGH director.

Dr. Edelina dela Paz, who was among the doctors who went on mass leave, told the Inquirer that the hospital administration seemed to be in denial that there was a problem at the government facility.

“We want to show that all of the people here at PGH are disgruntled … There is something going on here,” she said.

The controversy at the hospital started in December when Gonzales was elected PGH director by the 11-member UP Board of Regents by a vote of 6-5.

The board, however, nullified the results after it voided the pro-Gonzales vote cast by student regent Charisse BaƱez on the ground that she was not enrolled at UP at the time the election was conducted.

On February 25, the board held another election which led to Domingo being named as PGH director.

In a statement, the 60 doctors said they decided to take a mass leave of absence starting yesterday “to express our anger and dismay over the oppression and dubious removal from office of one of our own PGH doctors and to strongly protest the lack of democratic process in selecting our director.”

PGH doctors go on mass leave - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos

Monday, March 29, 2010

UP-PGH doctors announce mass leave in protest of new chief - INQUIRER.net

By Jeannette Andrade
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 10:04:00 03/29/2010


MANILA, Philippines—Doctors, health workers, and students of the University of the Philippines-Philippine General Hospital staged a protest action during the flag-raising ceremony on Monday.

They also announced a doctors' mass leave to protest the removal of the hospital head and the installation of the new PGH chief.

The move is to protest the ouster of Dr. Jose Gonzales as PGH director.

The protesters covered the Oblation statue with a black cloth to condemn the administration's "blatant disregard of the democratic processes" at the UP-PGH.

UP-PGH doctors announce mass leave in protest of new chief - INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos

Saturday, March 27, 2010

LEAD: 3 foreigners overcome language barriers, pass national nurse exam

Japan, a rapidly aging society, began accepting foreign nurses and caregivers in 2008 due to domestic labor shortages in medical and nursing service fields.

Foreign nurses are required to return to their home countries if they fail to pass Japan's nurse qualifying exam within three years. Caregivers also need to clear Japan's qualifying exam within four years.

None of the foreign nurses passed last year's national exams held in February as kanji characters and technical terms used in the exam are thought to pose a high hurdle for foreign nurses.

LEAD: 3 foreigners overcome language barriers, pass national nurse exam+

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Hindi Magiging Mabuti ang Kasaysayan*

ni: Rolando Tolentino
Today at 9:16pm

Hindi naman ito usaping personal. Mabuting makitungo si Emerlinda Roman, pangulo ng Unibersidad ng Pilipinas. Makwento ito, at kahit paulit-ulit ang kwento sa iba’t ibang pagkakataon, buhay na buhay pa rin ang kwento. Noong Chancellor pa ito ng UP Diliman, decisive ito kapag may itinanong o hiniling ang unit.

Kaya nakakalungkot isipin na ang sentenaryong pangulo ng UP, ang unang babaeng pangulo nito, ay hindi paborableng huhusgahan ng kasaysayan. Hindi kakatwa na sa dulo ng termino nito bumulwak ang mga isyu, pawang pahiwatig sa kalidad o kawalan nito ng demokratikong governance sa unibersidad.

Dati rati pa nga ay kasama si Roman sa pagtutol sa CPDP (Commonwealth Property Development Plan) ng nauna nang presidente Emil Javier. Gayon naman pala, ang pinakamalaking proyekto ng pribatisasyon, ang UP-Ayalaland Technohub ay maisasakatuparan sa termino ni Roman sa mismong sityo ng CPDP.

Ang walang dangal na pagpataw ng 300 porsyentong pagtaas ng matrikula ay naganap din sa watch ni Roman. Sa isang desisyong itinago sa mga nagproprotestang komunidad, naetsapwera ni Roman ang dakilang misyon ng UP na bigyan ng pinakakalidad na tertiaryong edukasyon ang pinaka-deserving at mahihirap na estudyante.

Dagdag pa sa tiwaling pamamalakad ni Roman, ang malawakang subkontraktuwalisasyon ng mga serbisyo, pagpasok ng unibersidad sa mga kwestiyonableng kasunduan sa pribadong entidad, pagpapalakad ng Board of Regents, ang pinakamataas na policy-making body ng UP, na expired na ang termino ng tatlong Malacanang appointees, at matapos madiskubre ito, nang walang konsultasyon sa kanyang constituency, nirekomendang magkaroon ng full term pa ang mga ito.

Dahil sa sistematikong kawalan ng konsultasyon ni Roman, bumuyanyang ang bigat ng kanyang plano’t aksyon. Tinanggal ang rehente ng mga estudyante, tinanggal ang nahirang nang direktor ng Philippine General Hospital (PGH), inuluklok muli ang Chancellor ng UP Mindanao nang hindi tinutugunan ang mga komento ng Commission ng Audit hinggil sa inagurasyon nito, at iba pa.

Marami nang presidente ang UP. Marami ang makasaysayang pamumuno dahil sa ginawang Filipinisasyon ng unibersidad at sa termino ni S.P. Lopez, ang demokratikong konsultasyon na nauwi sa pagproprotekta nito sa mga lumahok sa Diliman Commune laban sa militar ni Marcos.

Ang di-demokratikong pamamalakad ni Roman ay sarili niyang kagagawan. Sinasabi niyang maliit na pumpon ng nagproprotesta lamang ang nasa Quezon Hall. Tunay na ngang nasa ivory tower si Roman. Wala na itong interes na makinig, itinatatwa na niya ang radikal na tradisyon ng unibersidad na naghirang sa kanya bilang sentenaryong pangulo.

At hindi ito kataka-taka para sa “reyna ng komersyalisasyon.” Pinindeho ni Roman ang kasaysayan ng UP sa poder ng negosyo at reaksyonaryong estado. Hindi hiwalay ang kinikilos ni Roman sa neoliberalismo at fasismo ni Gloria Arroyo, ang napagtagumpayan niyang i-bypass dahil nakakolekta ng bilang ng boto si Roman mula sa mga rehenteng niluklok ni Arroyo.

Hindi naman pala sila magkaiba. Magkahalintulad ang kanilang bisyon sa isang sitwasyon limitado ang resources at may engrandeng bisyon na maging globally competitive ang kanilang pinaghaharian: papasukin ang negosyo, supilin ang demokratikong proseso, buwagin ang natitirang espasyo ng demokratikong karapatan. Ang resulta ay ang pamamayani ng kultura ng impunity.

Walang takot sa parusa si Roman o si Arroyo, walang remorse sa pinaggagagawa kahit natitiyak na natitinag din ito sa ilang beses na paghiyaw na “Roman resign!” ng mga nagproprotesta. Sino ang hindi? Dagdag pa ito sa kanyang makasaysayang panunungkulan: sentenaryong presidente, unang babaeng pangulo, at unang pinanawagan magbitiw na sa panunungkulan?

Na pati ang fasistang Chancellor ng UP Los Banos ay nahawahan na ng kulturang ito, walang takot na naghahari at nananakot sa kanyang kampus? Pati ang iba pang hinirang ni Roman na maging reservoir ng kapangyarihan niya, kasama na ang midnight appointments ng tatlong rehente ng Malacanang, ay namamayagpag sa kanilang kingdom come.

Tulad ni Arroyo, si Roman ay hindi rin natatakot maparusahan, hindi rin bibitiw sa kapangyarihan, kaya ang kasaysayan ang huhusga sa kanila. At tulad ng mga linya sa puntod, dito nakahimlay ang empire ni Roman, magarang monumento pero mabilis na naaagnas na, tulad ng maraming naghari nang may pag-iimbot, naglilingkod sa makauring interes ng negosyo at gobyerno.

Nabigwasan na ng progresibong kilusan sa unibersidad ang akala ay toreng pinagtitirikan ng kapangyarihan ng empire ni Roman. Mula sa kanyang posisyon, di na lamang alapaap ng sariling kapangyarihan ang natatanaw. Nasira na ang view ng mga graffiti at nagproprotestang komunidad.

* This article was written after a successful protest action today, participated by students, faculty and staff in front of Quezon Hall thereby preventing the holding of another Board of Regents meeting without the participation of a Student Regent

A Violative Verdict, A Denial of Justice

Health Alliance for Democracy (HEAD)
24 March 2010


Statement on the Court of Appeals Decision to Dismiss the Writ of
Habeas Corpus Petition of the 43 Illegally Detained Health Workers


When laws are used to subvert justice, what is left for the people to do?

The decision of the Court of Appeals Special Division of Five to dismiss the Writ of Habeas Corpus petition filed on behalf of the 43 health workers violates the most fundamental tenets of even the most token democracy.

The majority opinion, with its mechanical application of existing jurisprudence, has condoned the excesses of the State. Such act is erroneously predicated on the belief that “...the subsequent filing of criminal charges against the detainees cured whatever irregularities or infirmities were attendant to their arrest, even assuming arguendo that their warrantless arrest and detention were initially illegal.”

But since when does a “cure” cause more harm than good?

In contrast, the two dissenting opinions highlight what is at stake for Philippine society, particularly the attendant abuses that will reverberate due to the violative decision.

Justice Normandie Pizarro puts it succinctly as “in a habeas corpus as the one at bench, an inquiry to the legality of the proceedings...is necessarily called for as it is crucial in safeguarding the constitutional rights of the detainees...the paramount consideration...should be the respect for the majesty of the law, springing forth from our respect in the constitutionally-guaranteed rights of the people.”

Similarly, Justice Francisco Acosta waxes poetic with his ominous warning that “Allowing curative informations to justify illegal searches, arrests and detentions would definitely make every habeas corpus proceeding an exercise in futility, similar to a salt that has lost its taste. This is absolutely repugnant to the basic and primordial constitutional right to due process of law.”

Also cast into light is the abhorrent behavior of certain state prosecutors that reflect how the institution that should be a gatekeeper of justice has degenerated into the Department of Injustice under the current dispensation. Again, quoting Justice Pizarro, “Clearly, what the inquest officer should have done was to recommend to the Chief Prosecutor the immediate release of the persons who were arrested.”

Thus, it is not just a re-examination of the Ilagan doctrine that is required. We must likewise review the attitude of the courts, its officers, and the magistrates, upon whom much is expected when neither the executive nor the legislative branches of government are doing enough to protect the people.

That the Courts put more emphasis on process than on substance, on the letter of the law rather than on the spirit of the law, removes whatever real remedies are left for the people.

Worse, magistrates who perfunctorily perform their duties without weighing the issues at bar are no mere Pilates washing their hands. They become witting instruments of the fascist Arroyo regime. They perpetuate as legacy the vestiges, the abuses, and the violence of Marcos’ martial rule, all of which have been embraced by Mrs. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

It is therefore now that the system, rather than just its processes, that the people must judge. It is now more than ever that the people should seek and strive for meaningful change. A system that denounces its own sanctified rights and diminishes to naught all remedial measures is a system that will fester at the expense of its people.

This cannot be allowed to continue. Together, we must reclaim this nation and attain genuine freedom and democracy. We must build a society where there is equity, where rights are enjoyed, and where laws serve the rendering of justice.

We must begin now. Free the 43 health workers!

Dr. Geneve E. Rivera
Secretary-General, 0920 460 3712

Dr. Gene Alzona Nisperos
Vice-Chair, 0927 483 2325

Dr. Darby S. Santiago
Chair, 0927 473 7700