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In Proposals, ILO Puts Burden of Respecting Workers’ Rights on Arroyo Regime

In Proposals, ILO Puts Burden of Respecting Workers’ Rights on Arroyo Regime

By MARYA SALAMAT
A high-level team of the UN’s International Labor Organization has proposed, among others, trainings and "continuing education" for the Philippine police, military, the judiciary and the labor department on how to respect union rights and uphold labor laws.
Sidebar: Responses to ILO High-Level Mission

Poor Are Worst Hit by Ondoy; Inept Leadership Makes Them Suffer Even More

Poor Are Worst Hit by Ondoy; Inept Leadership Makes Them Suffer Even More

By CARLOS H. CONDE
A disaster-prone country like the Philippines should by now be a nation of experts on calamities and how to deal with them. But, as Ondoy has shown, Filipinos are almost always caught unawares. And often, the high cost of these calamities are caused not so much by lack of knowledge or resources as by poor governance.

In Surigao and Caraga Region, a Brutal Push for Investments

In Surigao and Caraga Region, a Brutal Push for Investments

By ALEXANDER MARTIN REMOLLINO
Far from a counter-insurgency operation, the massive militarization and dislocation of communities in Surigao del Sur and the Caraga region had more to do with protecting business interests, primarily mining and energy investments. Although there is nothing particularly new in all this, the Arroyo regime had actually taken the extra step to ensure that the military would act as veritable security guards of these companies.

For the Philippines’s Tribal Folk, a Constant War Against ‘Development Aggression’

For the Philippines’s Tribal Folk, a Constant War Against ‘Development Aggression’

By RONALYN V. OLEA
While the right of indigenous peoples to their ancestral land is recognized by international agreements and conventions, indigenous peoples in the Philippines are relentlessly being driven away by mining, tourism and other so-called development projects. In Zambales alone, more than 70 mining firms are now operating, with some preventing the Aetas from entering what used to be their land.

Under the Gun: Lumad School Rises Amid Conflict, Military Atrocities

Under the Gun: Lumad School Rises Amid Conflict, Military Atrocities

Special Report | Last of Three Parts Even in times of crisis and conflict, Alcadev, the nonformal school for tribal children in Surigao del Sur, carries on with its mission. Indeed, the recent militarization in Surigao that resulted in massive displacements of Lumad residents proved to be quite a learning experience for the students, if only it weren’t so traumatic.

Under the Gun: School Helps Build Lumad Communities — to Military’s Consternation

Under the Gun: School Helps Build Lumad Communities — to Military’s Consternation

Special Report | Second of Three Parts A significant impact of an Alcadev education is that it “bridges the knowledge between students and parents.” It thus helps the development of Lumad communities. But the military is suspicious, branding the school and what it does as communist, harassing not just the teachers and students but its foreign supporters and visitors as well.

Under the Gun: School for Tribal Children in Surigao Bears Brunt of Militarization

Under the Gun: School for Tribal Children in Surigao Bears Brunt of Militarization

Special Report | First of Three Parts A non-formal school in Surigao del Sur has shown how education serves as a tool to unite and develop Lumad communities. Now, amid the evacuation by Manobo villages triggered by the presence of soldiers, the school is being targeted by the military, claiming that it is an “NPA school.”

Despite Arroyo Order Cutting Some Prices, Drugs, Medicines Will Remain Expensive

Despite Arroyo Order Cutting Some Prices, Drugs, Medicines Will Remain Expensive

Even if seriously implemented, the Cheaper Medicines Law would still fail to bring down the prices of medicines because it did not break “the monopoly control of transnational corporations on all aspects” of the drug industry. This monopoly is the main reason why drug prices in the Philippines are among the highest in Asia.

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