Sikreto sa Tagumpay ng Kabataan Partylist

kabcon5*Mensaheng binigkas sa pambansang kumbensiyon ng Kabataan Partylist noong Setyembre 28, 2015

Natutuwa po ako at mukhang maraming bagong mukha sa araw na ito; ibig sabihin, bukod sa tumanda at gumradweyt na ang aming batch, ay patuloy ang pagdami ng kasapian ng Kabataan Partylist (KPL).

Natutuwa din po ako na makita ngayong araw ang mga pamilyar na mukha at pangalan; mga baguhan noon sa KPL na nanatili at piniling maging aktibo sa sektor ng kabataan. Ilan sa kanila sa Facebook ko na lang nakikita pero marami din sa kanila ay nakakasama natin sa iba’t ibang laban dito sa Kamaynilaan at iba pang rehiyon ng bansa.

Nagsimula po tayo noon na iilan lang ang tsapter, ang mga coordinator natin ay nangangapa sa pagpapagana ng isang partylist, wala tayong rekurso, at medyo mahirap ikampanya ang isang partylist na hindi kilala at wala pang rekord sa Kongreso.

Minsan nagpatawag tayo ng Kabataan Party meeting sa Negros, ang dumating ay mga bata, kasi ang ibig sabihin ng kabataan dun ay bata, kaya akala nila ang Kabataan Party ay ‘children’s party’. Minsan isang oras nagpapaliwanag kung bakit kailangang iboto ang KPL, pagkatapos sa open forum, itatanong ang apelyido ng ating nominee para ilalagay daw sa balota. May mga balotang nasayang kasi ang nakashade ay hindi lang Kabataan kundi pati Bayan Muna, Anakpawis, at Gabriela.

Ibang-iba talaga ang ating partylist: Saan ka nakakita na ang watcher ay walang bayad? Ang mga kampanyador ay teenager at karamihan ng coordinator sa siyudad, probinsiya at rehiyon ay hindi lalagpas sa edad na 23. Yung partylist ng mayayaman, nagbabayad ng boto, namimigay ng pagkain at regalo. Tayo, tayo minsan ang binabayaran ng botante kasi naaawa sa atin, pinapakain tayo ng mga masa sa komunidad, nililibre tayo ng mga estudyanteng nirerekrut natin, at tanging polyeto/leaflet/brochure ang ating pinamamahagi.

Bakit ba tayo nananalo? Siyempre masisipag ang mga KPL members and volunteers. Buong araw kung mangampanya tapos pag-uwi tuloy ang social media campaigning. Gigising ng madaling araw para magdikit ng poster.

Wala naman tayong secret formula. Yung iba kasi, nangangampanya para magkaposisyon lang, magkapera, rumaket, maging bahagi ng elitistang kongreso. Pero tayo, lumalahok tayo sa halalan kasi may pinaglalaban tayong adyenda. Adyenda ng kabataan adyenda ng mamamayan, adyenda para sa pagbabago. At manalo man o matalo, tuloy ang laban. Parang student council lang di ba, pero ibang level na ito, kasi sa Kongreso na ang labanan at ang sakop ay buong bansa.

Binabati ko ang lahat ng bumubuo ngayon sa KPL mula sa pamunuan hanggang sa mga bagong miyembro. Sa ngalan ng KPL alumni, salamat at patuloy ninyong tinataguyod ang simulain ng ating partylist. Salamat at patuloy ang paglawak ng ating naaabot at paglago ng ating prestihiyo.

Siyempre hindi kayo pwedeng tumanda sa KPL, kaya nga kabataan di ba, pero sana, at ito ang iniiwan kong munting hamon sa inyo, tumanda kayo habang pinaglilingkuran ang sambayanan; magkaedad kayo habang patuloy na kumikilos para sa pagbabago.

Mga apo ni Bonifacio, mga apo ni Heneral Luna, mga anak at katuwang ng Kabataang Makabayan, mabuhay kayo! Sulong sa mas marami pang tagumpay!

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Malaysia’s New National Security Law: A Step Toward Dictatorship?

Written for The Diplomat

Malaysia’s parliament swiftly approved the proposed National Security Council Bill despite the appeal of the opposition to conduct more debates and consultations about the measure.

The bill, which was just introduced on December 1, was immediately tabled for deliberation despite the admission of the ruling party that there was no internal threat or terror alert in the country.

Even if there is a need to establish the legal framework for the safeguarding of the country’s security, opponents contend that Malaysia already has several existing laws that can be used by authorities such as the Internal Security Act, Security Offenses (Special Measures) Act of 2012 and the Prevention of Terrorism Act which was passed early this year.

The 33-page NSC bill itself proposes the establishment of a National Security Council headed by the prime minister. This body, composed of eight high ranking Cabinet members and military officers, will be given the power to “formulate policies and strategic measures on national security, including sovereignty, territorial integrity, defense, sociopolitical stability, economic stability, strategic resources, national unity and other interests relating to national security.”

There is no clear definition of what constitutes national security, which has significant implications for how the bill is enforced. For instance, since the document mentions ‘socio-political stability’, does it mean the massive anti-government Bersih rally can be considered a threat to national security?

The bill allows the prime minister to declare any area in the country as part of a so-called ‘security area’. A director of operations in the security area will be appointed who can issue a curfew order. In addition, the director of operations has “the power to do all things necessary or expedient for or in connection with the performance of his duties in the security area.”

Some of the specified powers of the director include the authority to order warrant-less arrests, block any vehicle and persons in the security area from accessing roads and waterways, and seize property or destroy assets believed to be in the interest of national security. The National Security Council can also appoint an unlimited number of officers to implement the law in the security area.

Yet the bill raises issues of accountability since those implementing the law are immune from prosecution.

“No prosecution for an offence under this Act shall be instituted except by, or with the written consent, of the public prosecutor,” the bill states.

Steven Thiru, president of the Malaysian Bar, called the bill “an insidious piece of legislation that confers and concentrates vast executive powers in a newly created statutory body called the National Security Council.” He added that the bill grants the prime minister with emergency powers which were already repealed by the parliament in 2011.

According to the Lawyers for Liberty group, the bill is “extremely vague, arbitrary and wide and further obliges secrecy – a surefire recipe for abuse of power and human rights. Far from establishing matters concerning national security, the bill is more akin to establishing a dictatorship rule.”

Human rights group Suara Rakyat asserted that “the only reason why the Government of Malaysia wish to implement this legislation is to provide its leaders with unparalleled power to control the country and silence all form of dissent with violence and threat of violence.”

Veteran lawmaker Lim Kit Siang questioned the rush to approve the measure.

“It is an insult to the intelligence of Pakatan Harapan Members of Parliament and discerning members of the public to expect them to behave like unthinking and obedient robots or digits to give blank cheque support to whatever is decided by the Cabinet,” he wrote on his blog.

Notably, criticisms of the law do not question the right of the Malaysian government to implement measures for the protection of its citizens. Rather, the issue is why it needs the new bill at all: critics contend that the country has more than enough ‘draconian’ laws to deter criminal or terrorist acts.

If it is indeed true that the National Security Council Bill is unnecessary, then what is its purpose other than to give vast and broad powers to law enforcers and the prime minister? Irrespective of how one answers that question, the government also clearly missed the opportunity to explain its position when it quickly moved to approve the measure instead of consulting stakeholders about the proposed law.

International Court Revisits Indonesia’s 1965 Mass Killings

Written for The Diplomat

An international people’s tribunal gathered testimonies and other evidence linking the Indonesian government to the anti-communist mass killings in 1965. The tribunal was held from November 10 to 13 in The Hague.

The mass killings targeted suspected members and sympathizers of the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI). The purge killed at least half a million people but some human rights groups believe the number of victims could be more than a million. The wave of violence lasted for several months between 1965 and 1966 but state forces continued to arrest, harass, and persecute hundreds of thousands of suspected communists into the early 1970s.

In September 1965, the PKI was accused of brutally killing high-ranking army generals in a failed coup. This prompted the military to retaliate. An army officer, Suharto, became president during this period and remained in power until 1998. Suharto banned all attempts to probe the 1965 killings. He has consistently blamed the communists for starting the conflict in 1965.

It was only after the resignation of Suharto that witnesses and survivors started to speak out about the events of 1965 and beyond. For many years, it was alleged that majority who suffered during the anti-communist witch hunt were innocent civilians. Many were tortured and detained without trial because of mere suspicion that they were friends or relatives of PKI members. More than 10,000 individuals were banished to the remote island of Buru and Plantungan in Central Java. Women and children endured sexual violence and discrimination for many years. Some detainees were subjected to forced labor.

The military has denied committing these crimes over the past 50 years. It has refused to acknowledge that atrocities were done against ordinary citizens. Its official version of history is to depict the PKI as a monstrous and anti-democratic political force which has to be outlawed and decisively defeated in order to save the Indonesian republic. Some army commanders were even declared heroes for leading the anti-communist campaign in the 1960s.

The strong influence of Suharto and the military in the post-1998 era has prevented a full investigation of what really happened in 1965.

Some expected President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo to heal the wounds of the past by apologizing to the victims of military abuse and other forms of human rights violations. After all, he has no direct ties to Suharto and one of his election programs centered around promoting national reconciliation.

But Jokowi backtracked on this commitment and ignored appeals to finally end the half-century of impunity with regard to the anti-communist hysteria in 1965.

The international people’s tribunal, therefore, is a political action aimed at making the Indonesian government accountable for the alleged mass crimes it committed in 1965. It also seeks to “break down the vicious cycle of denial, distortion, taboo and secrecy” about the 1965 killings.

The tribunal involved 16 witnesses, six international prosecutors and seven judges. The Indonesian government faced a nine-count indictment of crimes including mass murder, torture, sexual abuse, enslavement, enforced evictions, persecution, and enforced disappearances.

Since it is not a criminal court, it has no power to provide justice and compensation to victims. Nonetheless, it is a significant political process to find out the truth about a dark episode in Indonesia’s modern history.

As Chief Prosecutor Todung Mulya Lubis said in his opening statement, the tribunal is an “absolute necessity” so that the “truth is told in its entirety, honestly and sincerely.”

“The wounds and pain will never be healed without truth telling,” he added.

And even if the tribunal has no legal standing in Indonesia, the prosecutors are confident that it can lead to political victories in the future.

“We truly believe that it will open the door for sincere apologies; for reparations and for rehabilitation of those who are discriminated until today,” they asserted in their closing statement.

After hearing the stories of survivors and studying the documents submitted by the prosecution team, the judges found the Indonesian government “responsible in the commission of such crimes against humanity as the chain of command was organized from top to bottom of the institutional bodies.”

The tribunal also tackled the “complicity” of the governments of the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia in the commission of the mass crimes in 1965. A witness alleged that these governments “provided radio-communication equipment in order to facilitate communication between the troops and delivered small arms and money. They also provided lists of alleged PKI members to the Indonesian authorities.”

As expected, the Indonesian government dismissed the international tribunal as a farce. It reminded the participants that Indonesia is a sovereign nation with a functioning legal system. It also insisted that President Jokowi will not apologize for the actions of the army in 1965. Some hardliners even branded the Indonesian participants as traitors and communists.

But if the government is looking for more solid evidence about the systematic and massive abuses of the army in 1965, it can read the 2012 report of the National Human Rights Commission of Indonesia which spent four years interviewing 349 witnesses and victims of the 1965 purge. The commission, a government agency, recommended the prosecution of army officials involved in the killings. More importantly, it found “adequate initial evidence” that state forces committed various crimes against humanity.

Sadly but not surprisingly, the recommendations of the commission were not acted upon by the government.

President Jokowi should remember his election pledge to promote national reconciliation. His government should reconsider its decision to ignore the findings of the human rights commission and the international people’s tribunal.

The survivors of the 1965 killings cannot wait for another 50 years to receive justice from the government.

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Politics of Memory: What 1965 Means in Southeast Asia

Written for The Diplomat

The year 1965 is politically significant in several Southeast Asian countries: Singapore became an independent nation, Ferdinand Marcos was elected president of the Philippines, and an anti-communist purge killed at least half a million people in Indonesia.

Singapore separated from the Malaysian Federation and subsequently, an independent government was established led by Lee Kuan Yew. Singapore under the leadership of Lee Kuan Yew became one of the most vibrant economies in the world. Its transformation from a small Third World city state into a prosperous nation with high living standards is one of the memorable development stories of the past century.

While Singapore was learning the ways of nationhood, Indonesia in 1965 was suddenly besieged by violent forces which led to the rise of Suharto. According to the army, it was only forced to retaliate when communists attacked government officials. But it was a massive retaliation that led unlawful killings of innocent civilians and suspected communist sympathizers. Hundreds of thousands were arrested, tortured, and condemned to forced labor even if their only crime was that they were relatives of communists.

The events in 1965 and their tragic aftermath were kept hidden from the public and the international community by Suharto and the military. It was only after Suharto fell from power in 1998 that witnesses and survivors came forward to share their stories. In 2012, Indonesia’s human rights commission finally declared that the army is guilty of committing human rights abuses in 1965.

While the power struggle in Indonesia led to a bloody confrontation between competing forces in 1965, the Philippines held a peaceful election during the same year. The incumbent president was defeated by Marcos who remained in power until 1986. Marcos declared martial law in 1972 to quell a rising communist insurgency but many believe this was only a ruse to extend his term. The Philippines under martial law was a dark period in the country’s history. The political opposition and other critics of Marcos were detained while soldiers were accused of committing gross human rights violations. Similar to Indonesia’s wave of killings between 1965 and 1966, many victims of martial law were suspected communists or sympathizers of the underground movement.

Fifty years later, the events of 1965 continue to influence contemporary politics in Singapore, Indonesia, and the Philippines.

Singapore held a massive and festive celebration to mark its 50th founding year. Singaporeans became nostalgic and proud of the achievements they made in the past half century. Millions paid their last respects to Lee Kuan Yew who passed away last March. There was an evident surge of patriotism in the country which could be a factor why the ruling party got a landslide victory in the election held a few days after Singapore’s 50th Foundation Day. Perhaps many voters were euphoric over Singapore’s rise as a global city and this sentiment benefited the party which has ruled the country from the very beginning despite the growing clamor for political reforms.

If Singapore is keen on remembering its humble origins, Indonesia is hesitant to find out what really happened during the reign of terror in 1965. There were expectations that President Jokowi would initiate steps to address the unresolved issues surrounding the 1965 tragedy. Last August, he proposed the formation of a reconciliation commission. But the country’s major political parties and the military rejected the idea and warned that it could spark a new conflict. Early this month, a literary festival aimed at sharing stories of people who survived the 1965 massacre was shelved due to pressure from the government.

Suharto may be dead, but his subordinates are still influential. That explains why it is extremely difficult to persuade the government to establish the truth about the events surrounding 1965.

Fortunately, an International People’s Tribunal is being organized next month in The Hague to determine the accountability of the Indonesian government in relation to the mass killings in 1965.

In the Philippines, Marcos remains a divisive figure. Three decades after his ouster, the Philippines is still an underdeveloped nation. His critics blame him for the problems besetting the country while his supporters continue to assert that removing him from power proved more costly to the nation. Even Marcos’ heirs hold elected positions today: his wife is a representative in Congress, his eldest daughter is a provincial governor, and his only son and namesake is an incumbent senator who is running for vice president in next year’s election.

The junior Marcos claims that Filipinos have already moved on and that martial law is no longer an issue that can be invoked against his family.

Fifty years after Marcos became president, his family and supporters are aggressively seeking to defend his legacy. They wanted to revise history’s verdict on Marcos and his martial law regime to boost the electoral chances of Marcos’ son.

There are many uses of history: it can be celebrated to unite a country (Singapore), it can be repressed to hide the truth (Indonesia), or it can be amended to influence the future (Philippines). This is politics as usual. But it should not distract us from pursuing the essential goals of seeking out the truth and fighting for justice.

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Time For Southeast Asia to Address its Climate Problem

Written for The Diplomat

Though transboundary haze pollution and the El Niño phenomenon are often reported these days across Southeast Asia, these issues deserve greater attention from regional leaders.

These are no longer national problems that local politicians can easily address through rhetoric; the situation already demands a stronger action which can be effectively realized through regional cooperation.

The haze has become an annual problem involving Indonesia, Singapore, and Malaysia. This year, the haze is darker and more hazardous than ever; but this time it has reached the skies of south Thailand and some parts of southern Mindanao in the Philippines.

The ‘ground zero’ of the disaster is in Indonesia where forest burning and land clearing operations have worsened the air pollution levels across the region. But equally to blame are Malaysian and Singaporean companies which are financing the expansion of rubber and palm oil plantations in Indonesia.

Some are also insisting that small farmers should be probed for causing the forest fires in western Indonesia. But while traditional farm practices should be reviewed, the more essential issue is the unsustainable production being pursued by large plantation companies. Besides, traditional farming has existed for decades if not hundreds of years without generating a massive haze pollution across borders.

The haze is a reminder for regional leaders to think of innovative solutions to address an old problem. Offers of financial and technical assistance must be welcomed, regional economic initiatives must be expanded, and cross-boundary interventions must be given a chance to work.

The haze should also alert the public about the direct link between human activities and environmental degradation. There’s nothing mysterious about the haze: stop the forest burning to bring back a clearer sky and cleaner air.

But this requires more than just enforcing of environment laws. Countries must be persuaded to review their economic models and growth targets, the business sector must be enticed to adopt a sustainable production output, and consumers must be informed to buy less and to choose only the products that do not harm the environment.

As Southeast Asian countries prepare to integrate their respective economies, they should also reconsider the impact of this undertaking on the region’s ecological integrity. Should traditional economic indicators such as high production levels, profitability, and expanding trade surplus trump other concerns such as environmental sustainability?

How Southeast Asia will address the haze issue could determine the future of the region in terms of its viability as a developing bloc of livable nations.

Another concern requiring regional discussion and action is the recurring El Niño or the prolonged drought affecting the lives of millions of farmers. El Niño is worse and deadlier than haze, but it is less visible and evokes a quieter indignation from urban residents.

Before Typhoon Koppu devastated northern Philippines last weekend, farmers there have been reeling from the harsh impact of El Niño in recent months. During his weekly speeches aired on national television, Thailand Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha never forgets to remind his rural constituency to support state programs on irrigation and other measures in response to the El Niño which is unusually more intense this year.

Southeast Asia may be more famous because of its cosmopolitan cities such as Singapore, Bangkok, and Kuala Lumpur or its exotic beach destinations in Phuket, Bali, and Palawan; but this rising region is primarily an agglomeration of agricultural economies. El Niño affects not just the region’s food security and the export of food crops, but also the backbone of its economy. It is particularly ruinous to ordinary farmers. As El Niño stalks Southeast Asia, the region’s economic prospects also falters.

El Niño should lead us to rethink the relevance of several trade agreements that some Southeast Asian governments are negotiating with other bigger and more developed countries. Should Southeast Asia first address the impact of El Niño as a regional formation? Should this inspire the implementation of a bold climate action that will benefit all economies in the region?

In relation to the trade agreements concocted by richer countries, the more crucial issue to ask is whether these economic instruments will uplift the lives of farmers who are already suffering from El Niño, or whether the farmers will lose from unfair trade competition.

The haze and El Niño are more than just minor concerns affecting the environment. They are not just an inconvenience. They destroy lives, weaken economies. and constitute a national security threat.

Choking from the haze and coping with El Niño, is it the right time for Southeast Asian counties to sign new and bold but divisive trade commitments?

Typhoon Haiyan Two Years Later: The Philippines is Still Recovering

Written for The Diplomat

Recovery continues to be slow two years after super typhoon Haiyan (known locally as Yolanda) devastated the central part of the Philippines.

To be sure, the failure to complete the rehabilitation process in Tacloban city and Leyte province, the ‘ground zero’ of the typhoon disaster, is seen by some as understandable considering the massive destruction left behind by Haiyan. To reiterate the extent of the damage, Haiyan affected 44 out of 80 provinces in the Philippines. It killed more than 6,000 people and cause more than $2 billion worth of property damage. It is reportedly the strongest typhoon in recorded history.

The government, for its part, has been defending its post-Haiyan relief efforts. A presidential spokesperson even bragged that the Philippines did better compared to the post-Hurricane Katrina performance of the United States government.

But critics have been citing official audit reports about the inefficient use of calamity funds and donations from other countries. They question the slow disbursement of funds intended for Haiyan survivors. They point out that thousands continue to live in temporary shelters or tent cities with inadequate services and livelihood opportunities. The government’s “Build Back Better” initiative is mocked as a program favoring big business at the expense of ordinary residents.

But the government has denied the accusation of underspending. It also countered the charge that it neglected the plight of Haiyan victims. Economic Planning Secretary Arsenio Balisacan insisted that the government is now “transitioning into the medium-term phase of recovery and rehabilitation efforts.”

However, Balisacan acknowledged that “reconstruction efforts were stymied by a whole set of serious policy and implementation issues.” As examples, he identified contradictory policies on procurement and land acquisition as well as the red tape involved in completing certain projects.

“We learned that several national laws, policies, and practices have been getting in the way of resource mobilization and fund disbursement, and have been a major hindrance to project implementation,” he added.

Balisacan’s statement, released a few days before the two-year anniversary of Haiyan, reflected a more moderate assessment of the government’s post-Haiyan achievements. It highlighted the new infrastructure and other economic programs that benefited Haiyan-hit communities, but the statement also mentioned the cause of “implementation bottlenecks” that delayed the delivery of a comprehensive reform package for Haiyan victims.

What Balisacan did not say was that these bureaucratic weaknesses could have been easily addressed through decisive leadership by the national government.

The government of outgoing President Benigno Aquino III will be remembered for its success or failure to restore normalcy in the Eastern Visayas region. Naturally, it is going to be an election campaign issue that can be invoked by opposition candidates in the next few months.

Adding to the pressure is the global media attention that the Philippines faces as it prepares to host the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit this month. If journalists decide to visit Tacloban and report the real situation of the city, it will not be difficult for them to pinpoint the unfulfilled promises and incomplete projects of the administration.

For its part, the government hopes to lead a discussion during the APEC summit about the need for building economies that strengthen the disaster resiliency of countries in the Pacific Rim.

Meanwhile, the deadly impact of Haiyan in a small underdeveloped archipelagic country like the Philippines is expected to be shared once more by climate justice advocates at the Paris Climate Conference next month. Many activists are hoping that the specter of Haiyan will convince world leaders to come up with a more effective climate pact.

Two years after Haiyan made history and traumatized an entire nation, many continue to debate its consequences and the inaction or slow action of concerned agencies. But as bureaucrats, politicians, economists, and climate experts exchange notes on the lessons to be learned from Haiyan, let us not forget that the essential task is still to bring fast relief, real recovery, and progress in the lives of ordinary residents in the communities which have remained calamity areas up to this day.

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Huwag Maniwala sa Aldub: Ang Paglaban at Pag-ibig ay Laging Nasa Tamang Panahon

cauayan(Talumpating binigkas sa rehiyunal na kongreso ng College Editors Guild Cagayan Valley sa Isabela State University Cauayan noong Setyembre 10, 2015). Published by Bulatlat

Una sa lahat, salamat at andito kayo kahit may Aldub ngayon. Huwag gawing obvious ang pagsilip sa Aldub hashtag.

Pangalawa, salamat sa College Editors Guild para sa karangalan na maging keynote speaker. Saludo ako sa CEGP, matayog na sandigan ng kilusang kabataan sa bansa na patuloy ang paglaban hindi lamang para sa karapatang magpahayag kundi kasama rin ang demokratikong karapatan ng mamamayan.

Nagagalak akong makita kayo na aktibong kalahok sa pagtitipong ito. Ibig sabihin kasi may extra effort kayo na inilalaan para sa pag-aaral. Hindi naman lahat pinipiling maging bahagi ng student paper; hindi lahat nauunawaan ang halaga ng tinatawag natin sa akademya na extra curricular activity. Kung ako ang inyong tatanungin, at ako ay nagsasalita sa punto de bista ng isang guro, kasing halaga ng pormal na kurikulum o minsan nga higit na mabisang learning tool ang mga aktibidad sa labas ng klasrum. Kapag aktibo kayo sa mga ganitong samahan, lumalawak ang inyong network, nabubukas sa inyo ang maraming oportunidad, at nadadagdagan ang inyong praktikal na kaalaman sa maraming bagay.

Marahil ngayon ay napansin na ninyo ang inyong spesyal na status bilang mga mag-aaral sa kolehiyo. Sa ating bansa, mataas ang drop-out rate mula kinder, elementary, at hayskul. Ang problema natin ay hindi lamang ang maikling high school system kundi ang mas pundamental na usapin na marami ang hindi nakakatapos ng hayskul. Alam yan ng DepEd pero tinuloy pa rin nito ang pagpapatupad ng programang K-12, isang reporma na maaaring magpalubha sa halip na resolbahin ang krisis sa edukasyon. Kung hindi K-12 ano ang alternatibo? Ano ang ating isusulong?

Bigla kong naalala ang 1987 Constitution dahil nakasaad dito na dapat libre ang hayskul. Sa 1973 Constitution, nakalagay dun na elementary lang ang libre. Panahon na siguro upang isakatuparan ang matagal nang sinisigaw ng mga kabataan na libreng edukasyon kahit sa kolehiyo. Imposible? Sundin ang nakasulat sa konstitusyon na dapat ang pinakamataas na gastusin ng pamahalaan ay nakalaan sa edukasyon. Ayusin muna ang mga pangunahing problema sa batayang edukasyon tapos pag-usapan natin kung paano hakbang-hakbang na ipapasok ang mga nilalaman ng K-12.

Sana bago matapos ang pagtitipong ito ay maaari na kayong makapagbigay ng inyong sariling kasagutan sa mga tanong na ito: Bakit ba tayo nag-aaral? Bakit ba tayo nagsusulat?

Tila simple, napakasimpleng mga tanong, hindi ba? Pero sa totoo, hindi. Sabi ng mga nakakatanda, kailangang mag-aral para magkaroon ng magandang kinabukasan. Susi raw ang edukasyon para makuha natin ang trabahong ating inaasam. Tama. Subalit hindi ba ito makitid na pananaw? Bakit natin ililimita ang misyon ng edukasyon sa paghahanda sa atin kung paano magtrabaho sa hinaharap? Wala namang problema kung tuntungan ang edukasyon upang maabot ang ating mga pangarap pero bakit kailangang nasa unahan ang mga indibidwal na mithiin? Mainam sana kung ang pokus ng lahat, kung ang tinataguyod ng mga paaralan ay hindi indibidwalismo o kompetisyon kundi panlipunang kagalingan din.

Iwan muna natin ang usaping ito at babalikan natin ito mamaya. Samantala, pag-usapan natin ang pagsusulat.

Mayroon akong pagtingin na nasa peligro ang batayang kasanayan sa pagsusulat. At ang banta ay nanggagaling sa popular na teknolohiya na ang tawag natin ay Internet. Oo, maraming positibo ang mababanggit patungkol sa Internet – mabilis na komunikasyon, instant na palitan ng impormasyon – at marami pa itong potensiyal na pwedeng magamit sa pag-aaral; subalit dapat din nating kilalanin na may epekto ito na hindi nakakabuti.

Maaaring sabihin na lahat naman ng disruptive technology ay may ganitong katangian tulad ng mga pagbabagong idinulot ng libro, makinilya, at TV noon. Tama ulit. Subalit nasa maagang yugto pa lang tayo ng Internet at kaugnay na teknolohiya sa tinatawag nilang Knowledge o Information Economy. Ibig sabihin, mahalaga na matukoy agad natin ang mga binabagong gawi at aktitud ng Internet sa ating pang araw-araw na buhay upang maagap din tayong makapag-adjust o makahanap ng karampatang aksiyon o reaksiyon.

Bilang mga millennial o henerasyong nagkaisip sa panahong halos mainstream na ang paggamit ng smartphone, maaaring hindi na kakaiba sa inyo ang paggamit ng Internet o paglahok sa social media. Dapat nating maunawaan na lahat ito ay naging popular sa nakalipas na dalawang dekada lamang. Subalit sa maikling panahong ito, nagbunsod na ito ng maraming pagbabago sa mundo ng tao. Wala tayong kakulangan ng mga babasahing pumupuri sa IT; ang kailangan natin ay mga kritikal na talakayan hinggil dito.

Mayroon akong mga mungkahing paksa kung paano natin ilulugar ang mga pagbabagong ito sa distribusyon at pagdebelop ng kaalaman sa lipunan:

– Ang Internet bilang search, email, blog, social media at app o kung paano umusbong, yumabong, at naging bonggang plataporma ang Internet sa mundo. Kaugnay nito, ang social media bilang gatekeeper ng impormasyon. At ang susunod na default technology: paggamit ng apps na gagabay sa ating bawat pagkilos;
– Pagbasa sa panahon ng realtime, instant info o kung magiging mas prangka tayo: may nagbabasa pa ba o simpleng tumitingin na lang ng mga visual?;
– Ang bilis o instant ay pinagkakamali bilang totoo;
– Malikhaing pagsulat gamit ang 140 characters. Malikhain ba ito? Pagsulat ba ito?;
– Kailan kulang at sobra ang impormasyon? Bakit trending samantalang kay bilis naman makalimutan?;
– Totoo bang may diversity ng opinyon sa ating timeline?;
– Self-surveillance bilang bagong privacy;
– Fact checking bilang expertise ng lahat kaysa pagsusuri sa lipunan. Gusto ba nating tumingin sa paligid o mas hangad nating makita ng iba? Paano ang social responsibility kung abala ang marami sa self-representation?

Habang pinag-uusapan natin ang Internet, huwag nating kalimutan na malaking bahagi pa rin ng bansa ang hindi online. Ang tawag nila dito ay digital divide o digital exclusion. Ang mahirap ay higit na nagiging marginalized dahil sa mga serbisyo at impormasyong pwede lamang makuha gamit ang laptop o smartphone.

Sa tingin ko’y pwede na nating pag-ugnayin ang dalawang tanong na nabanggit ko kanina: Bakit ba tayo nag-aaral? Bakit ba tayo nagsusulat? Sa panahon na may Internet, nagbago na rin ba ang mga dahilan kung bakit tayo nag-aaral at nagsusulat?

Eto ang aking pagmumuni-muni sa mga tanong na yan: Ang pag-aaral at pagsusulat ay dapat nakaangkla sa paghahanap at pagtatanggol sa katotohanan. Ang katotohanan ng lipunan, ang katotohanan ng pagkikibaka para sa pagbabago. Ang katotohanan na susi para paglingkuran ang masa, ang inaapi, ang mga walang boses sa lipunan. Nag-aaral at nagsusulat tayo para sa kanila, para sa iba, para sa bayan, para sa katotohanan. At ang pagpanig natin sa katotohanan ay sumasalamin sa tunay na layunin ng pag-aaral: hubugin ang indibidwal na magkaroong ng dunong at puso para sa kapwa.

Kaya ang pag-aaral at pagsusulat ay dapat nagbibigay liwanag sa mga usaping kasangkot ang lahat. Hindi pag-aaral na nakabatay lamang sa teksbuk. Hindi pagbubuo ng kaalaman ayon sa tinakdang kahulugan ng mga nasa awtoridad. Dapat mapangahas na sinusulat natin ang mga usaping may kongkretong pakinabang o silbi sa mamamayan.

Halimbawa:

– Plataporma hindi porma sa halalang 2016. People’s agenda hindi politicians’ agenda sa kampanya;
– Climate change bilang malupit na realidad sa bansa;
– Nagpapatuloy na pagkasira ng kalikasan. Sino ang dapat magbayad pinsala? Kailangan bang wasakin ang yamang likas sa ngalan ng kaunlaran?;
– Bakit pinapaslang ang mga lumad sa Mindanao? Bakit may militarisasyon sa mga plantasyon at ancestral domain?;
– Labor export bilang tanikalang bumihag sa maraming pamilyang Pilipino;
– Lumalalang kahirapan, lumalaking agwat sa pagitan ng mayaman at mahirap, tumitinding pagsasamantala sa kanayunan. Bakit mahirap ang magsasaka at mangingisda?

May pagkakataon tayong palalimin ang pag-unawa sa mga problemang ito sa nalalapit na APEC Summit sa Pilipinas. Ipakita natin na hindi ramdam ng marami ang sinasabi ng pamahalaan na pag-unlad ng ekonomiya. Itama natin ang makaisang panig na ulat hinggil diumano sa kaunlarang tinatamasa ng marami sa rehimen ng daang matuwid.

Bilang campus press, mahalaga ang inyong papel sa pagpukaw sa atensiyon ng inyong komunidad sa mga usaping hindi nababalita, mga isyung ayaw pag-usapan, mga solusyon na minamarkahang radikal o imposible. Ginagawa tayong tangang consumer ng TV, kontrolado ng malaking negosyo ang mga pahayagan, ang Internet naman ay binabaha tayo ng mga spam at iba pang walang katuturan na libangan.

Samantalang ang campus press, wala itong pananagutan sa anumang interes maliban sa magbigay ng tamang impormasyon sa madla. Nawa’y ang mga pahina ng inyong mga pahayagan ay magbigay ng inspirasyon sa marami na pumanig sa katotohanan. Aanhin ang balitang pwede namang i-google. Kaya dapat may dagdag imbestigasyon, may komprehensibong pag-aaral, may pagsisikap isulat ang mga istoryang kailanman ay ihindi ilalabas ng malaking media, may pagsagot sa mga tanong na kailanman ay hindi mababasa sa mainstream.

Ang kumpetisyon ninyo ay hindi dyaryo ng ibang paaralan sa Cagayan Valley kundi ang lahat ng dyaryo sa mundo, lalo na kung mayroon kayong website. Kaya sana tangkain ninyong isulat ang sikreto ng mga kurakot at mapang-api sa Cagayan Valley. Ano ang mukha ng kahirapan sa rehiyon? Saan ang logging at mining plantations? May mga biktima ba ng human trafficking? Bakit walang tren sa bahaging ito ng Luzon? Kailangan natin ng mga whistleblower na may kredibilidad at pwede itong gampanan ng campus press. Kailangan natin ng mga ulat na magpapaalala sa atin na tayo ay may matapang at mayamang kultura.

Maaari ninyong isagot na napakabata pa ng inyong mga edad upang gawin ito. Huwag kayong pabebe. Kung kaya ng mga teenager na magvideo at maging YouTube sensation, kayang-kaya ninyo rin maging investigative reporter. Matuto tayo sa aral ng kasaysayan: hindi hadlang ang edad upang magkaroon ng makabuluhang ambag para sa pagbabago.

Ngayong buwan ng Setyembre ay ginugunita natin hindi lang ang deklarasyon ng Martial Law noong 1972 kundi kung paano rin ito nilabanan ng maraming kabataan hanggang mapatalsik ang diktador. Kung kaya nila, kayang-kaya ninyo rin. Oo, wala ng martial law pero nagpapatuloy ang kahirapan, kawalan ng hustisya, at paglabag sa karapatan ng mamamayan. Sila, lumaban kahit walang cell phone at Internet. Kayo, tayo, walang dahilan upang maging tahimik at sumuko na lamang.

Maaari ninyong idagdag, lalaban tayo…sa tamang panahon. Hindi ngayon, kundi sa tamang panahon. Una, hindi kayo si Aldub o lola Nidora. Pangalawa, mali si lola. Ang paglaban ay laging nasa tamang panahon. Ang pag-ibig ay laging nasa tamang panahon. Walang maling panahon; ang mali ay nasa pag-iisip natin. Kung hindi tayo lalaban, magpapatuloy ang kasalukuyang kalakaran. Magpapatuloy ang karangyaan ng iilan habang mayorya ay gutom at walang pag-asa sa buhay. Ang maginhawang buhay, hindi hinihintay ang tamang panahon. Ipinaglalaban yan.

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Is East Timor Now a Rich Country?

Written for The Diplomat

Timor-Leste’s Ministry of Finance issued a press statement claiming that the small Southeast Asian nation is already among the richest countries in the world. It cited a report of the Global Finance magazine which ranked Timor-Leste’s GDP per capita on a purchasing power parity basis as the 87th highest in the world. The global survey involved 184 countries. In Southeast Asia, Timor-Leste ranked fifth behind Singapore, Brunei, Malaysia, and Thailand.

Global Finance also factored the relative cost of living and the inflation rates of countries. It used figures from the International Monetary Fund’s World Economic Outlook database for April 2013

But La’o Hamutuk, a non-government organization, made a simple fact-checking and discovered that the statistics used for Timor-Leste were already outdated. It made reference to the latest IMF World Economic Outlook published in April 2015 which gave Timor-Leste a rank of 122nd (not 87th) in the world in 2013. Furthermore, the country’s ranking is expected to decline by six places in 2014.

“We all wish that Timor-Leste’s people were less poor, but wishing doesn’t make it so. We encourage policy-makers to base their decisions on evidence, and not to believe their own public relations. It will take smart thinking and hard work to bring Timor-Leste out of poverty,” La’o Hamutuk wrote on its website.

The group added that using the GDP to measure the country’s wealth is not consistently reliable. “The citizens of the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste – especially impoverished rural residents whose lives are not reflected in these statistics – deserve better,” it reminded the government.

For many years, La’o Hamutuk and even foreign analysts have been urging Timor-Leste to diversify its economy, which is mainly dependent on petroleum exports. For its part, the government acknowledged the need to invest in other sectors and has committed to embark on non-oil ventures by realigning its state budget priorities.

A more detailed review of Timor-Leste’s economy is provided by Pacific Economic Monitor, a magazine of the Asian Development Bank. Its July 2015 issue analyzed the spending of the government, the country’s oil revenues, and consumer spending. It noted that government expenditure continues to be the biggest component of the country’s non-petroleum economy. This year’s government spending is reported to have increased by 33.4 percent. Total spending on public sector wages has risen but expenditures on goods and services and capital investment decreased. The report attributed the decline to the transition in government when a new Prime Minister was sworn into office last February.

The report revealed that the country’s total revenues fell 46.4 percent in the first quarter of 2015. Petroleum revenues declined due to lower global oil prices. Oil production also slowed down. But business activities improved as indicated by rising electricity consumption of the commercial sector, expansion of private sector borrowing, and higher volume of international flights.

The report also highlighted the continuing vulnerability of Timor-Leste to the harsh impact of climate change. It mentioned a 2011 study which estimated that in terms of economic impact, Timor-Leste could lose $5.9 million annually in the next 50 years because of earthquakes and cyclones.

It is clear that Timor-Leste faces various economic challenges – diversifying its economy, raising the productivity of its petroleum sector, collecting more revenues, eradicating poverty, and enhancing climate readiness. The government has the right to make a claim that Timor-Leste is already included in the league of the global rich. But it should not forget that there are serious obstacles to overcome if it wants to remain a wealthy country.

Myanmar’s Ribbon Movements Challenge Militarization

Written for The Diplomat

The appointment of military officers to various civilian agencies is being resisted by some sectors in Myanmar.

Last August, health workers launched a black ribbon movement to protest the entry of 13 military officers into the Ministry of Health. A month later, lawyers and some judges wore yellow ribbons to denounce the deployment of military officers into the Supreme Court.

Early this week, teachers vowed to promote green ribbons as a symbol of defiance against the hiring of army officials by the education ministry. In Mandalay, electrical engineers distributed blue ribbons after vacant technological management posts in the region’s Ministry of Electric Power were reportedly given to senior military officers. Meanwhile, some geologists working in the Ministry of Energy announced the formation of a red ribbon movement to protest the appointment of army personnel in the agency.

Authors and poets who are wary of the creeping militarization of civilian bodies in Myanmar have recently initiated a purple ribbon campaign aimed at stopping the continued nomination of active and retired army officials in various government agencies.

The ribbon movement began in the health sector. The announcement that senior army officials with no medical experience would occupy top positions in the Ministry of Health was widely criticized by doctors and other health professionals. Two days after this was reported in the news, a black ribbon movement emerged enjoining medical professionals to oppose the “military infiltration” of the ministry.

A Facebook page was set up, which quickly became popular. Organizers of the campaign immediately clarified that they are not backed by any political party: “This movement is not initiated, influenced, or encouraged by any political organization. We are simply opposing the dictatorial decision through a non-violent movement,” they said.

They also appealed for public support: “Anyone who would like to oppose the actions of the repressive military government who ignores human rights and the democratic norms of ruling the country based on the aspirations of the people can take part in this movement.”

Responding to the criticism, the ministry vowed that it will no longer accept further nominations from the army.

Inspired by the social media success of the black ribbon movement, a group of lawyers urged the public to tie a yellow ribbon on every court and to “rise up against the militarization of the judiciary.”

High Court lawyer Kyaw Myo Thu explained why his peers are protesting the appointment of former army officers in the judiciary: “We, the lawyers, are also acutely aware that having military superiors influencing from above can disrupt the ability of a civilian judiciary to make decisions freely.”

The campaign reached the townships of Pyinmana, Lewe, Tatkone, Zabuthiri, Ottarathiri, Pobbathiri, Zeyarthiri, and Nay Pyi Taw territorial council. In Pyay, a judge conducted a solo protest against the appointment of army officers in the Supreme Court.

This week, during the World Teachers’ Day celebration on October 5, the Myanmar Teachers’ Union bemoaned the lack of improvements in the education sector. Further, the group also criticized the practice of allotting high-level positions in the education ministry to retired army officers.

“We have nothing to say about those ex-military officers who have already been appointed to administer the education sector but we hope that no more ex-military officers will be appointed in the future,” a teacher said during the launching of the green ribbon campaign.

That army officials are rewarded with juicy appointments in Myanmar’s civilian sector is no longer surprising news. After five decades of military dictatorship, the country’s democratic transition continues to encounter formidable challenges. It seems that old practices die hard.

But the ribbon movements surprised many because these were spearheaded by ordinary citizens who resisted the prerogative of the army to dominate the leadership of various government agencies.

In the case of the black ribbon campaign, it was warmly received by the public, which forced the government to reconsider its appointments. The campaign didn’t dislodge the privilege of the military. But it revealed the insincerity of the military-backed government, which has declared its commitment to pursue democratic reforms.

The world is closely monitoring how Myanmar will conduct its election next month, hoping that it would lead to a more open and inclusive Burmese democracy. But the ribbon campaigns remind us that in order to expand civilian participation in the government, election reforms must be accompanied by bureaucratic adjustments.

On a positive note, the ribbon movements highlight the rise of new citizen groups and formations which are critical of the pronouncements of the government. They pose no threat to the establishment. But they could inspire more people to resist not just the militarization of civilian agencies, but also other privileges that the army has established to maintain its hegemony in Myanmar society.

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A is for Anakbayan and other activist terms in the Philippines

Written for Bulatlat

A – Anakbayan is a youth group established in 1998 which became prominent in Edsa Dos and during the campaign for the abolition of ROTC. Anakpawis is a partylist group which is at the forefront of the campaign to pass the Genuine Agrarian Reform Bill. Ang Bayan is the official paper of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) and the country’s unofficial alternative newspaper since it reports what mainstream media refuses or fails to publish. AOM or Arouse, Organize, Mobilize is how activists conduct political work among the grassroots. What about Akbayan? Well, in recent years the term has become synonymous with collaborationism and opportunism.

B – Bayan is a national multisectoral alliance and campaign center of national democratic mass organizations. Since 2001, Bayan Muna partylist has represented the country’s marginalized sectors in Congress. The common name for the stealing of taxpayers’ money by politicians, trapos, and political dynasties is corruption; activists call it Burukrata Kapitalismo: the use and accumulation of government resources by politicians to enrich themselves and to strengthen the political clout of their families. When activists extend an invitation to join a BMI, it means Basic Masses Integration; or community immersion activity either in the urban (including exposure to trade union work) or rural (farming commune, fisherfolk village, ancestral domain of indigenous peoples). Burgesya refers to the capitalist class. Burgesya Kumprador is local big business who acts as junior partner and promotes the interests of transnational or multinational monopoly capitalists. Pambansang Burgesya can be allies of the revolution since many of them are independent producers and entrepreneurs. Burgis has become a popular term to describe individuals belonging to the upper class and also those who act and behave like the rich. Bakwit is the Filipino word for refugees and internally-displaced peoples.

C – Criticism and Self-Criticism or CSC is a Maoist teaching which enjoins activists to acknowledge their personal and political errors in a collective or group meeting. In a CSC session, an individual also has the opportunity to point out the strengths and weaknesses of the political work of other individuals and the group as a whole. CPP was founded in 1930 which rallied many Filipinos to join the resistance movement during World War II. It suffered severe political setbacks in the 1950s but it was reestablished in 1968. Countryside or CS covers the areas in the guerrilla zone (sonang gerilya), the remote parts of the country, or the vast farming lands in the rural. CARHRIHL or Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law is a landmark agreement signed by the government and the National Democratic Front (NDF) in 1998; proof that peace talks can produce concrete results.

D – The philosophy of Dialectical Materialism or DM is based on the writings of Marx who applied Hegelian dialectics in studying the evolution of capitalism in society. Marx pointed out that social contradiction generates change (“The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggle”) and he called this philosophical approach as the materialist conception of history (historical materialism). The Democratic Reform Movement or DRM was spearheaded by student groups which successfully campaigned for the restoration of student councils, publications, and campus elections in the early 1980s. Demo has multiple meanings: In the past it refers to street demonstration. Today it either means demolition or demoralized, the latter is for activists who temporarily feel uninspired to perform a political task.

E – Educational Discussion or ED refers to the study sessions, discussion groups, and lectures organized by activists about Marxism and other revolutionary topics. Expo is another term for BMI but most of the time it means a trip to the CS.

F – Fascism is used quite differently in the Philippines as it pertains to the repressive policies of the government, most notably during martial law. Any official who acts like a dictator is called pasista. Feudalism is supposed to be obsolete but it continues to stalk the country through bogus land reforms, landlordism, colonial policies, and decadent culture. The armed struggle in the CS thrives because of popular support against feudal oppression. First Quarter Storm or FQS was a series of massive rallies in 1970 which called for a social revolution to overthrow the oppressive system. An individual who makes activism his/her 24/7 commitment is called FT or Full Time.

G – Gabriela is an organization of women activists and an alliance of advocates of women rights. China’s Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution or GPCR inspired many Filipino youth activists to read Mao and apply his teachings to the concrete conditions of the Philippines.

H – Hukbong Bayan Laban sa mga Hapon or Hukbalahap was the victorious liberation army which defeated the Japanese invaders in the 1940s. After the war, it became the Huks which attempted to topple the government in order to establish a communist state.

I – Philippine society has three basic problems: Imperialism, feudalism, and bureaucrat capitalism. Russian leader Lenin described Imperialism as the highest stage of capitalism; it is moribund and it leads to war among imperialist powers in search of colonies and markets for their surplus products. The Philippines gained formal independence in 1946 but it remained a semi-colony of the imperialist United States of America which continued to wield political, economic, and cultural influence in the country even up to the present. Thus, the passion, the clarity of the slogan Imperyalismo Ibagsak! The Internationale is a Paris Commune song. It became the anthem of the global Left because it articulates the need for the proletariat of the world to unite and overthrow the whole capitalist class. Filipino activists have translated the song and even added some lyrics to it. Communist Internationale is the unity of proletarian parties all over the world. International League of People’s Struggle or ILPS coordinates global campaigns and unites people’s movements around the world. When activists mention IPO, it has nothing to do with stock markets. It means Ideological, Political, Organizational or the proper method of planning and evaluating a program, plan, campaign or individual work.

J – Justice for Aquino, Justice for All or JAJA was a popular formation in the 1980s which denounced the human rights violations of the Marcos regime.

K – Kataas-taasang Kagalang-galangang Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan or KKK led the revolution for independence against Spanish colonialists. The legacy of Katipunan is kept alive, among others, by these groups: Kabataang Makabayan or KM is a national democratic youth organization established in 1964, Kilusang Mayo Uno or KMU is the country’s labor center, Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas or KMP is the country’s largest peasant network, Kadamay is an urban poor alliance. Activists have another word for love and it becomes more special if shared with another person, your KR or Karelasyon.

L – League of Filipino Students initiated the campaign for campus democratic rights during martial law. It also actively fought for the rejection of the U.S. bases treaty. Lakbayan is a long march often organized by peasant groups. Lighting Rally or LR is like the flashmob but more militant.

M – Makabayan is an electoral political party whose founding members include progressive partylist groups. Maikling Kurso sa Lipunan at Rebolusyong Pilipino or MKLRP is a short (but still very long) introduction to the history textbook of the Left: Philippine Society and Revolution. What is the mass line? Learn from the masses, trust the masses, the masses make history. In any political campaign, the essential task is to build the mass movement which can be developed through painstaking mass work of different mass organizations or MO (see AOM). Makibaka is both a verb (struggle) and a noun (revolutionary underground group of women activists). Many activists are students of MLM or Marxism-Leninism-Maoism. Communities and targeted sectors are informed about public events and campaigns through MPT or mobile propaganda teams

N – National Democracy or NatDem/ND is a political movement fighting for true independence and democratic rights. It is a struggle for national liberation against imperialist control, feudal bondage, and systemic corruption. After the victory of the national democratic revolution, it will be followed by the socialist construction of society. New People’s Army or NPA builds strength and red political power in the CS. NDF unites all revolutionary groups in establishing a coalition government. National Situation or NatSit is a common topic during activist forums and meetings. Noise Barrage is a form of protest in a particular place, building, street or even the entire city.

O – OPRS or On the Proletarian Relationship of Sexes, the CPP document on personal relationships, recognizes same-sex marriage and divorce. OUT or Our Urgent Task is another CPP document that provided the political framework on how to resist, defeat, and overthrow the US-Marcos regime in the 1970s

P – PSR, which was first serialized in the Philippine Collegian, remains one of the most read publications in the country. It is a major reference in the activist curriculum known as Padepa or Pambansang Demokratikong Paaralan. People Power ousted Marcos in 1986. People’s War is still raging in the countryside. There are 537 political detainees or Poldet in the country today. People’s Organizations or POs are based in the grassroots. Pulong Masa is a participatory activity involving MO members and the general public in a community.

Q – Quick Response Team or QRT is an emergency political action, picket, or rally.

R – The first Rectification or Recti movement (Kilusang Pagwawasto) led to the reestablishment of the CPP; the second Recti led to the resurgence of the ND movement in the 1990s. During the first Recti, the principal document used by activists to sum up the experience of the Philippine revolution was ‘Rectify Errors, Rebuild the Party’ or RERP. In the 1990s, the document was ‘Reaffirm Our Basic Principles and Rectify Errors’ or RR; those who supported it were called RA (reaffirmists) while those who rejected it were known as RJ (rejectionists). Rectification is essentially an ideological movement. In the Philippine context, it exposed the political errors, blunders, excesses, and opportunism committed by some revolutionary leaders. The CPP is the only political party in the Philippines which has acknowledged and apologized for the mistakes it has committed in the past.

S – Serve the People or STP (Paglingkuran ang Sambayanan) is the most popular clarion call of activists. Less known but more radical is STR or Sa Tagumpay ng Rebolusyon. SND or Struggle for National Democracy is a compilation of articles and speeches written by KM and CPP founder Joma Sison; it’s the country’s answer to China’s Red Book. Like the KM, SDK or Samahan ng Demokratikong Kabataan organized and mobilized the youth during the pre-martial law years. When activists engage in a local political campaign or organizing, they first conduct a Sica or Social Investigation and Class Analysis. Sison’s article, SCPW or ‘Specific Characteristics of our People’s War’, is an important theoretical work on how to wage a Maoist-inspired guerrilla warfare in an archipelagic country like the Philippines. Strike (Welga) is the political and democratic action of organized labor.

T – Tibak for aktibista. TU for trade union. Baligtarin ang Tatsulok in reference to the political analysis that the 99 percent of the population at the base of the social pyramid are ruled by the elite at the top. TF or Task Force is often created to coordinate a specific or urgent campaign. Student leaders are familiar with the term TFI which means Tuition Fee Increase. Government’s inaction over skyrocketing oil prices is the reason why some groups and operators organize a Transport Strike. Taong-Simbahan is the Filipino translation of church people signifying the importance of getting the support of the religious in the struggle for social change.

U – Unyonismo, an essential task in the TU sector. UF or united front, it basically means alliance work. Many activists were forced to go UG or underground during martial law.

V – The petty bourgeoisie (intellectuals, professionals, government employees) is always Vacillating between the proletariat and the burgesya, but they can be organized to support and embrace the objectives of the revolution. The CPP calls itself as the Vanguard of the Filipino proletariat and the Philippine revolution.

W – Capital is the magnum opus of Marx but he also wrote short articles that elucidated some of his teachings like ‘Wage, Price, Profit’ or WPP and ‘Wage, Labor, Capital’. Welgang Bayan is a militant form of protest in the urban with broad community support.

XYZ – YS stands for Youth Sector. May they always reject the Yellows in the progressive movement. And may the Generations X, Y, and Z continue to study history, engage in politics, and uphold the message of radicalism, the ultimate XXX in society. In other words, at the risk of oversimplifying the language of struggle, may the flames of revolution continue to inspire them to raise the red banners of the mass movement until victory is achieved. Viva!

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Jurassic World as a Metaphor of Wall Street and the Global Financial Crisis

Written for Manila Today

They were bigger, louder, and scarier – not the dinosaurs, but the product placements. Disturbingly, I didn’t feel cheated. Perhaps I have been desensitized already into accepting the incestuous partnership of mass art and the corporate sector. Besides, it’s a Hollywood franchise film which was produced to entertain and generate an insane amount of profit. The moviegoers came to be thrilled and not to learn about science. Based on these standards, the film was rated a huge success.

Without excusing its flaws, the film also has insightful lessons to offer. However, its educational value is not about dinosaurs or tropical islands but its surreal depiction of the modern economic enterprise. What a strange way to appreciate science fiction but if we want more people to understand the monstrous behavior of greedy bankers and financial investors, then the film can prove to be instructive.

Consider these examples:

The original Jurassic Park ended in tragedy but instead of abandoning the project, it was revived and rebranded by new investors as Jurassic World. Never mind that it’s risky and that it already killed people, the temptation to build a moneymaking theme park seems impossible to resist. It’s irrational but apparently it makes economic sense. It’s actually Wall Street in real life. How many times did it crash? How many lives perished because of speculative trading in the stock markets? Yet Wall Street continues to be the world’s financial center. As long as there’s potential cash to hoard, Wall Street behaves like a recidivist. And every time it self-destructs, the world comes to its rescue.

Jurassic World cloned a new dinosaur species which was named Indominus rex. Its genetic makeup is secret but later we learned that it’s part T-Rex, part Raptor, and they were mixed with several species. What motivated the scientists to play God? They were told to create a new attraction that will excite visitors and drive more interest in the park. They succeeded in breeding a bigger dinosaur which turned out to be an intelligent but deadly albino monster. The Indominus rex is like the complex financial products that overwhelmed the market more than a decade ago. The mad genius bankers at the Wall Street lab concocted new derivatives and hybrids like the subprime mortgages that triggered the 2008 global financial crisis. They thought their risk taking inspired innovation but it only led to more disasters. Like the scientists who didn’t know what animal they created, the bankers were unaware of the exact content of the products they were selling. When it was time to collect real money from the real economy, the Ponzi scheme was finally exposed.

When the Indominus rex got out of containment, there were several opportunities to end its life and thus avoid further fatalities. But security forces were ordered to use non-lethal weapons because the company cannot afford to lose its latest investment. Indominus rex was ‘too big to fail.’ When prestigious Wall Street firms started collapsing, they were also deemed ‘too big to fail’ so instead of allowing them to fall, they received bailout funds. Their irresponsible behavior bloated their real value which allowed them to blackmail the whole economy. They were penalized in a form of reward through the taxpayer-funded cash support.

Indominus rex may be the alpha monster but it was the smaller, flying pterosaurs that caused more damage and mayhem in the main park. The birdlike dinosaurs killed and injured more people than the giant animal. It’s similar to what happens during an economic crisis. When stock markets crash, it’s the ensuing panic and confusion in society that leave more dislocations in many economies. The big crash is fearsome but the numerous aftershocks are more ferocious.

When the Jurassic World owner crashed his helicopter in the aviary, was it caused by a dinosaur attack or was it deliberate? It reminded me of bankers falling from skyscrapers during the Great Depression. Did the owner regret his decision to open the park? Before the Indominus rex tragedy, he articulated his vision of building a scientific park that would be embraced by many people and he said that profit is a secondary consideration. He sounded more like a visionary than a tycoon. Was this a caricature of some real life business moguls who wanted to be known as eccentric investors rather than as ruthless monopolists?

The attack of the pterosaurs was like a military air offensive. It’s a demo of what the dinosaurs are capable of unleashing if they are to be deployed for military missions. If we view it this way, Jurassic World suddenly looks like a Disney subsidiary of a corporation which also develops and sells expensive new technologies to the military sector. The park is destroyed but the lab products are stored and transported into a safe place thus ensuring the financial survival of the corporation. Isn’t this an example of how the military-industrial complex continues to operate in the 21st century?

The original superbads in the previous Jurassic Park movies are the uncontrollable carnivorous raptors. But in Jurassic World, they were resurrected as potential allies of the human race. Despite their notorious record, they were expected to side with the humans in the hunt for the Indominus rex. This led to deadly consequences because the raptors eventually helped the beast in killing the humans. Think of raptors in Jurassic World as the neoliberal policy. Laissez faire was discredited in the 1930s but it became dominant again in the 1980s up to the present. Despite its grim legacy of dispossessing the world’s 99 percent, neoliberal prescriptions remain the first option of many governments. When countries suffer from economic downturns, ‘shock and awe’ neoliberal doctrines are used which never solves anything. It even exacerbates the situation. The Indominus rex is part raptor in the same way that the neoliberal cure is directly responsible for causing economic miseries around the world.

Another original super villain is the T-Rex which helped the humans in killing the Indominus rex. It was also given the honor of having the last roar at the end of the film sequence as it asserted its dominance above the park’s mission control tower. It symbolized the triumph of the normal dinosaur species over the genetically modified Indominus rex. T-Rex is like the bailout program and traditional banking regulations which were implemented to rescue the ailing financial sector after 2008. These policies provided some relief but they failed to restore confidence in the financial sector. In fact, the global economy is still in tatters. That is why comparing the T-Rex with the current financial regulations is apt because it is a reminder that we failed to slay the capitalist beast that wreaks havoc all over the world. How long should we allow this monster to control our lives?

Jurassic World is worth the watch because formulaic plot aside, it showed us that despite our glorious scientific achievements, human behavior is still primitive in many ways. Do not fear the dinosaurs that are already extinct, but be cautious every time investment bankers and neoliberal economists are spewing out financial gobbledegook as to why austerity or wage cuts are good for the world’s developing nations.

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What I think about rallies when I am marching in a rally

Written for Bulatlat

The heat, of course. Is it going to be tolerable? Ah but the scorching summer temperature is like inferno on Earth. There’s also the humid air, succeeded by a brief but heavy rain, and then it’s sticky hot again. Rains are unpredictable but the heat is constant. Clouds deceive because behind them lurk the menacing tentacles of the sun. That’s why the umbrella is useful for various practical reasons: a defense gadget against the elements, a crime deterrent, a companion magnet, and a light but durable weapon when state thugs are ordered to attack.

After sensing the weather, I seek out the strangers beyond the crowd that is already gathering. Are the motorists curious? Are the pedestrians stopping to inquire? The bystanders are a group of their own; can they be persuaded to join our crowd? The vendors, the tambays, and other wandering souls – what are their stories, their daily struggles?

The crowd is getting bigger and my instinct is to find familiar faces and voices. There are backpacks, flags, banners, placards, pamphlets, t-shirt slogans, smartphones and classic Nokia phones everywhere but fortunately amid the frenzy I saw my friends and comrades. What follows is nonstop shaking of hands and rapid conversations about, well, almost everything: How’s the weather, how many are you here, yes I’m going to the fluvial parade, no I can’t join the forum, sorry I was late yesterday, I haven’t seen the movie, email it to me later, tag me in the photo, thanks for the graphics, oh I didn’t know you broke up already, are they really dating, I will visit them this week, here’s the magazine, let’s eat, I hope it’s going to trend.

The crowd is finally moving. I walk with others who are also eager and agitated to reach the destination. During the march, we saw some uninspiring structures such as the decrepit pillars of the LRT, sleazy movie theaters, budget motels, unfinished public works, the so-called green footbridge, abandoned art deco buildings, giant billboard towers. Through the tarpaulins plastered on sidewalks, we learned that the country’s king of contractualization is the new owner of an engineering school. One block later, another banner of a tycoon school owner and tax evader par excellence flaunts the board exam performance of some students. Nearby, a review center ad makes a similar boast.

These are dizzying images of urban reality which are also false indicators of modernity. But they reflect bad governance and chaotic metro planning. The decaying structure, however, is masked by the bright and colorful posters of consumer brands. What is rendered visible to all is the digital effects of the seemingly new. But I reject the seductions of these signifiers and I refuse to adopt them in defining my identity. Perhaps I can do this because my exposure to these visual temptations is restricted. But for those who traverse the same route everyday, have they been desensitized already? Or how do they play the game of resistance?

Suddenly, the march comes to a halt. A clearing opens up. The public space has been reclaimed. It is an event preceded by numerous sub-events in recent days and weeks. An event in anticipation of greater political moments. We made the event possible, we succeeded in mobilizing a crowd, we turned an idea into reality. But there’s lingering guilt and regret caused by unmet expectations. We could have done more, we could have gathered more, we could have aimed for more. Or maybe it was the tactics that mattered.

The self-assessment is getting more serious when a screeching sound distracted everybody. There’s always a technical glitch that disrupts the event. Small or big, minor or major, the interruption actually normalizes and formalizes the event. A defective stereo, a misplaced stage, a broken banner, a missing equipment. Once these problems are addressed, the program commences and hopefully it will run more smoothly this time.

And while this is all happening, my mind is somewhere else: Where did I put the USB? What is the name of that movie character who resembles this person beside me? Are the kids still in school? I think I should buy the shaving kit, or not. I’m craving for cream puffs. Did I pay the jeepney driver? Dinner at home but who’s cooking? Ah coffee, I need my coffee fix.

Then I saw the crowd extension. The police behind the barricades, another flank holding truncheons and shields, a police officer commanding the unit. Meanwhile, moving within the crowd are media people. Armed with cameras, they document the event. They are welcomed as potential friends and allies.

What is the role of the police and media in relation to the crowd? They are partisan non-participants of the event. But their intervention is always crucial. It is the police who placed the barrier between the citadel of power and the emergent crowd. Their every action provokes the crowd because they are seen as representatives of the state which ordered the blocking of the event. The state monitors the crowd through the ubiquitous CCTV monitors. It is Big Brother which instructs the police on how to engage the crowd. Ideally, the police can opt to listen to what the crowd is demanding but they are deployed not to think freely but to carry out a direct order. Can they contravene the hierarchy? Yes, but they instantly becomes part of the crowd.

The media, on the other hand, captures the encounter between the state and the crowd. They have access to history-in-the-making event by bearing witness to the dramatic interplay of politics, collective power, and direct democracy. Some are walking warriors of truth and ethics but some are there simply to sell news, spin the truth, and shoot the sensational. Why bother to tell the truth when it is the odd that rates high on mainstream networks? And so they frame the news by focusing on peripheral and incidental issues like traffic. They simplify and even distort the agenda for social transformation by highlighting an awkward sound byte. But like the police, they are disempowered too since the final decision on what to report rests with the senior editors in the news editing room.

Politics and truth making are decided upon by powerful people who are divorced from the battlefield. Through their privileged location in society, these virtual players of politics reign supreme in dictating the specific discourse that will be preserved and reproduced by opinion-making institutions.

Of course this is infuriating. Worse, apologists of the status quo are quick to legitimize the unequal existing order as a natural, objective state of the world. If you continue to dissent, you are labelled a troublemaker, a nuisance, a purveyor of obsolete truths. You ignore the taunting, you block the persistent rants, but sometimes everybody around you makes the same argument, and you silently succumb to this judgment under duress.

Multiple paradigms tempt you with language games and your mind unwillingly plays with these ideas. Plural perspectives, epistemes, simulacrum, habitus, elective affinities….and then you find yourself back in the crowd. What caught your attention? The fiery anti-demolition speech of an urban poor leader restored your focus, the farmer organizer who spoke about feudal oppression rekindled your passion, and the defiant human rights victim inspired you to remember the basics. The basics? That politics is hostaged by elite interest, that a fierce struggle for supremacy among classes defines any society, that there are truths worth fighting for, that the radical task is to hasten the arrival of the future. That there are discourses that destroy solidarity, narratives that serve the ruling classes, and progressive theories that teach us not just to interpret the present but to change the world.

It is always the crowd, the multiple as one, which rescues us from moments of indecision and passivity. That is why every time the crowd prepares to disperse, we celebrate not the end of an event, but the prospect of going back to the masses, embracing their struggles, and joining them in the future to startup that Big Event we sometimes call the revolution.

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ASEAN’s Joint Communique: It’s Not Just About China or the South China Sea

Written for The Diplomat

The 48th foreign ministerial meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in Malaysia concluded by releasing a communique last week. As expected, most media reports focused on the position of ASEAN with regard the South China Sea dispute involving China. This is newsworthy because the issue has regional implications and the ministers were able to formulate a joint statement on a divisive topic. In 2012, no communique was released by ASEAN ministers in Cambodia because of divergent views on the aggressive activities of China in the disputed waters of the South China Sea.

This year’s communique tackled various issues and while China was mentioned in the document, it should not lead us to ignore ASEAN’s views on other less glitzy international matters. For example, the communique echoed the stand of ASEAN on the Palestine question: “We reiterated ASEAN’s support for the legitimate right of the Palestinian people for an independent state of Palestine and a two-State solution where Palestine and Israel live side-by-side in peace.”

It also expressed support for Iran nuclear agreement and the warming of relations between the United States and Cuba.

“We called for the timely lifting of all sanctions and embargoes imposed on Cuba.”

ASEAN also rejected extremist movements in the Middle East. “We condemn and deplore the violence and brutality committed by extremist organizations and radical groups in Iraq and Syria, whose impact increasingly poses a threat to all regions of the world.”

In addition, the communique also promoted moderation as the ASEAN approach of addressing conflicts.

“We recognized that moderation is an all-encompassing approach not only in resolving differences and conflicts peacefully but also for ensuring sustainable and inclusive development and equitable growth as well promoting social harmony and mutual understanding within countries and regions.”

Furthermore, the communique provided updates on ASEAN’s improving relations with various countries such as Australia, Canada, European Union, India, Japan, Republic of Korea, New Zealand, and Russia. It reported that Canada and European Union have expressed commitments to appoint an ASEAN ambassador.

It recognized the strategic role of the United States in “sustaining Southeast Asia’s rapid economic growth and maintaining peace and stability.” At the same time, it also affirmed its commitment to realizing the ASEAN-China Free Trade Area with an aim to achieve the target of USD 1 trillion on trade by 2020.

The communique is also useful to determine ASEAN’s assessment of its own socioeconomic situation. While many are worried about China’s military dominance, ASEAN is also concerned about its economic prospects as a more basic concern.

“The continued moderation in China would have an impact on the ASEAN’s forecast growth rate, given ASEAN’s strong economic linkages to China. The region is also faced with financial challenges as the persistent strengthening of the U.S dollar against domestic currencies, as well as the ongoing Greece debt crisis, which may cause volatility in the global financial markets,” the communique read.

A few days after releasing the communique, Indonesia reported lower economic growth while Malaysia’s currency was devalued. These troubling reports should make us realize that economic jitters, and not just the China ‘threat’, are hounding ASEAN countries today.

Aside from this, the communique also made reference to other regional problems such as the “irregular movement of persons”, people smuggling or trafficking, illegal drug trade, transboundary haze pollution, and climate change vulnerability.

“We noted with great concern that climate change is already having significant impact in the region, posing challenges to our environment, causing severe social and economic disruption and damage throughout the region.”

Finally, ASEAN warned China that its land reclamation activities in the South China Sea “have eroded trust and confidence, increased tensions and may undermine peace, security and stability” in the region. It took note of Indonesia’s proposal to establish a “hotline of communications” between ASEAN and China to address emergency situations on the ground. It also endorsed the implementation of a Code of Conduct in the South China Sea.

The 2015 communique issued by ASEAN’s foreign ministers reflected the unique perspectives and priorities of the regional grouping. Some were unhappy about its failure to directly make China accountable for its rude behavior toward its neighbors, while some appreciated that ASEAN was able to finally issue a stronger statement regarding the South China Sea dispute.

We should also be careful not to equate the communique with the actual commitment of ASEAN member countries. For instance, the communique declared full adherence to the protection of human rights even if many ASEAN governments are guilty of violating the political and economic rights of their citizens.

Overall, the communique is a reminder of the dynamic character of ASEAN as a political formation. On one hand, it strives to establish a more solid community of nations with an integrated economy. But on the other hand, it is also a group of neighbors besieged by transnational crimes, environment pollution, and the specter of a rising superpower represented by China.

Southeast Asia’s Transparency Problem

Written for The Diplomat

Most countries in Southeast Asia do not have a transparent budget process, according to a global survey conducted by International Budget Partnership.

The 2015 Open Budget Index used 140 observable facts and indicators to measure if a country’s budget system allows opportunities for adequate oversight and public participation. If a country scores a minimum of 60 out of 100, it is deemed to provide sufficient budget information and audit mechanisms.

In Southeast Asia, only the Philippines scored above 60 (the global average is 45). Indonesia and Malaysia performed above average with a score of 59 and 46 respectively. Thailand and Timor-Leste received ratings of 42 and 41. Three countries in the region were found to have a budget system with limited public participation and weak transparency: Vietnam (18), Cambodia (8), and Myanmar (2). There is no data available for Singapore, Brunei, and Laos.

The survey confirms long-held assumptions that many countries in the region continue to implement budget processes with little accountability and public engagement.

Of course, the problem is not exclusive to Southeast Asia: 98 out of 102 countries which participated in the survey lack adequate institutions and mechanisms “for ensuring that public funds are used efficiently and effectively.” In fact, only 24 countries scored over 60 on the budget transparency index.

But within the region, several common threads can be seen. The first is the failure of the government to include substantial public input and feedback in the budget making and implementation. The global average score for public participation is 25. Yet several Southeast Asian countries scored lower than this: Malaysia (12), Timor-Leste (10), Cambodia (8), and Myanmar (6). Even the Philippines, which scored high on this category and was singled out in the report for institutionalizing citizen participation in the budget system, was asked to “provide detailed feedback on how public perspectives have been captured and taken into account” in the whole budget process.

Another one is the absence of a strong legislative oversight of budget spending. Malaysia scored 15, while the Philippines got its lowest rating (36) for this indicator in the budget index. Last year, the Philippine Supreme Court ruled that a disbursement program enacted by the office of the president was unconstitutional since it was not authorized by Congress.

There were specific recommendations for countries in order to make the budget process more transparent and democratic. Cambodia is urged to “hold legislative hearings on the budgets of specific ministries, departments, and agencies at which testimony from the public is heard.” Vietnam needs to consult the legislature first before releasing contingency funds, which were not identified in the budget law.

Juvinal Dias, a researcher of Timor-Leste NGO La’o Hamutuk, recommends the following to the government: “Make budget information available to the public, make opportunities available for public participation in the budget process, and strengthen fiscal oversight by the legislator and auditor.”

There are also simple but relevant reforms that governments can immediately implement. These include publishing budget year-end and audit reports (Myanmar), producing a pre-budget statement and making it available to the public (Indonesia), establishing specialized budget research office (Malaysia), and holding a pre-budget debate by the legislature (Philippines).

The budget survey is useful as a benchmark for governments, scholars, and civil society organizations in assessing the utilization of public funds in their respective countries. In Southeast Asia, it is a reminder that opportunities for corruption can be reduced if we make the budget process more open while strengthening mechanisms for inter-agency accountability.

Southeast Asia’s Color Protests

Written for The Diplomat

Malaysia’s massive Bersih rally over the weekend reminded us of the colors used by protesters across Southeast Asia to symbolize and articulate their political demands in their respective countries.

Bersih (meaning “clean” in the local Malay language) started as an election reform movement that mobilized thousands of Malaysians in 2007, 2011, and 2012. This year, Bersih is demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Najib Razak, who is being implicated in a corruption scandal.

During all Bersih events, yellow was chosen as the protest color. It was a successful branding strategy which made yellow the symbol of the national movement for reforms in governance. A few days before Bersih 4 took place, the government enacted an order which criminalized the wearing of yellow Bersih clothing. The order described the printing, sale, and possession of the yellow Bersih shirt as a threat to security and the national interest.

During the actual Bersih event, police arrested 12 people for wearing the banned shirt. At least 100,000 people who joined the Bersih rally in Kuala Lumpur could also be prosecuted for wearing prohibited clothing.

Meanwhile, Najib downplayed the protest and accused the Bersih organizers of being unpatriotic. He made this statement while wearing red during a televised speech. His supporters vowed to mobilize a million ‘red shirts’ on October 10 to prove that majority of ordinary Malaysians still support the beleaguered prime minister.

One of the country’s prominent personalities who joined Bersih was former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. The appearance of the 90-year old retired leader surprised many, since he was consistently against the holding of rallies during his two-decade rule. In a media interview, Mahathir called for people power to force the removal of Najib. He likened Najib to former Philippine strongman Ferdinand Marcos, who was ousted by a popular uprising in 1986.

Mahathir’s analogy can be extended as well to the Philippine protest movement which challenged Marcos in the 1980s. Like Bersih today, Filipino protesters adopted the color yellow as a protest symbol against Marcos, whose trademark election color was red. “Yellow magic” became effective in persuading many ordinary Filipinos to resist Marcos, first through the ballot box and then subsequently in the streets, which led to the downfall of the dictator.

Will “yellow magic” also work in Malaysia? The Philippine example is a bit outdated compared to the recent conflict in Thailand, which involved dueling protesters and government supporters wearing yellow and red shirts. The Yellow Shirts are critics of deposed Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who were infamous for occupying the Bangkok airport in 2008. They succeeded in forcing a change in government but a new group emerged to counter them – the Red Shirts. This new group copied the tactics of the Yellow Shirts by blockading the major streets of Bangkok in 2010.

The daring actions and occasional clashes between these groups and the political parties that support them intensified Thailand’s political crisis. That in turn allowed the army to justify a coup in May 2014. And even before the army intervened, many Thais indicated their exasperation over the provocative campaigns of both the Yellow and Red Shirts by urging the public to wear neutral colors such as orange, white, and purple. At one point, Blue Shirts emerged, vowing to restore peace and order in society. Some suspected they were pro-government militia.

Though the coup last year ended the street rallies, Thais lost their right to organize peaceful assemblies. The military-backed government continues to ban protests and the public gathering of five or more people. Any color of protest is quickly rejected by the army as a threat to national security.

Whether it is Malaysia’s Bersih, the yellow fever of the 1986 People Power revolt in the Philippines, or Thailand’s current policy of outlawing protests organized by either Red or Yellow Shirts, the indubitable lesson from these distinct protest campaigns in Southeast Asia is that politics can never be color blind.

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