Pingkian - February 2015 Issue
Pingkian - February 2015 Issue
Education
pingkian
noun \pi-k- n\
1. flint
2. nom de plume of
revolutionary
Emilio Jacinto
3. metaphor for
struggle
PINGKIAN
FEBRUARY 2015
VOLUME/NUMBER
PINGKIAN
Journal for Emancipatory and Anti-imperialist Education
Volume # Number #
ISSN-2244-3142
Editors
Gonzalo Campoamor II (University of the Philippines) Peter Chua (San Jose
State University, USA)Gerry Lanuza (University of the
Philippines)Roland Tolentino (University of the Philippines)
Layout and Cover design
Jose Manuel Sicat
Featured art cover
Mother Sams Boot by Tilde Acua
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction .................................................................................................. 10
CRITICAL PEDAGOGY
After the storm, what? To the radical and unwavering conviction of the
Martial Law activists
Gerry Lanuza and Sarah Raymundo ....................................................................... 13
Ang Walang Modo at Ang Walang Galos: Hinggil sa Collection ni Abad
Tilde Acua ....................................................................................................... 17
NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC SCHOLARSHIP
Nationalism, the postcolonial state, and violence
Sonny San Juan, Jr. ............................................................................................ 21
US admission of CIA torture: No accountability, against US,
International Laws, not enough
Jose Maria Sison ............................................................................................... 36
Neo-liberal na Atake sa Mundo ng Paggawa at Panunupil sa Karapatan
ng Manggagawa: Hamon at Paglaban
Gerry Lanuza .................................................................................................... 39
LETTERS AND STATEMENTS FROM POLITICAL DETAINEES
Open Letter to Pope Francis I ........................................................................ 44
Second Open Letter to Pope Francis I ............................................................ 49
More Ironies and Torments as Another Sad and Oppressive Year Ends .......... 51
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE OF PEOPLES' STRUGGLE STATEMENTS
ILPS Condemns US Vilification of Venezuela
Supports Venezuelan People and Government .............................................. 55
We stand with the Venezuelan people against US imperialist aggression ....... 56
Defend the right to strike against capitalist attacks .........................................57
Best exit plan for Aquino is to resign ............................................................. 58
ILPS Welcomes Release of All Cuban 5 and Normalization of US-Cuba
Relations ....................................................................................................... 59
Condemn the massacre in West Papua ILPS-Phils...................................... 60
On Bonifacio Day 2014: The Filipino working class is on the rise ....................61
Fight against imperialist exploitation! ........................................................... 62
US-Aquino regimes militarization of childrens schools scored..................... 63
ILPS-Phils welcomes international probe on women trafficking of Haiyan
victims........................................................................................................... 64
10
INTRODUCTION
THE SPECTRE OF
YOUTH RADICAL TRADITION
IS HAUNTING THE ACADEME
The year 2014 was a riveting year for progressive educators and educational workers!
It was an interesting year for Filipino educators who joined thousands of patriotic and
progressive sectors of Philippine society that demanded the overthrow of a corrupt political
system that thrives on corruption deeply rooted in colonial and feudal patronage. Educators,
students, and educational workers took it to the streets and joined the waves of protesters
demanding accountability from the President of the Republic and his cabinets who exercised
their supposed good faith to use peoples money to architect the notorious disbursement
acceleration program (DAP) to bribe and remunerate the political allies of the ruling class
party for impeaching a Supreme Court Chief Justice, and abetting the election machineries
of the ruling cliques.
It is also a year when the long and glorious radical tradition of the University of the
Philippines was put to the test by the supposedly hooliganism of the activist students on the
occasion of protest against Budget Secretary Florencio Butz Abads talk at the School of
Economics. As the spectre of the long and glorious spectre of UP radical tradition haunted
the University and the nation, the honourable professors of the School of Economics, together
with the reactionary intellectuals and conservative sections of the public, wasted no time in
denouncing the violent hooliganism of the activist students. The aftermath of the protest
proved to be a backlash against the reactionary managers in the academe. Gerry Lanuza and
Sarah Raymundos article After the storm, What? To the Radical and Unwavering Conviction
of the Martial Law Activists, provides an unrivalled and incisive summary of the political
and ideological stakes in this debate. The article goes beyond the issue of academic freedom.
The authors successfully demolished the hegemonic tenets of liberal ideology that grope the
academic community.
Tilde Acunas article pursues the same critique fomented by the Lanuza nd
Raymundos article. Acunas short article engages with Sec. Abads son, Pio Abads art exhibit
at Vargas Museum. Acunas article links effectively the political fiasco of Pio Abads art exhibit
with his fathers entanglement with the current DAP corruption.
Next, the article of E. San Juan, Jr., Nationalism, the Postcolonial State, & Violence,
unmasks the reactionary ideology underpinning most postcolonial deconstruction of
nationalism and national liberation. San Juan concludes, If nations have been manipulated
by states dominated by possessive/acquisitive classes that have undertaken and continue to
11
undertake colonial and imperial conquests, then the future of humanity and all living
organisms on earth can be insured only by eliminating those classes that are the origin of
state violence.
Pingkian issue also includes the two short articles of Prof. Jose Maria Sison and Gerry
Lanuza. Prof. Sison, who turn 76 this year, provides an analysis of the accountability of the
CIA in the face of its admission of using tortures against the enemies of U.S. liberal
democracy. Lanuzas keynote speech for Congress for Trade Unions and Human Right
(CTUHR), challenges workers to unite against the destructive onslaught of neoliberalism on
the working class.
We are also including the political statements from various progressive sectors for this
issue of Pingkian. Included also are the letters and statements of political prisoners.
We hope that these articles and other materials can be effective resources for our
students, fellow educators and educational workers to conscientisize and raise the
consciousness of their students and fellow educators.
Again, the editors would like to express their profound gratitude to all the contributors
for the continuing support for Pingkian.
We also welcome feedbacks, contributions, and letters to the editor. Please direct
your correspondence to [email protected].
Gerry Lanuza
Editor
12
CRITICAL PEDAGOGY
Gerry Lanuza
Sarah Raymundo
Tilde Acua
13
14
issue. Why, there was minimal, if not a total absence of violence perpetrated during the
incident that agitated UP and Malacanang authorities.
They all claim that the student manhandled Abad but have no evidence, save for the
video that our very own organization Congress of Teachers and Educators for Nationalism
and Democracy (CONTEND) posted online wherein none of their frenzied claim to violence
happens.
How about the violence of the layers upon layers of security guards who accosted the
students to escort Abad? Doesnt their mere presence as avatars of state violence provoke
violence? Initially, Abad even admitted that the incident was not unusual. His academic
defenders however, could not understand, for all their intelligence, why such incident was
possible to have occurred in an academic setting.
These cynics and their masters from Malacanang must be gently reminded that
universities have always been, and rightfully so in our view, spaces for protests against state
violence. Abad was not even willing to dialogue with the activists. Was Abad even mugged
and injured? If yes, then is not a medico legal or some such proof in order? In the absence of
which wont the student activists consider filing a law suit against these cynical authority
figures in the University for moral defamation?
If the student activists were, indeed, hooligans, the forum would have been terminated
from the start. A lightning rally could have been staged right at the moment when Sec. Abad
was explaining how DAP was good for the motherland. What do you know, a fake bomb threat
could have been sent out for people to evacuate the building. There are thousand and one
ways to sabotage Abad, and none of which was ever executed. We can imagine a radical crop
of anarchists carrying out a shocking disruption. The protesters, however, waited outside.
What these cynical and denigrators and self-righteous Ghandian neophytes fail to
realize is the sociological truth that the flow and current of collective protests cannot be
predicted. Most of the time, they create their own collective logic and movements beyond the
will of individual participants.
These outbursts put the protesters on a defensive position face to face with the
personalities they confront. In failing to grasp the nature of protests, these cynics and
denigrators of STAND UP are no different from, say, someone who watches a football match
(often associated with hooligans) and ridiculously shouts Dont get too physical, follow the
rules! It seems that these clueless authoritarians cannot spell the difference between a forum
and the dynamics of protest actions. They want a protest without protest! They want to
struggle without a fight; war without battles. Worse, they want to drag everyone in their
misguided approach to oppositional politics.
Before we even accept a blanket condemnation of violence, guerrilla struggle, and
what cynics label as leftist dogmatism, and irrational activism, it must be clarified how
these thoughtless labelling have directed the issue away from the culpability of the
government for violating the constitution in its wanton use of DAP, with Budget Secretary
Abad being its architect and staunch defender. Pro-Aquino academics, those who are wont to
defend the presidential pork barrel, are now using this incident to win points against their
15
former comrades. And they do so with a distasteful and phony rhetoric: I was once like that.
But things have changed. We are no longer under Martial Law. Sec. Abad has a lot of
explaining to do, but give him respect due him is their more preposterous line of defence.
Wasnt DAP arbitrarily granted to Liberal Party legislators and local government allies to oil
the election machineries in 2013?
The liberal is a fascist
The academe-based cynics even shamed the UP activists by calling them a blot in the
long tradition of UP activism. Come to think of it, dont these activists from STAND UP
indeed figure as blots that expose the hypocrisy of the dominant version of academic freedom
that underlies UPs claim to liberal thinking? The philosophy and practice of liberalism
espouses a politics that proffers to tolerate all political and philosophical treatises precisely
by marginalizing the most radical of discourses.
As part of the progressive and militant bloc in the University, we do not and will never
condone the violence of the powerful against the oppressed. We are not liberals who can go
as far as tolerating lies for the sake of the empty promise of individual freedom. UP is very
strong against plagiarism and intellectual dishonesty. It exacts grave penalties against
violators. Sec. Abads deception about DAP is an act of dishonesty. He is not an ordinary
student or citizen. He is the Budget Secretary whom the liberal cynics of this University
defend. And in doing so, they actually contradict themselves by proclaiming freedom while
at the same time imposing their own values and worldviews on people who do not share them.
We are wary of such farcical tendencies. We stand by our critique of Philippine society
and the principles that guide our vision for genuine agrarian reform and national
industrialization. In so doing, we also make ourselves vulnerable to critique. We teach and
write to transform and to be transformed.
We are outraged that student activists have been labelled enemies of the university
by the 23 members of the SE faculty. This discursive move exposes the oft-forgotten truth
about the relationship between liberalism and fascism. Liberalism has never been the
antidote to fascism. They supplement each other.
In 2006, two UP student activists were disappeared and have been reported to have
undergone severe torture in a military camp. Gen. Jovito Palparan regarded activists like
Sherlyn Cadapan and Karen Empeo as enemies of the state. Their comrades from STANDUP have not wavered in condemning the governments counterinsurgency programs
Macapagal-Arroyos Oplan Bantay Laya and BS Aquinos Oplan Bayanihanthat have
consistently functioned to quell dissent and opposition rather than resolve the problem of
insurgency. The same activists from STAND-UP have been resolute in demanding justice for
Karen and Sherlyn and all the desaparacidos, and victims of extra-judicial killings.
Are these SE professors too naive so as to fail to realize that with the climate of
impunity in the country, the tag enemies of the university endangers the lives of these young
people? Or is that precisely the intention? There goes fascism, liberalisms obscene double. It
is harsh and shocking, as much as it is naive.
16
Note
The original article was published by Bulatlat Multimedia. Gerardo Lanuza is the Chairperson of CONTEND
and a faculty member of the Department of Sociology, UP Diliman. Sarah Raymundo is the convenor of UPKilos Na Multi-Sectoral Alliance and a faculty member of the U.P. Center for International Studies.
17
18
19
Tala
Unang inilimbag sa Manila Today ang artikulo (http://www.manilatoday.net/ang-walang-modo-at-angwalang-galos-hinggil-sa-collection-ni-abad/). Kawani ng UP at gradwadong estudyante ng Kolehiyo ng Arte
at Letra si Tilde Acua.
20
NATIONAL
DEMOCRATIC
SCHOLARSHIP
Sonny San Juan, Jr.
Jose Maria Sison
Gerry Lanuza
21
It has become axiomatic for postmodernist thinkers to condemn the nation and its
corollary terms, "nationalism" and "nation-state," as the classic evils of modern industrial
society. The nation-state, its reality if not its concept, has become a kind of malignant paradox
if not a sinister conundrum. It is often linked to violence and the terror of "ethnic cleansing."
Despite this the United Nations and the interstate system still function as seemingly viable
institutions of everyday life. How do we explain this development?
Let us review the inventory of charges made against the nation-state. Typically
described in normative terms as a vital necessity of modern life, the nation-state has
employed violence to accomplish questionable ends. Its disciplinary apparatus is indicted for
committing unprecedented barbarism. Examples of disasters brought about by the nationstate are the extermination of indigenous peoples in colonized territories by "civilizing"
nations, the Nazi genocidal "holocaust" of Jews, and most recently the "ethnic cleansing" in
the former Yugoslavia, Ruwanda, East Timor, and so on. Echoing Elie Kedourie, Partha
Chatterjee, and others, Alfred Cobban (1994) believes that the theory of nationalism has
proved one of the most potent agencies of destruction in the modern world. In certain cases,
nationalism mobilized by states competing against other states has become synonymous with
totalitarianism and fascism. Charles Tilly (1975), Michael Howard (1991), and other
historians concur in the opinion that war and the military machine are principal
determinants in the shaping of nation states. In The Nation-State and Violence, Anthony
Giddens defines nationalism as "the cultural sensibility of sovereignty" (note the fusion of
culture and politics) that unleashes administrative power within a clearly demarcated
territory, "the bounded nation-state" (1985, 219). Although it is allegedly becoming obsolete
under the pressure of globalization (for qualifications, see Sassen (1998), the nation-state is
considered by "legal modernists" (Berman 1995) as the prime source of violence against
citizens and entire peoples.
Postmodernist critiques of the nation (often sutured with the colonialist/imperialist
state) locate the evil in its ideological nature. This primarily concerns the nation as the source
of identity for modern individuals via citizenship or national belonging, converting natal
filiation (kinship) into political affiliation. Identity implies definition by negation, inclusion
based on exclusion underwritten by a positivist logic of representation (Balibar and
Wallerstein 1991). But these critiques seem to forget that the nation is a creation of the
modern capitalist state, that is, a historical artifice or invention.
It is a truism that nation and its corollary problematic, nationalism, presuppose the
imperative of hierarchization and asymmetry of power in a political economy of commodityexchange. Founded on socially constructed myths or traditions, the nation is posited by its
proponents as a normal state of affairs used to legitimize the control and domination of one
group over others. Such ideology has to be deconstructed and exposed as contingent on the
22
changing grid of social relations. Postcolonial theory claims to expose the artificial and
arbitrary nature of the nation: "This myth of nationhood, masked by ideology, perpetuates
nationalism, in which specific identifiers are employed to create exclusive and homogeneous
conceptions of national traditions" (Ashcroft et al 1998, 150). Such signifiers of homogeneity
not only fail to represent the diversity of the actual "nation" but also serves to impose the
interests of a section of the community as the general interest. But this is not all. In the effort
to make this universalizing intent prevail, the instrumentalities of state power--the military
and police, religious and educational institutions, judiciary and legal apparatuses)--are
deployed. Hence, from this orthodox postcolonial perspective, the nation-state and its
ideology of nationalism are alleged to have become the chief source of violence and conflict
since the French Revolution.
Mainstream social science regards violence as a species of force which violates, breaks,
or destroys a normative state of affairs. It is coercion tout court. Violence is often used to
designate power devoid of legitimacy or legally sanctioned authority. Should violence as an
expression of physical force always be justified by political reason in order to be meaningful
and therefore acceptable? If such a force is used by a state, an inherited political organ
legitimized by "the people" or "the nation," should we not distinguish between state-defined
purposes and in what specific way nationalism or nation-making identity is involved in those
state actions? State violence and assertion of national identity need not be automatically
conflated so as to implicate nationalism--whose nationalism?-- in all class/state actions in
every historical period, for such a move would be an absolutist censure of violence bereft of
intentionality--in other words, violence construed as merely physical force akin to tidal
waves, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and so on.
Violence, in my view, signifies a political force that demands dialectical triangulation
in order to grasp how nation and state are implicated in it. A historical-materialist
historicization of this phenomenon is needed to determine the complicity of individual states
and nations in specific outbreaks of violence. But postcolonialists like Homi Bhabha (1990)
resort to a questionable use of the discursive performativity of language to ascribe a semiotic
indeterminacy to the nation, reducing to a formula of hybridity and liminality the
multifarious narratives of nations/peoples. History is reduced to the ambiguities of culture
and the play of textualities, ruling out critique and political intervention.
In this light, what makes the postcolonialist argument flawed becomes clear in the
fallacies of its non-sequitur reasoning. It is perhaps easy to expose the contingent nature of
the nation once its historical condition of possibility is pointed out. But it is more difficult to
contend that once its socially contrived scaffolding is revealed, then the nation-state and its
capacity to mobilize and apply the means of violence can be restricted if not curtailed.
We can pose this question at this point: Can one seriously claim that once the British
state is shown to rest on the myth of the Magna Carta or the United States government on the
covenant of the Founding Fathers to uphold the interests of every citizen--except of course
African slaves and other non-white peoples, then one has undermined the power of the
British or American nation-state? Not that this is an otiose and naive task. Debunking has
been the classic move of those protesting against an unjust status quo purporting to be the
permanent and transcendental condition for everyone.
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But the weapon of criticism, as Marx once said, needs to be reinforced by the principled
criticism of weapons. If we want to guard against committing the same absolutism or
essentialism of the imperial nationalists, we need a historicizing strategy of ascertaining how
force--the energy of social collectivities--turns into violence for the creation or destruction of
social orders and singular life-forms. Understood as embodying "the pathos of an elemental
force," the insurrectionary movements of nationalities has been deemed the source of a vital
and primordial energy that feeds "the legal Modernist composite of primitivism and
experimentalism," a fusion of "radical discontinuity and reciprocal facilitation" (Berman
1995, 238).
The question of the violence of the nation-state thus hinges on the linkage between the
two categories, "nation" and "state." A prior distinction perhaps needs to be made between
"nation" and "society"; while the former "may be ordered, the [latter] orders itself" (Brown
1986). Most historical accounts remind us that the modern nation-state has a beginning--and
consequently, it is often forgotten--and an ending. But the analytic and structural distinction
between the referents of nation (local groups, community, domicile or belonging) and state
(governance, machinery of sanctioning laws, disciplinary codes, military) is often elided
because the force of nationalism is often conflated with the violence of the state apparatuses,
an error compounded by ignoring the social classes involved in each sphere. This is the lesson
of Marx and Lenins necessary discrimination between oppressor and oppressed nations--a
nation that oppresses another cannot really claim to be free. Often the symptom of this
fundamental error is indexed by the formula of counterpointing the state to civil society,
obfuscating the symbiosis and synergy between them. This error may be traced partly to the
Hobbesian conflation of state and society in order to regulate the anarchy of the market and
of brutish individualism violating civil contracts (Ollman 1993).
It may be useful to recall the metaphysics of the origin of the nation elaborated in
Ernest Renan's 1882 lecture, "What is a nation?" This may be considered one of the originary
locus of nationalism conceived as a primitivist revolt against the centralized authority of
modernizing industrial states. While Renan emphasized a community founded on acts of
sacrifice and their memorialization, this focus does not abolish the fact that the rise of the
merchant bourgeoisie marked the start of the entrenchment of national boundaries first
drawn in the age of monarchical absolutism. The establishment of the market coincided with
the introduction of taxation, customs, tariffs, etc. underlined by the assertion of linguistic
distinctions among the inhabitants of Europe. M. Polanyi's thesis of The Great
Transformation (1957) urges us to attend to the complexities in the evolution of the nationstate in the world system of commodity exchange. We also need to attend to Ernest Gellners
(1983) argument that cultural and linguistic homogeneity has served from the outset as a
functional imperative for states administering a commodity-centered economy and its classdetermining division of social labor.
Postcolonialists subscribe to a post-structuralist hermeneutic of nationalism as a
primordial destabilizing force devoid of rationality. And so while the formation of the nationstate in the centuries of profound social upheavals did not follow an undisturbed linear
trajectory--we have only to remember the untypical origins of the German and Italian nationstates, not to speak of the national formations of Greece, Turkey, and the colonized peoples
24
that is not enough reason to ascribe an intrinsic instability and belligerency to the nation as
such. States may rise and fall, as the absolute monarchs and dynasties did, but sentiments
and practices constituting the nation follow another rhythm or temporality not easily
dissolved into the vicissitudes of the modern expansive state. Nor does this mean that
nations, whether in the North or the South, exert a stabilizing and conservative influence on
social movements working for radical changes in the distribution of power and resources.
In pursuing a historical analysis of violence, we need to avoid collapsing the distinction
between the concept of the "nation-state" and "nationalism." Whence originates the will to
exclude, to dominate? According to Anthony Giddens, "what makes the nation integral to
the nation-stateis not the existence of sentiments of nationalism but the unification of an
administrative apparatus over precisely defined territorial boundaries in a complex of other
nation-states" (1987, 172). That is why the rise of nation-states coincided with wars and the
establishment of the military bureaucratic machine. In this construal, the state refers to the
political institution with centralized authority and monopoly of coercive agencies coeval with
the rise of global capitalism, while nationalism denotes the diverse configuration of peoples
based on the commonality of symbols, beliefs, traditions, and so on.
In addition, we need to guard against confusing historical periods and categories.
Imagining the nation unified on the basis of secular citizenship and self-representation, as
Benedict Anderson (1991) has shown, was only possible when print capitalism arose in
conjunction with the expansive state. But that in turn was possible when the trading
bourgeoisie developed the means of communication under pressure of competition and
hegemonic exigencies. Moreover, the dissemination of the Bible in different vernaculars did
not translate into a monopoly of violence by the national churches. It is obvious that the sense
of national belonging, whether based on clan or tribal customs, language, religion, etc.,
certainly has a historical origin and localizing motivation different from the emergence of the
capitalist state as an agency to rally the populace to serve the needs of the commercial class
and the goal of accumulation.
Given the rejection of a materialist analysis of the contradictions in any social
formation, postcolonial critics in particular find themselves utterly at a loss in making
coherent sense when dealing with nationalism. Representations of the historicity of the
nation in the modern period give way to a Nietzschean will to invent reality as polysemic
discourse, a product of enunciatory and performative acts. Postcolonialism resorts to a
pluralist if not equivocating stance. It sees nationalism as "an extremely contentious site" in
which notions of self-determination and identity collide with notions of domination and
exclusion. Such oppositions, however, prove unmanageable indeed if a mechanical idealist
perspective is employed. Such a view in fact leads to an irresolvable muddle in which nationstates as instruments for the extraction of surplus value (profit) and "free" exchange of
commodities also become violent agencies preventing "free" action in a global marketplace
that crosses national boundaries. Averse to empirical grounding, postcolonialism regards
nationalist ideology as the cause of individual and state competition for goods and resources
in the "free market," with this market conceived as a creation of ideology. I cite one
postcolonial authority that attributes violence to the nation-state on one hand and liberal
disposition to the nation on the other:
25
26
act of constituting the polity, gradually acquires libidinal investment enough to inspire
movements of anticolonial liberation across national boundaries. Its influence on the U.S.
Constitution as well as on personalities like Sun Yat-Sen, Jose Rizal, and other "third world"
radical democrats has given the principle of popular sovereignty a "transnational" if not
universal status (on Filipino nationalism, see San Juan 2000a). Within the system of nationstates, for Marxists, "recognition of national rights is an essential condition for international
solidarity" (Lowy 1998, 59) in the worldwide fight for socialism and communism.
Now this universal principle of people's rights is generally considered to be the basis
of state power for the modern nation, "the empowerment, through this bureaucracy, of the
interests of the state conceived as an abstraction rather than as a personal fiefdom" (Ashcroft
et al 1998, 153). A serious mistake occurs when the nation and its legitimating principle of
popular sovereignty becomes confused with the state bureaucracy construed either as an
organ transcending the interest of any single class, or as the "executive committee" of the
bourgeoisie. A mechanical, not dialectical, method underlies this failure to connect the
ideology, politics, and economics of the bourgeois revolution. This quasi-Hegelian
interpretation posits the popular will of the post-Renaissance nation-states as the motor of
world expansion, of 19th-century colonialism. Instead of the substance of the "civilizing
mission" being informed by the gospel of universal human rights, according to postcolonial
orthodoxy, it is the ideology of national glory tied to "the unifying signifiers of language and
race" that now impels the colonial enterprise.
So nationalism, the need to superimpose the unifying myths of the imperial nationstate, is not only generated by the bourgeois agenda of controlling and regulating the space
of its market, but also by the imperative of seizing markets and resources outside territories
and peoples. Nationalism is then interpreted by postcolonial theorists as equivalent to
colonialism; the nation is an instrument of imperialist aggrandizement, so that if newly
liberated ex-colonies employ nationalist discourse and principles, they will only be
replicating the European model whose myths, sentiments, and traditions justified the violent
suppression of "internal heterogeneities and differences." The decolonizing nation is thus an
oxymoron, a rhetorical if not actual impossibility.
Lacking any historical anchorage, the argument of postcolonial theory generates
inconsistencies due to an exorbitant culturalism. Because they disregard the historical
genealogy of the nation-state discussed by Gellner, Anderson, Smith (1971), among others,
postcolonial critics uphold the sphere of culture as the decisive force in configuring social
formations. Not that culture is irrelevant in explaining political antagonisms. Rather, it is
erroneous when such antagonisms are translated into nothing but the tensions of cultural
differences. The dogma of cultural difference (for Charles Taylor, the need and demand for
recognition in a modern politics of identity; more later) becomes then the key to explaining
colonialism, racism, and postcolonial society. Ambivalence, hybridity, and interstitial or
liminal space become privileged signifiers over against homogenizing symbols and icons
whose "authority of cultural synthesis" is the target of attack. Ideology and discursive
performances serve as the primary field of analysis over against "localized materialism" and
vulgar Marxism.
27
Violence in postcolonial discourse is thus located in ideas and cultural forces that
unify, synthesize or generalize a range of experiences; such forces suppress difference or
negate multiple "others" not subsumed within totalities such as nation, class, gender, etc.
While some culturalist critics allow for different versions of the historic form of the nation,
the reductive dualism of their thinking manifests a distinct bias for a liberal framework of
analysis: the choice is either a nation based on an exclusionary myth of national unity
centered on abstractions such as race, religion or ethnic singularity; or a nation upholding
plurality and multiculturalism (for example, Canada or the United States). This fashionable
vogue of pluralism and culturalism has already been proved inutile in confronting
inequalities of class, gender, and "race." Moreover, it cannot explain the appeal of nationalism
as a means of reconciling the antagonistic needs for order and for autonomy (Smith 1979) in
the face of mechanistic bureaucratism and the anarchic market of atomized consumers.
The most flagrant evidence of the constrained parameters of this culturalist diagnosis
of nation/nationalism may be found in its construal of racist ideology as "the construction
and naturalization of an unequal form of intercultural relations" (Ashcroft et al 1998, 46). If
racism occurs only or chiefly on the level of "intercultural relations," from this constricted
optic, the other parts of a given social formation (political, economic) become superfluous
and marginal. Politics is then reduced to an epiphenomenal manifestation of discourse and
language-games.
A virtuoso application of a culturalist contextualism may be illustrated by the legal
scholar Rosemary Coombe who defends the right of the Canadian First Nations to claim
"ownership" rights to certain cultural property. Coombe correctly rejects the standard
procedure of universalizing the Lockean concept of property and its rationale, possessive
individualism, which underlies the Western idea of authorship and authentic artefacts. She
writes: "By representing cultures in the image of the undivided possessive individual, we
obscure peoples historical agency and transformations, their internal differences, the
productivity of intercultural contact, and the ability of peoples to culturally express their
position in a wider world" (1995, 264). Although Coombe calls attention to structures of
power and the systemic legacies of exclusion, the call remains abstract and consequently
trivializing. Above all, it obscures the reality and effect of material inequities. The
postmodernist leitmotif of domination and exclusion mystifies the operations of corporate
capitalism and its current political suppression of the indigenous struggles for selfdetermination. Coombe ignores precisely those "internal differences" and their contradictory
motion that give concrete specificity to the experiences of embattled groups such as the First
Nations. Here ironically the postmodernist inflection of the nation evokes the strategy of
bourgeois nationalism to erase class, gender, and other differences ostensibly in the name of
contextual nuances and refined distinctions.
Notwithstanding her partisanship for the oppressed, Coombe condemns "cultural
nationalism" as an expression of possessive individualism and its idealist metaphysics. But
her method of empiricist contextualism contradicts any emancipatory move by the First
Nations at self-determination. It hides the global asymmetry of power, the dynamics of
exploitative production relations, and the hierarchy of states in the geopolitical struggle for
world hegemony. We have not transcended identity politics and the injustice of cultural
28
appropriation because the strategy of contextualism reproduces the condition for refusing to
attack the causes of class exploitation and racial violence. Despite gestures of repudiating
domination and exclusion, postmodernist contextualism mimics the moralizing rhetoric of
United Nations humanitarianism that cannot, for the present, move beyond reformism since
it continues to operate within the framework of the transnational corporate globalized
market. Such a framework is never subjected to critical interrogation.
In the fashionable discourse of postmodernists, nation and nationalism are made
complicit with the conduct of Western colonialism and imperialism. They become anathema
to deconstructionists hostile to any revolutionary project in the "third world" inspired by
emancipatory goals. This is the reason why postcolonial critics have a difficult time dealing
with Fanon and his engagement with decolonizing violence as a strategic response of
subjugated peoples to the inhumane violence of colonial racism and imperial subjugation.
Fanon's conceptualization of a national culture is the direct antithesis to any culturalist
syndrome, in fact an antidote to it, because he emphasizes the organic integration of cultural
action with a systematic program of subverting colonialism: "A national culture is the whole
body of efforts made by a people in the sphere of thought to describe, justify and praise the
action through which that people has created itself and keeps itself in existence" (1961, 155).
Discourse and power are articulated by Fanon in the dialectics of practice inscribed in the
specific historical conditions of their effectivity. Fanons universalist-critical theory of
national liberation proves itself a true "concrete universal" in that it incorporates via a
dialectical sublation the richness of the particulars embodied in the Algerian revolution.
Given his historicizing method, Fanon refuses any demarcation of culture from politics
and economics. Liberation is always tied to the question of property relations, the sol division
of labor, and the process of social reproductionall these transvalued by the imperative of the
revolutionary transformation of colonial relations. Opposed to Fanon's denunciation of
"abstract populism," Said and Bhabha fetishize an abstract "people" on liminal, borderline
spaces. Such recuperation of colonial hegemony via a "third space" or contrapuntal passage
of negotiation reveals the comprador character of postcolonial theories of translation and
cultural exchange. Transcultural syncretism devised to abolish the nation substitutes for antiimperialist revolution a pragmatic modus vivendi of opportunist compromises.
An analogous charge can be levelled at Edward Said's reading of Fanons
"liberationist" critique. Said locates violence in nationalist movements (unless it is "critical")
since they deny the heterogeneity of pre-colonial societies by romanticizing the past. For Said,
a liberationist populism is preferable to nativism and the fanatical cult of "minor differences."
Said presents us a hypothetical dilemma: "[Fanon's] notion was that unless national
consciousness at its moment of success was somehow changed into social consciousness, the
future would not hold liberation but an extension of imperialism" (1993, 323). Said thus
posits a spurious antithesis between the project of national self-determination and a vague
notion of social liberation. For Said, nationalism is always a tool of the hegemonic oppressor
and holds no socially emancipatory potential. Said's answer evacuates Fanon's populardemocratic nationalism of all social content, postulating an entirely abstract divide between
a nationalist program and a socially radical one. For Said, the violence of anticolonial
movements becomes symptomatic of a profound colonial malaise.
29
National liberation and social justice via class struggle are interdependent. As
Leopoldo Marmora observes, "While classes, in order to become predominant, have to
constitute themselves as national classes, the nation arises from class struggle" (1984, 113).
The popular-democratic aspiration for self-determination contains both national and social
dimensions. In "On Violence," Fanon invoked the ideal of decolonizing freedom as the
legitimizing rationale of mass popular revolution. It is force deployed to accomplish the
political agenda of overthrowing colonial domination and bourgeois property relations.
Violence here becomes intelligible as an expression of subaltern agency and its creative
potential. Its meaning is crystallized in the will of the collective agent, in the movement of
seizing the historical moment to realize the human potential (Lukacs 2000). If rights are
violated and the violence of the violator (for example, the state) held responsible, can the
concept of rights be associated with peoples and their national identities? Or is the authority
of the state to exercise violence derived from the nation/people? Here we need to ascertain
the distinction between the state as an instrument of class interest and the nation/people as
the matrix of sovereignty. The authority of the state as regulative juridical organ and
administrative apparatus with a monopoly of coercive force derives from its historical origin
in enforcing bourgeois rights of freedom and equality against the absolutist monarchy.
National identity is used by the state to legitimize its actions within a delimited territory, to
insure mobilization and coordination of policy (Held 1992). Formally structured as a
Rechststaat, the bourgeois nation-state functions to insure the self-reproduction of capital
through market forces and the continuous commodification of labor power (Jessop 1982).
Fanon understands that national liberation challenges the global conditions guaranteeing
valorization and realization of capital, conditions in which the internationalization and
nationalization of the circuits of capital are enforced by hegemonic nation-states.
We are thus faced with the notion of structural violence attached to the bourgeois state
as opposed to the intentionalist mode of violence as an expression of subject/agency such as
the collectivity of the people. Violence is thus inscribed in the dialectic of identity and
Otherness, with the bourgeois states coherence depending on the subordination (if not
consent) of workers and other subalterns.
We can resolve the initial paradox of the nation, a Janus-faced phenomenon (Nairn
1977), by considering the following historical background. The idea of state-initiated violence
(as opposed to communal ethnic-motivated violence) performs a heuristic role in the task of
historicizing any existing state authority and questioning the peaceful normalcy of the status
quo. The prevailing social order is then exposed as artificial and contingent; what is deemed
normal or natural reveals itself as an instrument of partial interests. But the relative
permanence of certain institutional bodies and their effects need to be acknowledged in
calculating political strategies. The long duration of collective and individual memories exerts
its influence through the mediation of what Pierre Bourdieu calls "habitus" (1993). We begin
to understand that the state's hierarchical structure is made possible because of the
institutionalized violence that privileges the hegemony (moral and intellectual leadership
crafted via negotiating compromises) of a bloc of classes over competing blocs and their
alternative programs. Hegemony is always underwritten by coercion (open or covert, subtle
or crude) in varying proportions and contingencies. The demarcated territory claimed by a
30
state in rivalry with other states becomes for Max Weber one major pretext for the state
monopoly of legitimate violence in order to defend private property and promote the overseas
interests of the domestic business class (Krader 1968).
Georges Sorel argued for the demystificatory use of violence in his Reflections on
Violence (1908; 1972). Sorel believed that the only way to expose the illusion of a peaceful
and just bourgeois order is to propagate the myth of the general strike. Through strategic,
organized violence, the proletariat is bound to succeed in releasing vast social energies
hitherto repressed and directing them to the project of radical social transformation. This is
still confined within the boundaries of the national entity. Open violence or war purges the
body politic of hatred, prejudice, deceptions, and so on. Proletarian violence destroys
bourgeois mystification and the nationalist ethos affiliated with it. Sorel's syndicalist politics
of violence tries to convert force as a means to a political and social end, the process of the
general strike. This politics of organized mass violence appeals to a utopian vision that
displaces the means-ends rationality of bourgeois society in the fusion of force with pleasure
realizable in a just, egalitarian order.
The classical Marxist view of violence rejects the mechanical calculation of meansends that undermines the logic of Blanquist and Sorelian conceptions of social change. Marx
disavowed utopian socialism in favor of the overthrow of the bourgeoisie through a
combination of violent and peaceful means. Instrumentalism is subordinated to a narrative
of emancipation from class bondage. The objective of emancipating labor associated with the
laboring nation/people requires the exposure of commodity-fetishism and the ideology of
equal exchange of values in the market. Reification and alienation in social relations account
for the bourgeois states ascendancy. Where the state bureaucracy supporting the bourgeoisie
and the standing army do not dominate the state apparatus completely (a rare case) or has
been weakened, as in the case of the monarchy and the Russian bourgeoisie at the time of the
Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, the working class might attain their goal of class liberation by
peaceful means; but in most cases, "the lever of the revolution will have to be force" harnessed
by the masses unified by class consciousness and popular solidarity.
Based on their historical investigations, Marx and Engels understood the role of
violence as the midwife in the birth of a new social order within the old framework of the
nation-state. In his later years Engels speculated that with the changes in the ideological
situation of the classes in any national territory, "a real victory of an insurrection over the
military in street fighting is one of the rarest exceptions." In an unusual historic conjuncture,
however, the Bolshevik revolution mobilized mass strikes and thus disproved Engels.
Nevertheless, Marxs "analytical universality," to use John Dunns (1979, 78) phrase, remains
valid in deploying the concept of totality to comprehend the nexus of state, class and nation.
We can rehearse here the issues that need to be examined from the viewpoint of totality: Was
Lenin's "dictatorship of the proletariat" an imposition of state violence, or the coercive rule
of the people against the class enemy? If it is an instrumental means of the new proletarian
state, did it implicate the nation? Is violence here both structured into the state system of
apparatuses and inscribed in the collective agency of the working masses cognized as the
nation? Is the political authority invoked by the proletarian state embodied in the class
interest of all those exploited by capital (in both periphery and center) ascendant over all?
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Marxists critical of the Leninist interpretation denounce the use of state violence as an
anarchist deviation, an arbitrary application of force. They affirm instead the law-governed
historical process that will inevitably transform capitalism into socialism, whatever the
subjective intentions of the political protagonists involved. Such fatalism, however, rules out
the intervention of a class-for-itself freed from ideological blinders and uniting all the
oppressed with its moral-intellectual leadership, the cardinal axiom of socialist revolution.
Rationalist thinkers for their part reject violence as an end in itself while accepting the
force of the market as normal and natural. This is epitomized by legal thinkers who contend
that primordial nationalist claims should be regulated by autonomous international law, "the
domain of the metajuridique" (Berman 1995). By identifying nationalism as a primitive
elemental force outside the jurisdiction of positive law, the modernist legal scholar is alleged
to be receptive to its experimental creativity so that new legal techniques are devised to
regulate the destabilization of Europe--and, for that matter, its colonial empires--by
"separatist nationalisms." The aim is to pacify the subalterns and oppressed classes by
juridical and culturalist prophylactic.
As I have noted above in dealing with Fanons work, the nature of violence in the
process of decolonization cannot be grasped by such dualistic metaphysics epitomized in the
binarism of passion-versus-law. What is needed is the application of a historical materialist
critique to the complex problem of national self-determination. Marxists like Lenin and Rosa
Luxemburg, despite their differences, stress the combination of knowledge and practice in
analyzing the balance of political forces. They contend that class struggle is a form of
knowledge/action, the civil war of political groups, which can synthesize wars of position
(legal, peaceful reforms) and the war of maneuver (organized frontal assault by armed
masses, to use Gramsci's terminology) in the transformation of social relations in any
particular nation. Violence itself can become a creative force insofar as it reveals the class bias
of the bourgeois/colonial state and serves to accelerate the emergence of class consciousness
and organized popular solidarity. Insofar as the force of nation/national identity distracts
and prohibits the development of class consciousness, then it becomes useless for socialist
transformation. In colonized societies, however, nationalism coincides with the converging
class consciousness of workers, peasants, and the masses of subjugated natives that
constitute the political force par excellence in harnessing violence for emancipatory goals.
From the historical-materialist perspective then, violence cannot be identified with the
nation or nation-state per se under all circumstances. We need to distinguish between the
two positions--the postmodern one of indiscriminate attack on all totalities (such as class,
nation, etc.) premised on a syllogistic Kantian means-ends rationality, and the historicalmaterialist one where means/ends are dialectically calibrated in historically inventive
modalities--so as to illuminate the problem of violence in this new millennium. The impasse
between these two positions reflects the relation of unceasing antagonism between the
bourgeoisie and the nationalities they exploit in the world system of commodity-exchange
and accumulation.
On another level, the impasse may be viewed as a theoretical crux. It signifies the
antinomy between agency and structure, the intentionalist-nominalist pragmatism of liberals
and the structuralist views of historical materialists. The former looks at the nation as always
32
implicated in the state while the latter considers the nation as historically separate and
contingent on the vicissitudes of the class warfare. One way of trying to elucidate this
contradiction is by examining Walter Benjamin's argument in "Critique of Violence" (1978).
Taking Sorel as one point of departure, Benjamin considers the use of violence as a
means for establishing governance. Law is opposed to divine violence grasped as fate and the
providential reign of justice. Bound up with violence, law is cognized as power, a power
considered as a means of establishing order within a national boundary. The abolition of state
power is the aim of revolutionary violence which operates beyond the reach of law-making
force, an aspiration for justice that would spell the end of class society. Proletarian revolution
resolves the means-ends instrumentalism of bourgeois politics. Violence becomes
problematic when fate/justice, once deemed providential, eludes our grasp with the Babel of
differences blocking communication and also aggrandizing particularisms found below the
level of the nation-form and its international, not to say cosmopolitan, possibilities.
Violence is only physical force divorced from its juridical potency. Benjamin's thesis
may be more unequivocal than the academically fashionable Foucauldian view of subsuming
violence in power relations. It takes a more scrupulous appraisal of the sectarian limitations
as well as empowering possibilities of violence in the context of class antagonisms. While the
issue of nationalist violence is not explicitly addressed in his essay, Benjamin seeks to explore
the function of violence as a creator and preserver of law, a factor intricately involved in the
substance of normative processes. Benjamin writes: "Lawmaking is powermaking, and, to
that extent, an immediate manifestation of violence. Justice is the principle of all divine end
making, power the principle of all mythical lawmaking" (1978, 295). Lawmaking mythical
violence can be contested only by divine power, which today, according to Benjamin, is
manifested in "educative power, which in its perfected form stands outside the law."
Benjamin is not entirely clear about this "educative power," but I think it can only designate
the influence of the family and other agencies in civil society not regulated by the traditional
state apparatuses. In another sense, Benjamin alludes to "the proper sphere of
understanding, language," which makes possible the peaceful resolution of conflicts. Since
language is intimately linked with the national community, national consciousness
contradicts the disruptive effects of violence in its capacity to resolve antagonisms.
Benjamin goes on to investigate violence embodied in the state (as contradistinguished
from the national community) through a process of demystification. Critique begins by
disclosing the idea of its development, its trajectory of ruptures and mutations, which in turn
exposes the fact that all social contract depends on a lie, on fiction. "Justice, the criterion of
ends," supersedes legality, "the criterion of means." Justice is the reign of communication
which, because it excludes lying, excludes violence. In effect, violence is the mediation that
enables state power to prevail. It cannot be eliminated by counter-violence that simply inverts
it. Only the educative power of language, communication associated with the national
collectivity, can do away with the need to lie. But since the social contract displaces justice as
the end of life with legality connected with the state, and law is required as an instrument to
enforce the contract, violence continues to be a recurrent phenomenon in a commoditycentered society.
33
Benjamin is silent about the nation and the efficacy of popular sovereignty in this text.
His realism seeks to clarify the historic collusion between law, violence, and the state. He
wants to resolve the philosophical dualism of means and ends that has bedevilled liberal
rationalism and its inheritors, pragmatism and assorted postmodernist nominalisms. His
realism strives to subordinate the instrumentality of violence to law, but eventually he
dismisses law as incapable of realizing justice. But we may ask: how can justice--the quest for
identity without exclusion/inclusion, without alterity--be achieved in history if it becomes
some kind of intervention by a transcendent power into the secular domain of class struggle?
How can justice be attained as an ideal effect of communication? Perhaps through language
as mediated in the nation-form, in the web of discourse configuring the nation as a
community of speakers (San Juan 2000b), the nation as the performance of groups unified
under the aegis of struggle against oppression and exploitation?
Benjamins speculation on the reconciling charisma of language seems utopian in the
pejorative sense. Peoples speaking the same language (e.g., Northern Ireland, Colombia,
North and South Korea) continue to be locked in internecine conflict. If violence is
inescapable in the present milieu of reification and commodity-fetishism, how can we use it
to promote dialogue and enhance the resources of the oppressed for liberation? In a seminal
essay on "Nationalism and Modernity," Charles Taylor underscores the modernity of
nationalism in opposition to those who condemn it as atavistic tribalism or a regression to
primordial barbarism. In the context of modernization, Taylor resituates violence in the
framework of the struggle for recognitionnationalism "as a call to difference,lived in the
register of threatened dignity, and constructing a new, categorical identity as the bearer of
that dignity" (1999, 240).
What needs to be stressed here is the philosophical underpinning of the struggle for
recognition and recovery of dignity. It invokes clearly the Hegelian paradigm of the relation
between lord and bondsman in The Phenomenology of Mind. In this struggle, the possibility
of violence mediates the individuals discovery of his finite and limited existence, his
vulnerability, and his need for community. Piotr Hoffmans gloss underlines the Hegelian
motif of freedom as risk: "Violence is the necessary condition of my emergence as a
universal, communal beingfor I can find common ground with the other only insofar as
both of us can endure the mortal danger of the struggle and can thus think independently of
a blind attachment to our particular selves" (1989, 145). Since the nation evokes sacrifice, the
warriors death on the battlefield, honor, self-transcendence, destiny, the state seeks to
mobilize such nation-centered feelings and emotions to legitimize itself as a wider, more
inclusive, and less artificial reality to attain its own accumulative goals. Weber reminds us:
"For the state is the highest power organization on earth, it has power over life and death.
A mistake comes in, however, when one speaks of the state alone and not of the nation"
(quoted in Poggi 1978, 101).
The nationalist struggle for recognition and the violence of anticolonial revolutions
thus acquire a substantial complexity in the context of modernity, the fact of uneven
development, and the vicissitudes of capitalist crisis. In any case, whatever the moral puzzles
entailed by the plural genealogies of the nation-state, it is clear that a dogmatic pacifism is no
answer to an effective comprehension of the real world and purposeful intervention in it.
34
Given the continued existence of nation-states amidst the increasing power of transnational
corporations in a geopolitical arena of sharpening rivalry, can we choose between a "just" and
an "unjust" war when nuclear weapons that can destroy the whole planet are involved?
Violence on such a scale obviously requires the dialectical transcendence of the system of
nation-states in the interest of planetary justice and survival.
Overall, the question of violence cannot be answered within the framework of the
Realpolitik of the past but only within the framework of nation-states living in mutual
reciprocity. Causality, however, has to be ascertained and responsibility assigned even if the
nation is construed as "an interpretive construct" (Arnason 1990, 230). My view is that the
hegemonic bloc of classes using the capitalist state machinery is the crux of the problem. If
nations have been manipulated by states dominated by possessive/acquisitive classes that
have undertaken and continue to undertake colonial and imperial conquests, then the future
of humanity and all living organisms on earth can be insured only by eliminating those classes
that are the origin of state violence. The nation-form can then be reconstituted and
transcended to insure that it will not generate reasons or opportunities for state-violence to
recur. That will be the challenge for future revolutionaries.
References
Anderson, Benedict. 1991. Imagined Communities. Verso: London.
Arnason, Johann. 1990. "Nationalism, Globalization and Modernity." In Global Culture. Ed. Mike Featherstone.
London: Sage Publications.
Ashcroft, Bill, Gareth Griffiths, and Helen Tiffin. 1998. Key Concepts in Post-Colonial Studies. New York:
Routledge.
Balibar, Etienne and Immanuel Wallerstein. 1991. Race, Nation, Class. London Verso.
Benjamin, Walter. 1978. Reflections. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
Berman, Nathaniel. 1995. "Modernism, Nationalism and the Rhetoric of Reconstruction." In After Identity. New
York: Routledge.
Bourdieu, Pierre. 1993. The Field of Cultural Production. New York: Columbia University Press.
Bowle, John. 1947. Western Political Thought. London: Methuen.
Brown, Michael. 1986. The Production of Society. Totowa, NJ: Rowman and Littlefield.
Coombe, Rosemary. 1995. "The Properties of Culture and the Politics of Possessing Identity: Native Claims in
the Cultural Appropriation Controversy." In After Identity. Ed. Dan Danielsen and Karen Engle. New
York: Routledge.
Dunn, John. 1979. Western Political Theory in the Face of the Future. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University
Press.
Fanon, Frantz. 1961. The Wretched of the Earth. New York: Grove Press.
Gellner, Ernest. 1983. Nations and Nationalism. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
Giddens, Anthony. 1985. The Nation-State and Violence. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.
---. 1987. Social Theory and Modern Society. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.
Held, David. 1992. "The Development of the Modern State." In Formations of Modernity. Ed. Stuart Hall and
Bram Gieben. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.
Hoffman, Piotr. 1989. Violence in Modern Philosophy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Howard, Michael. 1991. The Lessons of History. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Jessop, Bob. 1982. The Capitalist State.
Krader, Lawrence. 1968. Formation of the State. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall.
Lukacs, Georg. 2000. In Defense of History and Class Consciousness. London: Verso.
Marmora, Leopoldo. 1984. "Is There a Marxist Theory of Nation?" In Rethinking Marx. Ed. Sakari Hanninen
and Leena Paldan. New York: International General.
Ollman, Bertell. 1993. Dialectical Investigations. New York: Routledge.
Poggi, Gianfranco. 1978. The Development of the Modern State. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press.
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authorized and encouraged water boarding and other enhanced interrogation techniques
in the program.
The program was made under the Bush national security policy and was authorized
and facilitated by President George H.W. Bush, Vice President Richard Dick Cheney,
National Security Advisor Condoleeza Rice, White House legal counsel Alberto Gonzales,
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Vice Legal Counsel & Cheney Chief of Staff David
Addington, CIA Acting General Counsel John Rizzo, CIA Director of National Clandestine
Service Jose Rodriguez, Deputy Assistant US. Attorney General John Yoo, and several others.
The accountability of this crew of terrorists and fascistic criminals extends to the
torture of prisoners by Department of Defense personnel, the mass murder and displacement
of millions of Afghans and Iraqis, and the destruction of their social infrastructure, all colossal
crimes of imperialist aggression done in the name of a phoney global war on terror.
The summary report of the US Senate Committee is heavily redacted and is focused
only on CIA torture. It cites only one prisoner death and does not include information and
photographic evidence on US torture and prisons operated by the US Army, US Navy and
other Department of Defense (DOD) agencies. As of 2005, more than 100,000 prisoners had
been detained, many of whom were tortured, in US prisons set up across Central Asia since
the start of the so-called global war on terror in 2002.
Major General Antonio Taguba investigated torture and prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib
in 2004 and was aided by 2000 photographs that in his words showed torture, abuse, rape
and every indecency. The Taguba Report was squelched by the Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld
combine and the aforesaid photographs were either tucked away or destroyed. General
Taguba was frozen and forced to resign in 2007. He accused the Bush regime of committing
war crimes.
With reference to the US Senate Intelligence Committee report on CIA torture, the UN
High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Raad al-Hussein has declared that the US has an
obligation to ensure accountability because it ratified the UN Convention Against Torture in
1994. The Geneva Conventions also requires the US to prosecute the torturers. UN Secretary
General Ban Ki-Moon has also stressed that the report should lead to prosecutions because
the prohibition against torture is absolute. The UN Special Rapporteur on Counterterrorism
and Human Rights Ben Emmerson has also pointed out that there was a clear policy
orchestrated at a high level within the Bush administration which allowed the gross and
systematic violations of international human rights law.
But how do you prosecute Bush and his underlings? Although Obama officially
terminated the torture program in 2009, he blocked the report until he needed it to counter
the mid-term electoral victory of the Republicans. He continues to support the US
Department of Justice in refusing to undertake a criminal investigation. He is apparently
restraining himself because of fear that the Republican Congress and President would
someday also hold him accountable for the thousands of innocent civilians murdered by his
drone bombing campaigns.
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39
Gerry Lanuza
Ang mga komunista ay hindi naglilihim ng kanilang mga paniniwala at layunin.
Tahasan nilang ipinapahayag na ang kanilang pakay ay maaari lamang
makamit sa pamamagitan ng marahas na pagwasak sa kasalukuyang lipunan.
Hayaan nating manginig sa sindak ang mga naghaharing uri
kapag narinig nila ang paghihimagsik ng mga komunista.
Sa paghihimagsik, walang mawawala sa mga manggagawa
kundi ang kanilang pagkagapos. Dahil para sa kanila ang daigdig.
Mga mangagawa sa ibat ibang panig ng daigdig, magkaisa.
Sinulat ito ni Marx at Engels noong 1848! At ngayon, makaraan ang halos isang siglo
at animnaput anim (166) na taon, marami nang mga nawalan ng pananampalataya sa sinabi
ni Marx at Engels. Ang pamamayagpag ng monopolyo kapitalismo sa panahon ng
globalisasyon, ay tila nagtutulak sa mga manggagawa na maniwalang wala nang bisa o lipas
na ang mga pagsusuri ni Marx at Engels. Sabi pa ng iba, panis na. Ngunit para sa klasikong
Marxismo, payak lamang ang paliwanag: sa patuloy na pamamayagpag ng kapitalismo sa
daigdig, lalong maghihirap ang mga manggagawa, darami ang bilang ng manggaggawang
walang hanap-buhay at sila ang mangunguna sa pagpapabagsak ng nabubulok na sistema ng
kapitalismo. Ngunit sa kasalukuyan ay maraming mga intelektwal, sa loob at labas ng mga
unibersidad, mga lider manggagawa, mga consultants na bayaran ng mga korporasyon, na
naglalatag ng kakaibang pagsusuri at pagtingin sa patuloy na paghahari ng monopolyo
kapitalismo sa buong daigdig. Ayon sa mga makabagong pagasusuri ng mga tinaguriang
intelektwal, nag-iba na raw ang anyo ng kapitalismo sa daigdig. Lumiliit na raw ang bilang
ng mga manggagawa at napapalitan ng mga tinagurian knowledge workers, na hindi raw
kabilang sa tradisyunal na uring manggagawa. Dahil marami na raw ang mga knowledge
workers at papakaunti na ang mga tunay na manggagawa, nag-iiba na rin ang politika at
larangan ng pakikibaka. Dahil mas malaki ang sahod at benepisyo nilang mga tinaguriang
knowledge workers sa service sectors, hindi na raw dapat tignan ang tunggalian ng mga uri
bilang pangunahing motor ng panlipunang pagbabago. Sa kasalukuyan, hindi na sila
sumisigaw ng Uring Mangagagawa, Hukbong Mapagpalaya! Bagkos ang sigaw nila ay:
Pagkakapantay-pantay! na walang ibig sabihin kundi ang pagkakapantay-pantay sa uri,
kasarian, lahi, lipi, ng mga bakla, tomboy, at iba pang kasarian. Tila ang kalaban na ngayon
ng mga manggagawa ay ibat ibang uri ng kaapihan pero nakaligtaan na ang pagsasamantala
sa loob ng kapitalismo. Wala namang masama sa paglaban sa lahat ng kaapihan--kasarian o
lahi man ito. Heto naman talaga ang layunin ng mga union at samahang manggagawa sabi ni
Lenin.
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LETTERS AND
STATEMENTS FROM
POLITICAL DETAINEES
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confined in Metro Manila -- by transferring all of them to a secluded part of the National
Penitentiary. The political prisoners, who were hidden in a nook of the National
Penitentiary, wrote to Pope John Paul II a letter sharing with him about their existence and
situation, and asking him to visit them and to take a look at their situation. As an expression
of protest at their situation, they also engaged in fasting during the visit.
The Vatican, thus, learned about and at once raised directly with the Marcos
government the issue in regard to the existence and situation of political prisoners in the
Philipines. The Vatican had wanted to apply then in practice, in the case of the political
prisoners, a verse from Matthew 25:36 ("I was naked and you clothed me. I was sick and
you visited me. I was in prison and you came to me.").
The Marcos martial law regime, however, kept hiding the truth and maintaining its
total denial about the existence then of political prisoners in the country. Pope John Paul II
was, thus, prevented from personally meeting with them and seeing their situation during
his visit to the country. But when the Vatican learned about the malicious transfer of
political prisoners to the National Penitentiary just to hide them from the Pope, it sent the
Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Agostino Casaroli, to personally visit the political
prisoners there and investigate their situation. The Papacy then expressed concern to the
Marcos government and also to the world media about the existence and situation of
political prisoners in the country. This helped a lot in the push for the mass release, very
soon after, of political prisoners.
When in 1995, Pope John Paul II made a second visit to the Philippines, a new batch
(of post-martial law) political prisoners in the country again wrote him a letter about their
situation and, to further highlight their plight and demand for their release, went on hunger
strike. Peace talks between the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) and
the Government of the Republic of the Philippines (GRP/GPH) were then progressing, and
the release of all political prisoners was one of the principal demands of the NDFP in the
peace talks. In the face of all these, the ruling GRP/GPH regime (which was then headed by
President Fidel Ramos) was thus pushed to grant the mass release then of political
prisoners.
Even as the present ruling regime of Benigno S. Aquino III now keeps on mouthing
the very same line that the fascist dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos also kept on deviously
mouthing during the martial law days -- that there is not a single political prisoner existing
in the country -- you will definitely find out in your visit or through a serious investigation
by your office, that, on the contrary, there have long been and indeed continue to be a great
many of us, political prisoners, in the country -- some 500 of us, about half of whom have
been arrested and detained by the present ruling regime. Among the political prisoners at
present in the country are more than 40 women, six minors and about 100 sickly/elderlies
at present. Not yet included among these are more women, minors and sickly/elderlies and
other innocent local community folk arrested with some Moro National Liberation Front
fighters in the aftermath of the latter's stand-off last year in a section of Zamboanga City.
In Metro Manila, in particular, there are presently several scores of us, political
prisoners, who have been confined in Camp Bagong Diwa, in Camp Crame, and in the
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National Penitentiary. Via an actual visit of your holiness or a deep investigation by your
office, you will find out how very much repressive, restrictive and deprived are our
situations as political prisoners, and how the ruling reactionary state and jail authorities
institute systems and do what they can to prevent or even just stifle us from continuing to
effectively fight for peoples causes and for fundamental social changes in the interest of
qualitative betterment in the lives and conditions of the mass of the people -- most
especially the oppressed, deprived and impoverished -- and towards the attainment of true
and lasting peace in the country.
You will also find out that arbitrary arrests, torture, political detention, swamping
with trumped-up criminalized charges, and other acts of fascist state violence and
repression, including extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances against
political/social cause-oriented activists and freedom fighters, and also against peace talks
participants and consultants, as well as against many, many innocent struggling people in
our country, constitute and further keep exacerbating gross violations of the peoples
freedom, justice and human rights, as well as of long-standing peace agreements in our
country. These have practically been no different from what you have seen and have been
pained about in your home country, Argentina.
Together with human rights and other social cause-oriented forces, peace process
advocates and various concerned religious organizations, the National Democratic Front of
the Philippines (NDFP) and its peace panel have been pressing for the rectification of these,
including at the very least the release of all political prisoners, as well as the still-detained
NDFP peace talks participants and consultants, and the ruling state's accounting of the
victims of extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances among NDFP peace talks
participants and consultants and among political prisoners.
The help of your office in taking these up with the GRP/GPH would be of much help
to the peace process.
In this regard, we appreciate, too, that the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF)
leadership, that has also long been engaged in peace talks with the GRP/GPH, has also
written your holiness to help in beefing up the peace process ongoing in the country, and in
particular that between them and the GRP/GPH. In relation to this, it should be noted that,
among political prisoners who have been long been confined in Camp Bagong Diwa, are
about 50 MILF officers and forces. And there are many more of them in other jails in the
south. This, ironically despite the advances supposedly already gained in their peace talks
with the GRP/GPH.
We hope that your visit, at the very least, will see the actual dire situation, touch the
relevant issues, help in examining the roots of such gross fascist sins against the people and
against prospects for peace, and in beefing up efforts to alleviate the situation, including our
situation as political prisoners, who are among those made to continue suffering under such
prevailing rule and system.
We hope that your intercession in our situation may be of great help.
48
Jared Morales
Denis Ortiz
Rhea Pareja
Miguela Piero
Hermogenes Reyes Jr.
Andrea Rosal
Felicardo Salamat
Aristides Sarmiento
Antonio Satumba
Elmer Torres
Ma. Miradel Torres
Cirilo Verdan
IN CAMP
BAGONG DIWA
Tirso Alcantara
Emeterio Antalan
Leopoldo Caloza
Alan Jazmines
Loida Magpatoc
Jesus Abetria Jr.
Modesto Araza
Alex Arias
Cesar Balmaceda
Gemma Carag
Eddie Cruz
Philip Enteria
Marissa Espedido
Voltaire Guray
Fidel Holanda
Eduard Lansana
Pastora Latagan
Rolando Laylo
Evelyn Legaspi
Eliseo Lopez
Alberto Macasinag
Eduardo Sarmiento
Alberto Acerben
Jesus Alegre
Rodel Caballero
Marcial Dosmanos
Sandino Esguerra
Arnilo Gaviola
Generoso Granado
Romeo Lareno
Sony Marbella
Alfredo Montajes
Arturo Pangilinan
Rolando Paamogan
Gerardo dela Pea
Joel Ramada
Lamberto Santiago
Victor Segura
Ricardo Solangon
Danilo Soniscio
Francis Versora
Calixto Vistal
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50
We continue to fervently hope for your valued support and for, indeed, the great help
of your intercession in our situation and in that of the suffering mass of our people.
Political Prisoners (in Metro Manila jails)
IN CAMP
CRAME
Benito Tiamson
Wilma Austria-Tiamson
Dionisio Almonte
Renante Gamara
Eduardo Serrano
Gloria Pitargue-Almonte
Ramon Argente
Joel E. Enano
Arlene Panea
Rex G. Villaflor
Jared Morales
Denis Ortiz
Rhea Pareja
Miguela Piero
Hermogenes Reyes Jr.
Andrea Rosal
Felicardo Salamat
Aristides Sarmiento
Antonio Satumba
Elmer Torres
Ma. Miradel Torres
Cirilo Verdan
IN CAMP
BAGONG DIWA
Tirso Alcantara
Emeterio Antalan
Leopoldo Caloza
Alan Jazmines
Loida Magpatoc
Jesus Abetria Jr.
Modesto Araza
Alex Arias
Cesar Balmaceda
Gemma Carag
Eddie Cruz
Philip Enteria
Marissa Espedido
Voltaire Guray
Fidel Holanda
Eduard Lansana
Pastora Latagan
Rolando Laylo
Evelyn Legaspi
Eliseo Lopez
Alberto Macasinag
Eduardo Sarmiento
Alberto Acerben
Jesus Alegre
Rodel Caballero
Marcial Dosmanos
Sandino Esguerra
Arnilo Gaviola
Generoso Granado
Romeo Lareno
Sony Marbella
Alfredo Montajes
Arturo Pangilinan
Rolando Paamogan
Gerardo dela Pea
Joel Ramada
Lamberto Santiago
Victor Segura
Ricardo Solangon
Danilo Soniscio
Francis Versora
Calixto Vistal
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He was brought 30 minutes away, to the Wawa Dam mountain peak atop their
residence, and then more brutally beaten up with fists and rifle butts, until he lost
unconsciousness.
After having been held for three days where the government soldiers camped at the
mountain peak, he was brought to the 16th IB camp in Baras, Rizal, and there detained for
three days, all the time with his hands tied at his back. He was then brought to the Taytay
Police Station for booking, and then to the Taytay Provincial Prosecutor for inquest. The
arresting forces filed trumped-up charges of "illegal possession of firearms, ammunitions and
explosives" against him (he was purportedly carrying an M16 armalite and also purportedly
had a rifle grenade in his pocket when he was arrested). He was then returned to the 16th IB
camp, held there for two more months, until he was transferred to Camp Capinpin in Brgy.
Sampaloc, Tanay, Rizal, where he was detained for another three days. After the 16th IB
finally, even if already much belatedly and illegally, had obtained an official court order for
his detention, he was transferred to a regular jail -- at the Montalban District Jail -- where he
was confined for nine days.
The Montalban District Jail authorities were concerned that too many -- relatives,
friends and co-employees at the Montalban Municipal Office -- were visiting Eddie Cruz in
jail every day, and that, moreover, he is personally acquianted with practically all the people
living in the community around the Montalban District Jail. Thus, he was again transferred,
on August 28, 2010, to a detention center for "high risk detainees" -- at the Special Intensive
Care Area (SICA) Jail, here in Camp Bagong Diwa, Taguig City, where he has since been
detained for more than four years now.
Initially, even while in jail, Eddie Cruz continued to receive his salary from the
Montalban Municipality. But in March 2011, the head of the Montalban Tourism Office,
Municipal Councillor Rolando Hernandez, attended a court hearing of Eddie Cruz to explain
to the latter that, because he can no longer perform his tasks for the Montalban Tourism
Office, the payment of his salary will temporarily be suspended, but, since he is indeed a
regular employee of the office, will automatically be resumed as soon as he is freed and able
to function again in his previous work as a regular tourist guide.
Following this, the Mayor, Vice-mayor and the entire Sangguniang Bayan of
Montalban wrote an official attestation about Eddie Cruz' being a regular employee in good
standing in their municipality, and about their disbelief about the accusations his arrestors
made against him. They send a copy of their letter to the Office of the President, which also
made inquiries about Eddie Cruz' case. None of these has yet received any reply.
Under detention, Eddie Cruz has been suffering not only the very, very slow crawl of
justice, for which the Philippines is one of the most notorious -- if not actually the worst -- in
the world. He has also been further suffering the many, many failures of the jail authorities
to bring him to scheduled court hearings. Since court hearings in his trumped-up case started
in July 14, 2010, jail authorities have not brought him to court for 15 scheduled court
hearings. The failure to do so have all been intentional -- with the jail authorities absurdly
claiming that Eddie Cruz is a high risk political detainee, and that there is always the risk of
his escaping en route to and from his court hearings.
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Eddie Cruz is only one of presently some 500 national minorities -- mostly Moros -- at
the SICA 1 and SICA 2 Jail here.
Eddie Cruz is only one of presently some 500 of us, documented political prisoners in
the country, practically all of whom are similarly also victims of trumped-up criminalized
charges, in violation of the landmark Hernandez Doctrine, to viciously justify their arbitrary
and illegal arrest and continuing detention. (Still ongoing are the documentations of some
300 more presently detained at the SICA 2 Jail here -- mostly also national minorities, who
have been accused of taking part in the Zamboanga City stand-off of the Moro National
Liberation Front -- including about 70 innocent civilian community residents in the standoff area.)
In the meantime, Eddie Cruz has unjustly and cruelly been suffering continuing
arbitrary and illegal detention, and many other violations of his legal and human rights for
four and a half years now... and counting.
The long-ongoing persecution of indigenous peoples in our country today parallels the
evil persecution of innocent natives in the colonies of the Roman Empire some 2000 years
ago. Today's "Holy Innocents Day", December 28, is a recollection of such evil persecution,
victimizing especially the children of the natives in the Middle East.
Unless all the intentional evil wrongdoings of the present ruling state's powers that be
are not rectified soonest, for Eddie Cruz, and others like him wrongly arrested and detained
indigenous peoples, and like the rest of us -- about 800 other political prisoners in the country
today -- there will be no Happy New Year at all for all of us.
Alan Jazmines
Emeterio Antalan
Leopoldo Caloza
Loida Magpatoc
Tirso Alcantara
National Democratic Front of the Philippines peace consultants detained at Camp Bagong
Diwa, Bicutan, Taguig City
(28 December 2014)
54
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE OF
PEOPLES STRUGGLES
STATEMENTS
Jose Maria Sison
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In the strongest possible terms we denounce the move of the Employers Group (EG)
in the Committee of Application of Standards (CAS) of the International Labor Organization
that denied and challenged the right to strike in ILO Convention 87 on Freedom of
Association and Protection of the Right to Organize. The EG claimed that the absence of any
explicit reference to right to strike on the ILO C87 must be interpreted as without a right to
strike.
This move plays on words, and in one blow, kills outright the workers right to
strike. This is an insidious attack right inside the ILO and a grave abuse of its tripartite
mechanisms to settle disputes. The ILO itself should strike down the EG attack.
The Workers Group in the ILO is right to seek advisory opinion from the International
Court of Justice to settle the issue. However, true to its capitalist interests, this was blocked
by the EG and some governments. A tripartite meeting to discuss this issue is set on 23-25
February 2015.
We say enough of talk shops. Even as we dialogue, bullets have been fired on striking
workers in the Philippines resulting in mass slaughter right inside Hacienda Luisita owned
by the family of the incumbent Philippine President Benigno Aquino III. We cannot dialogue
with bullets.
The Philippine Government has formally ratified ILO C87. The Labor Code, however,
particularly the provisions on Assumption of Jurisdiction (AJ) that gives power to the
Secretary of Labor and the President to use police and/or military force to dismantle workers
strike in industries deemed indispensable to national interest has already undermined
workers right to strike and right to freely associate in Aquinos presidency from mother to
son and all presidencies in between.
Hence, as we call for the defense of the right to strike by the workers themselves, we
are calling for regime change and genuine systems change to liberate the country from all
forms of exploitation and oppression.###
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February 25 is not only the anniversary of EDSA 1. It is a full month after the
Mamasapano fiasco. The families of victims are still demanding justice. Many questions
remain unanswered. The US government can no longer lie about its role on Operation
Wolverine/Exodus. Pres. Aquino can no longer deny his criminal accountability in the
operations as the commander-in-chief and as head of state. His best exit plan is to resign.
We flatly reject a joint council with Aquino as one of the alleged exit plans being
devised by Malacanang in the face of the growing peoples movement for his resignation.
We join the people in conducting their own public hearings today in Plaza
Miranda. We enjoin the broad masses on February 25 to mobilize from Camp Crame to the
EDSA Shrine to press for Aquinos resignation.
We call for direct political actions by the people on the streets from February 25 and
onwards, in all major cities in the country and with our compatriots abroad, including OFWs
who have just remitted $26.93-billion last year.
Truth and accountability for the people is rendered impossible by the US-Aquino
regime. Peace and justice for the nation, including the Moro people, can only be achieved
without US intervention and Aquinos subservience to foreign interests. Imperialist dictates
have aggravated poverty, inequality and injustice in the country.
We do not need the US to advise Aquino to cut and cut cleanly as Sen. Paul Laxalt
under Reagan did to Marcos in 1986. Just withdraw your support and keep out, we say to the
Obama administration.
It is time to transit, to transform and move forward with a leadership without Aquino
and his ilk. We are for regime change, and for genuine systems change for the Filipino
people.###
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We, the International League of Peoples Struggle, share with the Cuban people and
their leadership the great joy of celebrating the release of the remaining 3 of the Cuban 5 and
the return of all these anti-terrorist heroes to their homeland. We demanded their freedom
for a long time and we are elated that they are free. They were unjustly imprisoned in the US
for more than 16 years.
We also welcome the decision of the Cuban and US governments to reestablish
diplomatic relations and to work for their normalization. It is the prerogative of any
independent state, be it socialist or not, to establish and develop normal diplomatic and trade
relations with other countries, irrespective of ideology or social system. We demand the
immediate and complete lifting of the economic, commercial and financial blockade that the
US has imposed on Cuba for more than 50 years.
It is a great victory for the Cuban people and their leadership that because of their
protracted revolutionary struggle against imperialism the US government has finally
admitted the failure of its policy of hostility and blockade. We share with all the peoples,
forces and movements in solidarity with the Cuban people the joy in celebrating such historic
victory.
We have confidence that the Cuban people and their leadership will continue to
uphold, defend and promote their national sovereignty and independence and their socialist
ideals. We continue to stand in solidarity with them and support them in fending off attempts
of the US to demand the unbridled license of US corporations, agencies and imperialistfunded NGOs in exchange for the lifting of the blockade. There are indeed risks and dangers
to reckon with.
History has shown that revolutionary states can maintain their independence, their
own principles and social system, even as they have normal diplomatic and trade relations
with other states of whatever ideology and social system. The Cuban people have their firm
revolutionary principles, historical experience and continuing revolutionary will, vigilance
and militancy to be able to counter any trap or trick of the imperialists and their reactionary
agents.###
http://ilps-phils.com/ilps-welcomes-release-of-all-cuban-5-and-normalization-of-us-cuba-relations/
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would indict them soon. This time, the Bonifacio trials would have a different ending. The
Filipino working class is fit to lead and win the Philippine revolution.###
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MANILA. The local affiliate of the International League of Peoples Struggle in the
Philippines (ILPS-Phils) welcomes an international fact finding-mission convened by
womens group GABRIELA to investigate alleged trafficking and prostitution of women
victims of typhoon Haiyan victims in Leyte.
The mission includes participants from the United States and Asia, as well as One
Billion Rising (OBR) Global Director Monique Wilson.
Government raids on at least three dens in the past year yielded women-victims of sextrafficking from typhoon-stricken areas of Eastern Visayas.
Despite official aid from foreign governments and donations from various
organizations, the Aquino government has failed to rehabilitate the typhoon victims
especially women and children. This is a full year into its so-called relief and rehabilitation
efforts.
The international Mission will join a National Conference of Disaster Victims
on November 6 and a protest demonstration of disaster victims on November 8.
They are critical of Aquinos public-private partnership (PPP) programs dictated by
international creditors for the worsening problem of food security, economic difficulties and
disaster vulnerability in the country.
At the tail-end of Aquinos presidential term, it received a new $300-million Third
Development Policy Loan (DPL 3) from Washington-based World Bank. It intends to
strengthen priority public investment implementation, reducing the cost of doing business,
fiscal stability, revenue mobilization and risk management for inclusive growth.
The women victims of trafficking and white slavery from disaster areas hope to air
their grievances and demands before the international mission and conference.###
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http://ilps-phils.com/we-congratulate-the-victory-of-bolivian-president-evo-morales/
The International League of Peoples Struggle (ILPS) Hong Kong and Macau chapter
extends our most militant greetings of solidarity to the people of Hong Kong who have been
asserting their democratic rights.
The militancy and bravery, especially of the young people, are most commendable.
The commitment of the people of Hong Kong for their democratic struggles against the
monopoly of the few on the politics and economy of Hong Kong has been shown through the
years; and, in the last few days, has been very much witnessed by the international
community.
We are one with the formations in Hong Kong and elsewhere who deplore the brutality
of the Hong Kong Police. The excessive force used repeated rounds of tear gas and
unscrupulous use of pepper spray to disperse protesters is extremely harsh and uncalled
for. Instead of listening to the demand of the students who initiated the action for a dialogue,
the protesters were met with repression.
The brutality shown with permission from the Hong Kong authorities has only
escalated the indignation of the Hong Kong people who continue to gather in swelling
numbers in major streets and commercial areas of Hong Kong.
It is very well for people of Hong Kong to stand up and defend their democratic rights
to assembly and to speak.
We urge the authorities to look into the violence perpetrated against the protesters
during the actions over the weekend. As the peoples action continues, the right to gather and
express must be fully recognized.
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We join the international call for the China government to work with the people in
Hong Kong towards the realization of the political reforms agreed on almost two decades ago
when the city was handed back to China under a one country, two systems arrangement.
We hope that other foreign powers in the world will respect this process.
The desire for the democratic aspirations of the people of Hong Kong must be
respected, while vigilance is maintained that the political and economic reforms serve the
interest of the majority of the people of Hong Kong and not of the few rich, elite, and
multinational businesses.
Uphold the democratic rights of the people!
Long live the people of Hongkong!
Long live international solidarity! ###
http://ilps-phils.com/message-of-solidarity-to-the-hong-kong-people/
1. We, the International League of Peoples Struggle, support the Hong Kong people in
upholding and exercising their democratic rights. We condemn the police brutality
applied by the Hong Kong authorities to suppress the peoples right to assemble and
speak freely. We are aware that both the Beijing and Hong Kong authorities are
anxious to end the mass protests for fear that these are likely to embolden similar
mass protests in mainland China, especially because of the Tiananmen massacre in
1989 and the current deteriorating economic and social conditions.
2. We recognize that the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HK SAR) is a
territory of the unitary state of the Peoples Republic of China. Since the British state
gave up its colonial authority over Hong Kong in 1997, the Chinese government has
applied a policy of one country, two systems relative to HK SAR and allowed this
part of China a high degree of autonomy. The Chinese government, the Hong Kong
authorities and the Hong Kong people must peacefully and amicably settle what
reforms are to be made and at what pace for their common benefit.
3. It is in accordance with Chinas national sovereignty and in the interest of the Chinese
people, to harmonize the interests of the Chinese nation and the central government,
the Hong Kong SAR and the Hong Kong people. We believe that it is an internal matter
for China that the aforesaid interests are harmonized in a just, peaceful and
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democratic process. Among the protesting people in Hong Kong are patriotic and
progressive forces. But there are also some agents of the US and UK and the pro-US
and pro-UK section of the Chinese big bourgeoisie.
4. We condemn the long-running and current scheme of the US and UK governments to
undermine and subvert the national sovereignty of China and to cause turmoil in HK
SAR for the purpose of serving the interests of the US and UK and their Chinese agents,
including the section of the Chinese big bourgeoisie that is closest to US and UK
imperialist interests, the Chinese assets of US and UK intelligence services and the
Chinese NGO operatives funded by the US National Endowment for Democracy and
the National Democratic Institute.
5. Having become a capitalist country, China has engaged in what has been
euphemistically called economic liberalization (meaning to say, capitalist reforms
and opening up to the world capitalist system). It has generated within China a
powerful fifth column, consisting of sections of the Chinese big bourgeoisie and
intelligentsia who are closest to US imperialist interests, who have long demanded
political liberalization in consonance with economic liberalization and who have
ridiculed the use of the communist flag and occasional invocation of socialism to
justify what has been called by the bourgeois press as capitalist authoritarianism.
6. In the ongoing US strategic pivot to East Asia, the US is employing the full spectrum
of its power to contain and press China to undertake political liberalization (reforms
towards bourgeois democracy and casting away the communist pretense) and further
economic liberalization (further reduction of state intervention in the market and
further privatization of its state-owned enterprises). The full spectrum of US power
being applied includes the increase of US military bases and shows of force around
China, economic and trade demands at the expense of China, bilateral and multilateral
US diplomacy, pro-US indoctrination of the Chinese intelligentsia, US funding for
Chinese NGOs and incitement of mass protests against the Chinese rulers.
7. The US seeks to restrain and discourage China from teaming up with Russia as the
leading members of the BRICS Bloc and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and
from undertaking projects like the BRICS Bank, the use of currencies other than the
US dollar in energy transactions and the Sino-Russian cross border trade in energy
and manufactures. The US is desperately trying to maintain the delusion of being the
sole superpower and reverse the reality of a multipolar world and the intensifying
struggle of the capitalist powers to redivide the world as a result of the protracted
worsening crisis of global capitalism, the decline of the US and the economic rise of
China and Russia.
8. In considering the growing contradictions between the US and China or Russia or
both, we have seen US imperialism as the unjust and anti-people side for engaging in
the most wanton plunder of human and natural resources under neoliberalism,
unleashing of the most brutal wars of aggression and undertaking all kinds of
intervention to violate the national sovereignty and democratic rights of peoples
throughout the world. We are concerned that the US is stirring up trouble in the name
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As the army conducted political and ideological work in a positive manner and stoked
the flames of training under combat conditions, all its officers and men and units of services
and arms became strong in ideas and faith and prepared as an invincible army capable of
discharging operational and combat missions proficiently in any circumstances and
conditions. Iron military discipline was established in the entire army and unprecedented
successes were made in the improvement of soldiers living. The defence industry sector
developed and completed various means of military strike of our style to make a tangible
contribution to the qualitative growth of the revolutionary armed forces.
Last year we made great progress in the building of a socialist economic giant and
civilized nation by the joint operation of the army and people.
Even in the difficult situation and adverse conditions last year, an upswing was
brought about in production in different sectors including agriculture, fishery and chemical
and coal-mining industries, opening up bright prospects for the building of an economic giant
and improvement of the peoples living standards. The construction sector kindled the fierce
flames for creating the Korean speed to build many monumental structures that serve as
standards and models of Juche-oriented architecture including the Wisong Scientists
Dwelling District, apartment houses for lecturers of Kim Chaek University of Technology,
Yonphung Scientists Holiday Camp and October 8 Factory, thereby actually demonstrating
the looks of the DPRK that is realizing its beautiful ideals. The service personnel who engaged
in the building of a thriving country achieved breakthroughs in production, construction and
modernization and created excellent model units in the spirit of devotedly implementing the
Partys policies and the spirit of match-for-a-hundred combatants.
Our sportspeople undauntedly fought by our own style of tactics in the 17th Asian
Games and world championships to exalt the honour of the country and greatly encourage
the service personnel and people who were out in the struggle to defend socialism.
All the victories and priceless successes we achieved last year are a brilliant result of
the Partys wise leadership and of the burning patriotic loyalty and self-sacrificing struggle of
all the service personnel and people rallied firmly behind the Party.
I extend heartfelt thanks to all the service personnel and people who made a
contribution to glorifying last year as a year of proud feats and changes by waging an
unyielding struggle with a steadfast faith in the revolutionary cause of Juche and the
revolutionary cause of Songun.
Comrades!
The new year 2015 will be a year of great significance, in which we will mark the 70th
anniversaries of national liberation and founding of the Workers Party of Korea.
Greeting this significant year, our people are looking back with great pride and dignity
upon the glorious 70-year history of our Party and homeland which have achieved shining
victories under the wise leadership of the President and the General; they are full of
confidence and optimism with a determination to follow the Party and achieve final victory
in the Juche revolution pioneered on Mt. Paektu.
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This year we should display the revolutionary spirit and mettle of Paektu to scathingly
thwart the challenges and manoeuvres by hostile forces and score a signal success in the
struggle to defend socialism and on all fronts of building a thriving nation. By doing so, we
should celebrate the 70th anniversaries of national liberation and founding of the Party as
revolutionary, auspicious events.
Upholding the slogan Let us all turn out in the general offensive to hasten final victory
in the revolutionary spirit of Paektu! all the service personnel and people should charge
dynamically towards the venue of grand October celebrations. Bearing in mind the soul and
mettle of Paektu, we should become honourable victors in the general offensive to exalt the
dignity of our socialist country and promote its prosperity on the strength of ideology, arms
and science and technology.
This year we will further consolidate our countrys invincible might as a socialist
political and ideological power.
We should invariably hold up the President and the General forever as the sun of
Juche, staunchly championing and adding eternal brilliance to their immortal revolutionary
exploits.
In this year of the 70th anniversary of the Party, which organizes and guides all
victories of our people, we should set up a new milestone in improving its leadership ability
and fighting efficiency.
We should steadily intensify the work of establishing the Partys monolithic leadership
system to make the whole Party share ideology with the Party Central Committee, breathe
the same breath as it and keep pace with it. All Party organizations should maintain
implementing the Partys lines and policies as the major line of Party work, and carry every
of them to completion unconditionally.
We should ensure that the people-first principle runs through the whole of Party work
as appropriate for its nature as a motherly party to make the climate of respecting, loving and
depending on them pervade it and Party work focus on improving their living standards. All
the organizations and officials of the Party should eliminate abuses of power and
bureaucratism, and take warm care of the people and lead them properly to make sure that
the latter trust and rely on it as they would do their mothers and throw in their lot with it.
We should hold fast to ideology as the Partys powerful weapon and make an
ideological offensive to consolidate the ideological position of our revolution rock-solid. We
should promote education in the greatness of the leaders, Kim Jong Ils patriotism, faith, antiimperialist and class consciousness and morality to train all Party members, service
personnel and other working people into staunch fighters of the Songun revolution and make
them raise the fierce flames of patriotic loyalty, creation and innovation at all posts in national
defence and for building a thriving nation.
This year we should further demonstrate our countrys might as a military power by
bringing about a fresh turn in building revolutionary armed forces and enhancing its defence
capability.
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The Peoples Army should thoroughly establish the Partys monolithic command
system across the entire army and vigorously conduct the movement of winning the titles of
O Jung Hup-led 7th Regiment and Guards Unit. Thus it should implement to the letter the
Partys four-point strategic line and three major tasks for increasing military strength. It
should effect a turnaround in improving the quality of training by eliminating formalism and
stereotyped patterns in combat and political training and updating its contents and methods.
It should maintain full combat readiness so that it can repulse any provocation by the enemy
in one stroke. By bringing about a radical turn in its supply service, it should provide soldiers
with better living conditions and make all its battalions and companies elite combat ranks
and their dear villages and homes that adjoin the yard of the office of the Party Central
Committee. In the future, too, it should be a pioneer and example in the struggle to
implement the Partys ideas and safeguard its policies in pursuance of its plan for building a
thriving nation.
In line with the requirements of the prevailing situation, the officers and men of the
Korean Peoples Internal Security Forces should sharpen the sword for defending the leader,
system and people, and members of the Worker-Peasant Red Guards and the Young Red
Guards should conduct combat and political training in a real-war atmosphere, thereby
beefing up their combat efficiency and getting fully prepared for an all-people resistance so
that they can defend their own provinces, counties and villages by themselves.
By carrying out the Partys line of promoting the two fronts simultaneously, the
defence industry sector should step up the efforts to make the munitions production Jucheoriented, modern and scientific and proactively develop and perfect powerful cutting-edge
military hardware of our own style.
This year we should give definite precedence to science and technology and effect an
upswing in building a socialist economic giant and civilized nation.
It is a determination and will of our Party to rapidly develop all sectors and build a
peoples paradise by dint of science and technology. The front of science should forcefully
rush ahead in the vanguard of a thriving socialist country building, thereby foiling the
enemys pernicious moves for sanctions and encouraging all the economic sectors to make
rapid headway on the strength of the high-running spirit of independence and of science and
technology. The scientific research sector should wage a brisk drive for going beyond the
cutting edge to produce many valuable findings conducive to developing the economy,
increasing defence capability and improving the peoples living standards. Regarding science
and technology as their lifeline, all sectors and all units should step up modernization and
introduction of information technology in our style, raise the scientific and technological level
of officials and working people and vigorously carry on all undertakings by relying on science
and technology.
We should make maximum use of the existing foundations and all potentials of the
self-supporting economy, so as to bring about a turn in improving the peoples living
standards and building an economic giant.
In this significant year we should bring about an upturn in improving the peoples
living standards.
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We should resolve the food problem of the people and improve their dietary life on a
higher level with agricultural production, animal husbandry and fishing as the main thrusts.
The agricultural sector should overcome unfavourable natural conditions and
overfulfil the cereals production plan by actively introducing scientific farming methods
including water-saving farming, supplying sufficient amounts of farming materials and
organizing and guiding production in conformity with actual conditions. We should put the
production at stockbreeding and fish-farming bases, greenhouses and mushroom production
bases built across the country on a regular footing and ensure that the people benefit from
them. True to the Partys plan, we should dynamically speed up the building of the
stockbreeding bases in the Sepho area and make steady preparations for livestock production
and their operation. By emulating the working spirit of the Peoples Army which made a new
history of sea of gold, the fishing sector should drastically bolster up the fishing industry
and land a huge haul, thus supplying a large amount of fish to enrich the peoples diet.
Fully aware of the responsibility and mission it assumes for the people, the light
industry sector should work out a strategy for fending for itself and put production at central
and local light-industry factories on normal track, so as to supply our people, including
students and children, with larger amounts and various kinds of quality consumer goods,
school things and childrens food.
We should direct great efforts to relieving the shortage of electricity, a major source of
power of the national economy, and strive to shore up its vanguard sectors and key industries.
We should increase coal and electricity production in the mettle displayed in bringing
about innovations in the coal-mining industry and thermal power stations last year and meet
the immediate demand for electricity by waging a campaign to economize on electricity to the
maximum, while taking realistic measures to resolve the electricity problem in a prospective
way. We should develop metal, chemical and other basic industries and brace rail transport
by relying on our own technology and resources and thus ensure that all other economic
sectors smoothly progress full of vigour. We should foster external economic relations in a
multilateral way and accelerate the projects for economic development zones including the
Wonsan-Mt. Kumgang international tourist zone. \xcvbnm,./
We should raise a stronger wind of creating the Korean speed in the construction
sector so as to build power stations, factories, educational and cultural establishments and
dwelling houses as befit the monumental edifices in the era of the Workers Party. By
completing with credit the major construction projects, including the multi-tier power
stations on the Chongchon River, Kosan Fruit Farm and Mirae Scientists Street, we should
splendidly adorn the venue of grand October celebrations.
The whole Party, the entire army and all the people should, as they carried out
rehabilitation after the war, turn out in the campaign to restore the mountains of the country
so as to turn them into mountains of gold thickly wooded with trees. All the sectors should
invariably push ahead with the work of afforesting and landscaping the whole country and
turning it into orchard, and build Pyongyang, provinces, cities, county seats, workplaces and
villages in a more cultured way and maintain and manage them on a regular basis.
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All the economic sectors and units should make positive efforts to increase production,
improve the quality of goods and enhance their competitive edge by working out proper
strategies for business operation and enterprise management and tapping all possible
reserves and potentialities. All the factories and enterprises should wage a dynamic struggle
to get rid of the proclivity to import and ensure the domestic production of raw and other
materials and equipment, while sprucing themselves up by taking their cue from the model
units put forward by the Party.
The Cabinet and other state organs for economic guidance should make proactive
efforts to establish the economic management method of our style as demanded by the reality
so that all the economic organs and enterprises can conduct their business activities
creatively on their own initiative. Party organizations at all levels should throw their full
weight behind the work of improving economic management in order to make sure that it is
done as intended by the Party.
A vigorous spur should be given to the building of a civilized socialist nation.
We should bring about a radical improvement in education in the new century by
arousing state and social interest in the role of officials in this sector and educational work,
thereby making fresh progress in making all the people well versed in science and technology
and developing ours into a talented nation.
The whole country should bubble with enthusiasm for sports and our sportspeople
should fly higher the flag of the Republic at international games to open up bright prospects
for building a sporting power.
The sector of art and literature should do away with stagnation and produce larger
numbers of contemporary masterpieces which inspire the masses to further efforts, and the
public health sector should improve the hygienic and anti-epidemic work and preventive and
curative medical care and boost pharmaceutical production.
We should make sure that national sentiments and noble and beautiful lifestyle prevail
across society, and press on with national heritage conservation as a patriotic undertaking
involving the whole country and all the people.
In order to successfully carry out the enormous tasks for this year all the officials, Party
members, service personnel and other working people should live and work in the
revolutionary spirit of Paektu, the spirit of the blizzards of Paektu.
The spirit is, in essence, an unyielding offensive spirit of braving obstacles and
difficulties and a staunch fighting spirit of rising up no matter how often one may fall and
fighting it out. The hearts of all our service personnel and people should beat with the
confidence in victory and indomitable spirit cherished by the anti-Japanese revolutionary
forerunners who fought death-defyingly for their country and people and won victory against
all odds. All the officials, Party members and other working people should enter the venue of
grand October celebrations proudly with gifts they have prepared by dint of the revolutionary
spirit of Paektu and through creative struggle.
The whole country should overflow with the spirit of patriotic devotion with which to
hold dear and add brilliance to our own things.
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Holding dear and adding brilliance to our own things is just the Korean-nation-first
spirit and the genuine patriotism that exalts the dignity of our country, our motherland, and
hastens its prosperity. We should value and add lustre to all the assets the preceding
generations of the revolution created on this land at the cost of their blood and sweat under
the guidance of the Party and the leaders, and create and develop everything in our own way
with a high sense of national pride and by relying on our strength, technology and resources.
Officials, leading participants in the revolution, should be the standard-bearers and
vanguard fighters in the ongoing general offensive.
They should faithfully serve the country and people for their prosperity and well-being
with a noble outlook on patriotism and firm preparedness for devoted service and,
shouldering heavy burdens by themselves, make redoubled efforts in the van of the masses.
With a full understanding of the Partys ideas and intentions, officials should go deep among
the masses and rouse them to carry through its lines and policies unconditionally at the cost
of their lives. They should be fully accountable to the Party and the state for the work in their
sectors and units, eliminate defeatism, self-preservation and expediency and do everything
in an innovative and scientific way.
Seventy years have passed since our nation was divided by outside forces.
In those decades the world has made a tremendous advance and the times have
undergone dramatic changes, but our nation has not yet achieved reunification, suffering the
pain of division. It is a deplorable fact known to everyone and it is lamentable to everyone.
No longer can we bear and tolerate the tragedy of national division that has continued century
after century.
Last year we put forward crucial proposals for improved inter-Korean relations and
national reunification and made sincere efforts for their implementation. Our efforts,
however, could not bear due fruit owing to the obstructive moves by the anti-reunification
forces within and without; instead the north-south relations have been on a headlong rush to
aggravation.
However complicated the situation may be and whatever obstacles and difficulties may
stand in our way, we should unfailingly achieve national reunification, a lifetime wish of the
President and the General and the greatest desire of the nation, and build a dignified and
prosperous reunified country on this land.
Let the whole nation join efforts to open up a broad avenue to independent
reunification in this year of the 70th anniversary of national liberation!this is the slogan of
struggle the entire Korean nation should hold up.
We should remove the danger of war, ease the tension and create a peaceful
environment on the Korean peninsula.
The large-scale war games ceaselessly held every year in south Korea are the root cause
of the escalating tension on the peninsula and the danger of nuclear war facing our nation. It
is needless to say that there can be neither trustworthy dialogue nor improved inter-Korean
relations in such a gruesome atmosphere in which war drills are staged against the dialogue
partner.
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To cling to nuclear war drills against the fellow countrymen in collusion with
aggressive outside forces is an extremely dangerous act of inviting calamity.
We will resolutely react against and mete out punishment to any acts of provocation
and war moves that infringe upon the sovereignty and dignity of our country.
The south Korean authorities should discontinue all war moves including the reckless
military exercises they conduct with foreign forces and choose to ease the tension on the
Korean peninsula and create a peaceful environment.
The United States, the very one that divided our nation into two and has imposed the
suffering of national division upon it for 70 years, should desist from pursuing the
anachronistic policy hostile towards the DPRK and reckless acts of aggression and boldly
make a policy switch.
The north and the south should refrain from seeking confrontation of systems while
absolutizing their own ideologies and systems but achieve great national unity true to the
principle of By Our Nation Itself to satisfactorily resolve the reunification issue in conformity
with the common interests of the nation.
If they try to force their ideologies and systems upon each other, they will never settle
the national reunification issue in a peaceful way, only bringing confrontation and war.
Though the people-centred socialist system of our own style is the most advantageous,
we do not force it on south Korea and have never done so.
The south Korean authorities should neither seek unification of systems that incites
distrust and conflict between the north and the south nor insult the other sides system and
make impure solicitation to do harm to their fellow countrymen, travelling here and there.
The north and the south, as they had already agreed, should resolve the national
reunification issue in the common interests of the nation transcending the differences in
ideology and system.
They should briskly hold dialogue, negotiations and exchanges and make contact to
relink the severed ties and blood vessels of the nation and bring about a great turn in interKorean relations.
It is the unanimous desire of the fellow countrymen for both sides to stop fighting and
pave a new way for reunification by concerted efforts. They should no longer waste time and
energy over pointless arguments and trifling matters but write a new chapter in the history
of inter-Korean relations.
Nothing is impossible if our nation shares one purpose and joins efforts. On the road
for reunification the north and the south had got such charter and great programme for
reunification as the July 4 Joint Statement, the historic June 15 Joint Declaration and the
October 4 Declaration, thus demonstrating to the whole world the nations determination
and mettle to reunify the country.
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We think that it is possible to resume the suspended high-level contacts and hold
sectoral talks if the south Korean authorities are sincere in their stand towards improving
inter-Korean relations through dialogue.
And there is no reason why we should not hold a summit meeting if the atmosphere
and environment for it are created.
In the future, too, we will make every effort to substantially promote dialogue and
negotiations.
The entire Korean nation should turn out together in the nationwide movement for
the countrys reunification so as to glorify this year as a landmark in opening up a broad
avenue to independent reunification.
Last year, in the international arena, hostilities and bloodshed persisted in several
countries and regions due to the imperialists outrageous arbitrariness and undisguised
infringement upon their sovereignty, which posed a serious threat to global peace and
security.
Especially, owing to the United States extremely hostile policy aimed at isolating and
suffocating our Republic, the bulwark of socialism and fortress of independence and justice,
the vicious cycle of tension never ceased and the danger of war grew further on the Korean
peninsula.
The United States and its vassal forces are resorting to the despicable human rights
racket as they were foiled in their attempt to destroy our self-defensive nuclear deterrent and
stifle our Republic by force.
The present situation, in which high-handedness based on strength is rampant and
justice and truth are trampled ruthlessly in the international arena, eloquently demonstrates
that we were just in our efforts to firmly consolidate our self-reliant defence capability with
the nuclear deterrent as its backbone and safeguard our national sovereignty, the lifeblood of
the country, under the unfurled banner of Songun.
As long as the enemy persists in its moves to stifle our socialist system, we will
consistently adhere to the Songun politics and the line of promoting the two fronts
simultaneously and firmly defend the sovereignty of the country and the dignity of the nation,
no matter how the international situation and the structure of relations of our surrounding
countries may change. On the basis of the revolutionary principles and independent stand,
we will expand and develop foreign relations in a multilateral and positive way, giving top
priority to the dignity and interests of the country.
Our Party and the government of our Republic will solidify in every respect the bond
and solidarity with the worlds progressive peoples who love peace and aspire after
independence and justice, and strive to develop good neighbourly relations with all the
countries that respect our national sovereignty and are friendly to us.
No force in the world can check the advance of our army and people who are rushing
forward like the blizzards of Paektu filled with rock-firm revolutionary faith and mettle of
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invincibility under the leadership of the great Party, and final victory undoubtedly belongs to
us.
Let us all staunchly strive to glorify this significant year as a year of great victories and
revolutionary, auspicious events, rallied more closely behind the Party and singing aloud the
march of final victory.
Greeting the hope-filled new year 2015, I wish all the families across the country
happiness.
CONGRESS OF
TEACHERS/EDUCATORS FOR
NATIONALISM AND
DEMOCRACY (CONTEND)
STATEMENTS
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be made accountable for all his crimes against the people especially his neglect of public
education.
As educators, we call on our fellow teachers, our students, to join the massive protests
being waged by our young people in different campuses and schools all over our nation today,
to denounce the dehumanizing policies and repressive practices being implemented in our
educational institutions. We commiserate with all the parents who feel hopeless amidst the
worsening crisis of our educational system. We join them in their protests against a system
that kills the future hopes of their children. We will continuously teach to emancipate the
minds of our young people to resist and struggle for a just future society.
No to commercialized education!
No to privatization!
Down with bureaucrat capitalism!
Down with US imperialism!
Struggle for nationalist, scientific and mass-based education!
Fight for free and accessible education to all!
Justice to all the iskolar ng bayan who were killed by the commercialized educational
system!
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documented numerous cases of maltreatment, sexual harassment, rape and attempted rape,
false accusations, withheld wages and other labor violations. There are also cases of
trafficking of at least 300 Filipino teachers who were duped by an illegal recruiter to work in
the US, collecting as much as Php500,000 from each of the victim. According to Ulat Lila,
despite more than 37 laws, executive and administrative orders pertaining to protect women
and children, one woman or child is battered every 16 minutes and one woman or child is
raped every 53 minutes. Worse, seven out of 10 victims of rape are minors. Poor women are
more vulnerable to abuse and violence, as indicated in the 2013 National Health and
Demographic Survey. Lacking access to economic opportunities, women are at the mercy of
those in power. Women are enslaved in prostitution in a society that prides itself of valuing
women highly. Poverty stricken women in disaster-affected areas such as in Eastern Visayas
and Zamboanga (after the MNLF siege) are left with no choice but to sell their bodies. This
structural violence could have been prevented, if only our callous and corrupt President has
compassion for our poor people devastated by wars and supertyphoons. Meanwhile, the USAquino regime intensifies its offensive against womens and other peoples movements that
oppose its anti-people and anti-women policies. Karapatans record of government atrocities
from July 2010 to June 2014 has included three cases of rape, 204 extrajudicial killings
(where 18 are women), 99 torture, 21 enforced disappearances, 39,800forced evacuation,
141,490 use of schools and other public places for military purpose, and 65,712 threat/
harassment or intimidation.
As educators, we must struggle and support women in their fight to break the bondage
of feudal social relations, and pervasive clouts of the male dominated religion and culture on
our peoples consciousness. We must teach our students that there can never be genuine
revolution without womens emancipation. We must set examples to our students and fellow
educators in justly dealing with women as persons. We have to expose and oppose all forms
of traditional ideologies that conscript women to second-class status. We have to teach our
students to understand the root causes of womens oppression in imperialist plunder of our
economy, the bureaucrat capitalist takeover of our state, and the feudal relations that tie most
of our people including women to landlessness. For as long as these oppressive structures
operate, womens emancipation remains elusive.
Long Live The Struggle Of Women!
Long Live All Revolutionary Women!
Women, Unite With All Oppressed Classes And Groups For National Democratic
Revolution!
BS Aquino, The Anti-Women And Anti-People President, Resign Now!
Down With Feudalism! Down With Bureaucrat Capitalism!
Down With Imperialism!
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people. Repeating the failed promise of Edsa today means joining our patriotic people and
progressive movements to demand the immediate resignation of Pres. Aquino. The hopeless
incompetence and incurable moral callousness of Pres. Aquino are disgrace to the memory of
Edsa People Power. His continuing reliance on US government for external and internal
security policies is a travesty of the nationalism of the activists who fought Marcos
dictatorship.
As educators, who teach our students and young people the usefulness of history for
changing the present, and seizing the future, we strongly encourage all educators and
students to teach the spirit of Edsa by demystifying its reformist meaning propagated by the
ruling class and its cliques. We do not simply remember Edsa by laying wreath at the Edsa
Monument! . We honour the memory of Edsa by re-activating its dangerous memory to
inspire our young people to continue the revolutionary promise of Edsa to create a truly
democratic, egalitarian, and humane society!
Remember the spirit of Edsa!, Ooust Pres. Aquino!
Down with state impunity and human rights violations!
Never again to dictatorship and Martial Law!
Down with US imperialism!
Down with feudalism!
Down with bureaucrat capitalism!
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mass media and reactionary politicians are diverting the issue away from the involvement of
the US military and Pres. Aquino in the Mamasapano carnage, deflecting all the weight of the
blame on the Moro Islamic Liberation Front and the ongoing peace process. Our people are
being conditioned to believe that the fallen SAF-44 were sacrificed for the peace process. We
are being indoctrinated to believe that the Muslims, without any qualifications and bereft of
historical knowledge, are out to seize all the advantages they can from our government in
order to advance their own selfish interests.
As nationalist and progressive educators we refuse to buy this indiscriminate political
propaganda against the Muslim Filipinos. We stand firmly for peace and justice! We must, as
educators, stand as advocates for peace based on justice to our students and young people.
We cannot remain silent in the face of this horrendous cultural discrimination and political
harassment against our people in Mindanao. We cannot condone the deaths of innocent
civilians. We cannot be indifferent to the communities displaced by this state-sponsored war
of vengeance. Before we judge the people of Mindanao, the Muslims, we have to ascertain,
without hesitation and with complete transparency, the accountability of President Aquino
and the US government in the Mamasapano bloodbath.
We therefore call on our fellow educators, students, and educational workers to
support the growing chorus of our peoples voice demanding the resignation of Pres. Aquino!
Let us show solidarity for all the victims of state injustice and state-led war by joining the
protests of our patriotic fellow Filipinos. Let us not be fooled by the desperate propaganda of
the ruling clique that an equally corrupt politician will take over as President. We are for a
transitional council that will serve as caretaker of our government until the 2016 election.
This is the only way to ensure that our aspirations as a people will not be hijacked by the
corrupt political dynasties and ruling elites.
Pres. Aquino resign now!
Justice to all the innocent victims of US-sponsored war against terrorism!
Justice to the fallen SAF-44!
Struggle for lasting peace based on social justice!
No to US-sponsored war on terror!
No to US-generated Islamophobia!
Down with US imperialism!
Down with bureaucrat capitalism!
Down with feudalism!
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FOR THE LORD HEARS THE POOR, AND DESPISES NOT HIS
PRISONERS .
Statement of Congress Of Teachers/Educators for Nationalism and Democracy-University of
the Philippines, Diliman On the Current Suppression of the Voices of Political Prisoners
During the Four-day Visit of Pope Francis
18 January 2015
We, the members of the Congress of Teachers/Educators for Nationalism and
Democracy, express our disgust and moral indignation against the callousness of the
government, in refusing and muting the voices of political detainees, who simply want to
express their requests and send their petitions to Pope Francis. We express our strongest
solidarity with the 491 political prisoners in 43 jails all over the country, especially with the
32 political detainees at Camp Bagong Diwa22 of whom are held at the SICA1 who have
been on a hunger strike since Saturday, hoping to dramatize their call for Pope Francis, who
is on a four-day visit to the country, to intercede for their release. We are strongly alarmed by
the report of political prisoner and peace consultant of the National Democratic Front of the
Philippines Alan Jazmines that the other inmates were threatening to kill us, political
prisoners, especially the senior leaders among us. We worry a lot that those, who have been
shouting their threats on top of their voices, have actually already been involved in murders
of fellow inmates in jail. As a result, political detainees are now suffering from tightened
security measures that curtail further their freedom even inside prisons. Doctors who are
supposed to check their health are now prevented from visiting the political detainees.
We urge all our fellow patriotic educators and teachers, our students, to raise our
voices against the roaring and raucous frenzy of the majority of mainstream medias coverage
of Pope Francis visit that pacifies the Popes disconcerting revolutionary message, while
selling his image as harmless religious leader like show business celebrity. The way
mainstream mass media projects the image of the Pope pays lip service to his radical call for
us to express solidarity with the poor. Pope Francis explicitly stated the goal of national
development in his speech at Malacanang: Essential to the attainment of these national goals
is the moral imperative of ensuring social justice and respect for human dignity. The great
biblical tradition enjoins on all peoples the duty to hear the voice of the poor. It bids us [to]
break the bonds of injustice and oppression, which give rise to glaring, and indeed
scandalous, social inequalities. Reforming the social structures, which perpetuate poverty
and the exclusion of the poor first requires a conversion of mind and heart. This strong
political statement filled with biblical and prophetic meanings are now hushed in the surge
of mass media frenzy that highlights the trivial acts of the Pope and bloating them as the
official image of Pope Francis from his cap being blown away to his breaking of protocols.
We urge all the progressive Catholic educators, fellow teachers, and students to
transcend this wanton celebritization and showbiznization of the Pope and his message. We
have to break through this mass media hypnotic propaganda that blinds us to the plight of
our political detainees, the poor, landless farmers, and abandoned children. Let us wrestle
away from the reactionary religious groups the monopoly of interpreting the message of Pope
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Francis! His message should reverberate in our society and awaken our conscience about the
current dismal situation of our political detainees, whose lives are now threatened inside their
detention facilities. We have to tell our students and the Filipino people that the visit of Pope
Francis is not just about personal compassion and moral conversion. It also entails the
liberation of our people from the bondage of oppression. It means recognizing the rights of
all political detainees who have always fought for the liberation of our people against
imperialism, feudalism, and bureaucrat capitalism the idols that Pope Francis consistently
denounced in public. As Zaldy Caete, former New Peoples Army combatant, now political
prisoner wrote to Pope Francis from the Compostela Valley provincial jail: Dear Pope, I am
just a revolutionary, I am not a criminal.
Free all political detainees now as a sign of good will during Pope Francis visit!
Ensure the safety of political prisoners especially those in Bicutan!
Uphold their right to see and consult with their lawyers and to be examined by
doctors!
Stop trivializing the radical message of Pope Francis! Heed his revolutionary
message!
Unmask the hypocrisy of the reactionary sectors of our religious institutions!
Express solidarity with the poor, political prisoners, landless peasants, exploited
workers, and displaced indigenous peoples.
Pursue genuine peace based on justice and solidarity with the poor!
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communities to preach the Gospel of justice and compassion. We should follow the example
of Pope Francis in denouncing the causes of injustices in the dictatorship of wealth and the
market. We have to teach our students that religion is not just about being compassionate
and charitable. We have to convince our students and colleagues that [t]odays economic
mechanisms which promotes inordinate consumption and unbridled consumerism
combined with inequality is damaging to the social fabric. As Pope Francis urges the
Catholics, we need to provide an education which teaches critical thinking and encourages
the development of mature moral values. The moral values we must teach should be countercultural moral values to the values being sold in the market today: consumerism, worship of
money, inequality, indifference, and apathy.
Let us join our progressive religious brothers and sisters in highlighting the pro-poor
vision of Pope Francis. Let us unmask the frenzy of the US-Aquino regime in downplaying
the radical message and vision of the Pope of the poor. Let us not allow the conservative and
reactionary sections of the church, mass media, and religious leaders to monopolize the
interpretation of the papal visit. We have to highlight to our students and educators the
liberating message of Pope Francis and his Church, and steer it away from the spiritualizing
and privatizing apolitical moralism of the reactionary members of the religious communities.
Let Pope Francis hear and listen to the cries of the victims of human rights abuses!
Free all political detainees as expression of good will to Pope Francis visit!
During Pope Francis visit, let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an
overflowing stream.
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These are clear examples of the human rights atrocities of the US-Aquino Regime. And
the government is spending peoples money to fund its war against its own people. In 2014
alone, the government gave away at least PhP 51.2 million of peoples money to so-called
informers that led to the arrest of perceived enemies of the state falsely charged with
criminal offenses and are now languishing in jail.
And instead of addressing the problems of state terrorism, Pres. Aquino simply blames
the victims, especially the journalists who were killed in the line of duty. Under the USAquino Regime retired Maj. Gen. Jovito Palparan Jr., the butcher of activists, was allowed
to be transferred from Bulacan Provincial Jail to the Philippine Army Custodial Center in Fort
Bonifacio. Human rights violators and corrupt bureaucrat capitalists and their minions
receive special treatment while political detainees languish in ordinary jails.
In the face of this terrifying culture of impunity, we as teachers and educators cannot
shirk away from our social reasonability to raise our voices in protest! Human rights
discourse and discussion are part of civic education. When military forces occupy the school
facilities for counter-insurgency programs, we must join those communities, who are
adversely affected, to defend their right to war-free schools. Education cannot take place in
an undeclared state of war that terrorizes the students, teachers, and communities. Education
cannot be sacrificed in the name of flushing out and isolating the so-called enemies of the
state.
Hence we join our patriotic fellow Filipinos, human rights activists, victims of state
violence in demanding for the end of the culture of impunity. As teachers we stand against all
forms of violence that curtail human rights especially among the educational sector. We have
to struggle to save our schools from militarization. We have the duty to teach human rights
in the face of this culture of impunity. We must get out of our classrooms and schools and
join our communities in creating a human rights-friendly environment. We cannot allow our
children and students to witness the rampant violations of human rights committed against
indigenous peoples, peasants, and religious groups. Silence in the face of this culture of
impunity only encourages moral apathy and callousness among our students. Education is
for freedom! And there can never be freedom if people are terrorized by the state and its proxy
para-military groups who are waging war against the people.
We join our people in demanding:
Stop the culture of impunity!
Down with state fascism!
Stop Oplan Bayanihan!
Justice to all human rights victims!
Free all political detainees! Free Andrea Rosal and Ma. Miradel Torres!
Down with US imperialism, the godfather of state fascism worldwide!
Uphold and defend human rights!
Oust BS Aquino, the Impunity King!
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the human rights of Talaingod Manobos disrupted their everyday lives, their childrens
education and moreso, their culture. But their resolve to continue their struggle for their land
and their future remain steadfast. It is their call and demand to respect their right to live
freely, exercise their political participation and further develop their culture as people.
As teachers and educational workers, we strongly urge our fellow teachers and
educational workers, especially our students, to support the outcry against US-Aquinos
Oplan Bayanihan. Military troops must be pulled out immediately from the communities in
order for Lumads to return to their homes and rebuild their lives. Lets join all the progressive
and patriotic sectors of our society in their call to make Aquino accountable for his crimes
against the people. We encourage all sectors to help in exposing and opposing the atrocities
perpetrated by state forces against the Indigenous Peoples. Our collective voices and action
are instrumental in upholding and defending the right of Lumads to their ancestral land and
self-determination.
Defend our communities!
Stop Oplan Bayanihan of the US-BS Aquino regime in Mindanao and in the whole
country!
Pull out all military combat troops from indigenous ancestral lands, farms, schools,
churches and communities!
Disarm and disband paramilitary groups now!
Scrap the Mining Act of 1995 and Aquinos EO 79!
End the state of impunity!
Down with fascism!
Down with state terrorism!
Uphold human rights!
Iskolar ng bayan, maglingkod sa bayan at sambayanan!
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Yolanda disaster, had just signed the P167.9 billion recovery plan. And this definitely will be
used as carrot and stick for 2016 election. Worse, this huge amount will facilitate the inroads
of bourgeois comprador businesses and foreign investments in the Yolanda-devastated areas.
Indeed even in disasters, bureaucrat capitalists, big landlords, and imperialists benefit
more than the victims and the survivors. The bureaucrat capitalists and big landlords use
disasters to advance their business interests by exploiting the helpless unemployed people,
buying and occupying lands, and setting up exclusive economic zones. The imperialists on
the other hand blackmail the traumatized people and their government, making them believe
they cannot recover without military intervention and massive foreign investments.
According to Ibon Foundations, though 1.5 million families were affected, only 215,471
families are reported to have benefited from Cash for Building Livelihood Assets projects.
Only 44,870 fisherfolk were provided fishing gears and 32,081 fisherfolk had their bancas
replaced or repaired; only 4,507 seaweed farmers were assisted. Victims remain largely in
temporary and transitional shelters. Reports reveal that only 364 housing units were
completed in Tacloban and Tanauan, Leyte.
Hence, we, members of CONTEND-UP Diliman, express our continuing support for
the Yolanda survivors. We join them in their struggle to regain their lives and rights by
fighting against the incompetence and neglect of the government. We urge all educators to
express solidarity with all the victims and survivors of Yolanda disaster especially those
affected in the educational sector. Today, the schools and education in the affected areas have
not yet recovered and normalized. Many students already migrated to other neighbouring
provinces because of lack of educational facilities. Others already dropped out of school. As
of now, only 213 classrooms have been repaired out of the target 19,648 classrooms.
The tragedy of Yolanda simply mirrors our greatest tragedy: a state ruled by
bureaucrat capitalists who pocketed and unconstitutionally re-aligned billions of pesos
through DAP and PDAF from the national budget to finance their massive political election
machineries while neglecting the rehabilitation of Yolanda-affected areas. Thus, after a year
of continuing state neglect, we join the chorus of our progressive and patriotic people of
Yolanda-affected areas:
JUSTICE FOR YOLANDA VICTIMS!
JUSTICE FO ALL THE VICTIMS OF STATE NEGLECT!
NO TO IMPERIALIST-ORIENTED, CAPITALIST-DRIVEN, ANTI-PEOPLE
REHABILTATION PROGRAM!
OUST PRES. AQUINO, THE PRESIDENT OF DISASTERS!
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LETS SHOW OUR RAGE AND DEMAND JUSTICE FOR THE DEATH OF
JEFFREY JENNIFER LAUDE, LETS UNITE WITH THE PEOPLE TO
DEFEND OUR SOVEREIGNTY AGAINST US IMPERIALISM
Statement of Congress of Teachers/Educators for Nationalism and Democracy
on the Death of Jeffrey Laude, a Transgender in Olongapo City
14 October 2014
The members of CONTEND-UP Diliman, express our deepest sympathy to the family
and friends of Jeffrey Jennifer Laude, 26, a transgender who was killed brutally in Celzone
Lodge, Olongapo City, last 11 October 2014, allegedly by an American marine soldier. We join
our fellow Filipinos who condemn this dreadful crime and who demand immediate justice for
the death of Laude. We support the growing clamor of our patriotic people for the immediate
abrogation of the Visiting Forces Agreement and Enhanced Cooperation Agreement (EDCA)
and all other military agreements with American government.
Laudes death is not the first recorded death of a Filipino in the hands of Americans in
the long history of US imperialist plunder of our economy, destruction of our environment,
exploitation of our people, and meddling in our national politics. The rape case of Suzette
Nicolas in 2005 should remind us that those who do not learn from the past mistakes are
bound to repeat the same mistakes in the present. In this case, the Article 5 item 6 of VFA
(Criminal Jurisdiction), will again put the Philippine government in disadvantaged position,
by giving the custody of the alleged criminal to the US: The custody of any United States
personnel over whom the Philippines is to exercise jurisdiction shall immediately reside with
United States military authorities, if they so request, from the commission of the offense until
completion of all judicial proceedings. The US imperialists and their local lackeys will again
apply all forms of deceptive extra-legal chicanery to save American honor, as evidenced in the
Wikileaks information about the haggling of the question of custody of Daniel Smith between
Washington and Manila in 2009. To extricate their soldiers, the US imperialists will use all
means to blackmail our government just as they suspended Balikatan Exercises immediately
after Cor. Daniel Smith was incarcerated in 2007 to put pressure on our government.
We urge our people not to be deceived by the posturing of some sectors of our society
who demand justice for Laude but insist that we need the American presence in our country
to defend our territories. This kind of double-talk and pseudo-nationalist rhetoric simply
resurrects the deceptive attitude of the elites in our history who betrayed our people by
trusting in the good will of our colonizers. We have to expose and oppose these war-mongers
who peddle the myth of America as ally and friend of democracy! We must refuse to be a part
of magnet for mounting terrorist attacks against American wars of plunder around the world.
We, as teachers and educational workers, urge our fellow teachers to discuss this
burning issue in our classes. We have to make this issue as a springboard to educate our
students about the distorted views of our history especially about American colonialism and
its continuing presence in our national life. We have to teach our students how Americans
manipulated our leaders, plundered our economy, supported Martial Law, and colonized the
minds of our people. We have to teach our students how to expose those unFilipino Filipinos
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who would rather let the death of Laude be muted than offending the sensibilities and feelings
of the American government.
We also express our full support for all transgender Filipinos who are struggling to end
all forms of discrimination. We reiterate Lenins wise advice to activists that we must be able
to react to every manifestation of tyranny and oppression, no matter where it appears, no
matter what stratum or class of the people it affects. Everyone Filipino who feels indignation
at any form of oppression should support the struggle of transgender Filipinos. The struggle
of transgender Filipinos, homosexuals, lesbians, and women cannot be isolated and
separated from the larger struggle of the Filipino people against inequalities and all forms of
tyranny. And our poverty and inequality cannot be abstracted from the historical ad
continuing unequal trade relations and military agreements with the American government.
Justice for Jeffrey Laude!
Junk VFA! Junk EDCA!
Arrest the murderer of Jeffrey Laude now!
US troops out now!
Down with US imperialism!
Down with state fascism!
Support the struggle of LGBTQ!
End all forms of discrimination!
Oust Pres. Aquino, the number one lackey of US imperialism!
Defend the sovereignty and dignity of our people!
Struggle for an independent foreign policy!
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has solved the backlogs in basic education such as textbooks, chairs, tables, schools,
classrooms, and teachers, yet the stark reality that the Filipino people saw during the opening
of classes last June simply confirmed how deceitful and incompetent our government is. This
is all the more true in the area as devastated by supertyphoon Yolanda.
Not content with insulting the teachers by ignoring their plight, the US-Aquino regime
even aggravates the tribulations of teachers by pushing for the implementation of the
impractical K+12 program. The K+12 program, which harmonizes with CHEDs restructuring
of higher education, relegates teachers to being mere appendage of an educational system
that teaches entrepreneurial values necessary to enter the exploitative world of transnational
companies, business process outsourcing companies (BPOs), here and abroad. Teachers,
rather than acting as transformative intellectuals, who will challenge the existing system, are
reduced to mere instruments for perfecting the bogus visions of K+12. Moreover the K+12
effectively sidelines the teachers in General Education by making their work redundant.
Teachers, faced with uncertainties, are forced to undergo re-training to be hired in high
schools, while the rest are excised from the system.
Amidst this worsening condition of our teachers, both in the public and private sectors,
we the members of CONTEND-UP, join the mass protest of teachers today to demand:
Upgrade Teachers Salary Now!
Fight for Greater Budget for Education!
Stop The Exploitation of Teachers!
Fight for a Nationalist, Scientific and Mass-Oriented Education!
Oust Pres. Aquino, the number One Enemy of Educational Reforms!
Sec. Butch Abad, the Architect of DAP, Resign Now!
Patricia Licuanan Of CHED, Who Supported Pork Barrel Allotment, Resign Now!
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