In the wake of K-12 implementation, the debates and the problems that cropped up highlight basic education as an issue. Indeed the system of education, particularly the 10-year basic education, is an issue. Basic public education in the Philippines is far from being accessible to increasing number of families falling into poverty on one hand and that education itself has deteriorated. The haste by which the government puts in place the kindergarten and 2-year senior high school on top of a worsened state of 10-year basic education is catastrophic to the whole education system and society. The K-12 program is premised on the recognition that basic education has indeed deteriorated. The deterioration is observable—increasing rate of dropouts relative to enrollment; the over-crowded classrooms; lack of textbooks and the worsened quality of education as measured in low and failing performance of students, especially high school students, in national achievement tests (NAT). On top of the main problems, the DepEd argued, is “congested curriculum”. Allegedly, the curriculum for 10-year basic education in the Philippines is actually hurdled in 12 years in other countries. Thus, adding two more years of senior high school would solve the problem of deterioration of education and would produce employable 18-year old graduates! President Noynoy Aquino (PNoy) is very clear on the main objective of K-12: Produce graduates who will match the demands of the global labor market. In other words, make Philippine labor competitive in the labor market—can speak and write in English, computer literate, have knowledge of practical mathematics but ready to get low wages. The immediate argument against K-12 is: the solution does not match the recognized problem. The fact that only an average of 1-2 public high schools per city and big municipality outside NCR are ready to admit a limited number of incoming grade 11 students would underscore increasing overcrowded classrooms! The added problem is that the incoming public senior high school students would attend private senior high schools for their academics. The DepEd seems oblivious of the fact that only a few private schools are ready for senior high school and that they would prioritize their own students. Moreover, about 25,000 members of college and university faculties would be displaced from teaching first two years of college from 2016-2018. The basic character of Philippine education system is the basic argument against K-12 The ideals of education are that, it should facilitate the building and development of the foundations for continued development of human societies. Consistent with the basic and essential nature and character of humans as social beings with innate rational or mental, aesthetic, physical and emotional faculties and capacities that differentiate humanity from animals, education, as a social need and function, develops and enhances, systematizes and crystallizes the basic nature and characters of humans. Thus, education should be social, liberating and developmental But established education system, in general, is always relative to the limitations and capacities of states and governments and needs of societies. The colonial orientation of Philippine education Philippine education system serves the needs of every period of development as shaped and designed in the interests of the US and its local allies. The US upon occupation of the country, established a public school system as it subjected the Filipino people under its rule. Education served to win the hearts and minds of the colonized people and to quell resistance. It projected the colonizers as benevolent and resistance as banditry. It banned nationalist songs, poems and emblems in schools and elsewhere in the country as it made students sing daily the “Star Spangled Banner” at the raising of the American flag. To sustain this colonial order, the US instituted higher learning to train generations of young intellectuals to administer Philippine society and all its aspects—economy, politics and governance, education and culture, police and military. It rallied best of the youth around scholarship grants/programs in the US and the established State University that remolded their consciousness and trained them according to the demands of perpetuating the colonial order. The US, then a new and rising imperialist power, needed to consolidate hold on the Philippines as both captive market and base for its global designs. The US used its optimum resources, both funds and personnel, to establish an education system and institutions that would nurture the culture and thinking of dependence on American rule and everything “Stateside”—consumer goods, culture, ideas and taste—thus, a captive and loyal market for US products and designs. It established normal schools to train Filipino teachers for primary schooling of children while American personnel founded most of the secondary schools that later became the provincial high schools. The colonial government upgraded the labor capacity of Filipinos even as it violently suppressed the country’s organized labor force. It put up trade and agricultural schools for this purpose. Filipino labor found employment in manufacturing and industries along ship repair, sugar refining, copra and tobacco processing, mining, logging and plantations. Some laborers were sent to the US to work in jobs reserved for Afro-Americans and Latinos such as plantations in Hawaii and California and as dockworkers or stevedores in New York. Along with the Filipino workers were intellectuals (pensionados) who trained in the US and observed, felt and absorbed the American way of life. When the Filipino people were deemed ready for self-rule”, the “nationalism” promoted was in forms and symbols. National hero, national dress, flower, fish, animal, later national language defined “nationalism” even as the state continued to suppress bloodily all resistance to colonial rule. The American rulers who earlier banned the study of Philippine history allowed it from 1935 although it was history according to the re-written version by the colonizers. It portrayed the Philippine-American war as an accident or a quirk of fate. It erased from both memory and education materials the atrocities done by American soldiers. It justified direct American rule as necessary “tutelage” to prepare and guide the Filipinos for “self-rule.” As World War II loomed, however, the American rulers reinforced the culture of dependence on the US even more. Post War: Basic Education in the Cold War Period until 1970 The US emerged as the only imperialist power after WWII. Nonetheless, it was locking horns with its former war ally the Soviet Union in the Cold War that lasted until 1970s. With the changed world situation and the US’s call for decolonization, the Philippines, after more than 40 years of American tutelage, was ready for independence that was “granted on July 4, 1946 on condition that the Philippines sign the Treaty of General Relations, which in effect and in fact, kept US sovereignty over the country. With the conditions of post-war reconstruction and the continuation of what the US had laid down during its direct rule, the US and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) closely monitored the Philippine education from 1946-1970. Distorted social and historical concepts and sense of values Post-war basic education until 1970 was mainly along what the US designed in 1935. Considering the social unrests in the country and the persistent calls for genuine independence, social studies for the elementary and high school included teaching distorted models of nationalism or patriotism. For instance, it equated patriotism to subscribing and being loyal to what the state promotes. Any contrary view or dissent was un-patriotic and subversive. It taught that colonialism served the interest of the colonized people like, “the Spaniards came to Christianize us; the Americans came to teach us how to govern ourselves and returned to liberate us”. The concept of democracy was reduced to “right” to vote; to the checks and balances between branches of government and obscured reality that these branches of government and the knowledge of the formal/official functions of government, the police and military remained the domains of the moneyed elite. Matching subjects to changing needs of the social order molded by US and US led global trends But widespread illiteracy, in the midst of poverty, remained and the dislocations caused by the war and the balance of payments and fiscal crisis from 1948-1949 exacerbated these. Elementary, much more, high school education was beyond reach of people in barrios/barangays outside town and provincial centers. Illiteracy limited the capacity of the country as market for everything “stateside” and “modern” and for publications promoting ideas and ideals of the great “American Dream”. Thus, English remained the principal medium of instruction, the national language and local dialects as supplementary. English remains, until now, the official language of the government and courts, of formal and business communications, of most publications and, of advertisements and product labels. The schools sufficiently equipped the young generations with basic tools to form and communicate ideas verbally and in writing, principally in English and secondarily, in Pilipino. Post-war reconstruction, “import substitution industrialization” and government corporations needed engineers, accountants, bookkeepers, secretaries, more lawyers, doctors and other medical practitioners, more teacher and skilled workers. In this regard and because the world is modernizing and because the country had to deal with outbreaks of diseases like cholera, it was necessary to teach corporations needed engineers, accountants, bookkeepers, secretaries, more lawyers, doctors and other medical practitioners, more teacher and skilled workers. In this regard and because the world is modernizing and because the country had to deal with outbreaks of diseases like cholera, it was necessary to teach mathematics, physics, health and natural sciences and to apply these in practical, home economics, industrial arts and high school laboratory classes. The government received foreign loans and grants from the US and other countries or international funding agencies in order to have enough funds to sustain basic education, even as foreign debt was steadily growing. Elementary and high schools maintained the proper teacher to student ratio for a length of time. The average class size was 25-30 students. The teachers were able to attend to the whole class and to each student and still had enough time to prepare lesson plans. Through such ratio, teachers got to know their students better and thus, were able advisers and counselors. Classes were whole day that afforded sufficient time for every set of subjects per day. Funds, though, were not enough for building new public schoolhouses and classrooms. Most of the school buildings, while spacious and well ventilated, were of pre-WWII vintage, others are converted bunkhouses of American soldiers and war refugees during “liberation”. In the latter part of 1960s, decreasing education graduates was a growing concern in the face of annual increases in school enrollment, retirement of old teachers and transfer of some teachers to private schools. The main factor to the declining interest in education courses was the relatively low salary of public school teachers compared to other professions or jobs and the tempting need for nurses in the US. In the face of protests by teachers, the Congress enacted the Magna Carta for Public School Teachers in 1966 to ensure the well-being of teachers and encourage other AB and BS graduates to become teachers by completing 18 education units while teaching. Neo-liberal globalization: Retrogression of 10-year basic education and 2 more years of senior high school The Cold War thawed after US’ defeat in its Indochina war and the “détente” talks between US and Soviet Union. The mighty US economy started to decline by 1970, as Japan and Germany rose from severely war-damaged economies. The US fell into successive financial crises starting 1970. The 1970 crisis had immediate impact on the Philippines, because the US was its main trading partner. The peso value against the dollar plummeted to P6 to $1 from P4 to $1. The crisis became full-blown when the US floated the dollar after it ended the fixed exchange rate system of US Dollar-Gold Standard in 1971; the price of oil jumped from $2- $15 a barrel from 1973-1979 resulting to crisis of stagflation from 1974-1980. The crisis ushered in the neo-liberal economic design pushed principally by the declining world superpower, USA. The huge reserves of “petro dollars”, from earnings of oil producing countries and super-profits of the oil cartel, were “overflowing” in American and European Banks. The banks through the IMF and World Bank (WB) loaned to many governments the huge surplus of “petro dollars”. The loans were called structural adjustment loans (SAL) for the structural adjustment programs (SAP) pushed by the IMF-WB. The US through the IMF-WB reversed the Philippine economy from “import-substitution industrialization” to “import dependent, export-oriented, labor intensive industrialization” from 1967- 1980s. Soon, the export oriented strategy included export of labor. Debt-driven reforms of basic education The debt-driven re-structuring of the Philippine economy logically led to re-structuring or “reforming” of the education system. Basic education underwent a series of reforms from 1970 until very recently. The World Bank, Asian Development Bank (ADB) and official development aid and loans from foreign governments pushed the reforms. The reforms the Philippines implemented from 1972-1982 focused on re-structuring and building the administrative bodies for higher education, non-formal education and the National Youth and Manpower Council (NYMC) that later became Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA). The NYMC/TESDA focused on vocational and technical courses/trainings and administered vocational and technical schools. Vocational and technical courses provided for the demands of labor intensive “industrialization and labor export. Of the instituted reforms, the decentralization of basic education was revealing. The national government passed the responsibility to ensure basic education on to local governments but the national government provided financial assistance and access to other financial resources. With petro dollar loans, the Marcos dictatorship pushed the upgrading and building of more school facilities and buildings. The Marcos dictatorship instituted all the 1972-82 structuring of administrative bodies and their functions in the Education Act of 1982. In the same year, the WB-funded 1982-1989 Program for Decentralized Education Development (PRODED) commenced. PRODED changed the curriculum to emphasize science, technology, math, English reading and writing. It compressed subjects on social studies, history and Pilipino into Makabayan subject.social studies, history and Pilipino into Makabayan subject. The succeeding 1991-1999 Education for All Philippine Plan of Action I (EFA-I) emphasized on non-formal and informal education programs, later called Alternative Learning System (ALS), to catch-up on the ever-increasing number of school drop-outs. EFA I also implemented the final phase of decentralization of formal basic education through fiscal autonomy—strengthening cooperation among school, home, community and local government and self-reliance on resource generation. General impacts of “reforms” Decentralization was stimulus to commercialized education and gave reasons for the national government to default on building new school buildings and hiring more teachers. Fiscal autonomy also resulted in stark differences among local governments’ income capacities to build new public school buildings, and grant additional cost of living allowances and hire new teachers. At the school level, self-reliance on fund sourcing resulted to the frequency of fund raising activities disrupting regular classes, which, in the first place, the schools have reduced to two sessions a day. Over all, the 10-year basic education consistently produces dropouts and graduates who are barely functionally literate and unable to apply concretely basic math. Poverty mainly causes dropouts as an increasing number of families need every able member to join in eking out the daily income. Nevertheless, various reasons attributable to the deteriorated education do not spare even students from average and better-off families and average and bright students from losing interest in formal schooling. The DepEd argument that top of the main problems is “congested curriculum” is not factual. It has reformed the basic education curriculum several times starting from PRODED resulting to constriction until social studies, history and other subjects that could make students socially conscious, sensitive and critical have become almost absent. Factually congested are the classrooms and the teaching and learning time of teachers and students. The sets of classes that the reforms have reduced to ½-1/3 of the day give no allowance for recess or break times. Students eat foodstuffs sold inside classrooms while classes of 60-90 students proceed. Students ordering anything from candies to ice-cold drinks frequently disrupt teaching. Classroom congestion makes it impossible for over-loaded teachers to monitor the learning process of It is insulting to parents, teachers and the students who went through 10 years of basic education to learn cookery, janitorial jobs or beauty and nail care in two more years! Two more years to produce graduates that fit the kind of jobs demanded by corporations that make every worker/employee do two or more tasks at a time. K-12 is also insulting to those who finish 6 months or 2 years of training to become good secretaries, automotive mechanics, precision machine operators, refrigeration and air-conditioning technicians, electronics technicians or skilled welders. Adding 2 years to deteriorated 10-year basic education is like placing 2 big rocks on top of a dilapidated 2-storey house. It is crazy, mindless and insensitive for the PNoy government and the DepEd to push through with K-12 as scheduled but in total disregard of actual state of Philippine education that they themselves recognize as deteriorated. WE in the Kilusan para sa Pambansang Demokrasya call on the people, especially the teachers and all members of the academic community, students and parents to unite and fight for these urgent demands: The PNoy government to cease and desist from implementing the K-12 basic education program! Make the World Bank, ADB, the US, Canadian, Australian, Japanese and other foreign governments and private global corporations that pushed the “reforms” pay for damages that worsened Philippine education system! Save the present young and future generations from social insensitivity and retrogression! Kilusan para sa Pambansang Demokrasya (Kilusan) June 4, 2015
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Mariing kinokondena ng Kilusan para sa Pambansang Demokrasya (KILUSAN), Workers for Peoples’ Liberation (WPL) at iba pang kasaping organisasyon ng KILUSAN ang, Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) ng gubyernong PNoy, ang lokal na gubyerno ng Valenzuela City at mga kapitalistang sina Beato Ang at Ong King Guan na may-ari ng Kentex Manufacturing Corp., sa masaklap na kamatayan ng higit 70 manggagawa nuong Mayo 13, 2014. Dumulo sa pagka-abo nang buhay ng mga manggagawang nakakarami ay kababaihan, at kinabilangan ng ilang menor de edad ang serye ng mga paglabag sa mga karapatan at pagsasamantala sa mga manggagawa. Una, ay madiing katibayan na ang gusali ay FIRE TRAP. Ibig sabihin isang gusali na sa pagkaka-layout nito ay isang tiyak na panganib kapag nagkasunog. Walang mga fire exit sa ikalawang palapag, na lugar ng trabaho ng higit na nakakaraming manggagawa . Ang iisang fire exit sa unang palapag ay hindi fire exit kundi main door! Sa katunayan, hindi dito lumabas ang sampung (10) nakaligtas na manggagawang sa halip ay sa pinto sa likod o back door. Iisa, ang hagdan paakyat at pababa mula sa ikalawang palapag. Ang mga bintana ng gusali ay may rehas na bakal, animo’y rehas ng bilangguan. Pangalawa, ang mga kemikal at iba pang materyales na health and fire hazards ay naka-imbak sa unang palapag. Walang hiwalay na bodega nito sa labas ng gusaling lugar ng trabaho. Pangatlo, walang fire drill na isinagawa kailanman sa nakaraan. Ito ay pinatunayan ng mga nakaligtas na manggagawa. Walang safety officer na itinalaga ng may-ari ng Kentex. Sa kabila nito at ng mala-cremation na sinapit ng mga buhay na manggagawa ay walang kahihiyang sinabi ni Sec. Baldoz ng DOLE na ang Kentex ay pasado sa general labor standards at sa occupational health and safety standards. Pinatunayan ito diumano sa inspeksyong ginawa ng DOLE nuong Setyembre 2014. Ang Kentex, diumano, ay binigyan ng Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP) ng fire safety inspection certificate taong 2014 din. Sa totoo’y walang pagsusuring ginawa ang DOLE. Ang tunay na nangyari ay self assessment ng may-ari ng Kentext, kaladkad ang company union ng tatatlumpong manggagawa. Ito ay naaayon sa Department Order (DO) 57-04 ng DOLE na nagpapahintulot sa malalaking kapitalista na may 200 o higit pang bilang ng maggagawa na gawin ang self-assessment. Sino bang kapitalista, na walang ibang layon kundi magkamal ng tubo sa pagpiga sa manggagawa, na magsasabing hindi pasado sa general labor standards ang kanilang empresa! Paulit-ulit naming kinokondina ang DOLE at gubyerno ni PNoy sa pagpapaubaya sa iilang malalaking kapitalista sa DO 57-04. Ito ay naaayon sa maka-kapitalista, laluna sa dayuhan, na tindig na mismong sinabi ni PNoy, “ Ang gubyerno ay hindi magiging balakid sa kapital, sa halip, ito ay tagapagpalago (enhancer) ng interes ng kapital”. Impiyernong kondisyon ng trabaho Bago pa ang sunog, ay impyerno na ang kondisyon ng trabaho ng mga manggagawa ng Kentex na gumagawa ng produktong tsinelas na goma (flipflops) tatak Havanas at iba pang rubber footwear. Ang kabuuang bilang ng trabahador ay mahigit 200. Ang tinuturing ng kapitalista ng Kentex na “regular” ay lampas 20 taong nagtatrabaho dito. Samantala, ang mga “casual” ay karaniwang 10 o higit pang taon sa Kentex. Ang mga “regular” at “casual” na manggagwa lamang ang tumatanggap ng minimum na sahod batay sa itinatakda ng Wage Board ng NCR. Humigit kumulang ang mga “regular” at “casual” ay bumibilang sa 80 katao o 40% ng pwersang manggagawa! Ang mga “regular” ay 15% ng ng mga manggagawa ng Kentex. Sila ang 30-kataong company union na kaladkad ng management para magpatibay na pasado ang Kentex sa labor standards and health and safety standards. Humigit-kumulang, 40 katao o 20% ng mga manggawa ay kontraktuwal na tuwirang tinanggap (direct-hired) ng Kentex. Sila ay nagtatrabaho sa batayang pakyawan o piece rate nang walang malinaw na basic pay at walang mga benepisyo. Kung ilang taon na silang kontraktuwal, tulad ng isa na 11 taon na sa ganitong katayuan. Sapagkat pakyawan o piece rate kadalasan ay kasama nila sa trabaho ang kanilang kapatid o anak, laluna kapag bakasyon, kung kaya may nasawi na mga menor de edad. Ang Kentex Inc, diumano’y pasado sa labor standards, ay pinahihintulot na magtrabaho dito ang mga menor de edad! Ayon sa mga nakausap na trabahador, ang 40% o 80 manggagawa ay agency hired sa pamamagitan ng CJC Manpower Services. Ang mga agency hired ay sumasahod ng minimum na P202/araw at may karagdagang P187-P220 daily allowance depende sa tagal sa serbisyo. Ngunit natuklasan ng mga agency hired ng CJC na hindi nito nire-remit sa SSS, Philhealth at Pag-ibig ang kapwa bahagi ng manggagawa at ng management. Nang mabisto, inamin ng DOLE na ang CJC ay hindi legal na nag-oopereyt at wala ito sa listahan ng recognized ng DOLE na Labor Agencies! Ang P202 na minimum na sahod ay lubhang mababa sa P466 na minimum wage na itinakda ng Wage Board ng NCR. Samantala ang P466 na minimum na sahod ay lubhang mababa sa mahigit P1,000 na arawang kita ng isang pamilya para makamit ang mga batayang pangangailangan. Walang pagsang-alang-alang ang may-ari ng Kentex sa kalagayan ng kanilang mga manggagawa. Ni walang maayos na bentilasyon sa loob ng pabrika na naglalagay sa kapahamakan ng kalusugan ng kanilang mga manggagawa. Isang katunayan na ang kapitalista ay walang pagkalinga sa kanyang mga manggagawa na siyang lumilikha ng yaman para sa kanya. Samantala, ang P5,000 na ipapatong sa P8,000 na katumbas sa kalahati ng buwanang sahod, na tulong para sa pamilya ng mga manggagawang namatay ay hindi sasapat at hindi makatwiran at makatarungan. Masalot na insult ito sa mga naulila laluna kung isasaalang alang ang napakalaking kita at tubo na piniga ng mga may-ari ng Kentex sa pagtatrabaho ng mga nasawi sa loob ng ilang taon. Ang pagka-abo ng higit sa 70 manggagawa ng Kentex ay malagim na paalala sa sinapit ng 17 empleyado ng Novo Jeans and Shirts na nasawi nang masunog ang department store nito sa Butuan City. Buwan din iyon ng Mayo, 2012. Ang mga biktima ay stay-in na manggagawa na natutulog sa dormitoryo sa ikatlong palapag. Ang limang nakaligtas ay nasaktan din sa kanilang pagtalon mula sa ikatlong palapag sapagkat ang dormitoryo ay naka-padlock mula sa labas upang maiwasan daw ang pagnanakaw ng mga manggagawang pinasasahod lamang ng P160 sa pagtatrabaho nang 12-14 oras sa bawat araw nang walang overtime pay. Sapagkat sila’y kontraktuwal. Hindi lamang dito sa Pilipinas nangyayari ang ganitong kalunos-lunos na sinasapit ng mga manggagawa. Sa iba’t ibang panig ng mundo ay mayroong mga manggagawang nagbubuwis ng buhay sa ngalan ng tubo para sa mga kapitalista. Hindi nga ba’t nitong Abril lamang ay isang ginagawang planta ng semento sa Bangladesh ang gumuho na ikinasawi ng 5 at kinasugat ng marami pang construction workers sa Bangladesh. Iyon ay alingawngaw ng tulad na sinapit ng 2 nasawi at 11 nasaktan na construction workers nang gumuho ang bahagi ng ika-7 palapag ng ginagawang gusali sa Bonifacio Global City, Taguig City; Pebrero 2015 lang ito. Ito ang mukha ng kapitalismong itinataguyod ng gubyerno. Ang disensyong neo-liberal ng imperyalistang globalisasyon na nagbibigay ng higit kalayaan sa mga kapitalistang magkamal ng tubo habang isinasadlak ang mga manggagawa sa kadusta-dustang kalagayan. Dagdag na madiing insulto sa mga manggagawa na ang naka-abang na trahedya ay naganap sa MAYO, buwan ng manggagawa ng buong daigdig. Kaisa ang KILUSAN sa pakikiramay sa mga pamilya, kaanak at kaibigan ng mga manggagawang namatay sa sunog sa pabrika ng Kentex noong Mayo 13. Kaisa nila kami sa pagsigaw ng katarungan. Mahigpit naming kahilingan na: 1. Panagutin ang mga may-ari ng Kentex, ang DOLE at Panguluhang Noyboy Aquino at lokal na gubyerno ng Valenzuela sa kriminal na paglabag sa mga karapatan at kaligtasan ng mga manggagawa na tulak ng DO 57-04! 2. Agad na ipawalang-bisa ang DO 57-04! 3. Kasama ang mga manggagawa, isagawa ang mahigpit na imbestigasyon at pagsusuri sa bawat empresa na may mula 200 at higit pang bilang ng manggagawa! 4. Katarungan para sa mahigit 70 manggagawa at kanilang mga pamilya sa pamamagitan ng pagpaparusa sa mga may sala at makatarungang bayad-pinsala sa mga pamilyang naulila! Manggagawa magkaisa at lumaban para sa kapakanan at kalayaan natin at ng buong mamamayan! Ibasura ang mga patakarang neo-liberal na nagbibigay ng higit na kalayaan sa kapital at may-ari ng kapital! Kilusan para sa Pambansang Demokrasya (KILUSAN) Workers for Peoples’ Liberation (WPL-MAKABAYAN) May 18, 2015 The Story Behind Subic-made ships of Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction Phils., Inc.
Author: Hanjin Workers A Briefing Paper: The Story Behind Subic-made ships of Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction Phils., Inc. Since June 2008, Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction Phils., Inc. manufactured and delivered twenty four vessels, 14 of which is worth $850 million. For the last two years, Hanjin remains the top exporter in Subic Freeport Zone by earning a total amount of $ 372.74 Million freight on board (FOB)[1]. With an initial investment of $721 Million, the South Korean conglomerate started operating in May 2006. It was the largest foreign direct investment (FDI) in the Philippines that inked a 50-year lease agreement with then President Arroyo. Hanjin started out with a 15,000 workforce it now employs 21, 000 Filipino workers. Now, the company targets to sell about $700 Million worth of vessels by 2010, $935 Million in 2011, and $1.28 Billion in 2012. Taking into account the generous benefits bundled with the deal like the ten year tax holiday in less than four years the company will be earning back its $ 1.8 Billion investment in no time. It is for this reason that Hanjin quality assurance director Yoonha Kim commended the Filipino workers for ‘learning fast in shipbuilding’. What then is the state of its 21,000 diligent Filipino shipbuilders? Recurrence of Accidents and Maltreatment SAMAHAN (Samahan ng mga Manggagawa sa Hanjin Shipyard) in its documentation observed in the early week of March 2011 an alarming frequency in fatal accidents occurring at the Subic site. In a span of almost five months, four workers died out of twenty-seven (27) grave accidents that occurred at the shipyard. These accident victims were either confined in the hospital or incapacitated just as the case of Ronaldo Alvarez who was caught between two metal panel boards that painfully twisted his lower torso turning his lower body invalid. He underwent three major operations including blood transfusions. Whereas, less serious accidents such as minor skin wounds or abrasions, skin irritation, swollen and irritated eyes from over-exposure to welding fumes and metal fillings and a loss of a limb or two occur with alarming frequency. Every day, the long line of workers awaiting treatment from the nurses on duty at the small clinic has become a living testimony to how dangerous shipyard work is. On the contrary, from March 28 to June 11, the association documented six (6) cases of maltreatment of Filipino workers by Korean superiors. Maltreatment ranges from choking, kicking, being hit on the head with solid metal flashlight (Maglite) or being hit by an industrial scissor (used for cutting iron sheets). Questionable Safety In the Workplace The poor safety record of the light-industrial Zone and Freeport came to light in 2008 with a string of accidents and deaths. Congress and Senate Labor Committee took steps to conduct an inquiry into the matter. In the first quarter of 2009, the number of deaths reached twenty four (24) while according to the Occupational Health and Safety section of the Labor Department reported 5,000 accidents with 40 deaths. Workers were encouraged to expose how their Korean superiors handle them like yelling, swearing, knocking their heads, kicking and hitting them with hard objects in order to “extract obedience.” Food is another perennial problem as it was often stale or maggot laden. It was also pointed out that one of the reasons of the accidents is the widespread use of subcontractors. In an ocular visit conducted by Senator Jinggoy Estrada on the shipyard the following recommendations were cited:
At first SAMAHAN’s registration was rejected but eventually granted last March 2010. Once more, the management appealed and the DOLE Region III immediately revoked the association’s registration. Through the efforts of supportive Church groups like Urban Missionaries (UM-AMRSP) and the National Secretariat on Social Action, Justice and Peace (CBCP-NASSA JP), the SAMAHAN certificate is reinstated by the Office of National Director of DOLE-BLR last September 2010. The alarming return of fatalities and serious injuries from preventable accidents and maltreatment by Korean superiors (with deliberateness unheard of in prior incidents) as well as unclean or sometimes stale and maggot-laden food at the canteen; the workers wrote several letters to the management included in this letter is the demand to reinstate the sixty-nine (69) illegally dismissed union and SAMAHAN members. The workers rejoiced when the management without answering the association’s letter for a dialogue; started to fix their food, provide uniforms and safety gadgets such as: safety shoes, and goggles, gas mask and helmet to some employees. Yet, in two days time the workers are back to the old cycle: stale food, poor quality equipment and worn-out uniforms; followed by four consecutive accidents that resulted in the death of two workers last April 8 to 15, 2011. In a bid to show their growing concern and alarm that the shipyard will once again be their graveyard the workers held lunch break noise barrage on the eve of May 1 and on May 26 they wrote a follow-up letter to the management. The demands of the group are simple: create a committee between the Hanjin management and the workers representative from SAMAHAN to jointly resolve the following:
### Contact Persons: Alfie Alipio-President(SAMAHAN)0930 1870 800 Joey Gonzales-Secretary- 0907 8320 094[email protected] Precy Dellomes (MAKABAYAN)0905 3652 391 Email: [email protected] Ernesto Arellano (President) (NUBCW–BWI) – 0922 8355 685 and Tess Borgonios – 0917 8256 954 [email protected] Subic, Zambales - “Shipbuilding is a high risk job; laxity on safety measures turns a shipyard into a gravely dangerous zone” this is the statement of Alfie Alipio, President of Samahan ng mga Manggagawa sa Hanjin Shipyard (SAMAHAN) in response to the accident that occurred yesterday at the Subic Shipyard or PHILSECO a shipbreaker company after a portion of a scaffold collapsed claiming the lives of five Pinoy workers while injuring six others.
“This horrible accident puts into the limelight the struggle for workplace safety of the Filipino workers in HANJIN’s Subic shipyard,” said Precy Dagooc, secretary general of labor center Manggagawa para sa Kalayaan ng Bayan (MAKABAYAN). Adding that, “if this accidents could happen in a company (PHILSECO) that strictly implements health and safety rules how much more in HANJIN a South Korean shipbuilding giant whose laxity on health and safety implementation caused for the death of 4 workers out of 28 serious accidents in the last five months. It can be recalled that last October 4, 2011 the Commission on Human Rights called for a dialogue with the management of Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction Phils. Inc. (HHICPI), the Task Force Hanjin headed by the Region III labor department, SAMAHAN and the Church Labor Conference. The initial dialogue exposed a wide gap in health and safety implementation, the labor department’s leniency in compelling HANJIN to comply in Philippine and internationally recognized labor laws such as the right to workplace safety, right to self-organization and collective bargaining agreement. “The rise of work-related deaths and the lack of financial support to the families of the victims is also a growing concern,” noted Alipio, “last May 27 another worker Aries Ariel Aquillo died from multi organ malfunction his family only received a Php 2, 000 donation from the HAnjin management.” MAKABAYAN alongside the Church Labor Conference demands onto P.Noy to bring justice to the Filipinos, uphold human dignity and save the lives of the 21,000 shipbuilders; HANJIN must comply to Philippine labor laws. ### Call for Support and Solidarity with Hanjin Workers We, the National Secretariat for Social Action – Justice and Peace (CBCP-NASSA), Urban Missionaries-AMRSP and the Social Action Center of Zambales, are one in recognizing that our government needs to entice foreign investors to help propel our country’s economy so as to provide employment opportunities for job-seeking Filipinos to support their families. However, we cannot compromise and allow our laws, social policies and workers’ rights to be violated and desecrated over investments. Labor takes priority over capital. We are glad to know that Hanjin, a Korean conglomerate, the 4th largest ship building facility in the world, chose to invest in Subic, Zambales in 2006 through its Philippine counterpart, the Hanjin Heavy Industries and Construction-Philippines, Incorporated (HHIC-Philippines). Considered as the biggest foreign direct investment project in the region and in the country today with an investment of $1.7 Billion, we believe that HHIC could contribute much to our economy. Why not? “It has employed 17,000 workers” as of January 9, 2010. Accordingly, since 2007, it exported fourteen (14) vessels worth $60 million dollars each on the minimum (http://www.gmanews.tv/story/181150/hanjin). Obviously, such enormous financial capability is a treasure to our unstable economy and a great help to address the unemployment problem in our country. However, we are alarmed by various reports of abuses and issues: 1. Hazardous working environment; 2. Maltreatments; 3. Labor rights violations; 4. Contractualization; and 5. Low wages. During our visits and dialogue with the workers, we have learned that they were slapped, kicked, boxed back-handed, and struck on their heads or hard hat by Korean managers. They work on contractual basis and some of them have contract periods of five to ten years. Their salary is far less than what the company promised to them and too far less than their South Korean counterparts. We are equally alarmed by the series of accidents and deaths in the workplace due to hazardous working environment and lack of personal protection equipments. Since 2006, a total of 27 workers died, resulting from accidents at the Hanjin facility were documented. These exclude cases of injuries and deaths that have been hidden by the company before the public. In fact just recently, a number of workers were brought to the hospitals because they were electrocuted. Reports of these incidents prompted Senator Pia Cayetano to file a resolution “directing the appropriate Senate committees to conduct an inquiry, in aid of legislation, on the alarming number of reported cases of deaths of Filipino workers at the Hanjin shipyard in Subic Bay Freeport (P.S. RES No 807).” The Senate Labor Committee chaired by Senator Jinggoy Estrada together with Senator Pia Cayetano conducted an investigation on the reported alarming series of accidents. After the Senate investigation Sen. Jinggoy Estrada urged SBMA Administrator Armand Arezza through a media interview “to strictly regulate the operations of the South Korean firm”. The Senator added that “Filipino workers are dying because of the apparent careless disregard to safety of Hanjin officials. SBMA should protect our workers” (http://www.gmanews.tv/largevideos/related/jinggoy-estrada-on-accupational-hazards-at-hanjin-shipyard). Estrada, “in his on-site inspection on Hanjin shipyard last Feb. 5, 2009 identified some safety and employment concerns of the laborers after he personally persuaded them to speak up on their working condition. Among his observations were: 1. Only two doctors (one general practitioner, one dentist) are on duty daily from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. after 5:00pm shift, no doctor is in the clinic; 2. Not all workers wear their helmets while at work; 3. Some workers wear dilapidated shoes. The senator even saw ones who wear “safety shoes” only banded together with green electrical tape; 4. Some workers complain they do not have insurance; 5. Some canals are left open; 6. Workers complain they work even on Sundays, without proper compensation. Other say they are underpaid, receiving only Php 303, instead of the minimum of the Php 310 wage rate” (http://www.senjinggoyestrada.com/index.php/articles/view/151.html) Based on these, HHIC clearly violates our law especially on Occupational Health and Safety (Article 162 of the Philippine Labor Code and DOLE Memorandum Circular No. 2 Series of 1998). HHIC also violated the security of tenure (Art. 279) of the Labor Code. But instead of rescuing our workers, the previous government chose to pay no heed to the cry of our workers. It is very disheartening to note that the high government officials in the previous administration allowed HHIC to violate our laws and abuse the rights of our Filipino workers because they have stakes in the company. This would explain perhaps why HHIC seems untouchable and has no fear to violate our laws that even the governor, mayors and other local officials cannot go inside the shipyard without approval from higher company officials. Our hearts bleed for the Hanjin workers, who continue to experience harassments and violations of their rights. The repressive and oppressive treatments of HHIC on our workers should be stopped. Hanjin employers should be reminded that their investment does not give them the right to disrespect our laws much more to degrade our workers. We urge all peace-loving Filipinos and advocates for justice to rally behind Hanjin workers. Let us support Hanjin workers’ call for humane treatment and safe working environment. Let us exact accountability from those and among government officials and agencies to pursue their investigation and see to it that HHIC is complying with the results and recommendation of Senate Labor Committee. We need to unite ourselves and strongly denounce South Korean employers in HHIC and demand them to observe and respect Philippine laws. Particularly:
Let us always remind ourselves that human dignity and rights flowing from it have always been of paramount concern of our Christian faith. The basis of this concern is the simple truth of our creation unto the image of God which demands us to respect and love our fellow human persons as we are all equal before Him. It is therefore, imperative for every one of us to work for human dignity. And working for human dignity is simply providing every person the opportunity to work and grow into the fullness of life. In solidarity with the workers, MOST REV. BRODERICK PABILLO, D.D. Chairman, National Secretariat for Social Action Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines 470 General Luna St., Intramuros, Manila Philippines [email protected]FR. HANIVAL G. BRUCELAS Director, Social Action Center of Zambales Olongapo City Philippines [email protected] DANIEL SANTIAGO III Chairperson, Urban Missionaries Association of Major Religious Superiors in the Philippines 70 Main Horseshoe Drive, 1112 Quezon City Philippines Email: [email protected] For your expression of solidarity, please write to: (kindly furnish us a copy of your letter) President Simeon Benigno Aquino III President, Republic of the Philippines Malacanang Palace, San Miguel, Manila Mrs. Rosalinda Baldoz Secretary, Department of Labor and Employment 7th Flr. DOLE Building, Muralla St. Corner Gen. Luna St., Intramuros Manila 1002, Philippines Fax/Tel: +632 527 3494 Email: [email protected] Hon. Leila De Lima Secretary, Department of Justice Padre Faura St., Ermita, Manila Direct line No.: 521-3310 TelefaxNo.521-1614 TrunklineNo.:523-8481loc.376/214 Email: [email protected] Hon. Loretta Ann P. Rosales Chairperson, Commission on Human Rights SAAC Building, Commonwealth Avenue UP Complex, Diliman, Quezon City 928-5655, 926-6188 Telefax: 929-0102 Email: [email protected] Sen. Jinggoy Estrada Chairperson, Labor, Employment and Human Resource Development Senate Rm. 602, 6th Floor, GSIS Building Financial Center, Roxas Blvd., Pasay City Hon. Emil L. Ong Chairperson, Labor and Employment Committee 3/F Annex Building, House of Representatives Quezon City Hon. Armand Arezza Administrator and Chief Executive Officer Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority Bldg. 229, Waterfront Road SBF 2, Olongapo City
A statement by MAKABAYAN |
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