Thursday, May 10, 2012

Torture, criminal raps vs. GMA and others


From the inbox:


Eight of the 43 health workers, collectively known as the Morong 43, today filed a criminal case against Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Gen. Victor Ibrado, Gen. Delfin Bangit, Lt. Gen. Jorge Segovia, Col. Aurelio Baladad, Col. Cristobal Zaragosa  and 10 other officials of the AFP and the Philippine National Police (PNP) for violations of the Anti-Torture Act of 2009, Republic Act 7438 (Rights of Persons Arrested, Detained or under Custodial Investigation), and robbery.
Cristina Palabay, Karapatan spokesperson and convenor of the End Impunity Alliance said that, “this is the first criminal case against Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo involving human rights violations under her watch, and on the basis of the anti-torture law that was passed during her regime.”

Karapatan expressed support for the health workers for their continuing quest for justice, as the rights group also urged the Department of Justice and Malacanang “to act immediately on the said complaint to make human rights violators in government accountable for the rights they have wantonly violated.”

“President Noynoy Aquino said it himself, that the arrest and detention of the health workers are ‘fruits of the poisonous tree.’ It is however, lamentable that instead of immediately prosecuting those responsible for their illegal arrests and incarceration, the promotion of these military and police officers are being effected. It is déjà vu, similar to period of former President Arroyo, when Maj. Gen. Jovito Palparan Jr. who, despite many cases filed against him, was heaped upon with promotions and accolades,” Palabay said.

In a letter sent to the Commission on Appointments (CA), through its secretary Atty. Arturo Tiu, KARAPATAN and the Council for Health and Development (CHD) expressed their opposition to the confirmation of the promotion of three officials of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) who are direct parties to the illegal arrest, torture and detention of the 43 health workers. The said officials are Lt. Gen. Jorge Segovia, Brig. Gen. Aurelio B. Baladad and Col. Jaime Abawag.  Col. Abawag has no formal appointment yet but was already in the list of Karapatan and CHD for future reference for the CA.

Karapatan chairperson Marie Hilao-Enriquez expressed “alarm upon learning of the recent appointment of the above-mentioned officials, they being perpetrators of gross human rights violations.” Hilao-Enriquez was one of the signatories, along with Dr. Eleanor Jara for the CHD, of the letter submitted to the CA.

Hilao-Enriquez added that, “we understand that any officer who has a pending case against him in court must not be promoted. Thus, we take exception to the promotion and confirmation of Segovia, Baladad as well as Zaragosa, who was promoted in February 2012, as they are among the respondents in cases mentioned above. We therefore ask the Commission if there are measures which it can do to rectify this transgression.”

Last year, on April 4, 2011, six of the 43 health workers also filed a civil case for damages under Articles 27, 32 and 33 of the Civil Code at the Quezon City Regional Trial Court.  Segovia, Baladad and Abawag were among the respondents for illegal arrest, torture, arbitrary and illegal detention.  A complaint was also filed before the Commission on Human Rights on February 25, 2010 against Segovia and Baladad.

“Thus, their supposed promotion must not be allowed and the institutions that gave the clearances for such promotion must answer to the people,” said Hilao-Enriquez. 

---------------------------------------------------------------------
PUBLIC INFORMATION DESK
publicinfo@karapatan.org
 
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Alliance for the Advancement of People's Rights
2nd Flr. Erythrina Bldg., #1 Maaralin corner Matatag Sts., Central District
Diliman, Quezon City, PHILIPPINES 1101
Telefax: (+63 2) 4354146

KARAPATAN is an alliance of human rights organizations and programs, human rights desks and committees of people’s organizations, and individual advocates committed to the defense and promotion of people’s rights and civil liberties.  It monitors and documents cases of human rights violations, assists and defends victims and conducts education, training and campaign. 

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Yesterday once more

"As long as we have memories, yesterday remains..."--this  quotation had no source at its end and came from a forwarded email a cousin sent when she shared a video of horses running free.

I found it the apt intro to this series of photos of ex-Brookside babies in various locales from Baguio to Los Baños to Malumanay street, Teachers Village, Quezon City. The last was where the yearly Christmas reunion of the Lolarga, Romero and Valdellon families used to be held, hosted by Uncle Esting and Auntie Linda (Col. Ernesto and Dr. Erlinda Lolarga).

Lola encouraged family fellowship, a tight-knit one. The closeness was forged in Baguio. So not only were our cousins cousins, we were and still are friends.

All these photos are from Lola's scrapbooks and photo albums.
Shown are Auntie Pacing (standing center), her six Romero children and an interloping niece. From row from left: Sonny, Babeth Lolarga, Tessie, Ferdie and Henry. Back Row: Toots and Rose. James Dean must've been at height of his fame, which explains Sonny and Henry's pose.
The Romeros again (from left): Ferdie, Tessie, Henry, Sonny, Toots and Rose. Behind the younger ones is Auntie Pacing.
I imagine this scene on the hill behind Lola's house. The girls are Allyn and Telly Valdellon, the boys Henry and Sonny.
The young girls are Aunties Grace and Shirley Cariño with Lola Purang behind, an unidentified woman and Apo Loly (Flora Cariño), Lola's younger sister who served for decades as a nurse at Baguio General Hospital.
Sonny was a good declaimer at Lourdes School Quezon City and was our pambato at impromptu programs at the Brookside house.
That's cousin Tess with the flowers of May behind her and what can only be a pair of Gregg shoes on her feet.
Sonny and Henry by the lake with their wooden swords
In another Baguio located in San Juan, Rizal,  a birthday party at the Valdellon residence in Little Baguio with (from left) Tess Romero, Telly, Beng and Allyn Valdellon
When her grandchildren would reach their cutie pie phase (toddler-hood), Lola would sometimes borrow them for a few weeks or months as in the case of my second of three brothers, Dennis. Here he is in Lola's garden.
A startled-looking Dennis (he must've just woken up that morning) with his yaya and older sister Babeth in cut-off shorts
Lola enjoys a dip in a hot spring with Tessie, Ferdie, Henry and Sonny.
By this time the older cousins Rose and Toots were in college but still spent their summers in Baguio. Dig those eyeglasses! That's the main door to the house. Unknown little girl there
Lola also welcomed her grand-kids' friends into her house. Here she poses with Rose (second from left) and college gang. The house was unfenced and directly faced M. Roxas street.
Christmas season was also when Lola would visit her children and their families in the big city. Here she's carrying baby Eleanor. On the wagon is Boysie, now Boise, Lolarga, surrounded by his sisters Minnie, Eileen and Louie.
The big Christmas lunch on Malumanay street was always followed by a program before the distribution of gifts. Here the Romero children sing accompanied by Henry on the guitar. From left are Tessie, Toots, Ferdie, Rose and Sonny. Eleanor Lolarga is held protectively by Ferdie.
Lola (third from right) with her children and daughters-in-law in Teachers' Village (from left): Uncle Celso, Daddy (Enrique Jr.), Mommy (Nene), Auntie Fe Valdellon, Auntie Pacing Romero and Auntie Linda Lolarga
Lola with daughter Fe and our younger cousins Nini Valdellon and Jing Lolarga

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Her year of magical travelling (Part 3)

Grainy photo of Lola with a slight breeze blowing her skirt
Here I have to go with the captions she wrote with her fountain pen on her souvenir photos of that time in Europe in the '50s. Lola doesn't identify her companions. I surmise she must've been part of a group tour or these other women are fellow Methodists or are connected with the "Y" (Young Women's Christian Association). If only pictures can speak, but thanks, Lola, for leaving so many things to remember you by.
At Buckingham Palace to watch the changing of the guards
 Lola (middle) carries an umbrella, apparently a "must" accessory in London.
Flower gardens, also a must stop somewhere in Europe
At the Vatican Square
St. Peter's Cathedral in her inscription
Same threesome outside the Vatican Museum
Taking her own picture with her Brownie camera on a street of Paris
Wish I was there.
Who's the looker on the right, Lola?
Home again for a hearty lunch. Caption in her own write reads: "Bienvenida party given by the children. Watch out!"

Mrs. Joie de Vivre

'Collect' Patricia Paterno & help her art be flashed on Times Square's screens

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Hat and Fruits

I am trying to return to a transparent medium (gouache) with pen and ink again. And I'm also thinking of doing a series on women in hats engaged in all sorts of activities. This one can be a fruit vendor or a buyer still deciding whether to purchase watermelons, tomato-looking persimmons or mangoes or one of each. My daughter thinks the melons look like enlarged Easter eggs. My partner  glanced at this and just gave a non-committal "hmmmm." All comments point to the message: "Try and try again."

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Tes Choa's outrage over felling of pine trees


From the email inbox:
Baguio City Sans Pine Trees

By Tes B. Choa

Outrage! Rallies! Protests! Court Suits! These are the everyday headlines in my hometown which is Baguio, supposedly the summer capital of the Philippines. The whole government used to transfer to this city because of the cool, green temperature even in summer. Not anymore. Baguio is now becoming another concrete jungle punctuated with squatters all over its mountains. And now the ShoeMart (SM) branch of Baguio is proposing a 7-level project that will cut another 182 trees. Somehow they think it will perfume their project if they say that the trees will be earthballed and relocated in their property. Tree Doctors and Experts – Serafin Metilla and Chito Bertol says it is very difficult to do this to pine trees because pine trees have such spread out sensitive roots that once the roots are injured, the whole tree dies. Ask the DENR an example of pine trees that they have successfully transferred or earthballed and they will show you NOTHING. For one thing, the DENR does not have the proper machines to relocate established trees. In the United States, it cost one million dollars ($1M) to earthball and transfer an established oak tree.

SM repeatedly tells the public that only 182 trees will be affected. Let me tell you the truth. SM Baguio was the former Pines Hotel opposite the Vallejo Hotel. When the mall was built, 473 trees were cut. When they added the Call Center, another 100 trees were cut. With this latest project with 1,000 slots for parking, a water catchment or cistern that is capable of holding 6.9 million liters and a roof garden that will try to “simulate” nature – 182 trees will die. Get your calculators out and you have 755 trees massacred for this giant entity that calculates to earn P1 million a day, just on parking alone. With a roof garden, perhaps 6 meters of soil in depth , how can you accommodate the roots of a pine tree? How will you address the drainage? On top of that, do you know that Baguio has FIVE crisscrossing fault lines? In 1990 we lost more than 3,000 lives due to an earthquake. One crack on that water catchment or cistern and you have a deluge that will pour into Session Road and probably reach the Public Market unless the water path directs its flow to University of the Cordillera across Gov. Pack Road first. So there you have another school with hundreds of students that will be affected plus pedestrians trekking in red, thick mud into town and into the mall. With no roots to hold the erosion in check and just a reinforced retaining wall that has no guarantee of leaching, what a disaster waiting to happen!

Do you have a tree in your backyard? If you do, you are a millionaire. A 100 year old tree is valued at P18 million pesos. A 50 year old tree is valued at P9 million pesos. These trees that will be sacrificed for a parking lot are 20 to 40 years old. If you value them at P4 million pesos, you are throwing away P728 million pesos. These trees give free fertilizer. The pine leaves and acorns that fall, decay and decompose thus enriching your soil. The old bark falls and regenerates with new cover. The insects, birds and fungi  that you find in their natural habitat will no longer have a home. A 30 year old tree absorbs the emissions of 3 buses, carbon dioxide and releases oxygen, vital to the very breath of life. Can you imagine what will happen to the quality of air in the city? Emissions of 546 buses will stay and linger in what was once the summer capital of the Philippines. Add to that the jeepneys, other vehicles and motorcycle emissions, you have a veritable nightmare for persons suffering from asthma and other respiratory ailments. The roots that hold the soil will no longer be there during the 6 rainy months and strong typhoons. SM boasts they will plant 50,000 trees in a period of three years. Well, it takes 50 years for a pine tree to reach full maturity. Meanwhile the new, small and puny pine trees that will be planted cannot give the same benefits that these established pine trees can offer. And where will the 50,000 trees be planted in the city proper? You will probably go to Sto. Tomas Hill to plant that many.   This is a good half an hour away from the city. There are no roads that can accommodate 546 buses in that area. Shall we sacrifice health for a daily intake of P1 million a day for SM? In a meeting with Mr. Hans Sy, he informed us that his “real” expansion was China. Then, why oh why expand in Baguio?

One parking slot has an average of 20 turnovers in a day. If you charge P35 for the parking slot and multiply that by 20 users, you earn P700 a day for that one slot. Now multiply that by 1,000 and you get a hefty sum of P700,000. The present mall has at least 400 slots to begin with. Get your calculators out and add those 400 slots as well. Now you know why SM is determined to put up this 7 level project.

Let me give you another scenario. SM has bought the PNR (Philippine National Railways) property near the Victory Bus Station. If you remember, you would take the bus in this terminal to catch the train in Damortis, Pangasinan. In that property, there are no trees. Why can’t SM build their 7 level project in that area? It is a 5 minute walk to the mall. Add a tram – the very first of its kind in the Philippines, and along the way showcase a winding garden that displays the flowers that every float carries during the “Panagbenga” Flower Festival. For the elderly and the physically challenged, the tram would be a wonderful way to go to the mall. Offer the valet service for those collecting their groceries and purchased articles in the mall and there you have more employment for Baguio citizens without harming or cutting one tree. I guess this cannot be envisioned by those overzealous architects, designers and engineers of SM. You not only add a new feature – a tram, you also save 170 trees. Twelve (12) trees have already been earthballed ready for their final death. A Dr. Pajillon from Los Banos was sent to testify at court about this earthballing of pine trees. When asked if he could give an example area where they successfully transferred pine trees, he had no answer. If you ask DENR what happened to those gorgeous Acacia trees that were supposed to have been transferred from Fort Bonifacio (Global City) to a protected area, the answer will be the same – No where!

To add insult to injury, do you know that SM does not pay Income Tax to Baguio City? It pays to Cavite where the BIR National Office is located. What is paid in Baguio is the Real Estate Tax and the business permits to include the vendors’ permits. Unfortunately we have a Baguio City Council that has been cowed and lured into an illusion of traffic decongestion. The City Engineers must have been more than eager to give their approval for such a project. In a meeting with the City Urban Coordinator, I was informed there was an ordinance to limit buildings or construction to five (5) stories. So, why an approval for a 7 level project? The Regional Office of DENR took a year to give its ECC Clearance. Does Mr. Clarence Baquilat know of experts who can assure the citizenry that those earthballed trees will survive? If he does, can he pinpoint a location where they have successfully relocated established pine trees? I would dearly love to see such an area. I would love to call on Serafin Metilla (Bonsai  and Tree Expert) and Chito Bertol (President of Manila Seedling Bank) to certify that earthballing of pine trees can be a successful endeavour.

A Temporary Protection Order was issued by the Court (Branch 5) in Baguio. This Branch handles all environmental issues. Until this case is resolved, the building of the 7 level project of SM is on hold. Open your email, your google and facebook. You will see all the ads placed by SM. During the rallies, pictures of the event were on the front pages of the local papers. Did you hear a peep in the Big 3? Not a peep in the Star, Inquirer or Bulletin. When a giant is involved, especially one that regularly advertises every week, the “Silence of the Lambs” is heard. Self-Censorship dominates. Currently it is the Opinion Writers that take up the advocacy. SM has hired writers to counter the issues mentioned by the protesters. SM has applied for a LEED (Leadership in Energy Environmental Design) Certificate. I wonder if the cutting of 755 trees will be taken into consideration for this application. I guess not.

The author is Founding Chairman of Mother Earth Foundation, Inc. Their focus is Solid Waste Management, teaching barangays how to compost, recycle, reduce, reuse and establish MRFs (Materials Recovery Facility) in various communities. Mother Earth is a member of the Eco-Waste Coalition and networks with like minded NGOs and schools like Zero Waste International Alliance, Health Without Harm, Miriam College, GAIA and Green Peace. Author info from www.teschoa.com

Painting of trees entitled "Why I Love It Here" by Babeth Lolarga. First exhibited at the maiden show of the Baguio Aquarelle Society at The Manor in Camp John Hay, Baguio City, in 2008.

Friday, May 4, 2012

Her year of magical travelling (Part 1)

The year is 1957. Telesfora Cariño Lolarga, a widow of two years, embarks on a tour that will take her to the US, Mexico, Canada, Europe, India. And back again. There are gaps in her scrapbooks and albums that I've been trying to fill up with conjectures. Among other reasons for her year-long trip,  she was part of a Philippine delegation to a world trade fair and she re-connected with friends she made at the Young Women's Christian Association (Lola was a Methodist from birth till death), the ladies of the Masons (her husband Enrique was one), etc. I think she also observed radio schools in the US, having taken over the post of president at the National Radio School and Institute of Technology when her husband died.

And so begins my virtual tour with Lola.
Undated photo. Let's call this starting from home.
From the lei around her neck, Lola (right) must be in Hawaii.
In Los Angeles. That must be her Brownie camera perched on a step at left. This would become her trademark pose, handbag on crook of arm. And that friendly smile and open face.
At an outdoor farmers' market in L.A.
Did she or didn't she watch the Miss U pageant in Long Beach, California? Can't tell now.
At a picnic in San Francisco, CA. That's her half sprawled (second from left) on the grass, still wearing her high heels.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Who Remembers What Munch's Life was Like?

"The version of 'The Scream' sold Wednesday was executed in 1895 and is the only one not held by Norwegian museums. It also features a poem inscribed by Munch in which he explains his inspiration for the work, which depicts 'the great scream in nature.'"

one hundred nineteen point nine million dollars
that's how much this painting was sold for at the auction block today

how many zeroes 
are there in that amount?

how many seedlings 
to replenish a forest
with that amount?

how many screaming protestors
can't be silenced
by zealous billionaires 
out to bury
collective memories with 
multi-level piles of concrete?

look how those
white-gloved men 
handle the work
as if it is 
a fragile infant
as if the slightest 
false move will cause 
precious pigments
to crumble

the painter 
once took a walk 
in the forest &
heard nature scream
its protest
at what the world
was turning out to be

he went home
to capture 
that sound
in waves upon
tsunami waves
of violent colors

how they must have 
echoed the violence
inside him
the kind that
protests when
moral guardians
say, "i'm disappointed
with you. you would've
made a skilled engineer.
an honorable trade
that one is.
stop this foolishness
of painting."

pweh!

if munch could outrace
his madness
his addictions
the nazis
who thought of him
& his works
as depraved

if he could
continue to paint away
recover his balance
& late in life
be respectable
be provident father
& not die van gogh's
pauper's death

oh for god's sake
pweh!

give the monied set
the screaming
effing scream

the forest will
outlive the self-proclaimed
zealots of progress

even munch in his
twilight years
must've known that

~ Babeth Lolarga
May 3, 2011
2:44 p.m.

 Source of quote and photo: http://news.ph.msn.com/lifestyle/munchs-scream-beats-auction-record-at-dollar1199-mn-3