Philippines President Benigno Aquino III waves as he arrives for the Leaders Meeting at the APEC summit in Vladivostok, Russia, Saturday, Sept. 8, 2012. (AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev)
Murray  Horton: Filipinos deserve real democracy
Prime Minister Key must raise human rights  during the Philippines President's visit, writes Murray Horton
Some of the most harrowing stories to come out  of the February 22 Christchurch earthquake involved people trapped alive in the  collapsed CTV Building desperately ringing their families, but dying before  they could be rescued. A number of them were among the Filipinos who died in  that building.
They were a group of nurses attending an  English language school. More and more Filipinos are coming to New Zealand to  work, either by themselves or with their families. Unlike Kiwis who go overseas  to travel and work, Filipinos are not here on their Overseas Employment (OE).
They leave their homeland because there are no  jobs for them, there is no welfare system, and unless you can support your  family by sending money back from overseas, they will starve. That is why we  are seeing an ever growing influx of Filipinos.
By and large they do the sorts of low-paid  menial jobs (such as retirement home nurse aids) that Kiwis aren't keen on and  they live very humbly. I doubt that any of them live in the circumstances of  their Coatesville compatriot Mrs. Dotcom.
People are the Philippines' biggest export;  they have become the Irish of Asia.
President Benigno Aquino is visiting New  Zealand this month to drum up business and trade ties. But the fact is that New  Zealanders know very little about this English-speaking Asian neighbor. There  are no direct flights; it is off the tourism radar. Why is it that millions of  Filipinos have to go overseas to find work, including in New Zealand? It is not  a poor country; quite the opposite, it is blessed with a wealth of natural  resources. But the vast majority of the people of this rich country are very  poor indeed, and not because of any fault of their own.
The Philippines' biggest problem is that land  and wealth (still very much the same thing) and power are concentrated in the  hands of a tiny number of extremely rich families who are not disposed to share  it, let alone give it up.
There has never been any genuine land reform.  Aquino himself is from a major land-owning family, and these dynasties are the  ones who control political power, with elected offices handed down from one  generation to the next. The Philippines has the formal trappings of democracy  but, in reality, it is still very much a semi-feudal society.
Three things reinforce the ruling dynasties'  stranglehold on wealth and power. One is institutionalized corruption on a  truly staggering scale. New Zealanders have heard of Imelda Marcos and her  shoes. The Marcos' conjugal dictatorship of the 70s and 80s personified the  word "kleptocracy" - massive theft from their own people.
More recently, another President was tried for  corruption on a comparably breathtaking scale; and President Aquino's immediate  predecessor has also been charged with corruption and electoral fraud offences.
The second and third things go together - institutionalized  violence towards all opposition, and a culture of impunity that sees both  corrupt politicians and the members of official death squads (soldiers, police,  and paramilitaries) go completely unpunished. Aquino was elected in June 2010  but, despite his own father having been the most high profile victim of Marcos'  many political murders, nothing has changed.
As of this September there had been 113  political murders during his Presidency. There are more than 400 political  prisoners (who are charged with concocted "criminal" offences);  torture is routine and was only very recently criminalized;  "disappearing" someone has still not been and is widely practiced.
The military and the ruling dynasties they  serve have a very broad definition of "enemies" - the world's worst  ever massacre of journalists (32, out of 58 people killed) took place in the  Philippines only three years ago. Nobody has been convicted for this and  witnesses have since been murdered.
Philippines  is a Model of the World for "People Power"
The people power in Tunisia that ousted their  dictator, the Ousted dictator in Egypt, Libya and the continues Arab Spring is  copied from the "people power" which was introduce by the Philippines to the  world that that the people if united is more powerful than the most wicked but powerful  man in a country.
When the previous President, Gloria  Macapagal-Arroyo, came to New Zealand in 2007, Helen Clark raised the human  rights issue with her.
We challenge John Key to do the same with  President Aquino.
The long-suffering Philippine people deserve  all the international support they can get (the US backs the status quo there,  as it always has, because the Philippines has always been a loyal satellite).  Filipinos don't take this lying down - they gave the world People Power when  they peacefully overthrew Marcos in 1986; opposition to the system ranges from  a vibrant popular movement representing many sectors of society, right through  to the decades of armed struggle waged by Communist and Muslim guerrillas.
We owe it to our Filipino workmates and neighbors  to urge our Government to demand of President Aquino what he intends to do to  make the Philippines an actual democracy and a fair society for all of its  people.
* Murray  Horton is the secretary of the Philippines Solidarity Network of Aotearoa.
Read more  here http://goo.gl/sZ7CX 
The New  Zealand Herald
 






 
 
 
 
 
 
