The Ecumenical Bishops Forum assailed the Aquino
administration for the militarization of lumad communities in Mindanao , saying the eviction of indigenous peoples
through threats and summary killings “will destroy the nation.”
Quoting the Bible, EBF, in a statement signed by its
executive secretary Bishop Elmer M. Bolocon of the United Church of Christ in
the Philippines ,
said: “When the King is concerned with justice, the nation will be strong, but
when he is only concerned with money, he will destroy his country.”
The bishops added: “The country is, indeed, being destroyed.
Our lumad who belong to the indigenous peoples (IPs) are getting
harassed, intimidated, threatened and killed. Their leaders are being
extra-judicially exterminated because they defend their ancestral land and
protect their people. The perpetrators, the military and their paramilitary
forces, use as an excuse the pretext that these leaders are New People’s Army combatants
or supporters.”
The “unjustified” accusations, EBF said, have also become
the basis for military and paramilitary units to force lumad to leave
their communities on threat of death or arson of their homes.
The Aquino government cannot legitimize the killing of
Emerito Samarca, executive director of the Alternative Learning Center for
Agriculture and Livelihood Development, and of Manobo leaders Dionel Campos and
Datu Bello Sinzo on September 1 in Lianga, Surigao del Sur by saying
they “supported” the NPA, the bishops said.
EBF’s position also thrashed the opinion of economist Solita
Monsod who wrote in a column that only rebels and their supporters run the risk
of being killed.
Earlier, the military also claimed that more than 60 percent
of the NPA in Mindanao are lumad.
EBF said threats of arson and mass murder are more than
enough reason for tribal communities to evacuate and seek sanctuary in safer
areas, like the hundreds of Manobo from Talaingod, Davao del Norte and San
Fernando, Bukidnon staying in a church compound in Davao City, and 3,000
refugees in Tandag City, Surigao del Sur who fled their homes after the Lianga
killings.
“Why are they being driven out of their ancestral lands? The
reason is money,” the bishops said. “Big foreign mining corporations want to
exploit the resources of the lands known for their richness in gold, nickel and
copper. The military wants to make sure that that happens. However, they could
not freely enter due to people’s resistance. Hence, the militarization of the
area had to commence.”
“Money has become more important than people!” they added.
The bishops noted that lumad communities have been
“neglected” for decades yet, after churches and nongovernmental organizations
took it on themselves to build schools, these have come under attack from the
military and paramilitary groups.
They also slammed North Cotabato Representative Nancy
Catamco, who chairs the committee on indigenous people at the House of
Representatives, for parroting military claims that the lumad refugees
in Davao City are “trafficking” victims being
held against their will and orchestrating a foiled “rescue” attempt that left
several persons injured.
The EBF voiced support for the lumad’s position
that they will not return to their communities unless militarization ends.
“We support the just demand of the lumad. It is
their right to go back to their own homes and be assured to live in peace. This
is the least that the government can do -- leave them in peace,” the bishops
stressed.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/118521/bishops-to-aquino-stop-militarizing-lumad-areas
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