From Katropa DWDD-CRS Virtual RTV Website (Dec 31, 2018): Martial law implementation caused the arrest of most want NPA in CARAGA
CAMP EVANGELISTA, Cagayan de Oro City – The firm and precise Martial Law Implementation by the 4th Infantry Division troops and Police Regional Office (PRO) 13 led to the arrest of CARAGA's top most wanted NPA terrorist at Purok Spring, Brgy Tagcatong, Carmen, Agusan del Norte on December 30, 2018, around 04:30 in... the morning.
Security forces from the 23rd Infantry Battalion, 4th MIB, PRO13 and 402nd Infantry Brigade arrested Joaquin Madrianon alias ALTO/JUNJUN who was an Intelligence Officer and the present Commanding Officer of Special Partisan Armed Revolutionary Unit (SPARU) of NPA in CARAGA. A Cal. 45 pistols with 22 rounds of ammunition, one hand-grenade, and a sling bag were recovered in his possession during the arrest who was immediately brought to Carmen Municipal Police Station for investigation and proper custody.
It was known that Madrianon was involved in various crimes such as murder, frustrated murder, and arson. He is listed as the Nr 1 Most Wanted NPA Terrorist in Agusan del Norte and Nr 2 in the most wanted list of overall criminals in the province.
Madrianon was responsible in unsolved lumad killings in CARAGA including the murder of the late Mayor Dario E. Otaza of Loreto municipality, Agusan del Sur last October 15, 2015. He was also involved in the failed ambush by the NPA against Governor Angel Amante-Matba of Agusan del Norte in March 2015 at Sitio Mimbahandi, Camagong of Nasipit municipality.
Major General Ronald C. Villanueva, the Commander of 4ID said; “I commend the troops under 23rd IB, 4MIB, 402nd Infantry Brigade and PRO-13 for the swift and precise actions that led to the arrest of this most wanted NPA terrorist in CARAGA. Through the Martial Law implementation, we were able to serve justice to all the victims of this apprehended terrorist. Martial Law extension with the support of our stakeholders brings remarkable
results that show great impact in security and development in particular”. Major General Villanueva concluded. | 4ID
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Tuesday, January 1, 2019
DWDD: Government forces hit anew terrorist group in Davao del Sur
From Katropa DWDD-CRS Virtual RTV Website (Jan 1, 2019): Government forces hit anew terrorist group in Davao del Sur
Makilala, North Cotabato - As government pursuit operation against CPP-NPA Terrorists (CNTs) progresses in the hinterlands of Barangay Sibulan, Sta Cruz, Davao del Sur, troops from 39th Infantry Battalion (39IB) again had an armed encounter at around 08:15 in the morning, December 28, 2018.
The troops had chanced upon a group of CNTs we...re apparently setting-up an ambush for pursuing government forces wherein the firefight ensued. The terrorists again scampered away leaving behind foodstuffs and other propaganda materials for their botched anniversary celebration.
Pursuit operation conducted again wherein government troops found along the CNTs tracks a Garrand Rifle with serial number 2846970. It can be recalled that the same contending forces had a skirmish last Christmas Day.
Lieutenant Colonel Rhojun Rosales, 39IB Commander said, "we are conducting Focused Military Operation to keep up the pressure on the terrorist group for them to submit and surrender or else be destroyed. This is in line with the President's guidance in ending these decades’ old Internal Security problem".
On the other hand, Brigadier General Roberto Ancan, Commander of 1002nd Infantry Brigade expressed his commendation to the troops and said, “the operation was indeed a security operation which is basically a measure to protect the community from deceptive recruitment and atrocities of terrorist groups. The decisive engagement of the troops against these terrorists were the result of the Community Support Program, now the CNTs are losing their ground.” | 10ID
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Makilala, North Cotabato - As government pursuit operation against CPP-NPA Terrorists (CNTs) progresses in the hinterlands of Barangay Sibulan, Sta Cruz, Davao del Sur, troops from 39th Infantry Battalion (39IB) again had an armed encounter at around 08:15 in the morning, December 28, 2018.
The troops had chanced upon a group of CNTs we...re apparently setting-up an ambush for pursuing government forces wherein the firefight ensued. The terrorists again scampered away leaving behind foodstuffs and other propaganda materials for their botched anniversary celebration.
Pursuit operation conducted again wherein government troops found along the CNTs tracks a Garrand Rifle with serial number 2846970. It can be recalled that the same contending forces had a skirmish last Christmas Day.
Lieutenant Colonel Rhojun Rosales, 39IB Commander said, "we are conducting Focused Military Operation to keep up the pressure on the terrorist group for them to submit and surrender or else be destroyed. This is in line with the President's guidance in ending these decades’ old Internal Security problem".
On the other hand, Brigadier General Roberto Ancan, Commander of 1002nd Infantry Brigade expressed his commendation to the troops and said, “the operation was indeed a security operation which is basically a measure to protect the community from deceptive recruitment and atrocities of terrorist groups. The decisive engagement of the troops against these terrorists were the result of the Community Support Program, now the CNTs are losing their ground.” | 10ID
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MILF: Yes vote to BOL will prevent the spread of violent extremism
Posted to the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (Dec 31, 2019): Yes vote to BOL will prevent the spread of violent extremism
An overwhelming yes vote by residents in the proposed Bangsamoro Autonomous Region of the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) will prevent the threat of violent extremism in Mindanao.
Violent extremism emerges every after a peace agreement between the GPH, and the Moro Fronts breaks down.
The junking by the Supreme Court of the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain (MOA-AD) led to the separation by late Aleem Ombra Kato separated from the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and organized the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Movement (BIFM).
MILF Chairman Al Haj Murad Ebrahim stressed during a dialogue with civil society leaders in Cotabato City last December 19, 2018,” that the emergence of the Abu Sayyaf was due to the breakdown in the implementation of 1996 GPH-Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) peace accord.
The dawn of the infamous ISIS-inspired Maute Group was due to the non-passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) in 2016. The so called Marawi City siege destroyed the Islamic City of Marawi and forced hundreds of thousands of resident to flee.
These acts of extremists groups happened out of frustrations in the Mindanao peace process, hence the urgency of the ratification of the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) is vital to prevent the spread of violent extremism in Mindanao.
Sad to note that two petitions to declare the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) unconstitutional were filed in the Supreme Court by Sulu Governor Sakur Tan II, and the Philconsa.
The higher court is yet to come out with a decision.
Tan in his petition asked the court that the votes of Sulu should be recognized as separate from the majority vote of ARMM, meaning that if the majority of votes from Sulu say no to BOL, then the province should not be part of the Bangsamoro.
He also alleged in his petition that the ARMM cannot be abolished without first amending the 1987 Constitution.
Tan petition said that “Since the ARMM is created by the Constitution, Congress, by itself, has absolutely no authority to abolish ARMM. Only through an amendment of the Constitution that ARMM can be abolished.
For his part, Chairman Al Haj Murad emphasized the various studies made on the BOL, and the consultations conducted with some framers of the 1987 Constitution, and legal luminaries during the drafting of the law.
“The Office of the President examined carefully the provisions of the BOL,” Al Haj Murad said.
“The Bangsamoro Transition Commission (BTC) that crafted the BOL which has its own legal team ensured that there are no unconstitutional provisions of the proposed law. This is so because, “we fear the possibility that the BOL will be declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court,” Al Haj Murad also said in his message.
“The MILF assures that even if the BOL is struck down by the higher court, the peace agreement will stay. They can claim that the government should implement it. This political agreement stands and the MILF still can hold on to this,” he stressed.
“I see the need to keep an eye on the groups who will take advantage of the failure of the peace process,” Al Haj Murad warns.
A victory of yes vote come plebiscite day will pave the way for the Bangsamoro Autonomous Government to realize finally the aspiration for Moro Right to Self-determination.
Otherwise, imagine, what challenges to peace our beloved Mindanao will face again?
The Philippine government, the Moro Fronts (MNLF and MILF), and civil society organizations, business organizations, and church groups all stand to gain or lose on the fate of the BOL on January 21st.
http://www.luwaran.com/news/article/1667/yes-vote-to-bol-will-prevent-the-spread-of-violent-extremism
An overwhelming yes vote by residents in the proposed Bangsamoro Autonomous Region of the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) will prevent the threat of violent extremism in Mindanao.
Violent extremism emerges every after a peace agreement between the GPH, and the Moro Fronts breaks down.
The junking by the Supreme Court of the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain (MOA-AD) led to the separation by late Aleem Ombra Kato separated from the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and organized the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Movement (BIFM).
MILF Chairman Al Haj Murad Ebrahim stressed during a dialogue with civil society leaders in Cotabato City last December 19, 2018,” that the emergence of the Abu Sayyaf was due to the breakdown in the implementation of 1996 GPH-Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) peace accord.
The dawn of the infamous ISIS-inspired Maute Group was due to the non-passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) in 2016. The so called Marawi City siege destroyed the Islamic City of Marawi and forced hundreds of thousands of resident to flee.
These acts of extremists groups happened out of frustrations in the Mindanao peace process, hence the urgency of the ratification of the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) is vital to prevent the spread of violent extremism in Mindanao.
Sad to note that two petitions to declare the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) unconstitutional were filed in the Supreme Court by Sulu Governor Sakur Tan II, and the Philconsa.
The higher court is yet to come out with a decision.
Tan in his petition asked the court that the votes of Sulu should be recognized as separate from the majority vote of ARMM, meaning that if the majority of votes from Sulu say no to BOL, then the province should not be part of the Bangsamoro.
He also alleged in his petition that the ARMM cannot be abolished without first amending the 1987 Constitution.
Tan petition said that “Since the ARMM is created by the Constitution, Congress, by itself, has absolutely no authority to abolish ARMM. Only through an amendment of the Constitution that ARMM can be abolished.
For his part, Chairman Al Haj Murad emphasized the various studies made on the BOL, and the consultations conducted with some framers of the 1987 Constitution, and legal luminaries during the drafting of the law.
“The Office of the President examined carefully the provisions of the BOL,” Al Haj Murad said.
“The Bangsamoro Transition Commission (BTC) that crafted the BOL which has its own legal team ensured that there are no unconstitutional provisions of the proposed law. This is so because, “we fear the possibility that the BOL will be declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court,” Al Haj Murad also said in his message.
“The MILF assures that even if the BOL is struck down by the higher court, the peace agreement will stay. They can claim that the government should implement it. This political agreement stands and the MILF still can hold on to this,” he stressed.
“I see the need to keep an eye on the groups who will take advantage of the failure of the peace process,” Al Haj Murad warns.
A victory of yes vote come plebiscite day will pave the way for the Bangsamoro Autonomous Government to realize finally the aspiration for Moro Right to Self-determination.
Otherwise, imagine, what challenges to peace our beloved Mindanao will face again?
The Philippine government, the Moro Fronts (MNLF and MILF), and civil society organizations, business organizations, and church groups all stand to gain or lose on the fate of the BOL on January 21st.
http://www.luwaran.com/news/article/1667/yes-vote-to-bol-will-prevent-the-spread-of-violent-extremism
MILF: BIAF Chief of Staff Sammy Al Mansoor hosts Multi-Sectoral Assembly
Posted to the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (Jan1, 2019): BIAF Chief of Staff Sammy Al Mansoor hosts Multi-Sectoral Assembly
In photo- MILF Chairman Al Haj Murad Ebrahim delivering his message during the Multi-Sectoral Assembly for BOL in the village of Gambar, Mother Kabuntalan, Maguindanao hosted by BIAF Chief Sammy Al Mansoor on December 30, 2018
Newly appointed OPAPP Secretary, and Retired AFP Chief of Staff Gen. Carlito Galvez, Jr. and members of the Central Committee of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) led by Al Haj Murad Ebrahim attended the Multi-Sectoral Assembly for the Ratification of the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) hosted by BIAF Chief of Staff Sammy Al Manssor at Gambar, Mother Kabuntalan, Maguindanao on December 30, 2018.
None but all has a common voice to vote yes for the BOL, and called on everyone to cast the same vote during the January 21st plebiscite for the ratification of the BOL.
In Photo-OPAPP Sec. Carlito Galvez, Jr. delivering his message during the Multi-Sectoral Assembly at Gambar, Mother Kabuntalan, Maguindanao
Sec. Galvez made a recollection of his statement made while still active on duty as Chief of the AFP that after his retirement, he will support the BOL and work for peace in the Bangsamoro.
He said, his coming to the assembly was a start of the fulfilment of his words. He also made a recollection of his days in the Senate hearings together with MILF Peace Implementing Panel Chairman Mohagher Iqbal where both of them were subjected to painstaking interrogations from some lawmakers.
He praised MILF Chairman Al Haj Murad who upon invitation visited the General Headquarters of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) at Camp Aguinaldo, Metro Manila, as the first rebel chief to do so.
Both leaders were erstwhile adversaries during the conflict but now working hand in hand for the dawning of peace in Mindanao.
Al Haj Murad in his message said he was concern much on how to make the management of the future autonomous government worthy for the best interest and welfare of the people in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM).
He said he does not want a scenario that some people feel that the huge budget for the Autonomous Government would just mean the soar high of the gains of corruption by some officials- to-be in the government being shaped.
He also made a memory of his revolutionary days in some areas of Mindanao where many civilians they mingled with refused to provide them refuge for fear of government punishment.
Al Haj Murad reciprocated with praise the statement of Sec. Galvez in saying that the general was the first AFP Chief to come to an MILF Camp with only an instrument of peace. His final call is for everyone to vote yes for the BOL.
Assembly host Abdulraof “Sammy Al Mansoor” Macacua, also known as Sammy Gambar mentioned the significance of Gambar to him and the MILF.
He said, it is his birthplace. It was also once the Central Camp of the MILF, a strategic and convenient place during those days for many MILF commanders to come being just few miles from their native barangays.
In his brief message, Iqbal said, the BOL has undergone many ladders, first was during the bloody engagement between the government and the MILF, then during the negotiations, then during the crafting of the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL), and the filing of the Bill in Congress.
In all steps, blood and tears were spent to come up with this BOL. It is just an opportunity for us not to miss or not to waste this chance towards the fruit of those mentioned stages by voting yes to the BOL.
Rep. Bai Sandra Sema of 1st District of Maguindanao, and Cotabato City said in her message recalled the story on how she maneuvered in overcoming the anti BOL in Congress.
Her husband Datu Muslimin Sema traced back his years in the struggle up to his captivity by the military, then to the peace process. He said, the BOL is the inclusive document for all the agreements signed between the government and the Moro fronts. It is just right for us to ratify positively on the BOL.
Mayor Datu Tucao Mastura of Sultan Kudarat, Maguindanao narrated his experiences in the struggle but most of all called on every one to vote yes to the BOL. While Dr. Susana Anayatin touched on the fiscal autonomy in the BOL. She said, the Bangsamoro officials of the BARMM will no longer beg funds from the National government. She called on the people for favor for the BOL.
Tens of thousands graced the assembly. Among the leading personalities that attended were BTC Commissioner Melanio Ulama, Mayor Datu Midpantao “Antao” Midtimbang, Hadji Datu Ali Midtimbang, Cotabato Board Member Kelly Antao, LGU leaders, Col. Randy Banaag of the AFP, AFP officers and men, Atty. Najuib Sinarimbo, MILF Commanders and their troops as well as their political committees, professionals, farmers, fishermen and local residents including those coming from nearby localities.
http://www.luwaran.com/news/article/1671/biaf-chief-of-staff-sammy-al-mansoor-hosts-multi-sectoral-assembly-
In photo- MILF Chairman Al Haj Murad Ebrahim delivering his message during the Multi-Sectoral Assembly for BOL in the village of Gambar, Mother Kabuntalan, Maguindanao hosted by BIAF Chief Sammy Al Mansoor on December 30, 2018
Newly appointed OPAPP Secretary, and Retired AFP Chief of Staff Gen. Carlito Galvez, Jr. and members of the Central Committee of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) led by Al Haj Murad Ebrahim attended the Multi-Sectoral Assembly for the Ratification of the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) hosted by BIAF Chief of Staff Sammy Al Manssor at Gambar, Mother Kabuntalan, Maguindanao on December 30, 2018.
None but all has a common voice to vote yes for the BOL, and called on everyone to cast the same vote during the January 21st plebiscite for the ratification of the BOL.
In Photo-OPAPP Sec. Carlito Galvez, Jr. delivering his message during the Multi-Sectoral Assembly at Gambar, Mother Kabuntalan, Maguindanao
Sec. Galvez made a recollection of his statement made while still active on duty as Chief of the AFP that after his retirement, he will support the BOL and work for peace in the Bangsamoro.
He said, his coming to the assembly was a start of the fulfilment of his words. He also made a recollection of his days in the Senate hearings together with MILF Peace Implementing Panel Chairman Mohagher Iqbal where both of them were subjected to painstaking interrogations from some lawmakers.
He praised MILF Chairman Al Haj Murad who upon invitation visited the General Headquarters of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) at Camp Aguinaldo, Metro Manila, as the first rebel chief to do so.
Both leaders were erstwhile adversaries during the conflict but now working hand in hand for the dawning of peace in Mindanao.
Al Haj Murad in his message said he was concern much on how to make the management of the future autonomous government worthy for the best interest and welfare of the people in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM).
He said he does not want a scenario that some people feel that the huge budget for the Autonomous Government would just mean the soar high of the gains of corruption by some officials- to-be in the government being shaped.
He also made a memory of his revolutionary days in some areas of Mindanao where many civilians they mingled with refused to provide them refuge for fear of government punishment.
Al Haj Murad reciprocated with praise the statement of Sec. Galvez in saying that the general was the first AFP Chief to come to an MILF Camp with only an instrument of peace. His final call is for everyone to vote yes for the BOL.
Assembly host Abdulraof “Sammy Al Mansoor” Macacua, also known as Sammy Gambar mentioned the significance of Gambar to him and the MILF.
He said, it is his birthplace. It was also once the Central Camp of the MILF, a strategic and convenient place during those days for many MILF commanders to come being just few miles from their native barangays.
In his brief message, Iqbal said, the BOL has undergone many ladders, first was during the bloody engagement between the government and the MILF, then during the negotiations, then during the crafting of the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL), and the filing of the Bill in Congress.
In all steps, blood and tears were spent to come up with this BOL. It is just an opportunity for us not to miss or not to waste this chance towards the fruit of those mentioned stages by voting yes to the BOL.
Rep. Bai Sandra Sema of 1st District of Maguindanao, and Cotabato City said in her message recalled the story on how she maneuvered in overcoming the anti BOL in Congress.
Her husband Datu Muslimin Sema traced back his years in the struggle up to his captivity by the military, then to the peace process. He said, the BOL is the inclusive document for all the agreements signed between the government and the Moro fronts. It is just right for us to ratify positively on the BOL.
Mayor Datu Tucao Mastura of Sultan Kudarat, Maguindanao narrated his experiences in the struggle but most of all called on every one to vote yes to the BOL. While Dr. Susana Anayatin touched on the fiscal autonomy in the BOL. She said, the Bangsamoro officials of the BARMM will no longer beg funds from the National government. She called on the people for favor for the BOL.
Tens of thousands graced the assembly. Among the leading personalities that attended were BTC Commissioner Melanio Ulama, Mayor Datu Midpantao “Antao” Midtimbang, Hadji Datu Ali Midtimbang, Cotabato Board Member Kelly Antao, LGU leaders, Col. Randy Banaag of the AFP, AFP officers and men, Atty. Najuib Sinarimbo, MILF Commanders and their troops as well as their political committees, professionals, farmers, fishermen and local residents including those coming from nearby localities.
http://www.luwaran.com/news/article/1671/biaf-chief-of-staff-sammy-al-mansoor-hosts-multi-sectoral-assembly-
MILF: MILF Condemns Mall Blast in Cotabato City
Posted to the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (Jan1, 2019): MILF Condemns Mall Blast in Cotabato City
In a statement by the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) signed by MILF Chair Al Haj Murad Ebrahim, it condemns in the highest possible terms the explosion that occurred today (December 31, 2018) in a shopping mall along Don Rufino Alonzo St, Cotabato City.
The dastardly act of putting an improvised explosive device (IED) with intent to kill or harm civilians is an act of cowardice, inhuman, and atrocious, the MILF said in the statement.
In the same statement, the MILF said, “We call on all concerned authorities to sincerely and thoroughly investigate this evil act. The motive is yet too premature to be concluded at this point, but we ask the authorities to examine all angles and make the result of the same public. We should not allow any party or group to make premature conclusions or draw insinuations so as to advance their own personal interest and political agenda.”
“We are saddened by the fact that this incident occurred at a time while we are in the thick of preparations for the plebiscite on the ratification of the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) on January 21, 2019. In the past, similar incidents have been resorted to in order to derail the Bangsamoro peace process. We must forge ahead with the same resolve as before so that we may finally achieve peace,” the Moro Front added.
The MILF called on all peace loving citizens in the city of Cotabato to stand united in securing our community and ensuring that peace will finally reign in our homeland. This is not the time to be divided. This Is the time to stand united.
“We condole with the families of the victims, both killed and/or wounded. It is precisely for the absence of security in our homeland that we exert our efforts for the passage of R.A. 11054 or the Organic Law for the Bangsamoro Autnomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, so that a government can be established that can really protect and promote the peace and security of the place and its peoples,” the MILF further said.
Mohagher Iqbal, Chair of the MILF Peace Implementing Panel also condemned the barbaric and atrocious bombing outside the South Seas Mall in Cotabato City where 2 people killed and more than 20 were injured. Iqbal said that the explosion came at a time where only 20 days left for the conduct of the plebiscite for the ratification of BOL, slated on January 21st.
“This gruesome incident should not have happened in a city considered as safest city in Mindanao,” Iqbal added.
“It’s uncivilized and inhuman act, and we in the MILF will extend all possible means to provide any possible assistance to authorities so that the perpetrators get arrested, prosecuted, and jailed for their terroristic act,” Iqbal further said.
Meanwhile, the Bangsamoro Transition Commission (BTC) through its Chairman Ghazali Jaafar also issued a statement condemning the blast in Cotabato City.
In the statement, Jaafar disclosed that one of the fatalities, Jonathan Torribiano is an employee of the BTC under Commissioner Melanio Ulama who represents the indigenous peoples.
“In the same vein, we also grieved for the others who got killed or wounded by this evil act. Only ssomeone who really oppose peace can perpetuate such a terroristic, immoral and cowardly action, “ Jaafar added.
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MILF Statement of condemnation on the recent expolsion in Cotabato City
Statements of BTC Condemnation of Bombing in Cotabato City
http://www.luwaran.com/news/article/1670/milf_condemns_mall_blast_in_cotabato_city
In a statement by the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) signed by MILF Chair Al Haj Murad Ebrahim, it condemns in the highest possible terms the explosion that occurred today (December 31, 2018) in a shopping mall along Don Rufino Alonzo St, Cotabato City.
The dastardly act of putting an improvised explosive device (IED) with intent to kill or harm civilians is an act of cowardice, inhuman, and atrocious, the MILF said in the statement.
In the same statement, the MILF said, “We call on all concerned authorities to sincerely and thoroughly investigate this evil act. The motive is yet too premature to be concluded at this point, but we ask the authorities to examine all angles and make the result of the same public. We should not allow any party or group to make premature conclusions or draw insinuations so as to advance their own personal interest and political agenda.”
“We are saddened by the fact that this incident occurred at a time while we are in the thick of preparations for the plebiscite on the ratification of the Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL) on January 21, 2019. In the past, similar incidents have been resorted to in order to derail the Bangsamoro peace process. We must forge ahead with the same resolve as before so that we may finally achieve peace,” the Moro Front added.
The MILF called on all peace loving citizens in the city of Cotabato to stand united in securing our community and ensuring that peace will finally reign in our homeland. This is not the time to be divided. This Is the time to stand united.
“We condole with the families of the victims, both killed and/or wounded. It is precisely for the absence of security in our homeland that we exert our efforts for the passage of R.A. 11054 or the Organic Law for the Bangsamoro Autnomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, so that a government can be established that can really protect and promote the peace and security of the place and its peoples,” the MILF further said.
Mohagher Iqbal, Chair of the MILF Peace Implementing Panel also condemned the barbaric and atrocious bombing outside the South Seas Mall in Cotabato City where 2 people killed and more than 20 were injured. Iqbal said that the explosion came at a time where only 20 days left for the conduct of the plebiscite for the ratification of BOL, slated on January 21st.
“This gruesome incident should not have happened in a city considered as safest city in Mindanao,” Iqbal added.
“It’s uncivilized and inhuman act, and we in the MILF will extend all possible means to provide any possible assistance to authorities so that the perpetrators get arrested, prosecuted, and jailed for their terroristic act,” Iqbal further said.
Meanwhile, the Bangsamoro Transition Commission (BTC) through its Chairman Ghazali Jaafar also issued a statement condemning the blast in Cotabato City.
In the statement, Jaafar disclosed that one of the fatalities, Jonathan Torribiano is an employee of the BTC under Commissioner Melanio Ulama who represents the indigenous peoples.
“In the same vein, we also grieved for the others who got killed or wounded by this evil act. Only ssomeone who really oppose peace can perpetuate such a terroristic, immoral and cowardly action, “ Jaafar added.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MILF Statement of condemnation on the recent expolsion in Cotabato City
Statements of BTC Condemnation of Bombing in Cotabato City
http://www.luwaran.com/news/article/1670/milf_condemns_mall_blast_in_cotabato_city
NDF/NPA-Negros Island: Confront and frustrate the US-Duterte regime’s martial law in Negros Island this 2019
NPA-Negros Island press statement posted to the National Democratic Front Philippines Website (Jan 2, 2019): Confront and frustrate the US-Duterte regime’s martial law in Negros Island this 2019
Juanito Magbanua
Apolinario Gatmaitan Command Spokesperson
New People’s Army Regional Command – Negros Island
PRESS STATEMENT
January 1, 2019
The Apolinario Gatmaitan Command of the New People’s Army (AGC-NPA) in Negros Island strongly condemns the terror sown from the implementation of the Synchronized Enhanced Managing of Police Operations (SEMPO) under the diabolical “Oplan Sauron” by the composite troops of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and Philippine National Police (PNP) with the aim to destroy the revolutionary movement particularly in Negros.
The six peasants who were victims of illegal arrests by the AFP and PNP last December 27 in Mabinay, Negros Oriental experienced the same horror that happened to peasants and civilians in Guihulngan City that resulted to 6 brutal murders and 50 illegal arrests. Jose Ferolino, who was captured by the PNP and AFP for allegedly being an NPA member together with 14 others, has not been found since his arrest at his home in Barangay Binobohan, Guihulngan City.
Meanwhile, in Mabinay, according to reports from the field, 12 trucks filled with forces from the PNP Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) unit and Special Action Force (SAF) were monitored to have entered the hinterlands of Mabinay on the early morning of December 27. Two helicopters were observed flying around the area from December 27-29. Simultaneous illegal operations were then conducted in Barangays Luyang and Talingting of Mabinay.
Margie Baylosis was surprised of the presence of elements of the Mabinay PNP and Regional Mobile Force Battalion (RMFB) at her home when she arrived after attending to her farm animals. She was immediately arrested for illegally possessing two units of improvised air gun, a cal .38 pistol loaded with live ammunitions and a rifle grenade launcher. These were planted evidence since Baylosis does not own any firearms at all. The alleged firearms were planted at her makeshift kitchen that was not even inside her house. Baylosis is the cousin of political detainee Joey Baylosis of the Mabinay 6, youth organizers of the Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas who were also illegally arrested last March 2018.
The same circumstances happened to father and son Isaias Rabilista, Sr. and Isaias Rabilista, Jr. wherein a cal .38 with ammunitions was planted in their home. Upon arriving at their house after tending to their farm animals in the morning of December 27, elements of the PNP Mabinay and RMFB were already at their house. They asked to come inside and immediately proceeded to where the alleged firearm was located. The two victims were then arrested.
Jessie Palagtiw and Ponciano Pinili and Rolando Pinili, also father and son, were no different. They were illegally arrested as well and all evidences against them were planted. These victims were told by the PNP that there are seven more to be arrested in Barangay Luyang, Mabinay.
The alarming incidents signal the terrorism of the fascist regime of Rodrigo Duterte. There is no longer a distinction between combatants and civilians. The legal democratic movement, critics of the regime and mere citizens are targeted because of the AFP and PNP’s failure to capture the NPA. In fact, their earlier deadline of decimating the NPA by December 2018 has already expired to their humiliation and they are forced to again move their time frame to June 2019. The AFP and PNP have run amuck in Negros Oriental deploying 3,000 butchers who will surely leave behind record breaking violations of human rights and a bloody death toll of innocent civilians.
The recent illegal arrests are sources of the PNP’s corruption wherein the victims are forced to pay bail or suffer imprisonment. The Police Regional Office 7 and local PNP led by PRO 7 director CSup. Debold M. Sinas will surely profit from the thousands of pesos they require for the freedom of their victims. Lt. Gen. Benjamin Madrigal of the 302nd Infantry Brigade of the Philippine Army has also a lot to gain from branding and fabricating lies that the six killed in Guihulngan City are members of the “SPARU” or “sparrow” of the NPA because of the bounty Duterte has set for every NPA member captured or killed.
The AFP and PNP are shameless to say that the NPA is supported by and are protectors of drug lords when the lord of all drug lords is their own commander-in-chief Duterte. It is also public knowledge that the big crime syndicates in the country have strong influence within the ranks of the AFP and PNP.
The Filipino people knows that the NPA is the genuine people’s army. The terroristic crimes of the AFP and PNP only proves this even more. Contrary to their aim of destroying the revolutionary movement, the sorrow and grief in the hearts of the people as a result of the intensified military operations will only flare their anger against the oppressive and exploitative system, press them to embrace the principles of armed revolution as the solution to the problems of the oppressed and exploited masses suffering from poverty generated by the semi-colonial and semifeudal system, and, in the end, take an active role in the armed struggle.
Overcome fear! The Filipino people must confront the terror propagated by the US-Duterte regime imposed through nationwide de facto martial law. The Filipino people, together with the Communist Party of the Philippines, NPA and National Democratic Front of the Philippines, will wage a militant and revolutionary struggle to frustrate and overthrow the US-Duterte regime this 2019.###
https://www.ndfp.org/confront-and-frustrate-the-us-duterte-regimes-martial-law-in-negros-island-this-2019/
Juanito Magbanua
Apolinario Gatmaitan Command Spokesperson
New People’s Army Regional Command – Negros Island
PRESS STATEMENT
January 1, 2019
The Apolinario Gatmaitan Command of the New People’s Army (AGC-NPA) in Negros Island strongly condemns the terror sown from the implementation of the Synchronized Enhanced Managing of Police Operations (SEMPO) under the diabolical “Oplan Sauron” by the composite troops of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and Philippine National Police (PNP) with the aim to destroy the revolutionary movement particularly in Negros.
The six peasants who were victims of illegal arrests by the AFP and PNP last December 27 in Mabinay, Negros Oriental experienced the same horror that happened to peasants and civilians in Guihulngan City that resulted to 6 brutal murders and 50 illegal arrests. Jose Ferolino, who was captured by the PNP and AFP for allegedly being an NPA member together with 14 others, has not been found since his arrest at his home in Barangay Binobohan, Guihulngan City.
Meanwhile, in Mabinay, according to reports from the field, 12 trucks filled with forces from the PNP Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) unit and Special Action Force (SAF) were monitored to have entered the hinterlands of Mabinay on the early morning of December 27. Two helicopters were observed flying around the area from December 27-29. Simultaneous illegal operations were then conducted in Barangays Luyang and Talingting of Mabinay.
Margie Baylosis was surprised of the presence of elements of the Mabinay PNP and Regional Mobile Force Battalion (RMFB) at her home when she arrived after attending to her farm animals. She was immediately arrested for illegally possessing two units of improvised air gun, a cal .38 pistol loaded with live ammunitions and a rifle grenade launcher. These were planted evidence since Baylosis does not own any firearms at all. The alleged firearms were planted at her makeshift kitchen that was not even inside her house. Baylosis is the cousin of political detainee Joey Baylosis of the Mabinay 6, youth organizers of the Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas who were also illegally arrested last March 2018.
The same circumstances happened to father and son Isaias Rabilista, Sr. and Isaias Rabilista, Jr. wherein a cal .38 with ammunitions was planted in their home. Upon arriving at their house after tending to their farm animals in the morning of December 27, elements of the PNP Mabinay and RMFB were already at their house. They asked to come inside and immediately proceeded to where the alleged firearm was located. The two victims were then arrested.
Jessie Palagtiw and Ponciano Pinili and Rolando Pinili, also father and son, were no different. They were illegally arrested as well and all evidences against them were planted. These victims were told by the PNP that there are seven more to be arrested in Barangay Luyang, Mabinay.
The alarming incidents signal the terrorism of the fascist regime of Rodrigo Duterte. There is no longer a distinction between combatants and civilians. The legal democratic movement, critics of the regime and mere citizens are targeted because of the AFP and PNP’s failure to capture the NPA. In fact, their earlier deadline of decimating the NPA by December 2018 has already expired to their humiliation and they are forced to again move their time frame to June 2019. The AFP and PNP have run amuck in Negros Oriental deploying 3,000 butchers who will surely leave behind record breaking violations of human rights and a bloody death toll of innocent civilians.
The recent illegal arrests are sources of the PNP’s corruption wherein the victims are forced to pay bail or suffer imprisonment. The Police Regional Office 7 and local PNP led by PRO 7 director CSup. Debold M. Sinas will surely profit from the thousands of pesos they require for the freedom of their victims. Lt. Gen. Benjamin Madrigal of the 302nd Infantry Brigade of the Philippine Army has also a lot to gain from branding and fabricating lies that the six killed in Guihulngan City are members of the “SPARU” or “sparrow” of the NPA because of the bounty Duterte has set for every NPA member captured or killed.
The AFP and PNP are shameless to say that the NPA is supported by and are protectors of drug lords when the lord of all drug lords is their own commander-in-chief Duterte. It is also public knowledge that the big crime syndicates in the country have strong influence within the ranks of the AFP and PNP.
The Filipino people knows that the NPA is the genuine people’s army. The terroristic crimes of the AFP and PNP only proves this even more. Contrary to their aim of destroying the revolutionary movement, the sorrow and grief in the hearts of the people as a result of the intensified military operations will only flare their anger against the oppressive and exploitative system, press them to embrace the principles of armed revolution as the solution to the problems of the oppressed and exploited masses suffering from poverty generated by the semi-colonial and semifeudal system, and, in the end, take an active role in the armed struggle.
Overcome fear! The Filipino people must confront the terror propagated by the US-Duterte regime imposed through nationwide de facto martial law. The Filipino people, together with the Communist Party of the Philippines, NPA and National Democratic Front of the Philippines, will wage a militant and revolutionary struggle to frustrate and overthrow the US-Duterte regime this 2019.###
https://www.ndfp.org/confront-and-frustrate-the-us-duterte-regimes-martial-law-in-negros-island-this-2019/
CPP/NDF-Bikol: Engkwentro sa Labo, Walang Katotohanan Nagdadamayan sa Kalamidad ang Masa at Rebolusyonaryong Pwersa
NDF-Bikol propaganda statement posted to the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) Website (Jan 2, 2019): Engkwentro sa Labo, Walang Katotohanan Nagdadamayan sa Kalamidad ang Masa at Rebolusyonaryong Pwersa
Maria Roja Banua
Spokesperson
NDF-Bicol
National Democratic Front of the Philippines
Maria Roja Banua
Spokesperson
NDF-Bicol
National Democratic Front of the Philippines
January 02, 2019
Pinapabulaanan ng NDF-Bikol ang pahayag ng 9th IDPA hinggil sa engkwentro sa Sityo Malapat, Baay, Labo, Camarines Norte noong Disyembre 30. Hinugot sa hangin ang ipinakakalat ng 96th IBPA na pekeng balita ng labinglimang-minutong putukan sa pagitan ng kanilang hanay at ng NPA-Bikol. Walang naganap na labanan at walang presensya ng mga kasama sa naturang lugar.
Matapos ang matagumpay na mga pagdiriwang ng masa at rebolusyonaryong pwersa sa ginintuang anibersaryo ng PKP noong Disyembre 26, kagyat ding naghanda ang mga kasama para sa pagtulong sa masang maaaring mapinsala ng bagyo. Sinisikap abutin ng lahat ng mga yunit ng hukbo ang mga masang naapektuhan ng bagyo sa kani-kanilang mga eryang sinasaklaw upang makapagbigay ng kinakailangang tulong sa paglikas o pag-ayos sa mga komunidad. Hanggang kasalukuyan ay abala ang Partido at Hukbong Bayan sa pagtuwang sa masa sa pag-aayos ng mga nasirang tirahan, kagamitan at pananim, ganoon din ang paggamot sa mga nagtamo ng kapansanan at nagkasakit.
Maraming lugar sa rehiyon ang nagkaroon ng landslides, pagbaha at nasirang mga produktibong lugar sa kanayunan ang hindi nababalita sa media at naaabot ng mga ahensya ng reaksyunaryong gobyerno upang mabigyan ng atensyon. Mataas ang kamulatan sa pagtutulungan ng masa at rebolusyonaryong pwersa sa mga kalamidad na pangunahing dulot nang pagkasira ng kalikasan para sa interes ng kapital at pandarambong ng mga naghaharing-uri. Humigit-kumulang 200 kontrata sa pagmimina ang pumasok sa rehiyon noong 2015 habang naglilipana pa rin sa ilang bahagi ng Bikol at karatig-prubinsyang Quezon ang mga konsesyon sa pagtotroso.
Sa kabilang banda, ang 96th IBPA ay abala sa pasistang panggagalugad ng mga komunidad sa kanayunan. Walang katotohanan ang ipinagmamayabang nilang ang kanilang yunit ay nasa proseso ng relief operations sa panahong nabanggit. Sa mga pahayag ng mga upisyal at tagapagsalita ng 9th IDPA matapos ang sunud-sunod na matatagumpay na taktikal na opensiba ng NPA noong huling kwarto ng taong 2018, sila mismo ang nagpahayag na ipagpapatuloy nila ang red alert status ng lahat ng kanilang mga yunit laluna sa panahon ng anibersaryo ng PKP partikular sa Camarines Norte at sa una at huling distrito ng Camarines Sur. Sinuhayan pa ito ng pagtanggi ng AFP na magdeklara ng katumbas na tigil-putukan sa panahon ng Kapaskuhan at Bagong Taon tulad ng ginawa ng NPA at mag-ooperasyon pa ang kanilang mga yunit upang masalakay ang mga aktibidad ng pagdiriwang ng ika-50 maniningning na taon ng PKP. Malinaw na ang naturang yunit na napasabak umano sa engkwentro ay nag-aakalang mayroon silang masisilong yunit ng NPA sa lugar. Lumang tugtugin na ang pagpapakalat ng 9th IDPA ng mga pekeng balita ng engkwentro at kubkob upang may maipagmayabang ang kanilang mga upisyales sa mga progress reports at makakuha ng insentibo bago magtapos ang taon.
Naghahabol ang 9th IDPA ng maiuulat na tagumpay laluna dahil ilang beses na ipinahayag ng kanilang Commander-in-Chief na si Duterte na kaya nitong tapusin ang rebolusyonaryong kilusan bago matapos ang taon. Isa pa, nagkukumahog silang makabawi mula sa sunud-sunod na tagumpay ng mga taktikal na opensibang ilinunsad ng mga yunit ng hukbo sa lahat ng larangang gerilya ng rehiyon na nagdulot ng pinsala at demoralisasyon sa kanilang hanay. Gagamitin din nila ang mga ganitong balita ng pekeng engkwentro upang lalong igiit ang ligalidad ng total war sa ilalim ng de-facto martial law, ang pagdaragdag ng pwersa ng militar at ang militarisasyon ng lahat ng sangay ng gubyerno sa ilalim ng National Task Force to End Communist Insurgency (NTFECI).
Kinukundena ng NDF-Bikol ang malisyosong pagpapakalat ng 9th IDPA ng mga pekeng balita at ang matinding militarisasyon sa kanayunan. Hanggang ngayon, ang bayan ng Labo ay nakapailalim sa masinsin at sustenidong operasyong militar ng 9th IDPA. Sa loob ng halos siyam na buwan, tuluy-tuloy na panggigipit at pang-aabuso ang dinaranas ng masa mula sa mga militar. Makailang ulit nang nakatanggap ng mga ulat at reklamo ang rebolusyonaryong kilusan sa walang humpay na paglabag ng mga militar sa karapatang-tao ng mga residente ng Camarines Norte.
Para sa mamamayan, higit sa dagliang tulong sa panahon ng sakuna, ang tuluyang pag-alis ng mga tropang militar sa kanayunan at ang pagtigil ng gera-kontra mamamayan ng teroristang rehimeng US-Duterte ang kinakailangan upang makabangon sila mula sa bagyo ng pasismo.
CPP/CNL-NL: Highest praise to the Communist Party of the Philippines on its 50th anniversary in waging the national democratic revolution!
Christians for National Liberation-Northern Luzon propaganda statement posted to the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) Website (Jan 2, 2019): Highest praise to the Communist Party of the Philippines on its 50th anniversary in waging the national democratic revolution!
December 19, 2018
On this Christmas season, which is the incarnation anniversary of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Father Nilo Valerio Chapter (FNVC) – as segment of the Christians for National Liberation here in Northern Luzon (CNL-NL) – and all the progressives and sympatizers of the CNL-NL among Christians and their churches in the Northern Luzon provinces, take this occasion to hail to the highest degree the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) on its golden anniversary for its revolutionary achievements in the pursuit and advancement of the National Democratic Revolution (NDR) through Protracted People’s War (PPW) throughout the country. With the cumulative revolutionary successes of the NDR-PPW, gained in the past five (5) decades, and alongside the continuing and worsening chronic crisis of semi-colonialism and semi-feudalism in Philippine society, the entire CNL all over the country is very confident that the CPP and the whole Filipino people would be able to raise to higher levels the NDR-PPW in the coming New Year and future years until national victory shall be achieved for socialist construction to commence nationwide.
While celebrating the CPP’s 50 years in carrying forward the Philippine revolution, let us be inspired by the many martyrs and heroes of the Filipino people – who include those from the CNL, such as Alfrdo Cesar, Purificacion Pedro, Rev. Fr. Nilo Valerio, Rev. Fr. Zacarias Agatep, Amanda Alvarez, Filomena Asuncion, and others in the advancement of the NDR through armed struggle here in Northern Luzon. And as we, in the FNVC, honor to the highest degree the CPP on its 50th anniversary in waging the NDR-PPW, CNL also wishes to convey its deepest gratitude to the CPP for painstakingly and ceaselessly guiding the Christians and explaining to them over the past years its program for a people’s democratic revolution, and the appropriate roles of the Christians, the Church people, and the religious men and women in the new democratic revolution. Consequently, we consider the following four (4) points below as reasons for CNL to express its highest praise and deepest gratitude to the CPP on its golden centennial in waging the Philippine revolution.
FIRST AND FOREMOST, the CNL fully respects and is utmost in its gratitude to the CPP for its red and expert cadres in guiding and helping the progressive Christians, church people, and the religious men and women in the establishment of the CNL on Feb. 17, 1972 during the anniversary of the martyrdom of Fathers Gomez, Burgos and Zamora. Through the CNL, the Christians, Church people and the religious men and women in the Philippines have enriched over the years their knowledge of the NDR-PPW and have strengthened their continuing active participation and support in upholding, defending and promoting the national and democratic rights and interests of the entire Filipino people, especially the workers, peasants, fisherfolks, women, youth and national minorities as they are the “least of Christ’s brethren”, irrespective of their religious beliefs and their ethno-linguistic origins.
Subsequently, the progressive Christians, the open-minded Church people and the enlightened religious men and women have described CNL as their revolutionary organization to confront Philippine social realities and practice their Christian faith by taking part in the new democratic revolution, as the continuation of the old democratic revolution, started by Bonifacio’s Katipunan and participated thereon by Father Gregorio Aglipay and other Roman Catholic priests from 1896 to 1902 against Spanish colonialism and US imperialism. And since the CNL’s establishment and under its banner, Christians, Church people and the religious have adopted the call: “Preach the Good News to the Poor, the Deprived, and the Oppressed. Love your Neighbor. Serve the People.”
SECONDLY, the CNL especially honors and is exceedingly glad to the CPP for respecting the Christian faith, pursuing dialogue between communists and Christians, and further enlightening the latter about the NDR with a socialist perspective. Such basic attitude of the communists towards the Christian faith should remind all Christians and their churches in their missionary endeavor to build and develop the power of the poor and the oppressed along the life of the early Christians in communal fellowship of owning properties in common and distributing proceeds of human labor to everyone according to one’s needs, as concisely described in the Acts of the Apostles (2:44-45 and 4:32,34-35). In many ways, communists have also enlightened the CNL, the enlightened Church people and the progressive religious men and women about the fundamental right to freedom of thought and belief, which is clearly enshrined in the revolutionary constitution, found in Guide for Establishing the People’s Democratic Government. The CPP’s recognition of this fundamental right is the communists’ full respect to the Christian faith and other religious beliefs.
That is why CNL calls and asks all its members to address themselves in a special way to their comrades who are Marxists (revolutionary atheists), because of the traditional antagonism between Christians and Marxists that the ruling classes and US imperialism continue to exploit to the present day. The CNL proclaims that Christians unite with the communists within the NDFP on the basis of the national democratic program. Within this political unity, all CNL members engage themselves in ideological Christian-Marxist dialogue and deliberations, which help them understand better the specific characteristics of Philippine society, and of the NDR and the people’s war. Thus, CNL declares that, as an ideological justification for anti-communism, Christianity and the Christian churches have become a special weapon for counter-revolution of the ruling classes and their imperialist masters. Accordingly, the CNL beckons its members to constantly combat Christian chauvinism and anti-communism among their ranks and resist the enemies’ efforts to exploit these in fostering splits among the people. Hence, the CNL affirms that the key question is not atheism or theism; it is revolution or counter-revolution.
THIRDLY, the CNL greatly praises and is highly thankful to the CPP in establising the New People’s Army (NPA) on March 29, 1969 to lead and advance the protracted people’s war from lower to higher stages in order to dismantle the semi-feudal and semi-colonial sytem. CNL is committed to the armed struggle as the principal and decisive form of struggle because CNL believes that, together with the non-armed forms, the armed struggle is important in building the people’s democratic power to overthrow the landlord-comprador bourgeoisie dominated state, and in advancing the agrarian revolution and national industrialization in order to lay the foundations of a socialist society in the Philippines.
In the coming years, the CNL shall continue its contribution to educate the populace, the church sector in particular, on the necessity, justness and legitimacy of the armed struggle. It must expose the reactionary character of the ruling system and the structures of violence of the semi-feudal and semi-colonial society as the political and economic basis of the option to take up arms. It must assert the fact that defense of national and people’s rights through armed revolution is an ethical imperative under the historical circumstances. It must show the legitimacy of the armed struggle in the current situation where the ruling classes have closed all doors to the peaceful resolution of the basic problems of the Filipino people, which are the root causes of the ongoing and intensifying armed conflict.
Since February 2017, Duterte and his pro-US imperialist and fascist army and police commanders have totally stopped the peace negotiations between the GPH and the NDFP. Ranting against the bishops and priests, and disbelieving in the “stupid God” of the Roman Catholic Church, the fascist Duterte has a “personal god” who has advised him to shroud the country with tyranny through his three (3) anti-Filipino wars. While constantly unleashing all-out war against the Filipino people, his tyrannical god must have also been the reason why Duterte issued last year Proclamation No. 360 terminating the peace negotiations between the GRP and the NDFP, and for Proclamation No. 374 listing the CPP-NPA as terrorist organizations. His Oplan Tokhang “war against drugs”; his Oplan Kapayapaan war of suppression throughout the country; and his martial law in Mindanao which he has extended and whose scope has now included Samar, Negros and Bicol; and his anti-Moro war in Mindanao – that has led to the total destruction of Marawi and untold hardships to hundreds of thousands of Maranaos – have all resulted to countless extra-judicial killings and have completely abandoned the respect of human rights and the international humanitarian laws.
In his 21⁄2-year presidency, tens of thousand Filipinos from the urban poor, workers, peasants, Lumads, Moro people, other national minorities, the women and the youth have already been murdered by terrorist Duterte’s reactionary army and police. Included in the tens of thousand slain are 10 mayors, 6 vice mayors and 3 Catholic priests, killed in the past months, namely, Fr. Tito Paez and Fr. Richmond Nilo both of Nueva Ecija, and Fr. Mark Ventura of Cagayan. With his 3 wars unleashed daily against the Filipino people, fascist Duterte, his tyrannical god and his pro-US imperialist and anti-Filipino army and police has now become the best recruiters for the NPA to hasten the fast increase of the Red army platoons and companies in all regions for the people’s war to move forward to the advanced sub-stage, till the strategic stalemate stage shall be attained nationally.
FOURTHLY AND LASTLY, the CNL highly exalts and is exceedingly grateful to the CPP for leading the national united front whose most consolidated embodiment is the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP), the largest united front organization, established on April 24, 1974. Together with other revolutionary mass organizations, the CNL officially became one of the founding member organizations of the NDFP. Through CNL, more and more Christians, Church people and the religious men and women were conscienticized as they saw the real features of the US-Marcos Dictatorship (USMD) as the great US-imperialist puppet and as another prodigious promoter of feudalism, bureaucrat capitalism and fascism throughout country.
Currently, the NDFP, consisting of 18 allied revolutionary organizations including the CNL, are bound together by patriotic and progressive principles. As a member, the CNL fully and actively supports the NDFP in following the national united front policies of relying mainly on the revolutionary basic alliance of the working class and the peasantry, of winning over the middle strata of the bourgeoisie, and takes advantage of the conflicts among the reactionaries in order to isolate and defeat the worst reactionary clique of the people’s enemy. The effectiveness of such policies has been demonstrated when dictator Marcos in 1986 and corrupt Estrada in 2001 were overthrown. These 2 grand events, especially the ouster of dictator Marcos, have been very successful because of the powerful convergence of all forces with their own respective reasons, such as the Roman Catholic and other Christian churces, the traditional opposition forces, the CPP, units of the reactionary armed forces, and other forces.
Especially before and after tyrant Duterte’s 2nd SONA, an unholy alliance has been formed by the Duterte-Arroyo- Marcos clique with their ruling class cohorts in order to establish a fascist dictatorship and consolidate state power. And because of the ungodly alliance’s unbridled pro-US imperialist puppetry, fascism, corruption, plunder, repression and abuses, the economic and political crisis has worsened and deepened throughout the country.
Such disastrous actuations of the Duterte-Arroyo-Marcos alliance (DAMA) certainly enflame the Christians, the religious men and women, their church leaders and the whole Filipino people to closely join themselves together in order to carry out more resolutely the mass struggles and revolutionary resistance to end martial law and military encampments in rural communities, demand wage increases, end contractualization and the TRAIN law, implement genuine land reform and put an end to the class dictatorship of big landlords and big comprador bourgeoisie. The unholy DAMA definitely encourages more and more people to join the New People’s Army to wage armed struggle and build a truly democratic government that genuinely represents and serves the interests of the Filipino people.
Long live the Communist Party of the Philippines! Long live the National Democratic Front of the Philippines! Long live the Christians for National Liberation! Join the New People’s Army! Advance the People’s War to higher stages!
December 19, 2018
On this Christmas season, which is the incarnation anniversary of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Father Nilo Valerio Chapter (FNVC) – as segment of the Christians for National Liberation here in Northern Luzon (CNL-NL) – and all the progressives and sympatizers of the CNL-NL among Christians and their churches in the Northern Luzon provinces, take this occasion to hail to the highest degree the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) on its golden anniversary for its revolutionary achievements in the pursuit and advancement of the National Democratic Revolution (NDR) through Protracted People’s War (PPW) throughout the country. With the cumulative revolutionary successes of the NDR-PPW, gained in the past five (5) decades, and alongside the continuing and worsening chronic crisis of semi-colonialism and semi-feudalism in Philippine society, the entire CNL all over the country is very confident that the CPP and the whole Filipino people would be able to raise to higher levels the NDR-PPW in the coming New Year and future years until national victory shall be achieved for socialist construction to commence nationwide.
While celebrating the CPP’s 50 years in carrying forward the Philippine revolution, let us be inspired by the many martyrs and heroes of the Filipino people – who include those from the CNL, such as Alfrdo Cesar, Purificacion Pedro, Rev. Fr. Nilo Valerio, Rev. Fr. Zacarias Agatep, Amanda Alvarez, Filomena Asuncion, and others in the advancement of the NDR through armed struggle here in Northern Luzon. And as we, in the FNVC, honor to the highest degree the CPP on its 50th anniversary in waging the NDR-PPW, CNL also wishes to convey its deepest gratitude to the CPP for painstakingly and ceaselessly guiding the Christians and explaining to them over the past years its program for a people’s democratic revolution, and the appropriate roles of the Christians, the Church people, and the religious men and women in the new democratic revolution. Consequently, we consider the following four (4) points below as reasons for CNL to express its highest praise and deepest gratitude to the CPP on its golden centennial in waging the Philippine revolution.
FIRST AND FOREMOST, the CNL fully respects and is utmost in its gratitude to the CPP for its red and expert cadres in guiding and helping the progressive Christians, church people, and the religious men and women in the establishment of the CNL on Feb. 17, 1972 during the anniversary of the martyrdom of Fathers Gomez, Burgos and Zamora. Through the CNL, the Christians, Church people and the religious men and women in the Philippines have enriched over the years their knowledge of the NDR-PPW and have strengthened their continuing active participation and support in upholding, defending and promoting the national and democratic rights and interests of the entire Filipino people, especially the workers, peasants, fisherfolks, women, youth and national minorities as they are the “least of Christ’s brethren”, irrespective of their religious beliefs and their ethno-linguistic origins.
Subsequently, the progressive Christians, the open-minded Church people and the enlightened religious men and women have described CNL as their revolutionary organization to confront Philippine social realities and practice their Christian faith by taking part in the new democratic revolution, as the continuation of the old democratic revolution, started by Bonifacio’s Katipunan and participated thereon by Father Gregorio Aglipay and other Roman Catholic priests from 1896 to 1902 against Spanish colonialism and US imperialism. And since the CNL’s establishment and under its banner, Christians, Church people and the religious have adopted the call: “Preach the Good News to the Poor, the Deprived, and the Oppressed. Love your Neighbor. Serve the People.”
SECONDLY, the CNL especially honors and is exceedingly glad to the CPP for respecting the Christian faith, pursuing dialogue between communists and Christians, and further enlightening the latter about the NDR with a socialist perspective. Such basic attitude of the communists towards the Christian faith should remind all Christians and their churches in their missionary endeavor to build and develop the power of the poor and the oppressed along the life of the early Christians in communal fellowship of owning properties in common and distributing proceeds of human labor to everyone according to one’s needs, as concisely described in the Acts of the Apostles (2:44-45 and 4:32,34-35). In many ways, communists have also enlightened the CNL, the enlightened Church people and the progressive religious men and women about the fundamental right to freedom of thought and belief, which is clearly enshrined in the revolutionary constitution, found in Guide for Establishing the People’s Democratic Government. The CPP’s recognition of this fundamental right is the communists’ full respect to the Christian faith and other religious beliefs.
That is why CNL calls and asks all its members to address themselves in a special way to their comrades who are Marxists (revolutionary atheists), because of the traditional antagonism between Christians and Marxists that the ruling classes and US imperialism continue to exploit to the present day. The CNL proclaims that Christians unite with the communists within the NDFP on the basis of the national democratic program. Within this political unity, all CNL members engage themselves in ideological Christian-Marxist dialogue and deliberations, which help them understand better the specific characteristics of Philippine society, and of the NDR and the people’s war. Thus, CNL declares that, as an ideological justification for anti-communism, Christianity and the Christian churches have become a special weapon for counter-revolution of the ruling classes and their imperialist masters. Accordingly, the CNL beckons its members to constantly combat Christian chauvinism and anti-communism among their ranks and resist the enemies’ efforts to exploit these in fostering splits among the people. Hence, the CNL affirms that the key question is not atheism or theism; it is revolution or counter-revolution.
THIRDLY, the CNL greatly praises and is highly thankful to the CPP in establising the New People’s Army (NPA) on March 29, 1969 to lead and advance the protracted people’s war from lower to higher stages in order to dismantle the semi-feudal and semi-colonial sytem. CNL is committed to the armed struggle as the principal and decisive form of struggle because CNL believes that, together with the non-armed forms, the armed struggle is important in building the people’s democratic power to overthrow the landlord-comprador bourgeoisie dominated state, and in advancing the agrarian revolution and national industrialization in order to lay the foundations of a socialist society in the Philippines.
In the coming years, the CNL shall continue its contribution to educate the populace, the church sector in particular, on the necessity, justness and legitimacy of the armed struggle. It must expose the reactionary character of the ruling system and the structures of violence of the semi-feudal and semi-colonial society as the political and economic basis of the option to take up arms. It must assert the fact that defense of national and people’s rights through armed revolution is an ethical imperative under the historical circumstances. It must show the legitimacy of the armed struggle in the current situation where the ruling classes have closed all doors to the peaceful resolution of the basic problems of the Filipino people, which are the root causes of the ongoing and intensifying armed conflict.
Since February 2017, Duterte and his pro-US imperialist and fascist army and police commanders have totally stopped the peace negotiations between the GPH and the NDFP. Ranting against the bishops and priests, and disbelieving in the “stupid God” of the Roman Catholic Church, the fascist Duterte has a “personal god” who has advised him to shroud the country with tyranny through his three (3) anti-Filipino wars. While constantly unleashing all-out war against the Filipino people, his tyrannical god must have also been the reason why Duterte issued last year Proclamation No. 360 terminating the peace negotiations between the GRP and the NDFP, and for Proclamation No. 374 listing the CPP-NPA as terrorist organizations. His Oplan Tokhang “war against drugs”; his Oplan Kapayapaan war of suppression throughout the country; and his martial law in Mindanao which he has extended and whose scope has now included Samar, Negros and Bicol; and his anti-Moro war in Mindanao – that has led to the total destruction of Marawi and untold hardships to hundreds of thousands of Maranaos – have all resulted to countless extra-judicial killings and have completely abandoned the respect of human rights and the international humanitarian laws.
In his 21⁄2-year presidency, tens of thousand Filipinos from the urban poor, workers, peasants, Lumads, Moro people, other national minorities, the women and the youth have already been murdered by terrorist Duterte’s reactionary army and police. Included in the tens of thousand slain are 10 mayors, 6 vice mayors and 3 Catholic priests, killed in the past months, namely, Fr. Tito Paez and Fr. Richmond Nilo both of Nueva Ecija, and Fr. Mark Ventura of Cagayan. With his 3 wars unleashed daily against the Filipino people, fascist Duterte, his tyrannical god and his pro-US imperialist and anti-Filipino army and police has now become the best recruiters for the NPA to hasten the fast increase of the Red army platoons and companies in all regions for the people’s war to move forward to the advanced sub-stage, till the strategic stalemate stage shall be attained nationally.
FOURTHLY AND LASTLY, the CNL highly exalts and is exceedingly grateful to the CPP for leading the national united front whose most consolidated embodiment is the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP), the largest united front organization, established on April 24, 1974. Together with other revolutionary mass organizations, the CNL officially became one of the founding member organizations of the NDFP. Through CNL, more and more Christians, Church people and the religious men and women were conscienticized as they saw the real features of the US-Marcos Dictatorship (USMD) as the great US-imperialist puppet and as another prodigious promoter of feudalism, bureaucrat capitalism and fascism throughout country.
Currently, the NDFP, consisting of 18 allied revolutionary organizations including the CNL, are bound together by patriotic and progressive principles. As a member, the CNL fully and actively supports the NDFP in following the national united front policies of relying mainly on the revolutionary basic alliance of the working class and the peasantry, of winning over the middle strata of the bourgeoisie, and takes advantage of the conflicts among the reactionaries in order to isolate and defeat the worst reactionary clique of the people’s enemy. The effectiveness of such policies has been demonstrated when dictator Marcos in 1986 and corrupt Estrada in 2001 were overthrown. These 2 grand events, especially the ouster of dictator Marcos, have been very successful because of the powerful convergence of all forces with their own respective reasons, such as the Roman Catholic and other Christian churces, the traditional opposition forces, the CPP, units of the reactionary armed forces, and other forces.
Especially before and after tyrant Duterte’s 2nd SONA, an unholy alliance has been formed by the Duterte-Arroyo- Marcos clique with their ruling class cohorts in order to establish a fascist dictatorship and consolidate state power. And because of the ungodly alliance’s unbridled pro-US imperialist puppetry, fascism, corruption, plunder, repression and abuses, the economic and political crisis has worsened and deepened throughout the country.
Such disastrous actuations of the Duterte-Arroyo-Marcos alliance (DAMA) certainly enflame the Christians, the religious men and women, their church leaders and the whole Filipino people to closely join themselves together in order to carry out more resolutely the mass struggles and revolutionary resistance to end martial law and military encampments in rural communities, demand wage increases, end contractualization and the TRAIN law, implement genuine land reform and put an end to the class dictatorship of big landlords and big comprador bourgeoisie. The unholy DAMA definitely encourages more and more people to join the New People’s Army to wage armed struggle and build a truly democratic government that genuinely represents and serves the interests of the Filipino people.
Long live the Communist Party of the Philippines! Long live the National Democratic Front of the Philippines! Long live the Christians for National Liberation! Join the New People’s Army! Advance the People’s War to higher stages!
C PP/CPDF-Mountain Province: Long live the golden anniversary of the Communist Party of the Philippines! Long live our 50 years of relentless struggle and shining victory!
Cordillera People's Democratic Front-Mountain Province propaganda statement posted to the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) Website (Jan 2, 2019): Long live the golden anniversary of the Communist Party of the Philippines! Long live our 50 years of relentless struggle and shining victory!
Cordillera People's Democratic Front - Mt. Province
National Democratic Front of the Philippines
Cordillera People's Democratic Front - Mt. Province
National Democratic Front of the Philippines
January 02, 2019
This year is a celebration of the 50th golden anniversary of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) that is guided by Marxism-Leninism-Maoism (MLM). This is a celebration of the five decades of relentless struggle of the Filipino proletariat and the people for genuine freedom, democracy and justice.
In five decades, the CPP has achieved great victories including the building and proliferation of organs of revolutionary political power nationwide. Because of this, the Party has successfully led the people’s war mainly of the peasant masses in unity with the working class. The surge of revolutionary struggle had reached the highest peaks of the Cordillera mountains. In 1970s, at the height of the Marcos dictatorship, the first Igorot cadres were recruited to the CPP and were tasked to return to their respective tribes and ili to start on arousing and organizing the national minority in Cordillera.
The CPP efficiently studied the theory of MLM, analyzed the concrete conditions of Philippine society being semi-colonial and semi-feudal, and pointed out the friends and enemies of the revolution that laid the basis for the Party to determine the people’s democratic revolution as the only solution to the sufferings of the Filipino masses. The CPP clarified that the current people’s democratic revolution is of a new type because it is led by the proletarian class through the Communist Party of the Philippines and that it has a socialist perspective.
This correct line served as a weapon for the national minority of Cordillera, the cadres and members of the CPP to effectively refute and repudiate the divisive and deceiving indigenist line of Conrado Balweg and the Cordillera People’s Liberation Army (CPLA). Balweg and the CPLA deny that the semi-feudal and semi-colonial character of the Philippine society reflects in the Cordillera region. They insist that Igorot communities have a semi-communal and semi- colonial character and that class struggle does not exist amongst the Igorots. They argue that the exploitation of lowlanders to the national minority of Cordillera is the root of the sufferings of the Igorots. The anti-revolutionary and opportunist motives of their faction was eventually disclosed when they declared that they would build a “Cordillera Nation” that they would lead. Currently, the remnants of the CPLA are wholly integrated to the Armed Forces of the Philippines. Its current recruitment immediately aims to serve as machinery for the upcoming 2019 elections and to present itself as the security armed force of the US-Duterte Regime’s current campaign for a bogus regional autonomy or federal state in Cordillera in the future, and for them to be to be able to get a share of the public funds intended for that another layer of the bureaucracy.
And now, the analysis of the CPP that Cordillera is fully assimilated in the semi-feudal and semi-colonial Philippine society is undoubtedly correct. The Igorots are suffering from extreme exploitation primarily from the three basic problems of Philippine society – imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism. National oppression which is also caused by the three basic problems adds to their sufferings. The Filipino masses including the Igorots, have a common enemy.
By upholding MLM, the CPP is able to pinpoint its own mistakes and shortcomings, and is able to conduct criticisms and self-criticisms and carry out rectification movements to improve its revolutionary practice. With this, the Party is able to rectify different forms of empiricism, conservatism and bureaucratism within the entire revolutionary movement.
The ongoing people’s war is gaining greater victories because the New People’s Army is under the absolute leadership of the CPP. Ever since the struggle of the people of Bontoc, Sadanga and Kalinga against the Chico Dam and that of the Tingguians against Cellophil, the Party and the NPA has worked hand in hand with the Igorots to attain greater unity to defeat a common enemy. Through these struggles, the people realized the correctness of taking up arms against the greedy, and that only through the national democratic armed struggle can the Igorots truly defend their ancestral land and fight for their right to self-determination. In the following decades, exploitation, oppression and militarization has intensified in Cordillera under different puppet regimes, pushing the people to take part in the armed revolution. This year only, units of the NPA under the Chadli Molintas Command has launched tactical offensives that frustrate the delusion of the US-Duterte regime to wipe out the NPA by 2018.
The founding of the Cordillera People’s Democratic Front (CPDF) in 1989 is one great achievement of the CPP and the Cordillera masses. The CPDF is a concrete expression of the revolutionary struggle of the Igorots. This is an alliance of all democratic classes and sectors in the region. The CPDF also helps the Igorot masses in building their revolutionary government in their tribes and communities. By next year, the CPDF will be celebrating its 30th founding anniversary.
Up to the present, the CPP is at the forefront guiding and implementing agrarian revolution to solve the multiple forms of feudal and semi-feudal exploitation of the peasant masses who comprise the majority of the Filipino people. Through collective action, the masses are able to fight the increasing number of destructive and rapacious companies attempting to conduct operations in the region which include mining, dams and geothermal energy projects. The people are fighting the continuing denial of the state to their access and use of the natural resources through oppressive laws such as PD 705 or the Revised Forestry Code, Mining Act of 1995, EPIRA, Renewable Energy Act and Small Scale Mining Act among others. The Igorots are more united to develop and increase their production. With the onslaught of super typhoon Ompong followed by Rosita, a vast area of agricultural land, infrastructures and properties are heavily damaged. The complete rehabilitation of these damages can only be attained through the collective action of the masses to fight for due services from the reactionary government.
The victories achieved by the CPP in the last 50 years is immeasurable. The Party has proven the correctness of the revolutionary theory of Marxism- Leninism- Maoism. It exhibited how the armed struggle through people’s war is dignified, just and inevitable in achieving genuine freedom, democracy and justice. The CPP is at the forefront of the world proletarian revolution raising the flag of socialism as still the best path of the struggling oppressed masses. Presently, the CPP serves both as example and inspiration for other nations aspiring for freedom, democracy and justice.
The CPDF enjoins the people of Cordillera to be one with the Filipino people in celebrating the 50 years of our relentless struggle and shining victory. Let us celebrate the victory of the CPP in leading the Filipino people to the road towards genuine freedom, lasting peace and justice, including us Igorots in our struggle for self- determination and democracy. In this 50th year of our Party, let us strengthen our resolve in advancing the national democratic revolution towards victory and onwards to socialist revolution.
In five decades, the CPP has achieved great victories including the building and proliferation of organs of revolutionary political power nationwide. Because of this, the Party has successfully led the people’s war mainly of the peasant masses in unity with the working class. The surge of revolutionary struggle had reached the highest peaks of the Cordillera mountains. In 1970s, at the height of the Marcos dictatorship, the first Igorot cadres were recruited to the CPP and were tasked to return to their respective tribes and ili to start on arousing and organizing the national minority in Cordillera.
The CPP efficiently studied the theory of MLM, analyzed the concrete conditions of Philippine society being semi-colonial and semi-feudal, and pointed out the friends and enemies of the revolution that laid the basis for the Party to determine the people’s democratic revolution as the only solution to the sufferings of the Filipino masses. The CPP clarified that the current people’s democratic revolution is of a new type because it is led by the proletarian class through the Communist Party of the Philippines and that it has a socialist perspective.
This correct line served as a weapon for the national minority of Cordillera, the cadres and members of the CPP to effectively refute and repudiate the divisive and deceiving indigenist line of Conrado Balweg and the Cordillera People’s Liberation Army (CPLA). Balweg and the CPLA deny that the semi-feudal and semi-colonial character of the Philippine society reflects in the Cordillera region. They insist that Igorot communities have a semi-communal and semi- colonial character and that class struggle does not exist amongst the Igorots. They argue that the exploitation of lowlanders to the national minority of Cordillera is the root of the sufferings of the Igorots. The anti-revolutionary and opportunist motives of their faction was eventually disclosed when they declared that they would build a “Cordillera Nation” that they would lead. Currently, the remnants of the CPLA are wholly integrated to the Armed Forces of the Philippines. Its current recruitment immediately aims to serve as machinery for the upcoming 2019 elections and to present itself as the security armed force of the US-Duterte Regime’s current campaign for a bogus regional autonomy or federal state in Cordillera in the future, and for them to be to be able to get a share of the public funds intended for that another layer of the bureaucracy.
And now, the analysis of the CPP that Cordillera is fully assimilated in the semi-feudal and semi-colonial Philippine society is undoubtedly correct. The Igorots are suffering from extreme exploitation primarily from the three basic problems of Philippine society – imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism. National oppression which is also caused by the three basic problems adds to their sufferings. The Filipino masses including the Igorots, have a common enemy.
By upholding MLM, the CPP is able to pinpoint its own mistakes and shortcomings, and is able to conduct criticisms and self-criticisms and carry out rectification movements to improve its revolutionary practice. With this, the Party is able to rectify different forms of empiricism, conservatism and bureaucratism within the entire revolutionary movement.
The ongoing people’s war is gaining greater victories because the New People’s Army is under the absolute leadership of the CPP. Ever since the struggle of the people of Bontoc, Sadanga and Kalinga against the Chico Dam and that of the Tingguians against Cellophil, the Party and the NPA has worked hand in hand with the Igorots to attain greater unity to defeat a common enemy. Through these struggles, the people realized the correctness of taking up arms against the greedy, and that only through the national democratic armed struggle can the Igorots truly defend their ancestral land and fight for their right to self-determination. In the following decades, exploitation, oppression and militarization has intensified in Cordillera under different puppet regimes, pushing the people to take part in the armed revolution. This year only, units of the NPA under the Chadli Molintas Command has launched tactical offensives that frustrate the delusion of the US-Duterte regime to wipe out the NPA by 2018.
The founding of the Cordillera People’s Democratic Front (CPDF) in 1989 is one great achievement of the CPP and the Cordillera masses. The CPDF is a concrete expression of the revolutionary struggle of the Igorots. This is an alliance of all democratic classes and sectors in the region. The CPDF also helps the Igorot masses in building their revolutionary government in their tribes and communities. By next year, the CPDF will be celebrating its 30th founding anniversary.
Up to the present, the CPP is at the forefront guiding and implementing agrarian revolution to solve the multiple forms of feudal and semi-feudal exploitation of the peasant masses who comprise the majority of the Filipino people. Through collective action, the masses are able to fight the increasing number of destructive and rapacious companies attempting to conduct operations in the region which include mining, dams and geothermal energy projects. The people are fighting the continuing denial of the state to their access and use of the natural resources through oppressive laws such as PD 705 or the Revised Forestry Code, Mining Act of 1995, EPIRA, Renewable Energy Act and Small Scale Mining Act among others. The Igorots are more united to develop and increase their production. With the onslaught of super typhoon Ompong followed by Rosita, a vast area of agricultural land, infrastructures and properties are heavily damaged. The complete rehabilitation of these damages can only be attained through the collective action of the masses to fight for due services from the reactionary government.
The victories achieved by the CPP in the last 50 years is immeasurable. The Party has proven the correctness of the revolutionary theory of Marxism- Leninism- Maoism. It exhibited how the armed struggle through people’s war is dignified, just and inevitable in achieving genuine freedom, democracy and justice. The CPP is at the forefront of the world proletarian revolution raising the flag of socialism as still the best path of the struggling oppressed masses. Presently, the CPP serves both as example and inspiration for other nations aspiring for freedom, democracy and justice.
The CPDF enjoins the people of Cordillera to be one with the Filipino people in celebrating the 50 years of our relentless struggle and shining victory. Let us celebrate the victory of the CPP in leading the Filipino people to the road towards genuine freedom, lasting peace and justice, including us Igorots in our struggle for self- determination and democracy. In this 50th year of our Party, let us strengthen our resolve in advancing the national democratic revolution towards victory and onwards to socialist revolution.
CPP/NPA-Mountain Province: Red salute to the 50th anniversary of the Communist Party of the Philippines!
NPA-Mountain Province propaganda statement posted to the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) Website (Jan 2, 2019): Red salute to the 50th anniversary of the Communist Party of the Philippines!
Magno Udyaw
NPA-Mountain Province (Leonardo Pacsi Command)
New People's Army
Magno Udyaw
NPA-Mountain Province (Leonardo Pacsi Command)
New People's Army
January 02, 2019
With utmost honors, the Leonardo Pacsi Command (LPC) salutes the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) as it celebrates its 50th founding anniversary. We take pride in recalling the great achievements of the Party and the revolution in the past 50 years.
We pay our highest tribute to all martyrs, comrades in the Party and the NPA, who gave their lives for the national democratic revolution. We also give the highest respects to our elders, chieftains, leaders and the masses who devoted their lives to the struggle for self-determination and democracy under the national democratic revolution. We salute the indomitable commitment, high spirit for sacrifice and perseverance of the cadres and members of the Party, Red commanders and fighters, leaders and mass membership of all revolutionary organizations.
The leadership of the Communist Party of the Philippines has been proven to be imperative for all revolutionary endeavours of the Filipino people and for the national democratic revolution to advance towards victory and socialism.
The CPP absolutely leads and harnesses the NPA to the Marxist-Leninist and Maoist ideology of the proletariat that makes the NPA invincible and resilient more than ever in its main role in advancing the people’s war. The NPA frustrated all previous fascist regimes that have been attempting to crush it in the past five decades. The Red army is cherished by the majority of the Filipino masses as their sole red army in their fight against the landlords and big bourgeois class, the imperialists and their fascist rule. The NPA is the only armed force that fights for sovereignty and democracy, and for the rights of the national minorities to self-determination against national oppression of the state.
The Party guided the laying and spreading of the people’s war in the Cordillera and the forming of the Red political power of the Igorot people. At the height of Martial Law during the US-Marcos dictatorship from 1971 to 1982, the guerrilla zone of Mt. Province was opened from Ifugao’s expansion, along with the expansion in Benguet, Abra, Kalinga and Apayao.The militant people’s struggle against the Chico Dam, the Cellophil Resources Corp. and the fascist US-Marcos regime heightened through the armed struggle in 1983 to 1985 that ended such anti-people projects. The elders and the chieftains mobilized hundreds of tribespeople and youth in joining the NPA. Battalions of people’s militia multiplied and strengthened the company forces of the NPA. In this struggle, the Party clearly imparted to the national minority of Cordillera that the revolutionary armed struggle is decisive in fighting the imperialist plunder of the ancestral domain’s wealth, state fascism and neglect .
Through the Party’s guidance in diligent social investigation and class analysis of Cordillera, it was pointed out that to overcome national oppression and pursue self-determination and democracy of the national minority, their struggle must be united with the struggle of the Filipino people in fighting feudalism, bureaucrat capitalism and imperialism. The Party clarified that the Igorots are part of the peasants, workers and impoverished Filipino people who are exploited under the semicolonal and semifeudal society and that the national oppression is an additional oppression to them by the state under this social system. This rectified the mistaken “national minority war” the Igorots should have trodden. The “national minority war” was supposedly a separate war of the national minority of Cordillera based on the subjective analysis that there is no class struggle in Cordillera. The Party united the separate tribes of Cordillera and led their war to their rightful enemy: the imperialists and their landlord and big
bourgeois cohorts and so with the reactionary government that enforces laws that allow the continuous pillage of the giant capitalists on the natural wealth of Cordillera. Also through the guidance of the Party, the NPA was able to deter and isolate the traitor and opportunist Cordillera People’s Liberation Army and despite the turmoil it created to the revolutionary movement, the armed struggle in the region still grew stronger.
The Party trained the NPA to effectively employ the three integral components of the people’s war to the concrete and particular situation of Cordillera – the building of revolutionary bases and organs of political power, agrarian revolution and the armed struggle. The Party leads the NPA in arousing and mobilizing the peasant masses for them to carry-out agrarian revolution as the kernel of the people’s war. The Party and the NPA are with the peasant masses in determining and resolving the existing semifeudal and feudal forms of exploitation on them. Here in Mt. Province and Cordillera, the peasants face the problems of usury and trader exploitation, burdensome land rent, low wages of farm workers, lack of subsidy and services in agriculture and social services, and lacking relief and delayed rehabilitation on calamity damages. These add up to the main problem of insufficiency and low productivity of land for the greater number of peasants in Cordillera to till. This is worsened by the landgrabbing practice of the giant mine and energy companies that seize the people’s ancestral land and water resources.
The NPA helps build revolutionary mass organizations likewise in strengthening of the Cordillera People’s Democratic Front as the revolutionary alliance of the workers, peasants and all democratic forces in Cordillera. As a result of the tenacious advancement of agrarian revolution and the expansion and deepening of the revolutionary bases, the peasant youth are enlisting in the NPA and the People’s Militias are likewise expanding.
The NPA is moreover grateful to the CPP in leading the comprehensive rectification of the ideological, political and organizational mistakes and weaknesses for the people’s war to leap forward to a higher level. Through the Party’s motivation, the NPA is determined in overcoming military conservatism and as a result is gaining more victories in its tactical offensives against the AFP and PNP. The Leonardo Pacsi Command along with the other units under the Chadli Molintas Command take the initiative in punishing the AFP and PNP forces that assault the ancestral territories and communities, likewise in punishing the destructive Lepanto, Philex and Hedcor companies.
In the past 50 years, the alternating regimes were not able to subdue the CPP, NPA and the revolutionary mass movement from their inception even in the harshest period of the US-Marcos dictatorship. And now, our unwavering march in the last 50 years is being challenged by the fascist yet imperialist lameduck Duterte. The US-Duterte regime is so worried of the intensifying armed struggle and the people’s surge. Their pronouncement of crushing the NPA til the end of 2018 is bound to fail, so that they are compelled to heighten their counter-revolutionary war through Oplan Kapayapaan and Martial Law.
The crisis of the semifeudal and semicolonial society and aggravated by the anti-people, pro- imperialist and fascist policies of the US-Duterte regime is the objective basis for the people’s armed revolution to advance. The neoliberal policies of the regime moreover stagnate the backward agriculture from which the people of Cordillera still take their basic living while stunting national industrialization. The regime prevents the people from utilizing and eking out their living from the natural resources of their ancestral lands for these to be served to the mining and energy capitalist companies. The AFP likewise focuses its counter-revolutionary war in the region through the IP-centric approach among the Igorots and quenching their revolutionary struggle through the “peace zone” propaganda and reformist projects.
The national minority of Cordillera has a noble history of waging war in pursuit of their self- determination and democracy. The Party guided this noble tradition by rooting deep into the oppressed people and the advancement of the struggle of all national minorities in the country have become a part of the Party’s 50 years of victory. And now, the Party points to the challenges ahead for the further advancement of the people’s war towards estrategic stalemate.
Celebrate the golden anniversary of the CPP! Strengthen and join the NPA! Raise higher the gallant tradition of the Igorots’ struggle for self-determination and democracy! Strengthen our resolve in advancing the national democratic revolution and further on to socialism!
We pay our highest tribute to all martyrs, comrades in the Party and the NPA, who gave their lives for the national democratic revolution. We also give the highest respects to our elders, chieftains, leaders and the masses who devoted their lives to the struggle for self-determination and democracy under the national democratic revolution. We salute the indomitable commitment, high spirit for sacrifice and perseverance of the cadres and members of the Party, Red commanders and fighters, leaders and mass membership of all revolutionary organizations.
The leadership of the Communist Party of the Philippines has been proven to be imperative for all revolutionary endeavours of the Filipino people and for the national democratic revolution to advance towards victory and socialism.
The CPP absolutely leads and harnesses the NPA to the Marxist-Leninist and Maoist ideology of the proletariat that makes the NPA invincible and resilient more than ever in its main role in advancing the people’s war. The NPA frustrated all previous fascist regimes that have been attempting to crush it in the past five decades. The Red army is cherished by the majority of the Filipino masses as their sole red army in their fight against the landlords and big bourgeois class, the imperialists and their fascist rule. The NPA is the only armed force that fights for sovereignty and democracy, and for the rights of the national minorities to self-determination against national oppression of the state.
The Party guided the laying and spreading of the people’s war in the Cordillera and the forming of the Red political power of the Igorot people. At the height of Martial Law during the US-Marcos dictatorship from 1971 to 1982, the guerrilla zone of Mt. Province was opened from Ifugao’s expansion, along with the expansion in Benguet, Abra, Kalinga and Apayao.The militant people’s struggle against the Chico Dam, the Cellophil Resources Corp. and the fascist US-Marcos regime heightened through the armed struggle in 1983 to 1985 that ended such anti-people projects. The elders and the chieftains mobilized hundreds of tribespeople and youth in joining the NPA. Battalions of people’s militia multiplied and strengthened the company forces of the NPA. In this struggle, the Party clearly imparted to the national minority of Cordillera that the revolutionary armed struggle is decisive in fighting the imperialist plunder of the ancestral domain’s wealth, state fascism and neglect .
Through the Party’s guidance in diligent social investigation and class analysis of Cordillera, it was pointed out that to overcome national oppression and pursue self-determination and democracy of the national minority, their struggle must be united with the struggle of the Filipino people in fighting feudalism, bureaucrat capitalism and imperialism. The Party clarified that the Igorots are part of the peasants, workers and impoverished Filipino people who are exploited under the semicolonal and semifeudal society and that the national oppression is an additional oppression to them by the state under this social system. This rectified the mistaken “national minority war” the Igorots should have trodden. The “national minority war” was supposedly a separate war of the national minority of Cordillera based on the subjective analysis that there is no class struggle in Cordillera. The Party united the separate tribes of Cordillera and led their war to their rightful enemy: the imperialists and their landlord and big
bourgeois cohorts and so with the reactionary government that enforces laws that allow the continuous pillage of the giant capitalists on the natural wealth of Cordillera. Also through the guidance of the Party, the NPA was able to deter and isolate the traitor and opportunist Cordillera People’s Liberation Army and despite the turmoil it created to the revolutionary movement, the armed struggle in the region still grew stronger.
The Party trained the NPA to effectively employ the three integral components of the people’s war to the concrete and particular situation of Cordillera – the building of revolutionary bases and organs of political power, agrarian revolution and the armed struggle. The Party leads the NPA in arousing and mobilizing the peasant masses for them to carry-out agrarian revolution as the kernel of the people’s war. The Party and the NPA are with the peasant masses in determining and resolving the existing semifeudal and feudal forms of exploitation on them. Here in Mt. Province and Cordillera, the peasants face the problems of usury and trader exploitation, burdensome land rent, low wages of farm workers, lack of subsidy and services in agriculture and social services, and lacking relief and delayed rehabilitation on calamity damages. These add up to the main problem of insufficiency and low productivity of land for the greater number of peasants in Cordillera to till. This is worsened by the landgrabbing practice of the giant mine and energy companies that seize the people’s ancestral land and water resources.
The NPA helps build revolutionary mass organizations likewise in strengthening of the Cordillera People’s Democratic Front as the revolutionary alliance of the workers, peasants and all democratic forces in Cordillera. As a result of the tenacious advancement of agrarian revolution and the expansion and deepening of the revolutionary bases, the peasant youth are enlisting in the NPA and the People’s Militias are likewise expanding.
The NPA is moreover grateful to the CPP in leading the comprehensive rectification of the ideological, political and organizational mistakes and weaknesses for the people’s war to leap forward to a higher level. Through the Party’s motivation, the NPA is determined in overcoming military conservatism and as a result is gaining more victories in its tactical offensives against the AFP and PNP. The Leonardo Pacsi Command along with the other units under the Chadli Molintas Command take the initiative in punishing the AFP and PNP forces that assault the ancestral territories and communities, likewise in punishing the destructive Lepanto, Philex and Hedcor companies.
In the past 50 years, the alternating regimes were not able to subdue the CPP, NPA and the revolutionary mass movement from their inception even in the harshest period of the US-Marcos dictatorship. And now, our unwavering march in the last 50 years is being challenged by the fascist yet imperialist lameduck Duterte. The US-Duterte regime is so worried of the intensifying armed struggle and the people’s surge. Their pronouncement of crushing the NPA til the end of 2018 is bound to fail, so that they are compelled to heighten their counter-revolutionary war through Oplan Kapayapaan and Martial Law.
The crisis of the semifeudal and semicolonial society and aggravated by the anti-people, pro- imperialist and fascist policies of the US-Duterte regime is the objective basis for the people’s armed revolution to advance. The neoliberal policies of the regime moreover stagnate the backward agriculture from which the people of Cordillera still take their basic living while stunting national industrialization. The regime prevents the people from utilizing and eking out their living from the natural resources of their ancestral lands for these to be served to the mining and energy capitalist companies. The AFP likewise focuses its counter-revolutionary war in the region through the IP-centric approach among the Igorots and quenching their revolutionary struggle through the “peace zone” propaganda and reformist projects.
The national minority of Cordillera has a noble history of waging war in pursuit of their self- determination and democracy. The Party guided this noble tradition by rooting deep into the oppressed people and the advancement of the struggle of all national minorities in the country have become a part of the Party’s 50 years of victory. And now, the Party points to the challenges ahead for the further advancement of the people’s war towards estrategic stalemate.
Celebrate the golden anniversary of the CPP! Strengthen and join the NPA! Raise higher the gallant tradition of the Igorots’ struggle for self-determination and democracy! Strengthen our resolve in advancing the national democratic revolution and further on to socialism!
CPP/NDF: On the pen and the gun
NDF propaganda statement posted to the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) Website (Dec 26): On the pen and the gun
Juliet de Lima | Chairperson
Reciprocal Working Committee Socio-Economic Reforms
National Democratic Front of the Philippines
January 02, 2019
The CPP’s 50-year Cultural Achievements
Keynote to Golden Festival
The ideas of the ruling class are in every epoch the ruling ideas, i.e. the class which is the ruling material force of society, is at the same time its ruling intellectual force. The class which has the means of material production at its disposal, has control at the same time over the means of mental production, so that thereby, generally speaking, the ideas of those who lack the means of mental production are subject to it.–Karl Marx, The German Ideology
Honored guests, comrades and friends!
I am honored to be able to address you today in celebration of the founding anniversary of the Reestablishment of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), which completed its 50th year three days ago. It is still fitting to have the celebration today because the Congress was still going on finalizing the documents and the program for distribution to the general membership.
My address on the 50-year CPP’s cultural achievements was intended to be short and sweet because Joma has written much on the subject in “Revolutionary Literature and Art in the Philippines from 1960s to the Present,” https://josemariasison.org/revolutionary-literature-and-art-in-the-philippines-from-the-1960s-to-the-present/. What I mean by CPP cultural achievements is the impact and influence of the Party’s cultural and artistic endeavors on Philippine society and the Filipino people’s revolutionary struggle, but not that all works cited are by Party members.
To paraphrase the great Mao Zedong, successful revolutions employ two weapons: the pen and the gun, the cultural and the military. “To defeat the enemy, we rely primarily on the people’s army wielding the gun. But this is not enough, we must also have an army wielding the pen.”
It is significant that Mao mentions the pen first before the gun. Our experience shows that we must first arouse before we can organize and then mobilize people, whether it is in taking up the pen, or the gun, or further, the gun and the pen. Reviewing its 50 years of uninterrupted revolutionary struggle, we can say that the CPP has been successful in wielding both weapons,
The CPP takes the stand that even before wielding the gun, it must start wielding the pen. Its progressive precursors understood this well from the the historical experience of the Filipino people. In the old democratic revolution, our revolutionary ancestors waged the First Propaganda Movement. With pens, they lobbied for reforms in the Spanish Cortes (legislature) pressing for the recognition of the Philippines as a province of Spain equal to its provinces in the Iberian Peninsula. Graciano Lopez Jaena, Marcelo H. del Pilar and Jose Rizal published La Solidaridad. Rizal wrote the novels Noli me Tangere and El Filibusterismo exposing the exploited and oppressed conditions of Philippine natives under Spanish yoke.
Having failed in the reform movement, Rizal returned home and founded La Liga Filipina, which Andres Bonifacio joined before founding the Katipunan to finally fight for independence with the gun.
When the Katipunan opted to wield the gun, it did not drop the pen. It wielded the pen to power the gun. Bonifacio and Emilio Jacinto (Dimas Ilaw) collaborated on writing the Kartilya ng Katipunan, , a primer on how Katipunan members should conduct themselves in the fight for freedom. Bonifacio wrote the poem “Pag-ibig sa Tinubuang Lupa” to instill patriotism, defense of and struggle to free the motherland at the price of sacrifices. Jacinto edited the Katipunan organ Kalayaan, wrote manifestoes, essays and poems on freedom, work, faith, and patriotism to facilitate recruitment of members for the armed revolution, and inspire and guide the people.
The Second or New Democratic Propaganda Movement (1959-1968)
The CPP precursors were at first informal and voluntary discussion groups, well read in liberal, progressive and Marxist-Leninist-Maoist literature (Marxist philosophy, political economy and revolutionary practice) who whiled away their time to discuss ideas that they could not find in classrooms. They formed small university-based groups and associations—put up their cultural, literary and artistic instruments, such as the irregular and financially unstable little magazines (Fugitive Review, Cogent, and Diliman Observer) and rode on or used existing publications such as the UP student papers Philippine Collegian (weekly), Collegian Folio (monthly) and Literary Apprentice of the UP Writers’ Club, which had large circulation (as these catered to the UP student body and alumni) and the quarterly Diliman Review for their creative production of progressive propaganda literature, such as essays, poetry and literary criticism, still much influenced by progressive liberal ideas.
When the Student Cultural Association of the UP (SCAUP) was organized, its propaganda vehicles expanded to include frequent forums and symposia in addition to the formal and informal discussion groups to raise the political and ideological consciousness of its members and associates. It had guest speakers from outside UP and progressive visiting foreigners. The subjects included the semi-feudal and semicolonial domestic conditions, imperialism, socialism, the Cold War and other world developments that could not be found in the university curricula. These discussion groups predated the campus teach-ins popularized by the Students for a Democratic Society from 1965 to 1968 to oppose the US war of aggression in Vietnam.
SCAUP’s initiatives served to break through the dominant climate of anti-communism flowing from the US McCarthyite witch hunt and the religious sectarianism of the feudal-patriarchal and comprador culture into the university and the country. It served as a university within the university. Its objective of continuing the unfinished Philippine revolution went beyond the UP confines and liberal parameters. With the defeat and almost total silence of the old merger party of the communist and socialist parties in most of the 1950s, SCAUP picked up the call of Claro Mayo Recto, a progressive nationalist and anti-imperialist, for a second propaganda movement but went beyond his call for nationalism to adopt a socialist perspective.
SCAUP also formed regular clandestine study groups to study such works as the Communist Manifesto, Dialectics of Nature, Materialism and Empirio Criticism, Wages, Prices and Profit, Mao’s Selected Works, “On Contradiction” and “On Practice”. Some like Edberto Villegas and a few others ventured to read and discuss Das Capital. Ideological work was very important because among the activists not a few were somehow influenced by aesthetic theories and works adhering to currents as art for art’s sake, petty bourgeois self-titillation, mystical flights or art supposedly transcending classes but truly in the service of the exploiting classes.
SCAUP cooperated with the UP Journalism Club, the Philippine Collegian, the UP Writers’ Club and the fraternities and sororities to promote its political line and advocacies, such as the fight against the anticommunist witchhunt undertaken by the Committee on Anti-Filipino Activities. Its members associated with progressive elders like the revolutionary poet and novelist Amado V. Hernandez, Jose Lansang, Renato Constantino, Andres Cristobal Cruz and former members of the old merger party. They connected with trade unions and built contacts with student leaders in the downtown universities such as Far Eastern University, University of the East, Manuel L Quezon University, Philippine College of Commerce, Lyceum of the Philippines and others.
An attempt was made to build a pre-party formation, the Alliance for Socialist Action (ALSA) consisting of activist leaders among them Satur Ocampo, Carlos Padilla and others. It is unfortunate that we have not found an extant copy of its Manifesto that Joma drafted and I typed in multiple layers of bond paper with carbon paper in between each. The project was dropped when some of its prospective founders joined the Progressive Party of the Philippines or Party for Philippine Progress, actually a CIA-instigated pro-US religio-sectarian reactionary party put up to oppose the Filipino first policy of then President Carlos Garcia.
By 1963, the CPP precursors were able to establish Progressive Publications to publish the Progressive Review, which was relatively more stable than their earlier little magazines and the book Struggle for National Democracy (SND) in 1967. However, they continued to use the Philippine Collegian and from time to time liberal publications such as the Philippines Free Press, Kislap-Graphic to which they submitted their literary works, press releases, statements and manifestoes. They made friends and recruited journalists and writers.
The writing tools were still the typewriter, the mimeograph machine-rented or owned, for periodikit & leaflets, and of course paints and brushes for posters, placards and streamers.
After Kabataang Makabayan (KM) was established in 1964, the national-democratic mass movement grew all over the country. Emulating Andres Bonifacio and Emilio Jacinto, KM had a cultural bureau which sought to organize writers and artists,and performers. The composer Felipe de Leon composed the music for the KM anthem. Amado V. Hernandez’s Kung Tuyo na ang Luha mo and other poems were set to music, and performed in dance and recitation.
The KM systematized and conducted cultural work consistently. More groups were formed. Social investigation and mass integration teams doubled as cultural teams to perform in factories, urban and rural communities, college and high school campuses where more performers were recruited and organized to popularize revolutionary songs and other art forms.
Doing propaganda and cultural work among the masses necessitated the use of the national language and the local lingua franca. Propaganda and other educational materials were translated into Tagalog. English continued to be used for Progressive Review and other publications, including the book Struggle for national democracy published in 1967. The essays in this book and statements and manifestoes were translated into Tagalog for distribution to the masses. Flyers and leaflets were printed in both Tagalog and English.
KM campaigned for the national language as the principal medium of education and literary development. University professors and instructors, high school teachers, and writers in English were encouraged to use, write, and conduct discussions in Pilipino. Tagalog and other local languages were used in the conduct of propaganda and agitation among the toiling masses.
The cultural and propaganda performing teams conducted systematic social investigation, mass integration, propaganda and organizing among the youth in urban and rural communities, in factories and school campuses (including high school) targeted for organizing into KM chapters. Aside from staging performances, they conducted discussion groups and meetings where urgent issues of the day were taken up in addition to the educational materials they brought with them, consisting of the KM Constitution and Program and mimeographed parts of SND. The schools for national democracy were organized.
KM also stressed the importance of studying the works of great Marxist-Leninist-Maoist masters and other revolutionary literature among activists who were honed to conduct social investigation, integrate with the masses and put what they learn into practice, in the spirit of following Mao’s mass line of learning from the masses to be able to teach the masses.
In their mass work, activists learned at first hand the concrete manifestations of the evils of US imperialism and their subservient domestic ruling classes of landlords and compradors; and the double exploitation and oppression these imposed on the toiling masses. They learned how to expose these evils, to imbibe the aspirations of the masses for a better life; and work out with them the tactics of fighting the manifestations of these evils in their localities. Thus they were able to produce propaganda, literature and art of social and revolutionary significance that easily resonated with the masses and inspired them to join the movement.
The CPP Reestablishment and Advance: the First Quarter Storm to Martial Law
Towards the CPP’s founding in 1968, intensive ideological, political and organizational work were conducted. Aside from drafting and discussing basic documents, including the rectification document, Rectify Errors and Rebuild the Party, in preparation for the Congress of Reestablishment, revolutionary literary and artistic works were produced to inspire the masses.
Philippine Society and Revolution was written shortly after the Party reestablishment, presenting from the standpoint of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism the main strands of Philippine history, the basic problems of the Filipino people, the prevailing social structure and the strategy and tactics and class logic of the people’s democratic revolution. First mimeographed in the last quarter of 1969, it was the main study material for the Party’s primary course but its circulation went well beyond the Party as this was published serially in the Philippine Collegian under the title Philippine Crisis and Revolution; the Collegian editor Antonio Tagamolila being a clandestine Party member. Its first printed edition was published in the third quarter or 1970, followed by the first foreign edition published by Ta Kung Pao in Hong Kong.
The central translation bureau was organized upon the the Party reestablishment. But the work went full blast only in the early part of 1970 when we able to organize several groups to translate the Communist Manifesto, Mao’s Selected Military Writings and Selected Readings from the Works of Mao Zedong, Lenin’s State and Revolution and Marx’s Wages, Prices and Profit, which were urgently needed for the Party secondary course.
With the founding of the CPP in 1968, cultural work became much more systematized. The CPP more firmly wielded the pen and, shortly after, the gun. The cultural, the propaganda and the translation bureaus were organized under the Education Department. More cultural groups were organized in the regions, provinces and communities . NPA propaganda teams were dispatched to start social investigation, conduct mass work and build the mass base for more guerrilla operations. Among the first groups they organized were those of cultural workers (painters, reciters of poems, actors, musicians, singers, dancers, etc) especially among the youth and the women in the communities.
1. Pre-Martial Law and the FQS
Cultural work was already well developed by the time the First Quarter Storm (FQS) broke out. Groups such as KM’s Panday Sining, Samahang Demokratiko ng Kabataan’s (SDK) Gintong Silahis and of the Philippine College of Commerce’s (*now Polytechnic University of the Philippines) Kamanyang did outstanding work among youth organizations in Manila and became models for youth and student cultural groups that proliferated in the provinces and regions.
Performance groups arose in the late 1960s to present solo and choral singing, instrumental music, poetry recitation, dances and skits and to create illustrations on publications, posters and walls in order to enliven and invigorate the meetings, mass protests and workers’ strikes.
Writers and artists organized themselves. Panulat para sa Kaunlaran ng Sambayanan (Pen for the propserity of the People-PAKSA) was founded in 1971 by creative writers in Pilipino & English and other major Philippine languages, who were determined to serve the Filipino people.
Fine Arts and Architecture students and young professionals from UP and other universities founded the Nagkakaisang Progresibong mga Artista at Arkitekto (United Progressive Artists and Architects-NPAA) also in 1971. Most of them were members either of SCAUP or KM and had been very much involved in propaganda work in either of these organizations.
Many creative writers and artists joined the underground and armed revolutionary movement and created more works about the dire social conditions, the sacrifices and struggles of the Filipino people. Literature and art flourished most among the NPA propaganda and cultural teams with the masses in the countryside. The central and regional publications of the CPP, NPA, and NDF published songs, poems, short stories and illustrations. Cultural organizations published, performed or exhibited the literary and artistic works of their members.
Songs, poetry recitations and educational lectures were popularized through audio cassette recorders and players. Revolutionary songs were recorded and reproduced for distribution to the provinces and regions for popularization. These were performed in celebrations and community gatherings in urban and rural communities. Primary and elementary school children sang them while at play.
The central publishing house was established as was the Revolutionary School of Mao Zedong Thought. It took charge of producing the stencils of Ang Bayan and other central CPP publications for distribution to the regions and more importantly for collating, selecting, formatting, printing and distributing the seven-volume Philippine Selections of the Selected Works of Chairman Mao Zedong. The central publishing house had two mimeographing machines and several IBM ball-type electric typewriters to cope with the great volume of printing to be done.
The portable V-type silkscreen printing was developed to decentralize the printing of Party and other publications for education and propaganda. This was also used for producing art works. The stencils were produced centrally for better quality control and sent out to the regional committees for reproduction (using the v-type portable printers) and distribution to the Party membership.
2. Martial Law: from 1972 until the fall of Marcos in 1986
When martial law was proclaimed, artists and creative writers joined the underground and became Red fighters and at the same time practiced their craft. Their works were published in the revolutionary publications.
Many writers and artists became martyrs, and many more were imprisoned. (The latter were the lucky ones because quite a number were killed while fighting or captured and tortured to death.)
Fascist repression took a toll as Party cadres and members were captured and imprisoned. It was futile for the fascist regime to detain and silence them. But neither prison walls nor barbed wire fences could silence them. In prison, they reflected on their experiences, maintaining their strong ideological viewpoint and political standpoint, nurturing and polishing their craft with even more revolutionary relevance.
Arts and crafts flourished and flowed out of prisons to celebrate and inspire the struggling masses in songs, poetry, paintings, drawings, carvings, and myriads of handicrafts from materials that could be found in prison. Though they lost grip of the gun, the imprisoned cultural activists firmly grasped the pen to inspire their comrades and friends outside wielding both the gun and the pen.
The poems in Prison and Beyond were written in an isolation cell in Fort Bonifacio and smuggled out by the author’s defense lawyer, passed on to definite activists and sent abroad to be published by Epifanio San Juan, who led a signature campaign of prominent writers and artists all over the world for the author’s freedom.
Prisons all over the country became crucibles of artistic creations, especially because despite the deprivations, these were ideal venues for reflection (even for those in isolation cells) and for continuous regular revolutionary education. ( songs, poems paintings, drawings, carvings, pins, cards, handicrafts and others). Their works could be brought outside in various open and clandestine ways; and were sold and circulated far and wide; to help boost the spirit of antifascist and anti-imperialist international solidarity among solidarity groups in Europe and North America and to a lesser extent domestically among allies and friends.
Among the outstanding songs created in prison were the lyrics and composition of Kay Taas ng Pader by Aloysius “Ochie” Baes, Awit sa Kasal by Jose Luneta and the music of Andres Bonifacio’s Pag-ibig sa Tinubuang Lupa by Luis Jorque in Bicutan. The Bicutan political detainees also wrote and performed plays on the struggles of the workers, peasants and the urban poor. They staged under direction of Behn Cervantes Bonifacio Ilagan’s Pagsambang Bayan, the Sinakulong Bayan or street version of the Passion of Christ and Aurelio Tolentino’s Kahapon, Ngayon at Bukas (a play written 115 years ago in 1903 on the struggle against US imperialism (Bagong Sibol) with a look back on Spanish colonialism (Halimaw) and China’s economic dominance (Haring Bata) relevant then and still today.
Despite intense repression, cultural and propaganda groups and cultural work proliferated. Elaborate stage presentations and socially relevant mainstream movies were produced by such directors as Lino Brocka, Ishmael Bernal, Behn Cervantes and Mike de Leon. The movies had popular stars and were box office hits. Among these were Brocka’s Bayan Ko Kapit sa Patalim (My Country, Grip the Knife), Insiang, Manila, sa mga Kuko ng Liwanag (In the Claws of Light), and Tinimbang ka Ngunit Kulang (You were Weighed but Found Short; Bernal’s Nunal sa Tubig (Mole in Water), Himala (Miracle), and Hinugot sa Langit (Pulled Out from the Sky); and and Mike de Leon’s Batch ’81, Sister Stella L. and Kisapmata (Twinkling of an Eye). Many won national and international awards.
Graphic and visual artists organized themselves. Pablo Baens Santos, Antipas Delotavo, Renato Habulan, Papo de Asis, Orlando Castillo, Edgar Fernandez, Al Manrique, Neil Doloricon and Jose Tence Ruiz organized Kaisahan in 1976, which defined artists’ role in society and produced works depicting the oppression of workers, peasant and urban poor by imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism.
Cultural groups and organizations proliferated and their various productions increased. Anniversaries of the Party, NPA and NDF were celebrated with much cultural fanfare. Revolutionary songs and poems were recorded in cassette tapes and distributed to the regions and provinces for popularization such that one would know the guerrila areas by hearing children singing.
Anthologies of literary works and songs were published in the Philippines and abroad, under the direction of the Party’s National Commission on Culture. The Instityut sa Panitikan at Sining ng Sambayanan (Institute for the People’s Literature and Art-IPASA) published Akdang Pandigmang Bayan, Ulos; and Dare to Struggle, Dare to Win(1973); Hulagpos(1981); Mga Tula ng Rebolusyong Pilipino 1972-80; and more.
Literary works circulated among the people. Lightning cultural performances were held even in city centers. Protest graffiti, periodikits and sticker-posters of various sizes could be found on walls, waiting sheds, and inside buses and jeepneys. A collective of creative writers and illustrators were able to illustrated version of Philippine Society and Revolution in Tagalog translation. Prison & Beyond 1985 (JMS prison poems mostly) was published in 1985 and won the Manila Writers’ Award and later the Southeast Asian Write Award.
National Midweek Magazine (1984-1991)and New Progressive Review; together with Philippine Collegian, Diliman Review, as well as campus publications continued to criticize the fascist regime and reported on the state of the national-democratic struggle and on issues confronting the Filipino people.
T-shirts with slogans and creatively designed placards and streamers, to huge murals and paper mache effigies were displayed at big marches and rallies. Protest music and street theater became widespread and popular through many small musical and theater groups based in unions, urban poor communities and schools, and through the more regularized or professionalized ones such as Philippine Educational Theatre Association (PETA). The resurgence of revolutionary art in the urban areas ran parallel to the constantly rising artistic and other cultural activities in the countryside.
To this day, the richest sources of literary and artistic works of revolutionary writers and artists are the central and regional publications and literary journals of the CPP, the NPA and the NDF. They publish songs, poems, short stories, illustrations and comic strips, aside from disseminating news and information about the revolutionary forces and the people in their respective areas. For an enumeration of these publications, you may refer to https://josemariasison.org/revolutionary-literature-and-art-in-the-philippines-from-the-1960s-to-the-present/
The best known central publications are: Ulos (literary journal of ARMAS-NDF), Sine Proletaryo (video production-CPP Information Bureau), Kalayaan (Freedom-KM), Liyab (Flame-KAGUMA) and Malayang Pilipina (-Free Filipina-MAKIBAKA).
In Northern Luzon: Baringkuas (Breaking out-Cagayan Valley), Dagitab (Spark-ARMAS-TK), Dangadang (Struggle-Northwest Luzon), Ramut (Root- revolutionary edication and culture -Norhwestern Luzon) and Rissik (Light Rays – revolutionary cultural journal-Cagayan Valley).
In Central Luzon:Himagsik (Revolt), Inang Larangan (Mother Field-cultural anthology, Central Luzon), Lakas ng Masa (Strength of the Masses-Central Luzon), Dyaryo Pasulong (Forward newspaper-Revolutionary People of Mount Sierra Madre),
In Southern Tagalog region: Diklap (Spark-South Quezon-Bondoc Peninsula) and Alab (Flame-a revolutionary publication for the masses in Mindoro), In Bikol region: Gerilya (NPA Bicol Regional Command) Punla (Seedling-literary publication-Bicol Region), Silyab (Flame – CPP-NPA in Bicol), and Ang Kusog (Strength – Masbate)
In the Visayas, Ang Panghimakas (Struggle – Negros Island), Ang Budyong (Trumpet – Leonardo Panaligan Command-Central Negros), Daba-daba (Panay), Sublak (revolutionary cultural magazine-Panay) Pakigbisog (Struggle – Central Visayas)
In Mindanao, Ang Kahilukan (NDF in Northern Mindanao), Asdang ( Advance – NDF-Far South Mindanao), Lingkawas (Liberation – CPP-Northwestern Mindanao), Pasa-bilis (NDF-Southern Mindanao), Sulong! (Advance – NDFP-Mindanao).
The CPP and the national democratic movement in both urban and rural areas gained momentum and grew in size and strength during the pre-martial law and martial law rule of Marcos, despite the counterinsurgency strategy using the triad concepts of intelligence, psywar and combat operations under the AFP Oplan Katatagan.
Marcos’ assassination of Aquino led to an upsurge in the antifascist struggle that before long convinced the US policy makers to drop Marcos, encourage a fraction of the military to organize themselves into the Reform the Armed Forces Movement (RAM) against Marcos and support the anti-Marcos reactionaries to try to drive a wedge between the rapidly growing alliance between anti-Marcos reactionaries and the revolutionary forces. Marcos followed the US pressure to call for a snap election.
The US-supported opposition candidate was Aquino’s widow, Corazon Cojuangco Aquino, who since 1983 after her husband’s assassination had been working closely with the revolutionary mass movement. Unfortunately the CPP made a tactical error by calling for an election boycott on the ground that Marcos would stack the cards and win the elections anyway. Thus the Party-led mass movement or advanced section of the broad masses missed an opportunity to take advantage of the anti-Marcos electoral campaign as venue for reaching the greater number of the masses to raise popular consciousness from the usual politicking issues to more fundamental issues affecting people’s lives and to raise their struggle to the level of necessary reforms against the US imperialists and the worst among local exploiting classes of compradors, landlords and bureaucrat capitalists that had further enriched themselves through land-grabbing and corruption with Marcos in power.
Indeed Marcos won the elections using sheer fraud and intimidation. But this further so outraged the people that again they took to the streets. RAM took this as a signal and attempted a coup against Marcos. However, they were foiled by the Marcos loyalists in the military. Fortunately for the RAM, the mass movement combining with the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (Church) led by Jaime Cardinal Sin and the Aquino supporters came to their rescue in the EDSA Uprising that led more of the military to abandon Marcos. Finally the Marcos fascist dictatorship fell.
3. Cory Aquino’s regime: 1986 until 1992
Marcos’ fall catapulted Corazon Aquino to the presidency. She declared a revolutionary government and made good on her word of freeing all political prisoners, against opposition from the US and the military. The goodwill built through the united front with the anti-Marcos reactionaries during the anti-Marcos struggle lasted for a while. Rumors were floated that a national reconciliation commission would be put up having the CPP founding chairman as head or that representatives of the revolutionary forces would be appointed to the Constitutional Commission to draft the prospective 1987 Constitution.
All these remained rumors as the US and the military were against having representatives of the revolutionary masses in these bodies and in other agencies of the government. However, three clandestine Party member became members of the Constitutional Commission. One of them was the movie director and revolutionary cultural activist Lino Brocka, who vigorously pushed for progressive reforms, especially in the field of art and culture but he resigned in protest when he saw that many of the policies adopted worked against the rights and interests of the Filipino people and took back to the streets and of course to directing social realist films such as Ora Pro Nobis that won him the Palm d’Or award and Gumapang Ka sa Lupak (Crawl in Mud).
Other progressive individuals that Aquino appointed and later removed or resigned were Joker Arroyo, her first executive secretary ; Augusto Bobit Sanchez, her Secretary of Labor blamed by the reactionaries for the many workers’ strikes and the growing strength of Kilusang Mayo Uno.
Ceasefire negotiations were supposed to graduate into peace negotiations of substantive issues but failed due to the opposition from Aquino’s US handlers and the military. Aquino proved to be putty in the hands of the military of which she was to be the commander-in-chief. The presidential security guards with some reinforcements carried out the Mendiola massacre of peasants demanding implementation of agrarian reform on January 22, 1987.
By February 1987, Aquino unsheathed the sword of war. Behind the bourgeois constitutional processes, militarization was intensified and the fascist repression of the basic masses and the progressive forces returned and continued to be widespread. In June 1987 there were the attempts to assassinate Buscayno, the former NPA chief; and shortly after, Dr. Nemesio Prudente the revolutionary patriot ex-president of the Philippine College of Commerce and cooperator in the NDF founding.
Then there were the assassinations of legal leaders of the national democratic movement, among them Lean Alejandro Bayan secretary general, on August 28, 1987 and Rolando Olalia, KMU and Partido ng Bayan chairman and his driver Leonor Alay-ay who were tortured, mutilated and murdered on November 12, 1987.
These atrocities were part of Aquino’s Oplan Lambat-Bitag I and II campaigns, with her AFP Chief of Staff and later Defense Chief, Gen. Fidel V. Ramos as chief implementor. The campaign did some damage to the revolutionary movement but failed to destroy its strong Marxist-Leninist-Maoist foundation even as the enemy campaign coincided with the growth of internal ideological and political errors within the CPP, the NPA, and the NDF, which loosened their grip on the gun as they did on the pen.
The loosened grip on the gun was ironical because, the revolutionary armed struggle had reached a new peak in 1983 as both the urban and the rural mass movement and revolutionary propaganda successfully supported the expansion efforts of the revolutionary movement in the countryside, especially the armed struggle.
Ironically, the successes in the armed struggle induced erroneous notions of quick victory deviating from the line and strategy of the people’s democratic revolution through protracted people’s war, of building strength in the countryside to surround the cities before the strategic offensive to seize the cities. Ideas of insurrectionism gained ground. The Party and NPA leadership adopted a so-called strategic counteroffensive (SCO) program, whipping up erroneous currents in various parts of the movement, including the premature and unsustainable ”regularization” of the guerrilla units from the main formation of platoons into companies and all-out armed partisan warfare, the obsession with “general paralyzing actions” and the reckless concept of peasant uprisings.
Operatives of the NPA were dispatched abroad as early as 1983 or 1984 to find connections to the Soviet Union, wishing to acquire from there the “heavy” weapons the leadership thought was necessary for raising the level of the armed struggle, even as the number of NPA fighters and the company formations had already started to decrease from 1986 onward as a result of Kampanyang Ahos hysteria and similar phenomena.
The inroads and propagation of big errors and deviations in almost a decade were traceable to the main weaknesses and shortcomings in building the Party ideologically, politically and organizationally. Within the Party, the comprehension and distinction of what is right and wrong on many issues regarding the theory, principles, history and practice of the movement got blurred.
The Education and Propaganda Commission and the National Instructions Bureau were dismantled in 1982. Education work at the basic and intermediate levels was passed on to the territorial commissions and the regional committees while the Executive Committee of the Central Committee assumed responsibility for the advanced course and the publication of a theoretical journal. But these works were not attended to as the cadres were too busy trying to build up the factors for their would-be insurrections and seizure of the seats of power and in the process dropped the pen. Attention to the ideological, political and organizational work at the basic levels and the localities slackened.
Liberalism ran rife, muddled thinking and confusion proliferated. Trotskyism and Gorbachovism made some inroads among some leading cadres, the Party’s revisionist critique were muted or stopped, leading later to groups splitting from the Party and the people’s army.
4. Four succeeding regimes: 1992-2016
The four following regimes (Ramos, Estrada, Arroyo and Aquino II) were not much different from each other. General Fidel Ramos succeeded Cory Aquino to the presidency (1992-1998). Although as Aquino’s chief of staff and later secretary of national defense, Ramos obstructed peace negotiations with the NDF, he moved and made feelers to the NDFP for the preparation and resumption of the peace negotiations. The Hague Joint Declaration was signed and approved on September 1, 1992. Two years and six months after he assumed the presidency, the GRP-NDFP peace negotiations formally opened in June 1995. Negotiations succeeded in completing the first substantive agenda with the signing of the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL) between the negotiating panels. However, Ramos as GRP principal did not sign it.
Notwithstanding the peace negotiations, Ramos continued his regime’s “counterinsurgency” plans under Oplan Bantay Laya III and IV. The peace negotiations came under the rubric of the low intensify conflict strategy of these operational plans. The NDFP competently managed the propaganda and educational aspects of the peace negotiations and continued to wage tit-for-tat struggles to counter every attempt of the reactionaries and the military to undermine and violate the agreements reached. The start of the Ramos administration coincided with the start of the Party rectification movement.
The significant losses in some parts of Party work–ranging from the Party itself to the people’s army, the united front and the mass movement, drove the leadership to reassess their experience and identify the reasons for the revolutionary movement to fall into such a threatening situation. They held the 10th Plenum which decided to conduct the Second Great Rectification Movement (SGRM) in all aspects of the Party’s work. The Party started again to tighten their grip on the pen and the gun. All the regional Party committees made their respective summings-up, identified their errors and weaknesses and started to correct and overcome them.
The rectification documents, “Reaffirm Our Basic Principles and Rectify Errors”, “Stand for Socialism against Modern Revisionism” and “General Review Of Important Events and Decisions (1980 To 1991)” were issued and distributed for study by the entire Party membership. The SGRM was a massive education movement conducted to reaffirm the CPP’s ideological and political line. Regular Party education on the basic and intermediate courses were revived. Social investigations, including grievance sessions to ferret out errors and shortcomings, reassessments summings-up were conducted to regain the trust and confidence of Party members and the masses, especially in the abandoned guerrilla areas
NPA units worked hard to recover and expand the mass base in the countryside. The NPA strove to overcome the series of “counterinsurgency” plans of successive post-Marcos presidents after Aquino’s Lambat Bitag I and II, Oplan Lambat Bitag III, IV and Oplan Pagkalinga under President Ramos; Oplan Makabayan under President Estrada; Oplan Enduring Freedom (Bush’ so-called anti-terrorism plan) adopted by President Gloria Arroyo; and Oplan Bayanihan by Aquino II.
Incorrigible advocates of anti-Party ideas were either booted out or got out of the Party as they continued to attack the basic principles of the Party in an all-round way. They had to be combated. Wielding the pen, the loyal Party cadres and members set out to fight the propaganda battle on two fronts, the reactionary media of the ruling classes and those produced by the anti-Party breakaway groups that found favor in the enemy media. The anti-Party elements eventually nestled themselves in the reactionary regime, with some of them becoming highly placed officials in the government and becoming silent as they were too busy enriching themselves and building their mansions. The loyal Party cadres and members had to work doubly hard to be able to win over those whom the anti-Party elements had misled.
Ang Bayan the Party organ was reoriented from the liberal and revisionist direction to which it was steered by the former editor who got enamoured with the Gorbachov’s ideas of glasnost and perestroika and turned out be an incorrigible anti-Party element. Revolution the CPP theoretical journal was revived and carried the rectificaiton documents of the central organs and the regional committees as well as theoretical articles on people’s war, the united front and the international communist movement.
The regional Party publications that had fallen silent for some time were revived. They started to use the internet and posted their works. Cultural and artistic activities all over the country steadily picked up in variety, volume and quality reached during the anti-Marcos dictatorship struggle.
Alternative online media outfits, such as Bulatlat and Kodao Productions, were established since 2001, and have since then published commentaries, special reports, multimedia productions and poetry.
Like all his precedents since Marcos, Ramos embraced the neoliberal policy regime of trade and investment liberalization, deregulation and privatization. He artificially buoyed up the economy with foreign loans and investments for a boom in private construction until the disastrous Asian crisis of 1997, at the expense of the people‘s sovereignty and national patrimony as he proceeded to sell off government corporations such as the Metropolitan Waterworks & Sewage System and even Fort Bonifacio to foreign monopoly corporations.
When Estrada was elected and assumed the presidency in June 1998, he approved and signed the CAHRIHL. This seemed to augur well for the peace negotiations. But less than two months after, he ratified the Visiting Forces Agreement and the NDFP called him to task for violating Philippine sovereignty and integrity. When the NPA captured and took as prisoners of war two ranking AFP officers, Estrada declared a unilateral suspension of the peace negotiations and the JASIG in May 1999. The peace negotiations stopped until it was resumed after his ouster and the assumption of the presidency by his vice president Gloria Arroyo.
Estrada’s tenure was very short. In October 2000 a corruption charge was brought against him involving the acceptance of bribes from a number of game operators. Impeachment proceedings were brought against him by leaders of the mass movement but the members of the Senate blocked the presentation of evidence. As a result, mass protests mounted against him and on January 20, 2001, he was driven off MalacaƱang and his vice president Gloria Arroyo ascended to the presidency.
During the mass campaigns to oust Estrada, Arroyo declared that if and when she assumed the presidency, she would “reverse the all-out-war policy of the Estrada government and resume peace negotiations with the NDFP and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF)”. Shortly after being sworn into office, Arroyo reconstituted the GRP negotiating panel for talks with the NDFP. Again, this seemed to augur well for the peace negotiations.
In April 2001, formal talks in the peace negotiations resumed in Oslo, Norway, with the the Royal Norwegian Government as facilitator. A second round was held in June with a four-day agenda to start substantive discussions on social and economic reforms. However, the GRP panel was ordered to suspend the talks on the second day as a protest against the killing of the most notorious human rights violator during the Marcos fascist regime. Later Arroyo requested the US government to designate the CPP, NPA and the CPP founding Chairman as terrorists by November 2001.
In August 2002, shortly after the visit of US State Department Secretary Colin Powell to Manila, Arroyo declared all-out war against the revolutionary movement and ordered offensives under Operation Enduring Freedom-Philippines, a US-instigated COIN plan against a so-called war on terrorism against various NPA guerrilla fronts. The USSD Secretary announced the listing of the CPP-NPA in the US list of foreign “terrorist organizations” and the NDFP chief political consultant among the specially designated nationals (SDGN) and specially designated global terrorist (SDGT) of the US Dept. of the Treasury.
The military implemented the US-Arroyo campaign of terror under what it named Oplan Bantay Laya. Kidnappings, torture, killings of mass activists, including peasants, workers, students, human rights advocates and defenders, lawyers and priests ran rampant, surpassing post-Marcos levels. The mass movement responded with sizeable mass protests and demonstrations in the Stop the Killings campaign but could not muster numbers reaching hundreds of thousands to cause the ouster of Arroyo. Several books were published and circulated in the Philippines and abroad exposing the crimes of the regime and complaints brought to agencies of the United Nations.
The Hacienda Luisita massacre of peasants in November 2004 with seven killed, more than a hundred, including women and children, injured, also more than a hundred arrested and subsequent killings of 7 supporters and advocates sparked outrage among the people. Artists and writers rallied to the cause of the peasants with songs, poetry, dances, paintings, drawings and other art works. Campaigns worldwide were launched to condemn the massacre and support the cause of the peasants and sugar farm workers.
Arroyo was brought to trial and found guilty by the Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal Second Session on the Philippines held in The Hague, the Netherlands on March 21-25, 2007 for gross and systematic violations of 1) civil and political rights; 2) economic, social and cultural rights; and 3) right to national self-determination and liberation. Worldwide campaigns on these comprehensive issues were launched, boosting solidarity for the Filipino people’s struggle.
The terrorist listing met with mass actions and demonstrations, editorial cartoons, internet postings, petitions and fund campaigns in several countries abroad among the Filipino community and solidarity friends The proceedings and documents of the Tribunal were published in book form and online. The trial itself was supported by a broad range of organizations and prominent human and people’s rights activists, including lawyers, jurists, academicians, bishops, priests of various religious denominations, artists, etc. and was attended by hundreds of delegates and guests from 18 countries in Asia, Africa, Latin America, Europe, Africa and the Middle East. It was well-covered by both Philippine and foreign media.
To some extent, the campaign against the atrocities lowered the level of human rights violations. When Noynoy Aquino (Aquino II) succeeded to the presidency, the level of human rights violations and military atrocities remained where this settled toward the end of the Arroyo regime. Nonetheless, thiswas still high enough for the International Coalition for Human Rights in the Philippines, a global network of organizations campaigning for human righs and Filipino people’s rights, in cooperation with Permanent People’s Tribunal and the International Association of Democratic Lawyers (IADL) to bring a case against him and his imperialist master US President Barack Obama. The trial was held in Washington, DC on July 16-18 2015 and, found them guilty of all the charges brought against them: gross and systematic violations of 1)civil and political rights, especially but not limited to extrajudicial killings, disappearances, massacre and torture, arbitrary arrests and detention as well as other vicious, brutal and systematic abuses and attacks on the basic democratic rights of the people; 2) human rights, particularly economic, social and cultural rights of the Filipino people through the imposition of neoliberal “free market” globalization to exploit the people; transgression of their economic sovereignty and plunder of their national patrimony and economy; and attacks on the people’s livelihoods and the destruction of the environment; and 3) the rights of the people to national self-determination and liberation through the imposition of the US war of terror and US military intervention; as well as the perpetration of crimes against humanity and war crimes; misrepresentations of the people’s right to national liberation and self-determination as “terrorism” and the baseless “terrorist” listing of individuals, organizations and other entities by the US and other governments.
Generally propaganda and protest art from 1992 to 2016, remained the same in substance and variety. An abundance of books of poetry and short story collections, conferences and assembly proceedings, commemorative volumes of major and minor national and regional organizations were published. This particular period is very well docunmented in books, pamphlets, videos, internet blogs, and others.
Altermidya <http://altermidya.net> (People’s Alternative Media Network) which describes itself as a network of independent and progressive media outfits, institutions and individuals was established in 2014. It conducts regular newscasts, commentaries on issues and media production training among mass activists and mass organizations. Tudla Productions <http://tudlaproductions.org>, a multimedia production outfit has been reactivated since 2011 to produce progressive and revolutionary videos reporting on current issues and cultural activities among the masses.
Mass demonstrations, though not as large as those during the Marcos fascist regime and Aquino I regime were enlivened with placards, tarpaulin, streamers, t-shirts, and elaborate effigies. Movies and documentaties were made; the Green Guerrillas a film on the NPA campaign in Mindanao for the protection of the environment and the culture of the indigenous people, released in 1995. The feature length documentary on the Philippine-American war in 1899, Memories of a forgotten war, was produced in 2001. Sa Liyab ng Libong Sulo, the documentary based on PSR to mark the 30th NDF founding anniversary was released in 2003. So many more video documentaries and some feature fims followed from 2003 onward, including The Guerrilla is a Poet (2013) and Ang Kababaihan ng Malolos (2014).
Theatrical productions on the history of the national-democratic movement were also produced, among them Kalibre45 (2004) and the more elaborate intermedia production Ang Mandirigma’y Makata, ang Makata’y Mandirigma (2015) and recorded in a video.
5. Duterte regime: 2016-present
A major victory of the revolutionary movement in the Duterte period is the holding of the Party Congress in the fourth quarter of 2016, which was ceremonially capped with the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the victory of the Great October or the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia.
Party cadres and members representing the regional committees, staff organs and departments assembled to strengthen the Party’s unity, amend its program and constitution based on accumulated victories and lessons; and elect a new set of leaders. The theme “Greater unity, greater victories,” guided the Congress in reviewing the Party’s 48 year history, taking stock of the current objective and subjective conditions and reaffirming the Party’s determination to advance the national democratic revolution to greater heights.
It updated the the Party’s Program for a People’s Democratic Revolution, presenting an updated critique of the semicolonial and semifeudal social system, with particular attention to the post-Marcos succession of pseudo-democratic regimes, the worsening forms of oppression and exploitation of the broad masses of workers and peasants and the deteriorating socio-economic conditions of the Filipino people in almost four decades under the neoliberal regime.
The Congress took a significant step to ensure a Party leadership that is vibrant, closely linked with the lower levels of leadership and capable of leading the practical work and day-to-day tasks of the Party, especially in waging revolutionary armed struggle against the reactionary state through the combination of senior Party members with the young and junior Party cadres to ensure the ideological, political and organizational training of a new generation of Party leaders who will be at the helm of the Party in the coming years.
With renewed vigor, the Party is entirely capable of confronting the challenges posed by the US-Duterte fascist-terrorost regime. It is already well on the way to frustrating the regime’s Oplan Kapayapaan whose objective is to destroy the revolutionary movement through violence and deception. Having survived and prevailed over so many failed US-instigated and supported Oplans from Marcos’ down to Aquino II, the Party and the people are confident and certain that Duterte’s Oplan would fail miserably and the national democratic movement would grow in strength and move closer to victory.
When Duterte made a feint at peace negotiations with the NDFP as soon as he assumed office, the Party saw through his real intent and gave guidance to the NDFP negotiating panel. It became clear after the third meeting held in Rome that what Duterte really wants is the surrender and destruction of the revolutionary movement; not social, economic and political reforms to address the roots of the armed conflict. Now it is entirely clear that what he desperately wants to the point of lunacy, is absolute power through a fascist dictatorship with him as dictator for the rest of his life, and perpetuated through his children so that they can continue grabbing wealth through bureaucratic corruption.
The Party and the legal mass movement are growing. New alliances are forming to intensify the struggle against the tyranny and state terrorism of the Duterte regime. The Movement Against Tyranny (MAT) is gradually gaining ground and needs solidarity from peoples all over the world. Organizations of Filipinos abroad, must expand on existing formations and initiatives and strengthen themselves to build a broad united front of solidarity organizations to expose, oppose and fight the Duterte terrorist regime.
The International People’s Tribunal held in Brussels, Belgium September 18-19, 2018, found Duterte, US President Donald Trump and the US government guilty.]of gross and systematic violations of [all the charges brought against them: 1) human rights, particularly civil and political rights, with focus on extrajudicial killings, massacres, trumped-up charges, arbitrary arrests and detentions, the imposition of martial rule in Mindanao; 2) human rights, particularly economic, social and cultural rights, with focus on labor, peasant, women, and migrants rights, and the rights to education, livelihood and housing, through the imposition of neoliberal policies and other imperialist impositions to exploit the people; transgression of their economic sovereignty and national patrimony; and various forms of economic plunder; and 3) the rights of the people to national self-determination and development and violations of international humanitarian law, with focus on attacks on civilian communities and schools, massacres of hors d’ combat, “terrorist” labeling and profiling, destructive mining and environmental degradation, and crimes against humanity; and misrepresentations and attacks on the people’s right to national liberation.
Using this document, the campaign must broaden to include lobbying in parliaments, United Nations agencies and other relevant international bodies to act on the various aspects of the criminal acts and violations.
There are more media channels available now and their use must be maximized. I visited a lot of websites of mass organizations and discovered that the majority are not updated, have scarce significant educational and propaganda materials, tend to be rather parochial in their coverage of issues, and insipid and uninteresting. Even major NDF member organizations only have Facebook pages with scarce content. We would expect KM having millennials for its members to be internet savvy in reaching out to the youth but it is not. Only some of its regional chapters have facebook accounts.
If the aim is building the broadest united front for the ouster of the Duterte fascist-terorist dictatorship, the NDF member organizations need to improve on their record in using the fastest methods of communications and propaganda to reach out to the general public. Of course, the internet is not enough. Nothing beats going among the masses, conducting social investigations for the purpose of arousing, organizing and mobilizing the backward sections of the public to join in the endeavor to oust Duterte and his corrupt bureaucrat capitalist clique of plunderers and murderers.
It is heartening that special formations of artists against Duterte tyranny such as RESBAK (Respond and Break the Silence Against the Killings), SAKA (Sama-Samang Artista para sa Kilusang Agraryo), LODI and Artist Forces of the Philippines (AFP), as well as existing artist organizations and collectives such as the revitalized Concerned Artists of the Philippines are bringing art and culture to the revolutionary mass movement and into their mass actions and demonstrations in well designed giant tarpaulins, streamers and posters with well couched slogans in brilliant colors and in elaborate depictions of Duterte’s tyranny and terror, effigies reflecting the monstrosity of his criminal acts burning and aflame at the height or end of massive demonstrations, spectacular but ephemeral images signifying the people’s victory and recorded for posterity on video posted on the internet to heighten the anger of the masses and inspire them further to resist and fight.
Many cultural activists of today were shaped and tempered in the struggle against the Marcos fascist dictatorship when both repression and resistance were most intense. The practitioners of resistance and revolutionary art and literature produced exemplary works of great sociopolitical and revolutionary significance as they drew inspiration from the heroic struggles of the people. Since then, the revolutionary movement has accumulated their songs, dances, poetry, drama, short stories, novels, plays, playlets and skits, video documentaries, movies, painting, posters, streamers, murals, sculpture, carvings, handicrafts, etc., reflecting the sufferings, the struggle, the achievements and the victories of the people against the enemy and which are still very relevant today.
Now, we see extreme repression under the current regime several times worse than that of the Marcos fascist dictatorship. Duterte fascism surpasses Marcos’ in infamy: tens of thousands of people massacred or tortured to death, and intended still to be brought to millions, massive impoverishment of the people through the anti-people economic, financial and fiscal policies, utter subservience to wishes and demands of two imperialist masters to satisfy his own greed for wealth to the detriment of the people’s sovereignty and national patrimony, and so forth.
Would the intensity of the people’s resistance against this evil regime produce, shape and temper new cultural activists to create great literary and art works from all the media available to them, surpassing in quantity, quality and variety those of their predecessors? Can we discern signs that they would? The new cultural activists born of the struggle against the evils of Duterte have a lot to learn from their predecessors’ experiences and works.
Although the mass street actions and demonstrations have have not yet reached the levels reached even only during the Estrada regime, they are now now picking up. The leaders and cadres of the Party need to exert more efforts to revive the mass movement to levels reached in the struggle to topple the US-Marcos fascist dictatorship, considering that the current regime has by far already surpassed the latter by its extreme violations of human rights and people’s rights. Using the internet, the revolutionary propagandists and artists today can very easily overwhelm the rants and raves of Duterte and his paid hacks with their bots that spout nothing but senseless curses.
Cultural workers and artists now must take up such protest themes as agrarian problems, foreign economic domination, export labor, exploitation of women and children, and ecological damage, while they express their aspirations for genuine freedom and combat the neoliberal attacks on progressive Philippine culture. For example, the ongoing struggle of Tanggol Wika or Alyansa ng mga Tagapagtanggol ng Wikang Filipino (Alliance of Defenders of Filipino) to restore the subject of Filipino language and Philippine literature that was removed from the core curriculum for college courses need to be supported. As Rizal wrote, “While a people preserves its language; it preserves the marks of liberty.”
I would like to cite a successful and vibrant propaganda campaign worthy of emulation. One Billion Rising (OBR <https://www.onebillionrising.org>) came on the international scene in 2012 and found its way to the Philippines. It started as a movement of feminist or gender identity politics. In 2014, by focusing on justice for all survivors of gender violence, it escalated the demand for justice to revolution, exposing the root causes of violence; and calling in 2015 for a “Rise for Revolution” demanding accountability and system change.
The theme of revolution, solidarity, and resistance continued through 2016 to 2018, from adding focus on marginalized women, solidarity against exploitation of women and girls through layers of exploitation, the patriarchal structure, economic exploitation and oppression within capitalism, imperialism, colonization, environmental plunder and war–to unity against the fierce escalation of fascist, imperialist, neo-liberal attacks on the lives of people around the world with the rise of more anti-women, anti-people leaders and governments all over the the world. Now for 2019 the call for resistance continues against fascism and tyranny.
The OBR global risings looked beyond itself and engaged with other social movements to build deep and vigorous solidarity everywhere for the advocacy of women’s rights, the protection and defense of indigenous lands and the rights of indigenous peoples, struggle against fascism and tyranny, discrimination and racism, environmental plunder and destruction, corporate greed, economic violence, poverty, state brutality and repression, war and militarism.
Women from all countries worldwide responded to the calls and acted on them. The OBR makes very effective use of the internet. Its website is distinctively slick, well maintained and its contents constantly updated with news, blogs on women’s oppression and important issues affecting the lives of women. A very broad spectrum of women in the Philippines have since 2014 actively participated in the campaigns. It forms a very broad cultural united front, which although focused on the issue of gender, encompasses all the fundamental issues confronting humanity–from gender oppression to class war and environmental plunder. Their cultural activities, such as theatre and other intermedia productions in between the risings presents excellent opportunities for our cultural workers to expand their reach and organize multimedia productions.
The evolution of OBR from gender to comprehensive anti-imperialist and anti reactionary concerns owes much to its dynamically creative Filipino international coordinator Monique Wilson, activist, theatre director, performer as actor & singer, campaigner, organizer. OBR presents an excellent vehicle and opportunity for expanding and consolidating our cultural and propaganda work. This means further organizing and education work deepen revolutionary commitment and militancy among the masses.
Let me end with a quote from my concluding exhortation to cultural workers in my keynote address to the ILPS 5th International Assembly Commission No. 14 Workshop on the Imperialist Cultural Offensive :
Let us train ourselves to understand and deal with facts and events, as these unfold in the real-world conditions experienced by the masses. Let us not confine ourselves in ivory towers, honing our individual imaginations and crafts, away from the real world and the masses, but let us study current events, study history, immerse ourselves with the masses in their struggles, and in the course of our struggle develop, together with them the peoples´s culture based on concrete realities.
Let us all contribute our utmost to the peoples’ unified cultural offensive against imperialism, aware that its overwhelming dominance necessitates strong organizations with strong leaderships guided by the ideology, politics and methods of a party of the most advanced and most productive class in our society today. Especially in this age of the Internet and multimedia, let us also help build powerful alternative and counter-media—powerful in that they are able to support the people’s struggles and effectively amplify the people’s voice, and in turn find resonance in and draw concrete support from the masses in their millions. It is not enough for us to compete with the imperialists in such superficial terms such as trending hashtags, viral Youtube views, and TV ratings.
More important to us are the long-term results, measured in the sustained growth by leaps and bounds of the anti-imperialist mass organizations and mass movement at the national and international levels. Let us help build many channels, flowing in one general direction. An apt analogy is that of the people’s struggles as many small rivulets eventually conjoining into one endless current of strength to swamp the cultural bastions of the enemy.
The essential task of progressive and revolutionary forces all over the world today is developing unity, cooperation and coordination of all peoples and raising their level of struggle to weaken and defeat imperialism and reaction, in particular against imperialist plunder and war led by US imperialism, the foremost terrorist power, towards building a society that is just, peaceful and progressive.
https://www.philippinerevolution.info/statement/on-the-pen-and-the-gun/
Juliet de Lima | Chairperson
Reciprocal Working Committee Socio-Economic Reforms
National Democratic Front of the Philippines
January 02, 2019
The CPP’s 50-year Cultural Achievements
Keynote to Golden Festival
The ideas of the ruling class are in every epoch the ruling ideas, i.e. the class which is the ruling material force of society, is at the same time its ruling intellectual force. The class which has the means of material production at its disposal, has control at the same time over the means of mental production, so that thereby, generally speaking, the ideas of those who lack the means of mental production are subject to it.–Karl Marx, The German Ideology
Honored guests, comrades and friends!
I am honored to be able to address you today in celebration of the founding anniversary of the Reestablishment of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), which completed its 50th year three days ago. It is still fitting to have the celebration today because the Congress was still going on finalizing the documents and the program for distribution to the general membership.
My address on the 50-year CPP’s cultural achievements was intended to be short and sweet because Joma has written much on the subject in “Revolutionary Literature and Art in the Philippines from 1960s to the Present,” https://josemariasison.org/revolutionary-literature-and-art-in-the-philippines-from-the-1960s-to-the-present/. What I mean by CPP cultural achievements is the impact and influence of the Party’s cultural and artistic endeavors on Philippine society and the Filipino people’s revolutionary struggle, but not that all works cited are by Party members.
To paraphrase the great Mao Zedong, successful revolutions employ two weapons: the pen and the gun, the cultural and the military. “To defeat the enemy, we rely primarily on the people’s army wielding the gun. But this is not enough, we must also have an army wielding the pen.”
It is significant that Mao mentions the pen first before the gun. Our experience shows that we must first arouse before we can organize and then mobilize people, whether it is in taking up the pen, or the gun, or further, the gun and the pen. Reviewing its 50 years of uninterrupted revolutionary struggle, we can say that the CPP has been successful in wielding both weapons,
The CPP takes the stand that even before wielding the gun, it must start wielding the pen. Its progressive precursors understood this well from the the historical experience of the Filipino people. In the old democratic revolution, our revolutionary ancestors waged the First Propaganda Movement. With pens, they lobbied for reforms in the Spanish Cortes (legislature) pressing for the recognition of the Philippines as a province of Spain equal to its provinces in the Iberian Peninsula. Graciano Lopez Jaena, Marcelo H. del Pilar and Jose Rizal published La Solidaridad. Rizal wrote the novels Noli me Tangere and El Filibusterismo exposing the exploited and oppressed conditions of Philippine natives under Spanish yoke.
Having failed in the reform movement, Rizal returned home and founded La Liga Filipina, which Andres Bonifacio joined before founding the Katipunan to finally fight for independence with the gun.
When the Katipunan opted to wield the gun, it did not drop the pen. It wielded the pen to power the gun. Bonifacio and Emilio Jacinto (Dimas Ilaw) collaborated on writing the Kartilya ng Katipunan, , a primer on how Katipunan members should conduct themselves in the fight for freedom. Bonifacio wrote the poem “Pag-ibig sa Tinubuang Lupa” to instill patriotism, defense of and struggle to free the motherland at the price of sacrifices. Jacinto edited the Katipunan organ Kalayaan, wrote manifestoes, essays and poems on freedom, work, faith, and patriotism to facilitate recruitment of members for the armed revolution, and inspire and guide the people.
The Second or New Democratic Propaganda Movement (1959-1968)
The CPP precursors were at first informal and voluntary discussion groups, well read in liberal, progressive and Marxist-Leninist-Maoist literature (Marxist philosophy, political economy and revolutionary practice) who whiled away their time to discuss ideas that they could not find in classrooms. They formed small university-based groups and associations—put up their cultural, literary and artistic instruments, such as the irregular and financially unstable little magazines (Fugitive Review, Cogent, and Diliman Observer) and rode on or used existing publications such as the UP student papers Philippine Collegian (weekly), Collegian Folio (monthly) and Literary Apprentice of the UP Writers’ Club, which had large circulation (as these catered to the UP student body and alumni) and the quarterly Diliman Review for their creative production of progressive propaganda literature, such as essays, poetry and literary criticism, still much influenced by progressive liberal ideas.
When the Student Cultural Association of the UP (SCAUP) was organized, its propaganda vehicles expanded to include frequent forums and symposia in addition to the formal and informal discussion groups to raise the political and ideological consciousness of its members and associates. It had guest speakers from outside UP and progressive visiting foreigners. The subjects included the semi-feudal and semicolonial domestic conditions, imperialism, socialism, the Cold War and other world developments that could not be found in the university curricula. These discussion groups predated the campus teach-ins popularized by the Students for a Democratic Society from 1965 to 1968 to oppose the US war of aggression in Vietnam.
SCAUP’s initiatives served to break through the dominant climate of anti-communism flowing from the US McCarthyite witch hunt and the religious sectarianism of the feudal-patriarchal and comprador culture into the university and the country. It served as a university within the university. Its objective of continuing the unfinished Philippine revolution went beyond the UP confines and liberal parameters. With the defeat and almost total silence of the old merger party of the communist and socialist parties in most of the 1950s, SCAUP picked up the call of Claro Mayo Recto, a progressive nationalist and anti-imperialist, for a second propaganda movement but went beyond his call for nationalism to adopt a socialist perspective.
SCAUP also formed regular clandestine study groups to study such works as the Communist Manifesto, Dialectics of Nature, Materialism and Empirio Criticism, Wages, Prices and Profit, Mao’s Selected Works, “On Contradiction” and “On Practice”. Some like Edberto Villegas and a few others ventured to read and discuss Das Capital. Ideological work was very important because among the activists not a few were somehow influenced by aesthetic theories and works adhering to currents as art for art’s sake, petty bourgeois self-titillation, mystical flights or art supposedly transcending classes but truly in the service of the exploiting classes.
SCAUP cooperated with the UP Journalism Club, the Philippine Collegian, the UP Writers’ Club and the fraternities and sororities to promote its political line and advocacies, such as the fight against the anticommunist witchhunt undertaken by the Committee on Anti-Filipino Activities. Its members associated with progressive elders like the revolutionary poet and novelist Amado V. Hernandez, Jose Lansang, Renato Constantino, Andres Cristobal Cruz and former members of the old merger party. They connected with trade unions and built contacts with student leaders in the downtown universities such as Far Eastern University, University of the East, Manuel L Quezon University, Philippine College of Commerce, Lyceum of the Philippines and others.
An attempt was made to build a pre-party formation, the Alliance for Socialist Action (ALSA) consisting of activist leaders among them Satur Ocampo, Carlos Padilla and others. It is unfortunate that we have not found an extant copy of its Manifesto that Joma drafted and I typed in multiple layers of bond paper with carbon paper in between each. The project was dropped when some of its prospective founders joined the Progressive Party of the Philippines or Party for Philippine Progress, actually a CIA-instigated pro-US religio-sectarian reactionary party put up to oppose the Filipino first policy of then President Carlos Garcia.
By 1963, the CPP precursors were able to establish Progressive Publications to publish the Progressive Review, which was relatively more stable than their earlier little magazines and the book Struggle for National Democracy (SND) in 1967. However, they continued to use the Philippine Collegian and from time to time liberal publications such as the Philippines Free Press, Kislap-Graphic to which they submitted their literary works, press releases, statements and manifestoes. They made friends and recruited journalists and writers.
The writing tools were still the typewriter, the mimeograph machine-rented or owned, for periodikit & leaflets, and of course paints and brushes for posters, placards and streamers.
After Kabataang Makabayan (KM) was established in 1964, the national-democratic mass movement grew all over the country. Emulating Andres Bonifacio and Emilio Jacinto, KM had a cultural bureau which sought to organize writers and artists,and performers. The composer Felipe de Leon composed the music for the KM anthem. Amado V. Hernandez’s Kung Tuyo na ang Luha mo and other poems were set to music, and performed in dance and recitation.
The KM systematized and conducted cultural work consistently. More groups were formed. Social investigation and mass integration teams doubled as cultural teams to perform in factories, urban and rural communities, college and high school campuses where more performers were recruited and organized to popularize revolutionary songs and other art forms.
Doing propaganda and cultural work among the masses necessitated the use of the national language and the local lingua franca. Propaganda and other educational materials were translated into Tagalog. English continued to be used for Progressive Review and other publications, including the book Struggle for national democracy published in 1967. The essays in this book and statements and manifestoes were translated into Tagalog for distribution to the masses. Flyers and leaflets were printed in both Tagalog and English.
KM campaigned for the national language as the principal medium of education and literary development. University professors and instructors, high school teachers, and writers in English were encouraged to use, write, and conduct discussions in Pilipino. Tagalog and other local languages were used in the conduct of propaganda and agitation among the toiling masses.
The cultural and propaganda performing teams conducted systematic social investigation, mass integration, propaganda and organizing among the youth in urban and rural communities, in factories and school campuses (including high school) targeted for organizing into KM chapters. Aside from staging performances, they conducted discussion groups and meetings where urgent issues of the day were taken up in addition to the educational materials they brought with them, consisting of the KM Constitution and Program and mimeographed parts of SND. The schools for national democracy were organized.
KM also stressed the importance of studying the works of great Marxist-Leninist-Maoist masters and other revolutionary literature among activists who were honed to conduct social investigation, integrate with the masses and put what they learn into practice, in the spirit of following Mao’s mass line of learning from the masses to be able to teach the masses.
In their mass work, activists learned at first hand the concrete manifestations of the evils of US imperialism and their subservient domestic ruling classes of landlords and compradors; and the double exploitation and oppression these imposed on the toiling masses. They learned how to expose these evils, to imbibe the aspirations of the masses for a better life; and work out with them the tactics of fighting the manifestations of these evils in their localities. Thus they were able to produce propaganda, literature and art of social and revolutionary significance that easily resonated with the masses and inspired them to join the movement.
The CPP Reestablishment and Advance: the First Quarter Storm to Martial Law
Towards the CPP’s founding in 1968, intensive ideological, political and organizational work were conducted. Aside from drafting and discussing basic documents, including the rectification document, Rectify Errors and Rebuild the Party, in preparation for the Congress of Reestablishment, revolutionary literary and artistic works were produced to inspire the masses.
Philippine Society and Revolution was written shortly after the Party reestablishment, presenting from the standpoint of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism the main strands of Philippine history, the basic problems of the Filipino people, the prevailing social structure and the strategy and tactics and class logic of the people’s democratic revolution. First mimeographed in the last quarter of 1969, it was the main study material for the Party’s primary course but its circulation went well beyond the Party as this was published serially in the Philippine Collegian under the title Philippine Crisis and Revolution; the Collegian editor Antonio Tagamolila being a clandestine Party member. Its first printed edition was published in the third quarter or 1970, followed by the first foreign edition published by Ta Kung Pao in Hong Kong.
The central translation bureau was organized upon the the Party reestablishment. But the work went full blast only in the early part of 1970 when we able to organize several groups to translate the Communist Manifesto, Mao’s Selected Military Writings and Selected Readings from the Works of Mao Zedong, Lenin’s State and Revolution and Marx’s Wages, Prices and Profit, which were urgently needed for the Party secondary course.
With the founding of the CPP in 1968, cultural work became much more systematized. The CPP more firmly wielded the pen and, shortly after, the gun. The cultural, the propaganda and the translation bureaus were organized under the Education Department. More cultural groups were organized in the regions, provinces and communities . NPA propaganda teams were dispatched to start social investigation, conduct mass work and build the mass base for more guerrilla operations. Among the first groups they organized were those of cultural workers (painters, reciters of poems, actors, musicians, singers, dancers, etc) especially among the youth and the women in the communities.
1. Pre-Martial Law and the FQS
Cultural work was already well developed by the time the First Quarter Storm (FQS) broke out. Groups such as KM’s Panday Sining, Samahang Demokratiko ng Kabataan’s (SDK) Gintong Silahis and of the Philippine College of Commerce’s (*now Polytechnic University of the Philippines) Kamanyang did outstanding work among youth organizations in Manila and became models for youth and student cultural groups that proliferated in the provinces and regions.
Performance groups arose in the late 1960s to present solo and choral singing, instrumental music, poetry recitation, dances and skits and to create illustrations on publications, posters and walls in order to enliven and invigorate the meetings, mass protests and workers’ strikes.
Writers and artists organized themselves. Panulat para sa Kaunlaran ng Sambayanan (Pen for the propserity of the People-PAKSA) was founded in 1971 by creative writers in Pilipino & English and other major Philippine languages, who were determined to serve the Filipino people.
Fine Arts and Architecture students and young professionals from UP and other universities founded the Nagkakaisang Progresibong mga Artista at Arkitekto (United Progressive Artists and Architects-NPAA) also in 1971. Most of them were members either of SCAUP or KM and had been very much involved in propaganda work in either of these organizations.
Many creative writers and artists joined the underground and armed revolutionary movement and created more works about the dire social conditions, the sacrifices and struggles of the Filipino people. Literature and art flourished most among the NPA propaganda and cultural teams with the masses in the countryside. The central and regional publications of the CPP, NPA, and NDF published songs, poems, short stories and illustrations. Cultural organizations published, performed or exhibited the literary and artistic works of their members.
Songs, poetry recitations and educational lectures were popularized through audio cassette recorders and players. Revolutionary songs were recorded and reproduced for distribution to the provinces and regions for popularization. These were performed in celebrations and community gatherings in urban and rural communities. Primary and elementary school children sang them while at play.
The central publishing house was established as was the Revolutionary School of Mao Zedong Thought. It took charge of producing the stencils of Ang Bayan and other central CPP publications for distribution to the regions and more importantly for collating, selecting, formatting, printing and distributing the seven-volume Philippine Selections of the Selected Works of Chairman Mao Zedong. The central publishing house had two mimeographing machines and several IBM ball-type electric typewriters to cope with the great volume of printing to be done.
The portable V-type silkscreen printing was developed to decentralize the printing of Party and other publications for education and propaganda. This was also used for producing art works. The stencils were produced centrally for better quality control and sent out to the regional committees for reproduction (using the v-type portable printers) and distribution to the Party membership.
2. Martial Law: from 1972 until the fall of Marcos in 1986
When martial law was proclaimed, artists and creative writers joined the underground and became Red fighters and at the same time practiced their craft. Their works were published in the revolutionary publications.
Many writers and artists became martyrs, and many more were imprisoned. (The latter were the lucky ones because quite a number were killed while fighting or captured and tortured to death.)
Fascist repression took a toll as Party cadres and members were captured and imprisoned. It was futile for the fascist regime to detain and silence them. But neither prison walls nor barbed wire fences could silence them. In prison, they reflected on their experiences, maintaining their strong ideological viewpoint and political standpoint, nurturing and polishing their craft with even more revolutionary relevance.
Arts and crafts flourished and flowed out of prisons to celebrate and inspire the struggling masses in songs, poetry, paintings, drawings, carvings, and myriads of handicrafts from materials that could be found in prison. Though they lost grip of the gun, the imprisoned cultural activists firmly grasped the pen to inspire their comrades and friends outside wielding both the gun and the pen.
The poems in Prison and Beyond were written in an isolation cell in Fort Bonifacio and smuggled out by the author’s defense lawyer, passed on to definite activists and sent abroad to be published by Epifanio San Juan, who led a signature campaign of prominent writers and artists all over the world for the author’s freedom.
Prisons all over the country became crucibles of artistic creations, especially because despite the deprivations, these were ideal venues for reflection (even for those in isolation cells) and for continuous regular revolutionary education. ( songs, poems paintings, drawings, carvings, pins, cards, handicrafts and others). Their works could be brought outside in various open and clandestine ways; and were sold and circulated far and wide; to help boost the spirit of antifascist and anti-imperialist international solidarity among solidarity groups in Europe and North America and to a lesser extent domestically among allies and friends.
Among the outstanding songs created in prison were the lyrics and composition of Kay Taas ng Pader by Aloysius “Ochie” Baes, Awit sa Kasal by Jose Luneta and the music of Andres Bonifacio’s Pag-ibig sa Tinubuang Lupa by Luis Jorque in Bicutan. The Bicutan political detainees also wrote and performed plays on the struggles of the workers, peasants and the urban poor. They staged under direction of Behn Cervantes Bonifacio Ilagan’s Pagsambang Bayan, the Sinakulong Bayan or street version of the Passion of Christ and Aurelio Tolentino’s Kahapon, Ngayon at Bukas (a play written 115 years ago in 1903 on the struggle against US imperialism (Bagong Sibol) with a look back on Spanish colonialism (Halimaw) and China’s economic dominance (Haring Bata) relevant then and still today.
Despite intense repression, cultural and propaganda groups and cultural work proliferated. Elaborate stage presentations and socially relevant mainstream movies were produced by such directors as Lino Brocka, Ishmael Bernal, Behn Cervantes and Mike de Leon. The movies had popular stars and were box office hits. Among these were Brocka’s Bayan Ko Kapit sa Patalim (My Country, Grip the Knife), Insiang, Manila, sa mga Kuko ng Liwanag (In the Claws of Light), and Tinimbang ka Ngunit Kulang (You were Weighed but Found Short; Bernal’s Nunal sa Tubig (Mole in Water), Himala (Miracle), and Hinugot sa Langit (Pulled Out from the Sky); and and Mike de Leon’s Batch ’81, Sister Stella L. and Kisapmata (Twinkling of an Eye). Many won national and international awards.
Graphic and visual artists organized themselves. Pablo Baens Santos, Antipas Delotavo, Renato Habulan, Papo de Asis, Orlando Castillo, Edgar Fernandez, Al Manrique, Neil Doloricon and Jose Tence Ruiz organized Kaisahan in 1976, which defined artists’ role in society and produced works depicting the oppression of workers, peasant and urban poor by imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism.
Cultural groups and organizations proliferated and their various productions increased. Anniversaries of the Party, NPA and NDF were celebrated with much cultural fanfare. Revolutionary songs and poems were recorded in cassette tapes and distributed to the regions and provinces for popularization such that one would know the guerrila areas by hearing children singing.
Anthologies of literary works and songs were published in the Philippines and abroad, under the direction of the Party’s National Commission on Culture. The Instityut sa Panitikan at Sining ng Sambayanan (Institute for the People’s Literature and Art-IPASA) published Akdang Pandigmang Bayan, Ulos; and Dare to Struggle, Dare to Win(1973); Hulagpos(1981); Mga Tula ng Rebolusyong Pilipino 1972-80; and more.
Literary works circulated among the people. Lightning cultural performances were held even in city centers. Protest graffiti, periodikits and sticker-posters of various sizes could be found on walls, waiting sheds, and inside buses and jeepneys. A collective of creative writers and illustrators were able to illustrated version of Philippine Society and Revolution in Tagalog translation. Prison & Beyond 1985 (JMS prison poems mostly) was published in 1985 and won the Manila Writers’ Award and later the Southeast Asian Write Award.
National Midweek Magazine (1984-1991)and New Progressive Review; together with Philippine Collegian, Diliman Review, as well as campus publications continued to criticize the fascist regime and reported on the state of the national-democratic struggle and on issues confronting the Filipino people.
T-shirts with slogans and creatively designed placards and streamers, to huge murals and paper mache effigies were displayed at big marches and rallies. Protest music and street theater became widespread and popular through many small musical and theater groups based in unions, urban poor communities and schools, and through the more regularized or professionalized ones such as Philippine Educational Theatre Association (PETA). The resurgence of revolutionary art in the urban areas ran parallel to the constantly rising artistic and other cultural activities in the countryside.
To this day, the richest sources of literary and artistic works of revolutionary writers and artists are the central and regional publications and literary journals of the CPP, the NPA and the NDF. They publish songs, poems, short stories, illustrations and comic strips, aside from disseminating news and information about the revolutionary forces and the people in their respective areas. For an enumeration of these publications, you may refer to https://josemariasison.org/revolutionary-literature-and-art-in-the-philippines-from-the-1960s-to-the-present/
The best known central publications are: Ulos (literary journal of ARMAS-NDF), Sine Proletaryo (video production-CPP Information Bureau), Kalayaan (Freedom-KM), Liyab (Flame-KAGUMA) and Malayang Pilipina (-Free Filipina-MAKIBAKA).
In Northern Luzon: Baringkuas (Breaking out-Cagayan Valley), Dagitab (Spark-ARMAS-TK), Dangadang (Struggle-Northwest Luzon), Ramut (Root- revolutionary edication and culture -Norhwestern Luzon) and Rissik (Light Rays – revolutionary cultural journal-Cagayan Valley).
In Central Luzon:Himagsik (Revolt), Inang Larangan (Mother Field-cultural anthology, Central Luzon), Lakas ng Masa (Strength of the Masses-Central Luzon), Dyaryo Pasulong (Forward newspaper-Revolutionary People of Mount Sierra Madre),
In Southern Tagalog region: Diklap (Spark-South Quezon-Bondoc Peninsula) and Alab (Flame-a revolutionary publication for the masses in Mindoro), In Bikol region: Gerilya (NPA Bicol Regional Command) Punla (Seedling-literary publication-Bicol Region), Silyab (Flame – CPP-NPA in Bicol), and Ang Kusog (Strength – Masbate)
In the Visayas, Ang Panghimakas (Struggle – Negros Island), Ang Budyong (Trumpet – Leonardo Panaligan Command-Central Negros), Daba-daba (Panay), Sublak (revolutionary cultural magazine-Panay) Pakigbisog (Struggle – Central Visayas)
In Mindanao, Ang Kahilukan (NDF in Northern Mindanao), Asdang ( Advance – NDF-Far South Mindanao), Lingkawas (Liberation – CPP-Northwestern Mindanao), Pasa-bilis (NDF-Southern Mindanao), Sulong! (Advance – NDFP-Mindanao).
The CPP and the national democratic movement in both urban and rural areas gained momentum and grew in size and strength during the pre-martial law and martial law rule of Marcos, despite the counterinsurgency strategy using the triad concepts of intelligence, psywar and combat operations under the AFP Oplan Katatagan.
Marcos’ assassination of Aquino led to an upsurge in the antifascist struggle that before long convinced the US policy makers to drop Marcos, encourage a fraction of the military to organize themselves into the Reform the Armed Forces Movement (RAM) against Marcos and support the anti-Marcos reactionaries to try to drive a wedge between the rapidly growing alliance between anti-Marcos reactionaries and the revolutionary forces. Marcos followed the US pressure to call for a snap election.
The US-supported opposition candidate was Aquino’s widow, Corazon Cojuangco Aquino, who since 1983 after her husband’s assassination had been working closely with the revolutionary mass movement. Unfortunately the CPP made a tactical error by calling for an election boycott on the ground that Marcos would stack the cards and win the elections anyway. Thus the Party-led mass movement or advanced section of the broad masses missed an opportunity to take advantage of the anti-Marcos electoral campaign as venue for reaching the greater number of the masses to raise popular consciousness from the usual politicking issues to more fundamental issues affecting people’s lives and to raise their struggle to the level of necessary reforms against the US imperialists and the worst among local exploiting classes of compradors, landlords and bureaucrat capitalists that had further enriched themselves through land-grabbing and corruption with Marcos in power.
Indeed Marcos won the elections using sheer fraud and intimidation. But this further so outraged the people that again they took to the streets. RAM took this as a signal and attempted a coup against Marcos. However, they were foiled by the Marcos loyalists in the military. Fortunately for the RAM, the mass movement combining with the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (Church) led by Jaime Cardinal Sin and the Aquino supporters came to their rescue in the EDSA Uprising that led more of the military to abandon Marcos. Finally the Marcos fascist dictatorship fell.
3. Cory Aquino’s regime: 1986 until 1992
Marcos’ fall catapulted Corazon Aquino to the presidency. She declared a revolutionary government and made good on her word of freeing all political prisoners, against opposition from the US and the military. The goodwill built through the united front with the anti-Marcos reactionaries during the anti-Marcos struggle lasted for a while. Rumors were floated that a national reconciliation commission would be put up having the CPP founding chairman as head or that representatives of the revolutionary forces would be appointed to the Constitutional Commission to draft the prospective 1987 Constitution.
All these remained rumors as the US and the military were against having representatives of the revolutionary masses in these bodies and in other agencies of the government. However, three clandestine Party member became members of the Constitutional Commission. One of them was the movie director and revolutionary cultural activist Lino Brocka, who vigorously pushed for progressive reforms, especially in the field of art and culture but he resigned in protest when he saw that many of the policies adopted worked against the rights and interests of the Filipino people and took back to the streets and of course to directing social realist films such as Ora Pro Nobis that won him the Palm d’Or award and Gumapang Ka sa Lupak (Crawl in Mud).
Other progressive individuals that Aquino appointed and later removed or resigned were Joker Arroyo, her first executive secretary ; Augusto Bobit Sanchez, her Secretary of Labor blamed by the reactionaries for the many workers’ strikes and the growing strength of Kilusang Mayo Uno.
Ceasefire negotiations were supposed to graduate into peace negotiations of substantive issues but failed due to the opposition from Aquino’s US handlers and the military. Aquino proved to be putty in the hands of the military of which she was to be the commander-in-chief. The presidential security guards with some reinforcements carried out the Mendiola massacre of peasants demanding implementation of agrarian reform on January 22, 1987.
By February 1987, Aquino unsheathed the sword of war. Behind the bourgeois constitutional processes, militarization was intensified and the fascist repression of the basic masses and the progressive forces returned and continued to be widespread. In June 1987 there were the attempts to assassinate Buscayno, the former NPA chief; and shortly after, Dr. Nemesio Prudente the revolutionary patriot ex-president of the Philippine College of Commerce and cooperator in the NDF founding.
Then there were the assassinations of legal leaders of the national democratic movement, among them Lean Alejandro Bayan secretary general, on August 28, 1987 and Rolando Olalia, KMU and Partido ng Bayan chairman and his driver Leonor Alay-ay who were tortured, mutilated and murdered on November 12, 1987.
These atrocities were part of Aquino’s Oplan Lambat-Bitag I and II campaigns, with her AFP Chief of Staff and later Defense Chief, Gen. Fidel V. Ramos as chief implementor. The campaign did some damage to the revolutionary movement but failed to destroy its strong Marxist-Leninist-Maoist foundation even as the enemy campaign coincided with the growth of internal ideological and political errors within the CPP, the NPA, and the NDF, which loosened their grip on the gun as they did on the pen.
The loosened grip on the gun was ironical because, the revolutionary armed struggle had reached a new peak in 1983 as both the urban and the rural mass movement and revolutionary propaganda successfully supported the expansion efforts of the revolutionary movement in the countryside, especially the armed struggle.
Ironically, the successes in the armed struggle induced erroneous notions of quick victory deviating from the line and strategy of the people’s democratic revolution through protracted people’s war, of building strength in the countryside to surround the cities before the strategic offensive to seize the cities. Ideas of insurrectionism gained ground. The Party and NPA leadership adopted a so-called strategic counteroffensive (SCO) program, whipping up erroneous currents in various parts of the movement, including the premature and unsustainable ”regularization” of the guerrilla units from the main formation of platoons into companies and all-out armed partisan warfare, the obsession with “general paralyzing actions” and the reckless concept of peasant uprisings.
Operatives of the NPA were dispatched abroad as early as 1983 or 1984 to find connections to the Soviet Union, wishing to acquire from there the “heavy” weapons the leadership thought was necessary for raising the level of the armed struggle, even as the number of NPA fighters and the company formations had already started to decrease from 1986 onward as a result of Kampanyang Ahos hysteria and similar phenomena.
The inroads and propagation of big errors and deviations in almost a decade were traceable to the main weaknesses and shortcomings in building the Party ideologically, politically and organizationally. Within the Party, the comprehension and distinction of what is right and wrong on many issues regarding the theory, principles, history and practice of the movement got blurred.
The Education and Propaganda Commission and the National Instructions Bureau were dismantled in 1982. Education work at the basic and intermediate levels was passed on to the territorial commissions and the regional committees while the Executive Committee of the Central Committee assumed responsibility for the advanced course and the publication of a theoretical journal. But these works were not attended to as the cadres were too busy trying to build up the factors for their would-be insurrections and seizure of the seats of power and in the process dropped the pen. Attention to the ideological, political and organizational work at the basic levels and the localities slackened.
Liberalism ran rife, muddled thinking and confusion proliferated. Trotskyism and Gorbachovism made some inroads among some leading cadres, the Party’s revisionist critique were muted or stopped, leading later to groups splitting from the Party and the people’s army.
4. Four succeeding regimes: 1992-2016
The four following regimes (Ramos, Estrada, Arroyo and Aquino II) were not much different from each other. General Fidel Ramos succeeded Cory Aquino to the presidency (1992-1998). Although as Aquino’s chief of staff and later secretary of national defense, Ramos obstructed peace negotiations with the NDF, he moved and made feelers to the NDFP for the preparation and resumption of the peace negotiations. The Hague Joint Declaration was signed and approved on September 1, 1992. Two years and six months after he assumed the presidency, the GRP-NDFP peace negotiations formally opened in June 1995. Negotiations succeeded in completing the first substantive agenda with the signing of the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL) between the negotiating panels. However, Ramos as GRP principal did not sign it.
Notwithstanding the peace negotiations, Ramos continued his regime’s “counterinsurgency” plans under Oplan Bantay Laya III and IV. The peace negotiations came under the rubric of the low intensify conflict strategy of these operational plans. The NDFP competently managed the propaganda and educational aspects of the peace negotiations and continued to wage tit-for-tat struggles to counter every attempt of the reactionaries and the military to undermine and violate the agreements reached. The start of the Ramos administration coincided with the start of the Party rectification movement.
The significant losses in some parts of Party work–ranging from the Party itself to the people’s army, the united front and the mass movement, drove the leadership to reassess their experience and identify the reasons for the revolutionary movement to fall into such a threatening situation. They held the 10th Plenum which decided to conduct the Second Great Rectification Movement (SGRM) in all aspects of the Party’s work. The Party started again to tighten their grip on the pen and the gun. All the regional Party committees made their respective summings-up, identified their errors and weaknesses and started to correct and overcome them.
The rectification documents, “Reaffirm Our Basic Principles and Rectify Errors”, “Stand for Socialism against Modern Revisionism” and “General Review Of Important Events and Decisions (1980 To 1991)” were issued and distributed for study by the entire Party membership. The SGRM was a massive education movement conducted to reaffirm the CPP’s ideological and political line. Regular Party education on the basic and intermediate courses were revived. Social investigations, including grievance sessions to ferret out errors and shortcomings, reassessments summings-up were conducted to regain the trust and confidence of Party members and the masses, especially in the abandoned guerrilla areas
NPA units worked hard to recover and expand the mass base in the countryside. The NPA strove to overcome the series of “counterinsurgency” plans of successive post-Marcos presidents after Aquino’s Lambat Bitag I and II, Oplan Lambat Bitag III, IV and Oplan Pagkalinga under President Ramos; Oplan Makabayan under President Estrada; Oplan Enduring Freedom (Bush’ so-called anti-terrorism plan) adopted by President Gloria Arroyo; and Oplan Bayanihan by Aquino II.
Incorrigible advocates of anti-Party ideas were either booted out or got out of the Party as they continued to attack the basic principles of the Party in an all-round way. They had to be combated. Wielding the pen, the loyal Party cadres and members set out to fight the propaganda battle on two fronts, the reactionary media of the ruling classes and those produced by the anti-Party breakaway groups that found favor in the enemy media. The anti-Party elements eventually nestled themselves in the reactionary regime, with some of them becoming highly placed officials in the government and becoming silent as they were too busy enriching themselves and building their mansions. The loyal Party cadres and members had to work doubly hard to be able to win over those whom the anti-Party elements had misled.
Ang Bayan the Party organ was reoriented from the liberal and revisionist direction to which it was steered by the former editor who got enamoured with the Gorbachov’s ideas of glasnost and perestroika and turned out be an incorrigible anti-Party element. Revolution the CPP theoretical journal was revived and carried the rectificaiton documents of the central organs and the regional committees as well as theoretical articles on people’s war, the united front and the international communist movement.
The regional Party publications that had fallen silent for some time were revived. They started to use the internet and posted their works. Cultural and artistic activities all over the country steadily picked up in variety, volume and quality reached during the anti-Marcos dictatorship struggle.
Alternative online media outfits, such as Bulatlat and Kodao Productions, were established since 2001, and have since then published commentaries, special reports, multimedia productions and poetry.
Like all his precedents since Marcos, Ramos embraced the neoliberal policy regime of trade and investment liberalization, deregulation and privatization. He artificially buoyed up the economy with foreign loans and investments for a boom in private construction until the disastrous Asian crisis of 1997, at the expense of the people‘s sovereignty and national patrimony as he proceeded to sell off government corporations such as the Metropolitan Waterworks & Sewage System and even Fort Bonifacio to foreign monopoly corporations.
When Estrada was elected and assumed the presidency in June 1998, he approved and signed the CAHRIHL. This seemed to augur well for the peace negotiations. But less than two months after, he ratified the Visiting Forces Agreement and the NDFP called him to task for violating Philippine sovereignty and integrity. When the NPA captured and took as prisoners of war two ranking AFP officers, Estrada declared a unilateral suspension of the peace negotiations and the JASIG in May 1999. The peace negotiations stopped until it was resumed after his ouster and the assumption of the presidency by his vice president Gloria Arroyo.
Estrada’s tenure was very short. In October 2000 a corruption charge was brought against him involving the acceptance of bribes from a number of game operators. Impeachment proceedings were brought against him by leaders of the mass movement but the members of the Senate blocked the presentation of evidence. As a result, mass protests mounted against him and on January 20, 2001, he was driven off MalacaƱang and his vice president Gloria Arroyo ascended to the presidency.
During the mass campaigns to oust Estrada, Arroyo declared that if and when she assumed the presidency, she would “reverse the all-out-war policy of the Estrada government and resume peace negotiations with the NDFP and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF)”. Shortly after being sworn into office, Arroyo reconstituted the GRP negotiating panel for talks with the NDFP. Again, this seemed to augur well for the peace negotiations.
In April 2001, formal talks in the peace negotiations resumed in Oslo, Norway, with the the Royal Norwegian Government as facilitator. A second round was held in June with a four-day agenda to start substantive discussions on social and economic reforms. However, the GRP panel was ordered to suspend the talks on the second day as a protest against the killing of the most notorious human rights violator during the Marcos fascist regime. Later Arroyo requested the US government to designate the CPP, NPA and the CPP founding Chairman as terrorists by November 2001.
In August 2002, shortly after the visit of US State Department Secretary Colin Powell to Manila, Arroyo declared all-out war against the revolutionary movement and ordered offensives under Operation Enduring Freedom-Philippines, a US-instigated COIN plan against a so-called war on terrorism against various NPA guerrilla fronts. The USSD Secretary announced the listing of the CPP-NPA in the US list of foreign “terrorist organizations” and the NDFP chief political consultant among the specially designated nationals (SDGN) and specially designated global terrorist (SDGT) of the US Dept. of the Treasury.
The military implemented the US-Arroyo campaign of terror under what it named Oplan Bantay Laya. Kidnappings, torture, killings of mass activists, including peasants, workers, students, human rights advocates and defenders, lawyers and priests ran rampant, surpassing post-Marcos levels. The mass movement responded with sizeable mass protests and demonstrations in the Stop the Killings campaign but could not muster numbers reaching hundreds of thousands to cause the ouster of Arroyo. Several books were published and circulated in the Philippines and abroad exposing the crimes of the regime and complaints brought to agencies of the United Nations.
The Hacienda Luisita massacre of peasants in November 2004 with seven killed, more than a hundred, including women and children, injured, also more than a hundred arrested and subsequent killings of 7 supporters and advocates sparked outrage among the people. Artists and writers rallied to the cause of the peasants with songs, poetry, dances, paintings, drawings and other art works. Campaigns worldwide were launched to condemn the massacre and support the cause of the peasants and sugar farm workers.
Arroyo was brought to trial and found guilty by the Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal Second Session on the Philippines held in The Hague, the Netherlands on March 21-25, 2007 for gross and systematic violations of 1) civil and political rights; 2) economic, social and cultural rights; and 3) right to national self-determination and liberation. Worldwide campaigns on these comprehensive issues were launched, boosting solidarity for the Filipino people’s struggle.
The terrorist listing met with mass actions and demonstrations, editorial cartoons, internet postings, petitions and fund campaigns in several countries abroad among the Filipino community and solidarity friends The proceedings and documents of the Tribunal were published in book form and online. The trial itself was supported by a broad range of organizations and prominent human and people’s rights activists, including lawyers, jurists, academicians, bishops, priests of various religious denominations, artists, etc. and was attended by hundreds of delegates and guests from 18 countries in Asia, Africa, Latin America, Europe, Africa and the Middle East. It was well-covered by both Philippine and foreign media.
To some extent, the campaign against the atrocities lowered the level of human rights violations. When Noynoy Aquino (Aquino II) succeeded to the presidency, the level of human rights violations and military atrocities remained where this settled toward the end of the Arroyo regime. Nonetheless, thiswas still high enough for the International Coalition for Human Rights in the Philippines, a global network of organizations campaigning for human righs and Filipino people’s rights, in cooperation with Permanent People’s Tribunal and the International Association of Democratic Lawyers (IADL) to bring a case against him and his imperialist master US President Barack Obama. The trial was held in Washington, DC on July 16-18 2015 and, found them guilty of all the charges brought against them: gross and systematic violations of 1)civil and political rights, especially but not limited to extrajudicial killings, disappearances, massacre and torture, arbitrary arrests and detention as well as other vicious, brutal and systematic abuses and attacks on the basic democratic rights of the people; 2) human rights, particularly economic, social and cultural rights of the Filipino people through the imposition of neoliberal “free market” globalization to exploit the people; transgression of their economic sovereignty and plunder of their national patrimony and economy; and attacks on the people’s livelihoods and the destruction of the environment; and 3) the rights of the people to national self-determination and liberation through the imposition of the US war of terror and US military intervention; as well as the perpetration of crimes against humanity and war crimes; misrepresentations of the people’s right to national liberation and self-determination as “terrorism” and the baseless “terrorist” listing of individuals, organizations and other entities by the US and other governments.
Generally propaganda and protest art from 1992 to 2016, remained the same in substance and variety. An abundance of books of poetry and short story collections, conferences and assembly proceedings, commemorative volumes of major and minor national and regional organizations were published. This particular period is very well docunmented in books, pamphlets, videos, internet blogs, and others.
Altermidya <http://altermidya.net> (People’s Alternative Media Network) which describes itself as a network of independent and progressive media outfits, institutions and individuals was established in 2014. It conducts regular newscasts, commentaries on issues and media production training among mass activists and mass organizations. Tudla Productions <http://tudlaproductions.org>, a multimedia production outfit has been reactivated since 2011 to produce progressive and revolutionary videos reporting on current issues and cultural activities among the masses.
Mass demonstrations, though not as large as those during the Marcos fascist regime and Aquino I regime were enlivened with placards, tarpaulin, streamers, t-shirts, and elaborate effigies. Movies and documentaties were made; the Green Guerrillas a film on the NPA campaign in Mindanao for the protection of the environment and the culture of the indigenous people, released in 1995. The feature length documentary on the Philippine-American war in 1899, Memories of a forgotten war, was produced in 2001. Sa Liyab ng Libong Sulo, the documentary based on PSR to mark the 30th NDF founding anniversary was released in 2003. So many more video documentaries and some feature fims followed from 2003 onward, including The Guerrilla is a Poet (2013) and Ang Kababaihan ng Malolos (2014).
Theatrical productions on the history of the national-democratic movement were also produced, among them Kalibre45 (2004) and the more elaborate intermedia production Ang Mandirigma’y Makata, ang Makata’y Mandirigma (2015) and recorded in a video.
5. Duterte regime: 2016-present
A major victory of the revolutionary movement in the Duterte period is the holding of the Party Congress in the fourth quarter of 2016, which was ceremonially capped with the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the victory of the Great October or the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia.
Party cadres and members representing the regional committees, staff organs and departments assembled to strengthen the Party’s unity, amend its program and constitution based on accumulated victories and lessons; and elect a new set of leaders. The theme “Greater unity, greater victories,” guided the Congress in reviewing the Party’s 48 year history, taking stock of the current objective and subjective conditions and reaffirming the Party’s determination to advance the national democratic revolution to greater heights.
It updated the the Party’s Program for a People’s Democratic Revolution, presenting an updated critique of the semicolonial and semifeudal social system, with particular attention to the post-Marcos succession of pseudo-democratic regimes, the worsening forms of oppression and exploitation of the broad masses of workers and peasants and the deteriorating socio-economic conditions of the Filipino people in almost four decades under the neoliberal regime.
The Congress took a significant step to ensure a Party leadership that is vibrant, closely linked with the lower levels of leadership and capable of leading the practical work and day-to-day tasks of the Party, especially in waging revolutionary armed struggle against the reactionary state through the combination of senior Party members with the young and junior Party cadres to ensure the ideological, political and organizational training of a new generation of Party leaders who will be at the helm of the Party in the coming years.
With renewed vigor, the Party is entirely capable of confronting the challenges posed by the US-Duterte fascist-terrorost regime. It is already well on the way to frustrating the regime’s Oplan Kapayapaan whose objective is to destroy the revolutionary movement through violence and deception. Having survived and prevailed over so many failed US-instigated and supported Oplans from Marcos’ down to Aquino II, the Party and the people are confident and certain that Duterte’s Oplan would fail miserably and the national democratic movement would grow in strength and move closer to victory.
When Duterte made a feint at peace negotiations with the NDFP as soon as he assumed office, the Party saw through his real intent and gave guidance to the NDFP negotiating panel. It became clear after the third meeting held in Rome that what Duterte really wants is the surrender and destruction of the revolutionary movement; not social, economic and political reforms to address the roots of the armed conflict. Now it is entirely clear that what he desperately wants to the point of lunacy, is absolute power through a fascist dictatorship with him as dictator for the rest of his life, and perpetuated through his children so that they can continue grabbing wealth through bureaucratic corruption.
The Party and the legal mass movement are growing. New alliances are forming to intensify the struggle against the tyranny and state terrorism of the Duterte regime. The Movement Against Tyranny (MAT) is gradually gaining ground and needs solidarity from peoples all over the world. Organizations of Filipinos abroad, must expand on existing formations and initiatives and strengthen themselves to build a broad united front of solidarity organizations to expose, oppose and fight the Duterte terrorist regime.
The International People’s Tribunal held in Brussels, Belgium September 18-19, 2018, found Duterte, US President Donald Trump and the US government guilty.]of gross and systematic violations of [all the charges brought against them: 1) human rights, particularly civil and political rights, with focus on extrajudicial killings, massacres, trumped-up charges, arbitrary arrests and detentions, the imposition of martial rule in Mindanao; 2) human rights, particularly economic, social and cultural rights, with focus on labor, peasant, women, and migrants rights, and the rights to education, livelihood and housing, through the imposition of neoliberal policies and other imperialist impositions to exploit the people; transgression of their economic sovereignty and national patrimony; and various forms of economic plunder; and 3) the rights of the people to national self-determination and development and violations of international humanitarian law, with focus on attacks on civilian communities and schools, massacres of hors d’ combat, “terrorist” labeling and profiling, destructive mining and environmental degradation, and crimes against humanity; and misrepresentations and attacks on the people’s right to national liberation.
Using this document, the campaign must broaden to include lobbying in parliaments, United Nations agencies and other relevant international bodies to act on the various aspects of the criminal acts and violations.
There are more media channels available now and their use must be maximized. I visited a lot of websites of mass organizations and discovered that the majority are not updated, have scarce significant educational and propaganda materials, tend to be rather parochial in their coverage of issues, and insipid and uninteresting. Even major NDF member organizations only have Facebook pages with scarce content. We would expect KM having millennials for its members to be internet savvy in reaching out to the youth but it is not. Only some of its regional chapters have facebook accounts.
If the aim is building the broadest united front for the ouster of the Duterte fascist-terorist dictatorship, the NDF member organizations need to improve on their record in using the fastest methods of communications and propaganda to reach out to the general public. Of course, the internet is not enough. Nothing beats going among the masses, conducting social investigations for the purpose of arousing, organizing and mobilizing the backward sections of the public to join in the endeavor to oust Duterte and his corrupt bureaucrat capitalist clique of plunderers and murderers.
It is heartening that special formations of artists against Duterte tyranny such as RESBAK (Respond and Break the Silence Against the Killings), SAKA (Sama-Samang Artista para sa Kilusang Agraryo), LODI and Artist Forces of the Philippines (AFP), as well as existing artist organizations and collectives such as the revitalized Concerned Artists of the Philippines are bringing art and culture to the revolutionary mass movement and into their mass actions and demonstrations in well designed giant tarpaulins, streamers and posters with well couched slogans in brilliant colors and in elaborate depictions of Duterte’s tyranny and terror, effigies reflecting the monstrosity of his criminal acts burning and aflame at the height or end of massive demonstrations, spectacular but ephemeral images signifying the people’s victory and recorded for posterity on video posted on the internet to heighten the anger of the masses and inspire them further to resist and fight.
Many cultural activists of today were shaped and tempered in the struggle against the Marcos fascist dictatorship when both repression and resistance were most intense. The practitioners of resistance and revolutionary art and literature produced exemplary works of great sociopolitical and revolutionary significance as they drew inspiration from the heroic struggles of the people. Since then, the revolutionary movement has accumulated their songs, dances, poetry, drama, short stories, novels, plays, playlets and skits, video documentaries, movies, painting, posters, streamers, murals, sculpture, carvings, handicrafts, etc., reflecting the sufferings, the struggle, the achievements and the victories of the people against the enemy and which are still very relevant today.
Now, we see extreme repression under the current regime several times worse than that of the Marcos fascist dictatorship. Duterte fascism surpasses Marcos’ in infamy: tens of thousands of people massacred or tortured to death, and intended still to be brought to millions, massive impoverishment of the people through the anti-people economic, financial and fiscal policies, utter subservience to wishes and demands of two imperialist masters to satisfy his own greed for wealth to the detriment of the people’s sovereignty and national patrimony, and so forth.
Would the intensity of the people’s resistance against this evil regime produce, shape and temper new cultural activists to create great literary and art works from all the media available to them, surpassing in quantity, quality and variety those of their predecessors? Can we discern signs that they would? The new cultural activists born of the struggle against the evils of Duterte have a lot to learn from their predecessors’ experiences and works.
Although the mass street actions and demonstrations have have not yet reached the levels reached even only during the Estrada regime, they are now now picking up. The leaders and cadres of the Party need to exert more efforts to revive the mass movement to levels reached in the struggle to topple the US-Marcos fascist dictatorship, considering that the current regime has by far already surpassed the latter by its extreme violations of human rights and people’s rights. Using the internet, the revolutionary propagandists and artists today can very easily overwhelm the rants and raves of Duterte and his paid hacks with their bots that spout nothing but senseless curses.
Cultural workers and artists now must take up such protest themes as agrarian problems, foreign economic domination, export labor, exploitation of women and children, and ecological damage, while they express their aspirations for genuine freedom and combat the neoliberal attacks on progressive Philippine culture. For example, the ongoing struggle of Tanggol Wika or Alyansa ng mga Tagapagtanggol ng Wikang Filipino (Alliance of Defenders of Filipino) to restore the subject of Filipino language and Philippine literature that was removed from the core curriculum for college courses need to be supported. As Rizal wrote, “While a people preserves its language; it preserves the marks of liberty.”
I would like to cite a successful and vibrant propaganda campaign worthy of emulation. One Billion Rising (OBR <https://www.onebillionrising.org>) came on the international scene in 2012 and found its way to the Philippines. It started as a movement of feminist or gender identity politics. In 2014, by focusing on justice for all survivors of gender violence, it escalated the demand for justice to revolution, exposing the root causes of violence; and calling in 2015 for a “Rise for Revolution” demanding accountability and system change.
The theme of revolution, solidarity, and resistance continued through 2016 to 2018, from adding focus on marginalized women, solidarity against exploitation of women and girls through layers of exploitation, the patriarchal structure, economic exploitation and oppression within capitalism, imperialism, colonization, environmental plunder and war–to unity against the fierce escalation of fascist, imperialist, neo-liberal attacks on the lives of people around the world with the rise of more anti-women, anti-people leaders and governments all over the the world. Now for 2019 the call for resistance continues against fascism and tyranny.
The OBR global risings looked beyond itself and engaged with other social movements to build deep and vigorous solidarity everywhere for the advocacy of women’s rights, the protection and defense of indigenous lands and the rights of indigenous peoples, struggle against fascism and tyranny, discrimination and racism, environmental plunder and destruction, corporate greed, economic violence, poverty, state brutality and repression, war and militarism.
Women from all countries worldwide responded to the calls and acted on them. The OBR makes very effective use of the internet. Its website is distinctively slick, well maintained and its contents constantly updated with news, blogs on women’s oppression and important issues affecting the lives of women. A very broad spectrum of women in the Philippines have since 2014 actively participated in the campaigns. It forms a very broad cultural united front, which although focused on the issue of gender, encompasses all the fundamental issues confronting humanity–from gender oppression to class war and environmental plunder. Their cultural activities, such as theatre and other intermedia productions in between the risings presents excellent opportunities for our cultural workers to expand their reach and organize multimedia productions.
The evolution of OBR from gender to comprehensive anti-imperialist and anti reactionary concerns owes much to its dynamically creative Filipino international coordinator Monique Wilson, activist, theatre director, performer as actor & singer, campaigner, organizer. OBR presents an excellent vehicle and opportunity for expanding and consolidating our cultural and propaganda work. This means further organizing and education work deepen revolutionary commitment and militancy among the masses.
Let me end with a quote from my concluding exhortation to cultural workers in my keynote address to the ILPS 5th International Assembly Commission No. 14 Workshop on the Imperialist Cultural Offensive :
Let us train ourselves to understand and deal with facts and events, as these unfold in the real-world conditions experienced by the masses. Let us not confine ourselves in ivory towers, honing our individual imaginations and crafts, away from the real world and the masses, but let us study current events, study history, immerse ourselves with the masses in their struggles, and in the course of our struggle develop, together with them the peoples´s culture based on concrete realities.
Let us all contribute our utmost to the peoples’ unified cultural offensive against imperialism, aware that its overwhelming dominance necessitates strong organizations with strong leaderships guided by the ideology, politics and methods of a party of the most advanced and most productive class in our society today. Especially in this age of the Internet and multimedia, let us also help build powerful alternative and counter-media—powerful in that they are able to support the people’s struggles and effectively amplify the people’s voice, and in turn find resonance in and draw concrete support from the masses in their millions. It is not enough for us to compete with the imperialists in such superficial terms such as trending hashtags, viral Youtube views, and TV ratings.
More important to us are the long-term results, measured in the sustained growth by leaps and bounds of the anti-imperialist mass organizations and mass movement at the national and international levels. Let us help build many channels, flowing in one general direction. An apt analogy is that of the people’s struggles as many small rivulets eventually conjoining into one endless current of strength to swamp the cultural bastions of the enemy.
The essential task of progressive and revolutionary forces all over the world today is developing unity, cooperation and coordination of all peoples and raising their level of struggle to weaken and defeat imperialism and reaction, in particular against imperialist plunder and war led by US imperialism, the foremost terrorist power, towards building a society that is just, peaceful and progressive.
https://www.philippinerevolution.info/statement/on-the-pen-and-the-gun/