Showing posts with label Philippines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Philippines. Show all posts

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Rebels seize guns from Philippine police station


MANILA, Aug 23 (Reuters) - Communist rebels wearing army uniforms walked into a police station in the southern Philippines on Wednesday and left with 11 assault rifles and handguns, officials said.

Around 20 members of the New People's Army (NPA) emptied San Isidro's police station, which was located inside the town hall, at around noon without firing a shot.

"They came in two vans pretending to turn over a captured rebel," Eleuterio Quilisadio, police chief in the southern province of Davao Oriental, told reporters.
"But once inside the town hall, they disarmed all police officers and emptied the town's armoury of weapons, bullets and supplies."
The rebels also raided a nearby mango plantation, taking two more guns from security guards, police said.

It was the second NPA raid in the area since April when guerrillas seized 114 weapons from a prison.

Since 1969, the 7,000-member NPA has been fighting a protracted guerrilla warfare in 69 of 81 provinces in the mainly Roman Catholic country.
The communist insurgency, one of the longest-running Maoist rebellions in Asia, has killed more than 40,000 people.

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Chronology of the Persecution of Prof. Jose Maria Sison by the Philippine, US and Dutch governments


CHRONOLOGY OF THE PERSECUTION OF PROF. JOSE MARIA SISON

BY THE PHILIPPINE, US AND DUTCH GOVERNMENTS

Issued by the International DEFEND Committee




Since his release from military detention and the nullification of subversion and rebellion charges against him in 1986 after the fall of the Marcos fascist dictatorship, Prof. Jose Maria Sison has been subjected to a series of false and politically motivated charges in 1988, 1991, 2003 and 2006. One after the other, these charges have been dismissed and nullified by Philippine courts in 1992, 1994 and 2007. Thus, they have been proven as malicious and pure fabrications of the Philippine military, police and intelligence authorities.

But the Philippine, US and Dutch governments have used the false charges to persecute Prof. Sison. The trumped-up charges of subversion in 1988 and multiple murder in 1991 and the charges of subversion and rebellion nullified in 1986 have been used by the Dutch government to prevent the legal admission as refugee and residence of Prof. Sison in The Netherlands. Even the most unfounded propaganda attacks from the time of Marcos to 2006, which never materialized into formal complaints, have been used by the Philippine, US and Dutch governments to malign him as a “terrorist.” These governments do so even as Philippine prosecutors and courts dismiss and nullify the formal complaints and charges.

Under the Marcos fascist dictatorship, the Philippine government subjected Prof. Jose Maria Sison to arbitrary detention from 1977 to 1986 and to various forms of physical and mental torture, including water cure, punching, more than five years of solitary confinement, prolonged deprivation of basic necessities as well as medical and dental care and repeated death threats. He was arrested and detained without judicial warrant and was charged before two military commissions for subversion and rebellion. He was thus put in jeopardy of being punished twice for the same alleged offense of seeking to overthrow the Philippine government.

After the fall of the Marcos dictatorship, the Aquino regime released Prof. Sison from military detention on March 5, 1986. The two charges of subversion and rebellion against him were nullified through the dissolution of the military commissions as organs of repression. He joined the faculty of the Asian Studies Center of the state institution, the University of the Philippines in April 1986. From September 1986 onwards, he went on a tour for a series of university lectures and solidarity speeches in Oceania, Asia and Europe on the situation and prospects of the Philippines. The Philippine military authorities publicly attacked his lectures and pressured the Aquino regime to cancel his Philippine passport. They trumped up a new charge of subversion against him in September 1988. This became the basis for the cancellation of his Philippine passport.

After the arbitrary cancellation of his passport, Prof. Sison applied for political asylum in The Netherlands in October 1988. The Dutch Ministry of Justice used the false charge of subversion and related false claims against him from the Philippine government as the basis for issuing a negative decision on his asylum application in July 1990. The US State Department admitted publicly that the Philippine government intervened in the asylum case in order to oppose it. But the highest administrative court, the Judicial Department of the Council of State (Raad van State), made a judgment in 1992 annulling the unfavorable decision of the Dutch Ministry of Justice. It recognized Prof. Sison as a political refugee and criticized the ministry for using secret intelligence dossiers against him in contravention of the principle of fair administration and for delaying for more than four years the approval of his asylum application.

Despite the 1992 judgment of the Council of State, the Dutch Ministry of Justice refused to grant asylum to Prof. Sison. It also ignored the repeal of the Anti-Subversion Law by the Philippine government in 1992 and the consequent dismissal of the charge of subversion against Prof. Sison by the Pasig city court and the related nullification of the specifications against him. It likewise disregarded the resolution of the Manila city prosecutors in April 1994 dismissing as something based on pure speculation the 1991 complaint of multiple murder arising from the Plaza Miranda bombing in 1971. It continued to use the false charges against Prof. Sison and argue that to grant him asylum would run counter to the commitment and credibility of the Dutch state to its allies. Further, it cited raw intelligence dossiers to fabricate the claim that he is in contact with “terrorist” organizations. It was thus already using the “terrorist” label against him as early as in the years from 1990 to 1994.

In response to the new appeal of Prof. Sison in 1993, the Council of State, as the highest administrative court, issued in 1995 the judgment reaffirming its previous ruling that he is a political refugee under Article 1 A of the Refugee Convention and that he is under the protection of Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights. It ruled that Article 1 F of the Refugee Convention did not apply on him because there was no sufficient evidence against him for crimes that would exclude him from consideration as a refugee. It directed the Dutch Ministry of Justice to grant him legal admission as refugee and residence permit if there was no other country to which he could transfer without violating the Refugee Convention and without putting him at risk of ill treatment prohibited by Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights. But the Dutch Ministry of Justice ignored the judgment of the Council of State and continued to refuse him legal admission as refugee and the permit to reside in The Netherlands.

Prof. Sison appealed to the newly-created Aliens Court in 1996 against the refusal of the Dutch justice ministry to grant him asylum. The court ordered the Dutch government to make a new decision. The Dutch government ultimately took the position before the Law Unification Chamber (REK, Rechtseenheidkamer) that it had the freedom of policy or discretion to refuse to Prof. Sison legal admission as a refugee and not to give him residence permit but to cease and desist from expelling him from The Netherlands in order to avoid the violation of the principle of nonrefoulement in Article 33 of the Refugee Convention and Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights. Being dependent on justice ministry personnel, funds and facilities, the REK upheld the position of the Dutch Ministry of Justice and dignified the brazen lie that Prof. Sison was liable for the false accusations of the Philippine government and for “contacts with terrorist organizations” on the basis of intelligence dossiers already examined and evaluated by the Raad van State in 1992 and 1995. It ran counter to the 1992 and 1995 judgments of the Raad van State, the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights in the Chahal case, the dismissal of all charges against Prof. Sison in the Philippines from 1992 to 1994 and the total absence of any criminal charge against him abroad.

In April 1998 the justice secretary of the Philippine government issued an official certification declaring that there was no pending criminal charge against Prof. Sison and referred to the 1992 nullification and 1993 dismissal of the 1988 charge of subversion as well as the 1994 dismissal of the 1991 charge of multiple murder related to the Plaza Miranda bombing. From 1994 to 2003, the Philippine government, including the military and police authorities, took a rest from filing any formal criminal complaint against Prof. Sison. The Philippine military authorities merely hurled propaganda attacks against him, despite the fact that the Philippine government had already requested the US government in November 2001 to designate Prof. Sison as a “terrorist”. It was only in 2003 that they submitted to the Department of Justice a complaint against him for the June 2001 killing of the intelligence officer Col. Rodolfo Aquinaldo. The Filipino lawyers of Prof. Sison succeeded in having the complaint archived because of its patent falsity and political motivation and because of the lack of Philippine jurisdiction over him in the light of Philippine and international law.

The US government designated Prof. Sison as a “terrorist” on August 12, 2002 and the Dutch government followed suit within 24 hours on August 13, 2002 despite the completely clean legal status of Prof. Sison, despite the absence of any specific act of terrorism that can be ascribed to him, despite the absence of any kind of criminal charge or investigation involving him and despite the Hernandez doctrine in Philippine jurisprudence concerning political offenses and the absence then of any anti-terrorism law in the Philippines. The “terrorist” blacklisting of Prof. Sison by the US and other governments has placed him in a position worse than that of a convicted murderer. He is prohibited from gainful employment. He is deprived of his social benefits, including living allowance, housing, medical insurance, civil liability insurance and old age pension. His bank account is frozen. He is prevented from receiving royalty payments for the publication of his books. He is preempted from receiving compensation for damages due to him for winning his human rights case against the Marcos regime. His fundamental rights have been violated, including the right to the essential means of human existence, the right to the presumption of innocence, the right to defense, the right to be informed of reasons for the sanctions, the right to judicial protection, the right to private and family life, the right of free movement, the right against slander and defamation and the right to be secure against threats to life and reputation.

Out to please the US and Philippine governments politically, the Dutch government, with the open lobbying of Philippine authorities, pushed the Council of the European Union to blacklist Prof. Sison on October 28, 2002. Two days after the blacklist decision of the Council, the Dutch government repealed its blacklisting of Prof. Sison but persisted in violating his fundamental rights and causing material and moral damage to him by invoking the Council decision. The Dutch and British governments are the main interveners in support of the Council of the European Union in the case filed by Prof. Sison against the Council before the European Court of First Instance in Luxembourg since February 2003. The Dutch government is the main source of the lies given to the court that (a) Prof. Sison is liable for “terrorism” (and not for rebellion under the Hernandez political offense doctrine of Philippine jurisprudence) for being allegedly the Chairman of the Communist Party of the Philippines and head of the New People’s Army and (b) the 1992 and 1995 judgments of the Dutch Council of State and the 1997 judgment of the REK on his asylum case held Prof. Sison liable for “terrorism” (contrary to the fact that these courts recognized him as a political refugee under Article 1 A of the Refugee Convention and as someone protected by Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights).

In 2005 Arroyo and her henchmen in the Cabinet Oversight Committee on Internal Security and the Anti-Terrorism Task Force started to escalate false accusations against Prof. Sison in the mass media and pushed military officers to file baseless charges of common crimes (like murder, robbery, kidnapping and the like) against him in connection with incidents ascribed to the New People’s Army in various parts of the Philippines. The campaign of slander was obviously intended to reinforce the “terrorist” blacklisting of Prof. Sison by various foreign governments and to justify the intensified extrajudicial killing, abduction and torture of progressive legal activists. It was also intended to link Prof. Sison to a broad united front of legal political forces striving to lead the people to oust the Arroyo regime for having cheated in the presidential elections of 2004. The filing of criminal charges against Prof. Sison culminated in an omnibus charge of rebellion in April 21, 2006 against him and 50 other people, including underground revolutionary leaders, progressive congressmen and anti-Arroyo military officers. The purported facts of the charge of rebellion covered the entire period, from the founding of the Communist Party of the Philippines on December 26, 1968 to the filing of the charge on April 21, 2006 and disregarded the nullification of charges and the amnesty proclamations from 1986 to 1995.

On April 23, 2007 the Council of the European Union sent to Prof. Sison a letter with a one-page statement that repeats the two lies provided by the Dutch government, as mentioned in No. 9 above. On May 22, 2007 he sent a letter of reply and told the Council that the statement of lies had already been presented by the Council to the European Court of First Instance, has been debunked in court and does not amount to a statement of reasons as required of the Council by the court in cases of “terrorist” blacklisting. Then the Council made a new decision on June 28, 2007 blacklisting Prof. Sison on the basis of the aforesaid lies it had made before. This new decision of the Council is obviously intended to serially perpetuate Prof. Sison in the ‘terrorist” blacklist, continually violate his fundamental rights, cause material and moral damage to him and undermine or render useless any favorable judgment of the European Court of First Instance on his case against the Council of the European Union.

The European Court of First Instance issued its judgment on the Sison case on July 11, 2007 annulling the decision of the Council placing him on the “terrorist” list and freezing his financial assets. The annulment is grounded on the Council’s infringement of Prof. Sison’s right to defense, its failure to give a statement of reasons from the second time that it blacklisted him and the violation of his right to judicial protection. The court does not require the Council to pay for the material and moral damages suffered by Prof. Sison due to its decision and fails to mention that the Dutch government has invoked the decision of the Council in order to inflict material and moral damages on him. However, the court requires the Council to pay for the costs of the litigation to the lawyers of Prof. Sison as plaintiff and the National Democratic Front of the Philippines as intervener. Insofar as it can be established that the Dutch government has directly inflicted material and moral damages on Prof. Sison, he can take legal action to seek compensation for such damages. But it can be expected that the Dutch government will resort to every legal trickery to evade accountability.

In the meantime, Prof. Sison has won a resounding legal victory in the Philippines. The Philippine Supreme Court issued on July 2, 2007 a judgment nullifying the omnibus charge of rebellion and all the supposed evidence from 1968 to 2006 against Prof. Sison and his 50 other co-accused. In effect, the supposed evidence cannot be used again against all or any of them in any new charge. The solicitor general has publicly admitted that the value of the state’s stock of purported evidence has been wiped out. This is the latest instance when Prof. Sison is cleared of a criminal charge. It previously happened in 1986, 1992, 1994 and 1998. At this moment, the Philippine and foreign governments persecuting Prof. Sison should be at a loss in holding him liable for any criminal offense or any semblance of this. The Philippine government can fabricate a charge of rebellion against Prof. Sison only from the date after April 21, 2006 and a charge of “terrorism” from July 15, 2007 which is the date the Human Security Act of 2007 became effective. However, the Human Security Act of 2007 is now under fire by a broad range of democratic forces, human rights organizations and legal experts in the Philippines and abroad for being patently unconstitutional.

Prof. Sison has won a significant legal victory with the July 11, 2007 judgment of the European Court of First Instance. But he still needs to complete his legal victory by contending with the preemptive June 28, 2008 decision of the Council retaining him in the “terrorist” blacklist and by filing a new application for annulment of said decision insofar as he is concerned. He still has to defend his fundamental rights and demand compensation for the material and moral damages inflicted on him.

We expect that the Philippine, US and Dutch governments will continue to persecute Prof. Jose Maria Sison by using against him their political power and the existing fascist “anti-terrorism” laws and decisions that they have devised in order to justify state terrorism and wars of aggression. We need to continue and intensify both the political and legal struggles of democratic forces and the people of the world in order defend the fundamental rights of Prof. Sison and other victims of the global trend of fascisation and aggressive wars generated by the imperialist powers and their reactionary puppets.

We must struggle to stop immediately the persecution of progressive leaders like Prof. Jose Maria Sison and the suppression of anti-imperialist and democratic forces and peoples fighting for national liberation, greater freedom, social justice, development and world peace!!!

Ruth de Leon

International Coordinator

International DEFEND Committee

Email: defenddemrights@ yahoo.com

Website: www.defendsison. be

Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Some documents on the Phillippines economy

Below I have reproduced some articles that I had recieved via mail
on the Philippines for the Archives

Crisis of the Semifeudal Economy - Lectures on Phillippine Crisis and Revolution


Crisis of the Semifeudal Economy
By Jose Maria Sison
Second in a Series of Lectures
on Philippine Crisis and Revolution
April 18, 1986


U.S. monopoly capitalism has impacted on the Philippine economy
to shape it into a semifeudal one, and put it firmly within the
orbit of the world capitalist system. The commodity system has
prevailed over the natural economy of self-sufficiency. But
domestic feudalism has merely subordinated itself to an external
industrial power.

The distinctness of the Philippine mode of production is due
mainly to its deepseated prior feudal character in the 19th
century, the persistence of feudalism and the evolvement of
semifeudal relations that mediate U.S. monopoly capitalism and
domestic feudalism.

Let us describe first the current forces and relations of
production that comprise the semifeudal mode of production in the
Philippines. Then we can discuss the ever worsening economic
crisis due to foreign monopoly capitalism, domestic feudalism,
and bureaucratic corruption.

The Productive Forces

The forces of production are mainly agrarian and nonindustrial.
They are generally of a low level of technology. They are
backward or underdeveloped.

Agricultural land totaling 12 million hectares in 1980 is the
principal means of production. It produces the food staples for
domestic consumption; the overwhelming bulk of surplus products
for export and some amount of raw materials for local processing.

There is negligible use of modern farm technology beyond peasant
brawn, hand tools, plow and work animals on lands devoted to
rice, corn and coconut, all of which comprise 90.4 percent of
total agricultural land. The promotion of costly imported farm
inputs and equipment during the 70s affected only a few hundred
thousands of hectares. Estimates range from 500,000 to 800,000
hectares.

Even on land devoted to sugarcane, banana, pineapple and other
new crops for export, which comprises no more that 7 percent of
total agricultural land, and where there is relatively more
impressive use of tractors and chemicals, reliance on sheer brawn
and traditional peasant tools is still widespread. No more than 4
percent of total agricultural land is worked by tractors and
other farm machinery.

Every piece of modern equipment in the agricultural, industrial
and service sectors of the economy is imported. It is paid for
with foreign exchange earned on raw material exports, mostly
agricultural. Deficits incurred in foreign trade are covered by
foreign loans and earnings on the export of labor.

Even hand tools are imported to the extent of 85 percent. And of
course, the remaining 15 percent are fabricated locally from
imported metals. There are no well-established industries which
produce from the available local raw material basic metals, basic
chemicals, capital goods and the like.

What is passed off as the industrial sector consists of mining
and quarrying, construction, utilities and light manufacturing
which are all dependent on imported equipment, basically
processed materials, semi-processed materials and raw materials,
especially fuel.

And of course, the service sector which consists of transport,
communications and storage, trading and banking and other
services, including government, entertainment and the like, is
also dependent on imported equipment.

The People in Production

According to NEDA figures, there were nine million peasants and
farm workers, accounting for 52 percent of employment; 2.5
million industrial workers, 14 percent; and six million service
workers, 34 percent, in 1979, which was a year of economic growth
still bloated by excessive foreign borrowing.

These figures indicate, therefore, that peasants and farm workers
comprise 78 percent of the direct producers of goods and
industrial workers 22 percent. There are four peasants for every
industrial worker.

Most peasants (poor and middle peasants) have the following means
of supplementary livelihood: farm work for others, fishing,
forestry and animal husbandry, handicrafts, construction or
carpentry, hauling and petty peddling. Seasonal farm work is the
most common sideline occupation, and is the main recourse for
surplus labor in the countryside.

Only 74 percent of industrial workers are in manufacturing; and
in turn 70 percent of workers in manufacturing are employed in
small fabricating and repair shops, each employing less than ten
workers and therefore hardly qualifying as truly manufacturing
enterprises.

The figure for employment in the service sector is bloated by
decreases of employment in the agricultural and industrial
sectors during the 70s. Agricultural employment went down from 59
percent in 1970 to 52 percent in 1979; and industrial employment
from 17.6 percent in 1970 to 14 percent in 1979. The employment
rate of the real producers of goods has decreased from year to
year since 1979.

Only a minority of service workers-possibly not more than 30
percent-are regular wage earners. In the main, these regular wage
earners are employed by the government and by the multinational,
big comprador and middle bourgeois firms. Most of the so-called
service workers are actually underemployed or have no regular
employment or are even unemployed but are misrepresented by
government statistics as fully employed.

Productive Relations

The comprador big bourgeoisie is the dominant class in the
relations of production. It determines the semifeudal character
of the economy. As the chief trading and financial agent of U.S.
monopoly capitalism, it lords over the commodity system and
decides the system of production and distribution.

The big compradors own the highest concentration of capital
(merchant capital) involved in the unequal exchange of
raw-materials exports and manufactured imports. They amass
commercial profits through import-export operations and domestic
wholesale; and interest through banks and quasi-banks.

In most or many cases, they are big landlords because their
landed estates are their reliable sources of export crops. They
also invest heavily in mining and other extractive enterprises;
service enterprises other than banking and trading and
import-dependent enterprises.

Upon the behest of U.S. monopoly capitalism and in accordance
with their own class interest, the comprador big bourgeoisie
opposes and prevents the comprehensive industrialization of the
Philippines and shares with the landlord class the fear of land
reform.

The landlord class remains a distinct class. It now runs second
to the comprador big bourgeoisie as the exploiting class. It owns
the largest tracts of land and amasses land rent from the
tenants. It also engages in other forms of exploitation such as
the hiring of farm workers, usury, unfair trading of crops and
farm inputs, renting out of farm equipment and animals at
excessive rates, and so on.

The landlord class is far more widespread than the comprador big
bourgeoisie based in the cities. At the first instance, it
collects the largest amount of surplus products in the country,
not only from the tenants and farm workers, but from all the
peasant masses.

From this surplus product, the landlord class yields to the
comprador big bourgeoisie payments for imported goods for high
consumption, as well as for the productive needs of agriculture.
The foreign monopolies extract their superprofits through the big
compradors or through direct subsidiaries.

The landlords own most of the best agricultural land and continue
to accumulate land. They take away the surplus product not only
from the greatest number of real producers, but also from the
course of national industrialization.

The big bureaucrat capitalists are big compradors and big
landlords who have stood out as such by using their public
offices, privileges issued by the state, state banks and state
enterprises to amass private capital and land. In Philippine
history, the most outstanding example of bureaucrat capitalism
would be that of the fallen Marcos regime.

Using his autocratic power, Marcos was able to manipulate
government firms and projects, foreign loans, export earnings,
state funds and privileges to make his family and his cronies the
wealthiest and most exploitative clique of big comprador and
landlords, surpassing the long-established super-rich like the
Roxases, Ayalas, Zobels and Sorianos. The problem now of the
fallen Marcos clique is how to retain most of its assets in the
face of the Commission of Good Government.

National entrepreneurs who are mainly in light manufacturing and
own the means of production, belong to the middle bourgeoisie.
They use local and imported components in varying degrees. They
have a desire to push national industrialization forward and
assume the prime position in the economy, but are pressed down by
the foreign monopolies, the big compradors and the landlords.

The entrepreneurial middle bourgeoisie is directly engaged in the
management of its productive enterprises. It engages in the
exploitation of workers through the extraction of surplus value,
and often gives wages that are lower than those given by foreign
and big comprador firms. But these firms actually reap a higher
rate of profit; and worse, they take out their superprofits from
the country or divert these from the course of national
industrialization.

The urban petty bourgeoisie in general undergoes increasing
exploitation in time of ever worsening crisis, tends to side with
the working class and peasantry, and influences the national
bourgeoisie to oppose modern imperialism, domestic feudalism, and
bureaucratic corruption.

The industrial proletariat is the most progressive productive
force in the country today. It sells its labor power to the
owners of capital. It suffers from low wage that are further
eroded by the ever-soaring prices of prime commodities. Mass
layoffs and lack of new job opportunities are always threatening
the workers in the current crisis.

The industrial proletariat comprises some 15 percent of the
people. It is desirous of national industrialization so as to
enlarge its number and strength, and thus is exceedingly eager to
struggle against foreign and feudal domination.

The peasant is the most numerous and exploited class in the
semifeudal economy. It consists of some 75 percent of the people.
It suffers from feudal and semifeudal exactions, and struggles
for land reform.

The peasantry is vehemently opposed to the rapid accumulation of
land by Filipino landlords and foreign agricorporations. The
displacement of peasants from the land is rapidly increasing the
ranks of farm workers and peasant revolutionaries.

Ever Worsening Economic Crisis

Being an appendage of U.S. monopoly capitalism, the Philippine
agrarian semifeudal economy suffers from U.S. trade and
investment policies, which are dictated to Philippine authorities
directly by U.S. authorities, multinational firms and banks; and
through multilateral agencies like the IMF and the World Bank.

The U.S. does not wish the Philippines to undertake national
industrialization and genuine land reform because it wants to
perpetuate the unequal exchange of its surplus manufactured goods
and cheap Philippine raw materials. It also wants to dump its
surplus agricultural products on the Philippines.

The U.S. is pushing import liberalization hard because it wants
to pursue a trade offensive to reduce its huge trade deficits.
Import liberalization will certainly smash the small number of
Filipino industries, which are dependent on imported equipment,
basically processed components, semi-processed components, and
raw materials, especially fuel.

The U.S. is always demanding the free flow of foreign direct
investments into the country and the most excessive privileges
for these, including the most blatant violation of economic
sovereignty, tax exemption, accelerated depreciation allowances,
unrestricted capital repatriation and profit remittances, and so
on.

But in fact U.S. direct investments have moved into the country
unevenly and into quick profit areas. A small amount of
investment fetches huge amounts of superprofits. The U.S. has
always made sure that it controls strategic lines of business but
makes its investments in such a way that these do not result in
the fundamental and comprehensive industrialization of the
country and in a balanced economy.

The Philippine economy is now required to concentrate on
agriculture after a period of being overloaded with foreign loans
for infrastructure projects, agricultural and mining mills,
five-star hotels and other grandiose tourism facilities, and
other unproductive or remotely productive projects.

With agricultural exports as the mainstay for earning foreign
exchange, the Philippines suffered an accumulated total trade
deficit of $16 billion from 1972 to 1983. There is not any number
of agricultural products which can earn enough foreign exchange,
even only to reduce the foreign trade deficits. The method being
used lately to reduce foreign trade deficits is to reduce
imports, including the most essential goods for local industries.
Thus, the entire economy is depressed both by a failure to sell
Philippine raw-material exports in sufficient volume and at a
good price and by the idling of Philippine industries.

The Philippines is overloaded with foreign loans that it can
never really pay back from its agrarian economy. The accumulated
foreign debt is now $20 billion. The Philippines will continue to
sink deeper into the debt trap. Even only to keep up with debt
service payments, now about $3 billion a year, the Philippines
will have to incur new foreign debts. The Philippine foreign debt
crisis will be further aggravated by the reduction of foreign
exchange earnings for labor export.

The U.S. wants to press down wages and increase the tax burden
even as local industries and agriculture are depressed. And yet
the inflation rate is high because of both demand-pull due to the
scarcity of goods and cost-push due to the heavier tax burden,
budgetary deficits, high interest rates and debt service
payments.

U.S. monopoly capitalism is objectively and unwittingly killing
the Philippine economic system. This phenomenon of murder emerged
clearly when the U.S. pushed its pseudodevelopment and
anti-industrialization program through the Marcos fascist
dictatorship which was supported by an avalanche of foreign
loans, encouraged to aggravate and deepen the agrarian and
semifeudal character of the economy, and which was given all the
leeway to undertake the most unbridled bureaucratic corruption
and build up the coercive apparatuses of the state.

The political downfall of Marcos and his cronies does not
necessarily solve the ever worsening economic crisis. A major
portion of their assets in capital and land, which includes at
least $10 billion stashed away abroad, may be successfully
confiscated by the state. But this will eventually fall into the
hands of another faction of the same big comprador and landlord
class.

What is an obvious fact is that the economy has been bled white.
And what is developing is a more violent struggle for economic
and political power among factions of the exploiting classes. At
least two factions, the Aquino and Marcos factions, are girding
and maneuvering for a battle royale under conditions of an ever
worsening socioeconomic crisis.

The national bourgeoisie is agitated by the threat of being wiped
out economically by import liberalization and other antinational
and anti-industrial policies, and tends to make stronger demands
for protection.

The urban petty bourgeoisie continues to suffer a worsening life
of misery and want. It does not cease to swing towards the
direction of revolutionary politics and conjoin with the toiling
masses in a common struggle. The intelligentsia is most revolted
by the fact that its professional and technical skills are
ill-remunerated or are being wasted in a depressed semifeudal
economy.

The working class is incensed by rampant unemployment, low wages
and ceaseless inflation. This class is continuously turning the
trade union movement into a school of revolution. Many of the
disemployed workers have given up job-hunting and are turning in
the direction of social revolution.

The continued thrust of the U.S. and reactionary economic policy
to promote plantation projects is absurd in the face of a
depressed world market for agricultural commodities, and yet if
it succeeds it is bound to exacerbate the land problem and incite
further peasant unrest and armed revolution in the countryside.

It is the rapid accumulation of land by old and new-style
landlords, sweeping over old settlements and overtaking new
settlements in the frontier areas, which has made fertile the
ground for a peasant-based and proletarian-led armed revolution
in a semicolonial and semifeudal country bereft of an
industrialization program to absorb displaced peasants.

Every major policy and course of action being undertaken within
the parameters of the semifeudal economy is coming to a dead end.
The contradictions within the mode of production are leading to
social revolution.#

Introduction to Philippine Economy and Politics - Jose Maria Sison CPP

AN UPDATE: QUALITATIVELY UNCHANGED CONDITIONS
(Author’s Introduction to Philippine Economy and Politics)
Jose Maria Sison
April 1995


I am deeply pleased and grateful that my long interview with Julie, On the Mode of Production in the Philippines in 1983, while I was still detained by the Marcos fascist dictatorship, and my series of lectures as research fellow of the Center for Asian Studies of the University of the Philippines, Philippine Crisis and Revolution, in April May 1986 are published together in this volume, Philippine Economy and Politics.

Since its congress of reestablishment on December 26, 1968, the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) has described Philippine society as semi-colonial and semi-feudal. The Philippine political system has been semi-colonial since 1946, under the indirect rule of U.S. imperialism through the parties and politicians of the local exploiting classes. The Philippine economic system has been semi-feudal since the first decade of the 20th century, exploited by the homegrown comprador big bourgeoisie and landlord class in the service of foreign monopoly capitalism.

Correspondent to the semi-colonial and semi-feudal character of Philippine society, the CPP has put forward the general line of national democratic revolution through protracted people’s war under the leadership of the proletariat. The strategic line of encircling the cities from the countryside and accumulating strength in the countryside until it becomes possible to seize the cities realizes and activates the basic class alliance of the working class and the peasantry.

In this regard, the CPP has deployed its cadres in the countryside in order to build the people’s army and the peasant movement, solve the land problem as the main problem of the democratic revolution and build the people’s democratic power even while reactionary state power is still entrenched in the cities. Responding to the demand of the peasant majority of the people for an agrarian revolution, the anti-feudal line is the main component of the general line of national democratic revolution.

On the Question of Semi-feudalism

Some opponents of the general line of national democratic revolution pretend to be anti imperialist and progressive and therefore avoid questioning the description of the Philippine ruling system as semi-colonial or neocolonial. But they concentrate on attacking the description of the Philippine economy as semi-feudal in order to do away with its precision, confuse the situation and exaggerate “development” or prospects of it under the auspices of the imperialists and the local reactionaries and attack the general line of the national democratic revolution, especially the strategic line of protracted people’s war.

The Philippine economy has been called many names — “free enterprise,” “market,” “mixed,” “developing,” “dependent capitalist” and so on. But none of these is more precise than “semi-feudal” in denoting the level of development of the productive forces and the relations of production, particularly the shift from the feudal economy of the 19th century under Spanish colonialism to the semi-feudal economy of the 20th century under U.S. imperialism. Bourgeois economists adopt their own terminology to stress private ownership of the means of production, the commodity system or the primacy of the market and the promise of development under capitalism. And political counter-revolutionaries wish to get rid of the term semi-feudal to impugn the general line of national democratic revolution through protracted people’s war.

In its entire 20 year period of the rule from 1966, especially during its imposition of fascist dictatorship on the Filipino people from 1972 to 1986, the U.S. Marcos ruling clique aggravated and deepened the agrarian, preindustrial and semi-feudal character of the Philippine social economy. It did not undertake national industrialization and land reform but exacerbated the socioeconomic problems inflicted by foreign monopoly capitalism, domestic feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism.


Under the policy dictates of the U.S. and such multilateral agencies as the IMF and the World Bank, the Marcos regime poured domestic as well as borrowed foreign resources into big comprador operations, bureaucratic corruption and into a military buildup. It made a big portion of agricultural production of staples dependent on imported inputs under the “green revolution,” expanded mineral and agricultural raw material production for export, maintained the infrastructure for the exchange of raw material exports and manufactured imports and deepened the dependence on imported machinery and inputs.

However, in the late ‘70s, a handful of subjectivist elements within the CPP started to question and undermine the description of the Philippine economy as semi-feudal, agrarian and without basic industries. They cited data on the commodity system, wage relations, the increase of rural and urban oddjobbers and distribution of gross output values. They came to the conclusion that the Philippine economy was no longer semi-feudal, implying that it was already industrial capitalist without analyzing the kind of industry that existed and the socioeconomic relations.

In effect they credited the Marcos regime for “industrializing”the Philippines. They also exaggerated the extent of the urban population as 40 percent and implied that the purported percentage increase in urban population was due to industrialization and not merely due to the exhaustion of the land frontier in the ‘60s and the increase of the unemployed and oddjobbers in both rural and urban areas throughout the ‘70s.

The subjectivists falsely claimed that the Philippines had been industrialized and urbanized to an extent that it was necessary to “modify, adjust and refine”the general line of the national democratic revolution through protracted people’s war. In fact, they were undercutting and assailing this general line. They were rationalizing the urban basing of the CPP central leadership and the concentration of cadres in the cities. They were promoting revisionism by pushing subjectivist and opportunist lines of thinking.

In 1980, the subjectivists pushed distinguishably “Left”and Right opportunist lines of policy. They blamed the founders of the CPP for the supposed inaccuracy of describing the Philippine economy as semi-feudal and for the supposed neglect of revolutionary work in the urban areas. They obscured the fact that the proletarian revolutionary cadres of the CPP had been ceaselessly developing the legal democratic movement in the urban areas since the entire decade of the ‘60s and that it was the open rule of terror of the Marcos regime rather than the anti-feudal line of the Party that had required the urban based legal democratic movement to go underground in the ‘70s.

Throughout the ‘80s, the worst of the Left opportunists pushed the line of accelerating the advance of the armed revolution through urban based armed insurrections, incited by armed city partisans, and through premature enlargement and “regularization”of units of the people’s army. They had contempt for the legal and defensive character of the struggle in the urban areas and for the constant necessity of ever expanding and consolidating the mass base in the urban and rural areas through painstaking mass work.

“Left” opportunism was pushed either under the premature notion of “strategic counteroffensive” or making urban based insurrections the leading factor in the process of armed revolution. They kept on wishing for an exceptional conjuncture of domestic and international factors that would invalidate the strategic line of protracted people’s war. They considered as more important the external rather than the internal factors of the revolutionary process and confused the principal and secondary aspects of this process. They took the victorious uprisings in Vietnam in 1945 and in Nicaragua in 1979 out of historical context and cited these as the best models of the Philippine revolution.

At the same time, the Right opportunists pushed the erroneous line that the urban based legal mass movement was of higher importance than the rural based armed struggle, and that more people would be attracted to the united front and to the revolution if the leadership would be entrusted to the anti Marcos section of the reactionaries under the concept of a bourgeois nationalist “New Katipunan” and that the leadership of the working class and the CPP would have to be cut down or even liquidated. Under the stimulus of funding from Western Europe, the urban based Right opportunists produced a considerable amount of bourgeois reformist propaganda and drew as well as withheld CPP cadres from the countryside.

In any communist party, even at its best, there is always an internal basis for the emergence and development of subjectivism and opportunism because of the inflow of petty bourgeois elements who fail to remould themselves to become genuine proletarian revolutionaries and because there is the constant impact of influences from outside the Party, either from the social environment in general or from deliberate attempts of the enemy to penetrate and influence the CPP. The dangers of subjectivism and opportunism rise when ideological, political and organizational standards for Party membership are lowered as in certain urban based units of the CPP and when the antifascist aspect of the revolutionary struggle is cut off from the anti imperialist and anti-feudal aspects.

The communists are always bombarded by the official development theory of foreign monopoly capitalism and the local reactionaries. In the absence of or due to the weakening of Marxist Leninist study, the unremoulded petty bourgeois elements in the CPP can become impressed with the glossy presentation of “development”programs and projects of the reactionaries, the heavy importation of consumer goods and rapid infrastructure building financed through deficit spending and foreign borrowing. Whenever a communist party is ideologically and politically lax, the class enemy can even introduce or recruit in place agents to sow political confusion. In addition, there are those outside the Party who pretend to be Left and progressive, deliberately address themselves to the communists and spread wrong notions about the Philippine economy which in fact assist the counter-revolutionaryline of the barefaced enemies of the Philippine revolution.

After the imposition of martial rule on the Philippines, the so called social democrats, who are in fact Christian democrats trained for anti-communist work but who deck themselves out as progressive competitors of and alternatives to the communists, circulated the notion that the Marcos regime even if repressive had adopted an excellent economic policy of development under the auspices of the IMF and World Bank. The Lava revisionist group openly capitulated to the Marcos regime and misrepresented it as representative of the national bourgeoisie, as one interested in “noncapitalist development”and as one trying hard to free itself from a U.S. dictated policy of “neocolonial industrialization.” The flunkeys of Soviet social imperialism presumed that industrialization was a foregone conclusion and that the struggle was only about whether it is foreign owned or Filipino owned with Soviet aid.

Those who presumed that the Philippines had become “dependent capitalist”also tried to sow confusion in petty bourgeois circles about the character of the Philippine economy. Among them were either Trotskyites with pretensions of advocating world revolution or simply neo Kautskyites with reformist intentions. They babbled that the Philippine economy was no longer semi-feudal and that it was no longer valid and important to take into account the distinct Philippine mode of production in the face of the globalization of capital and the metropolis periphery schema. It was implied that the ground had been taken away from the strategic line of people’s war.

A highly placed “development”technocrat of the Marcos regime (now the head of the CIA instituted Philippine Rural Reconstruction Movement [PRRM]) who had “defected”to the NDF in December 1977 drummed up the line of “reexamining”the Party’s analysis that the Philippine economy is semi-feudal and found resonance among some members of the CPP Central Committee. The push for a reexamination was based on superficial observations of the commodity system in agriculture involving types of cash crop such as onions in Bongabon, Nueva Ecija.

In 1978, the criticism and repudiation of modern revisionism wavered within the CPP. There was no Marxist Leninist criticism and repudiation of the already clear ascendance of the Chinese revisionists headed by Deng in China. Marxism Leninism Mao Zedong Thought became depreciated. Some members of the CPP Central Committee started to float the notion that the Soviet Union and China were similarly socialist and that their socialist economies were being strengthened by capitalist oriented reforms.

In 1979 Philippine military intelligence officers were telling several prisoners, suspected as high cadres of the CPP, that they could be released from prison immediately if they pledged to push the line that the Philippines was no longer semi-feudal and that the Marcos regime had made substantial economic progress under the auspices of the IMF and the World Bank.

In the late ‘70s, the Filipino assets of U.S. intelligence agencies (CIA and DIA) inserted themselves into and used the U.S. based Katipunan ng Demokratikong Pilipino (KDP) to question the description of the Philippine economy as semi-feudal and push the twisted line of “support the Philippine armed struggle, drop Mao Zedong’s theory of people’s war and seek the decisive support of the Soviet Union.” Soon, the KDP openly attacked the CPP. Some of the KDP activists pretended to remain loyal to the CPP but in fact continued to push such notions as that “export oriented manufacturing”could be the cutting edge of U.S. inspired industrialization and that democratization was simply a matter of overthrowing Marcos, without the need for people’s war.

By the early ‘80s, there was already a loud debate in narrow petty bourgeois circles whether the Philippine economy was semi-feudal or not. I responded to the attempts of the opportunist elements within the CPP and pseudo Left elements outside the CPP to sow confusion regarding the character of the Philippine economy. It so happened that Julie was already out of prison and could relate to me developments in the current debate and bring to me reference materials every weekend. We agreed on the format of an interview by her with me on the Philippine mode of production in order to clarify the essential character of the Philippine economy and counter the wrong notions about it.

It is of vital importance to publish this interview in this volume in order to bridge the economic analysis in the founding documents of the CPP in 1968 and Amado Guerrero’s Philippine Society and Revolution in 1970 on the one hand and the current reality and information about the Philippine economy on the other hand and in order to counter the persistent attempts of anti CPP elements to discredit the Marxist Leninist analysis of the Philippine economy as semi-feudal and undermine the general line of the national democratic revolution through protracted people’s war.

The Semi-feudal Economy, 1960 90

The Philippine economy continues to have no industries producing basic metals, basic chemicals and capital goods from the local primary production of raw materials. It remains basically agrarian even as it has some kind of floating industry dependent on imported capital goods. The socioeconomic relations are dominated by the comprador big bourgeoisie and the landlord class in the service of foreign monopoly capitalism. The semi-feudal economy is a commodity system that has departed from the feudal economy of self subsistence but it is one dominated by the comprador big bourgeoisie rather than by a homegrown industrial bourgeoisie. The urban based comprador big bourgeoisie is in close partnership with the rural based landlord class. At the same time, the whole semi-feudal economy is a neocolonial preindustrial or an agrarian adjunct of the world capitalist system.

Whatever are the current proportions of gross output values and employment in the agriculture, industry and service sectors of the economy, all these are dependent on imported equipment, fuel, other raw materials and manufactured components from abroad. The latest high tech tools may be used in any sector but the Philippine economy until now does not produce these tools. Production for local consumption as well as for export has become more import dependent than ever under the policy of trade liberalization. Agricultural and mineral production for export and low value added production of semiconductors, garments and toys for reexport have consigned the Philippine economy to chronic foreign trade deficit and ever mounting foreign debt.

In all sectors of the economy, the imported producer and consumer goods count high in the gross output values. Subtracting the value of the import content will reveal the following: the highest net value is still contributed by agricultural and mineral ore production and the rising high payments for the imports. In essence, the imports are paid for in part by export income (mainly from raw material exports) and in another part by an increasing amount of foreign borrowings.

The export of cheap labor for unskilled work has become a bigger earner of foreign exchange than any of the agricultural, mineral or manufactured exports. However, the income of the overseas contract workers is not large enough to close the foreign trade gap. The export of cheap labor is a manifestation of the inability of the economy to employ the huge number of college educated Filipinos who are driven to take menial jobs abroad.

Under the Aquino and Ramos regimes, like their predecessor Marcos regime, the Philippine reactionary government has rabidly followed the same policies dictated by foreign monopoly capitalism. These have run counter to national industrialization and land reform, aggravated and deepened the agrarian and semi-feudal character of the economy and, in the face of international credit difficulties, compelled the state to resort more and more to local public borrowing, privatization of state assets, increasing the tax burden and attracting short term speculative foreign capital.

It is instructive to go over some important data from 1960 to 1990 in order to see how much the Philippine economy has undergone degradation. According to official statistics, some 15.4 percent of the labor force was in industry in 1960. This dropped to 15.0 percent in 1990. Within the industrial sector, manufacturing plunged from 12.1 percent share of employment in 1960 to only 9.7 percent in 1990. In 1979, it was supposed to have gone down to 14 percent. The upward fluctuation to 15 percent in 1990 is not believable but is still indicative of retrogression. This is evidence of de industrialization rather than industrialization. The proportion of employment in manufacturing has become smaller in the period of “export oriented”manufacturing since the ‘70s than in the earlier period of “import substitution”manufacturing in the ‘50s and ‘60s.

The share of industry in the gross national product (GNP) is supposed to have risen from 28.5 percent in 1960 to 32.9 percent in 1990. Most of this share of industry (34.3 percent in 1991) is contributed by manufacturing (25.4 percent), construction (5 percent) and utilities (2.5 percent), all of which are import dependent for equipment, fuel, other raw materials or component parts. Manufacturing of consumer goods accounts for an average of 55 percent in 1985 91, petroleum and coal processing 32.6 percent and local fabrication of imported basic metals, reassembly or fringe processing of manufactured components and repairs, 10.7 percent.

Eighty percent out of the 76,288 manufacturing firms surveyed recently employ on the average one to nine people and 800 large firms employing more than 200 people and above comprise only one percent and account for half of the total manufacturing labor force. Of the total value in manufacturing, 71.4 percent is overconcentrated in Metro Manila, Southern Tagalog and Central Luzon.

Employment in agriculture is supposed to have fallen from 61.2 percent in 1960 to only 45.2 percent in 1990 and the share of agriculture in the GNP is supposed to have decreased from 31.1 percent in 1960 to 23.2 percent in 1990. The service sector is supposed to have absorbed mainly the labor force shifting from agriculture, especially in the form of rural and urban oddjobbers who are in fact unemployed or grossly underemployed. Anyhow, “employment”in the service sector is supposed to have risen from 23.5 percent in 1960 to 43 percent in 1993 and the share of the service sector in the GNP from 40.4 percent in 1960 to 43.9 percent in 1990.

The former “Left”and Right opportunists in the CPP who have become outright traitors to the Philippine revolution and the Filipino people have made so much out of their continuing false claim that the Philippines has become far more urbanized than Russia during the Bolshevik revolution or China during the protracted people’s war of liberation in order to rationalize the erroneous line of shifting the focus of the revolutionary movement from the rural to the urban areas and basing themselves in the latter even while the people’s war is still at the stage of the strategic defensive.

They produce the high figure of at least 40 percent urban population by adding up the population of Metro Manila, the provincial cities, provincial capitals and town centers. By the same measure, the proportion of the urban population in Russia in 1917 and China in 1949 should be far bigger than that in the Philippines. Russia and China have far longer histories of urbanization under feudalism and the development of handicrafts and manufacturing. Moreover, Russia was also radically different from semi-feudal China by having basic industries and an industrial bourgeoisie which was strategically dominant in the economy.

Out of the total Philippine population of 27,088,000 in 1960, the population of Metro Manila and all provincial cities was 5,370,000 or 19.8 percent, with Metro Manila accounting for 2,460,000 or 9 percent. Out of the total Philippine population of 60,703,000 in 1990, the population of Metro Manila and all the provincial cities was 13,012,000 or 21 percent, with Metro Manila accounting for 7,928,000 or 13 percent.

The increase in city population from 19.8 percent of the total national population in 1960 to 21 percent in 1990 is not really big and does not necessarily mean either real urbanization or industrialization. Only a small portion of the urban population enjoys such amenities as piped in water and electricity. In fact, the conditions of rural backwardness and poverty are brought into the cities by the huge reserve army of labor (unemployed) coming from the countryside.

Philippine cities are basically centers of operations of the comprador big bourgeoisie and not of an industrial bourgeoisie. The prevalent kind of economic activity in Metro Manila is commercial rather than industrial and in provincial cities there is generally a small area as center of commercial activity. The population outside the small commercial centers in so called provincial cities is actually rural. The provincial capitals and town centers which are not classified as cities have generally less commerce and less urban amenities than those classified as cities.

The same incorrigible opportunist elements who have unduly credited the Marcos regime for “industrializing”and “urbanizing”the Philippines and who have faulted the CPP for refusing to accept this wrong view are still the same elements who have praised the Aquino regime for “economic recovery”and who have self contradictorily declared that the Ramos regime is still in the process of making the agrarian Philippine economy a “newly industrializing country”by the year 2000. Consistently, they wish the big comprador landlord regime to industrialize the Philippines in the vain hope of liquidating soon the protracted people’s war. Thus, they have shamelessly pushed the line of “seeking convergences”with the “development”program of the Ramos regime, pretending to criticize it up to a certain point but on the whole supporting it.

On the Question of Dictatorship and Democratization

In the upsurge of the broad popular struggle against the Marcos fascist dictatorship from 1983 to 1986, after the outrageous assassination of Benigno Aquino and when the anti Marcos reactionaries became emboldened to oppose the dictatorship, the “Left”opportunists exaggerated the possibility of winning total victory or taking a major share of political power in the offing through urban insurrections and premature regularization of the NPA and became unmindful of the conspicuous grave loss and weakening of the mass base in the rural areas, starting from 1984, and the occurrence of Kampanyang Ahos in Mindanao, starting from 1985, due to the putschist line.

At the same time, the Right opportunists exaggerated the possibility of winning a major share of political power upon the condition that they prevailed with their bourgeois reformist line. They wished the revolutionary forces to tail after the leadership of the anti Marcos reactionaries, engage solely or mainly in legal struggle and become mere footstool for the anti Marcos reactionaries in their rise to power.

The most corrosive line that the Right opportunist elements (under the influence of the Filipino assets of U.S. imperialism) pushed within the CPP was the one presuming that there would be “democratization”and a simple case of expanding the “democratic space”through legal struggle if the Marcos fascist dictatorship had been replaced by another big comprador landlord clique, especially one headed by the widow of Aquino.

They claimed that with the end of the personal dictatorship or autocracy of Marcos, the ensuing “elite democracy”would still constitute “democratization”open to reform and to conversion into “popular democracy”through reformist legal struggle. The series of dichotomies between dictatorship and democratization and between “elite”and “popular”democracy was meant to obfuscate the persistence of the joint class dictatorship of the big compradors and landlords even after the fall of Marcos in the absence of a successful people’s war.

After the fall of Marcos in the manner foretold by the earlier fall of Baby “Doc”Duvalier in Haiti and military juntas in Latin America, through the combination of a big split in the reactionary armed forces and a popular uprising, the Filipino assets of U.S. imperialism and the “Left”and Right opportunists in the CPP combined to declare that the CPP had had nothing to do with the downfall of Marcos, had become marginalized and had suffered a strategic defeat because of its boycott policy in the 1986 snap presidential elections.

They misconstrued democracy as merely the “democratic space”for them within the ruling system in terms of civil and political liberties, claimed that there was no more ground for people’s war and deliberately obfuscated the fact that the joint class dictatorship of the comprador big bourgeoisie and the landlord class and the open rule of terror was persistent, despite the temporary liberal facade of the Aquino regime. In fact, the Aquino regime retained or made worse the antiworker and antipeasant decrees of Marcos and General Ramos intensified the military campaigns of suppression against the revolutionary forces and the people.

The “Left”opportunist exponents of urban insurrectionism and military adventurism who had been responsible for the consequent grave damage to the rural mass base and for Kampanyang Ahos in Mindanao as early as 1985 also joined the Filipino assets of U.S. imperialism and the Right opportunists in recriminations against the Party for the boycott policy error and in making misrepresentations about the character, implications, magnitude and consequences of this error. Both “Left”and Right opportunists in effect asserted that the banned revolutionary forces should have participated in the Marcos staged elections and considered the boycott policy as the Party’s biggest error in its entire history.

The most blatant assets of U.S. imperialism compared the Aquino regime to the Magsaysay regime as one effectively undercutting the revolutionary movement by restoring “democratic institutions and processes”and seriously carrying out “land reform”under a U.S. and World Bank supported mini Marshall plan. They boasted that the post Marcos period was one of democratization through legal institutions and processes, rendering useless and outdated the armed revolution. Since then, they have ceaselessly prated about alternatives (including foreign funded NGOism, job placements in the reactionary government, electoral politics and the like) to the armed revolution rather than to the oppressive and exploitative ruling system. They conveniently forget the fact that the CPP was reestablished in 1968 and built the NPA in 1969 when Marcos was the big display in Washington’s “show window of democracy”in Asia and he too was threatening to carry out land reform.

The popdems, socdems, Bisig and the like were all happy to take a ride on the Aquino bandwagon. Even the old line pro Soviet revisionists wanted to take the ride with them immediately after serving the Marcos regime for a long time. The Right opportunist line within the CPP described the Aquino regime as a “liberal democratic”regime worthy of critical support. The “Left”opportunists responsible for unprecedented damage to the revolutionary movement and for Kampanyang Ahos in Mindanao ceaselessly overstated the boycott policy error as the biggest error ever in the history of the CPP in order to cover up their far graver culpability in Mindanao and elsewhere in the country.

Amidst all the attempts at confusing the revolutionary forces, I delivered the series of lectures on Philippine crisis and revolution at the Asian Studies Center of the University of the Philippines from April to May 1986 in order to clarify the new situation and the big comprador landlord class character of the U.S. Aquino regime and update Amado Guerrero’s Philippine Society and Revolution. The Political Bureau of the Central Committee of the CPP subsequently adopted this series of lectures as basic study material for the Party in 1987 and was able to circulate and promote it in 1988, much to the chagrin of the incorrigible Right opportunists and the “Left”opportunists who were then on the path of turning into blatant Right opportunists, revisionists and even criminal gangsters from year to year.

It is of vital importance to publish again this series of lectures on the Philippine crisis and revolution to demonstrate that all along there has been a timely response to attempts of the agents of U.S. imperialism and the incorrigible opportunists at confusing the ranks of the revolutionaries and the people about the post Marcos period and to heighten the fighting consciousness of communists and all revolutionary militants.

This series of lectures has upheld the continuing validity and vitality of the national democratic revolution against foreign monopoly capitalism, domestic feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism. It has helped carry over the revolutionary cadres and the masses from the Marcos to the post Marcos period along the general line of national democratic revolution and to foil the U.S. imperialists, the local exploiting classes and their special agents to destroy or derail the armed revolution.

The Second Great Rectification Movement

The incorrigible “Left”and Right opportunists within the CPP have fully exposed themselves as counter-revolutionaryopponents of Marxism Leninism, the CPP and the national democratic revolution. They are now shameless bootlickers of the U.S. Ramos regime and barefaced traitors to the revolutionary cause. Irony of all ironies, they have chosen to expose themselves and act viciously as counter-revolutionaries during the presidency of General Ramos, the continuity man in the open rule of terror under the joint class dictatorship of the comprador big bourgeoisie and the landlord class.

After failing in their vicious attempt to liquidate the CPP from the inside, they continue to specialize in slandering the CPP and the entire revolutionary mass movement. In so many devious ways, they deny the persistence of the joint class dictatorship of the comprador big bourgeoisie and landlord class. They obscure the continuing rule of open terror under the Aquino and the Ramos regimes and claim that human rights violations have been on the decline, despite the brutalities of Lambat Bitag I, II and III and other military campaigns under the “total war”policy or “low intensity conflict”directed by U.S.imperialism. Having fully exposed themselves as special agents of psychological warfare, they have become more and more ineffective in their attempts to show confusion.

The conjuncture and convergence of the three sectors of neocolonialism (government, big business and foreign funded NGOs), the false promises of “Philippines 2000”and the escalation of the “total war”policy, the brutal military campaigns and intrigues of “low intensity conflict,” the opportunist errors and crimes, the open betrayal by the incorrigible opportunists and revisionists and the anti-communist ideological and political offensive of the imperialists and their local lackeys in connection with the disintegration of the revisionist parties and regimes abroad have failed to break or demoralize the forces of the national democratic revolution.

Instead, the revolutionary forces have reaffirmed basic revolutionary principles, have drawn strength from their reservoir of ideological, political and organizational accomplishments, have repudiated the errors and crimes of the “Left”and Right opportunists and have raised the fighting will and capabilities of the people. The victory of the Second Great Rectification Movement cannot be fully understood without reading and studying the interview on the Philippine mode of production and the series of lectures on the Philippine crisis and revolution.

These countered the most devious and vicious attacks on the general line of the national democratic revolution in the ‘80s and laid the ground for the Second Great Rectification Movement. From year to year since 1988, the proletarian revolutionaries in the Central Committee of the CPP increasingly combatted the “Left”and Right opportunist c] c s until the Second Great Rectification Movement was carried out in a comprehensive and deepgoing way, starting in 1992


Monday, August 06, 2007

YouTube a new vehicle for NPA propaganda

YouTube a new vehicle for NPA propaganda

By Ike Suarez, Tech Times Contributor

YouTube, the online video forum, accessible to anyone in the world with Internet broadband connectivity, now appears to be a new guerrilla front for the New People’s Army in its 38-year insurgency to overthrow the Philippine government and establish a Stalinist society in the country.

An examination of this online video portal shows that the National Democratic Front has uploaded a number of propaganda videos into it with a view to rebut the charge they are a terrorist group as classified by the United States State Department.

The videos appear professionally done with the composition of the camera shots, their sequencing, and voiceovers produced by crews familiar with television work and broadcast news. A group calling itself ISNYP Media, which claims to be an official propaganda arm of the National Democratic Front, has produced them.

The videos have been uploaded by ISNYP Media itself or by a certain Jake25 whose commentaries in the feedback section give the impression he is an official NPA propagandist or at least a rabid sympathizer.

The videos also offer a subscribe button for online viewers interested to regularly receive online feeds from the National Democratic Front.

An examination of the commentary sections show that the videos have elicited passionate reactions for and against these videos with Jake25 often taking the cudgels for the Maoist rebels.

An example would be the series of online videos showing the capture of a Philippine Army 1st lieutenant and a private first class and their subsequent release in March and August 2004, respectively. The Philippine Army junior officer and enlisted man were captured in an encounter in Barangay Bataan and Tinamba, Camarines Sur.

The voice-over has been done by a propagandist of the Romulo Jallores Command of the New People’s Army who has identified herself as Luisa. Though her face is not shown in the videos, she narrates events in Filipino with a well-modulated voice typical of television reporters in the Philippines.

The scripts for the voice-over have also been written in line with standard formats for television newscasts and documentaries.

Stressed is the message that the NPAs treated the two prisoners humanely and in line with the protocols of the Geneva Convention. The NPA is therefore not a terrorist group as branded by the US State Department.

As of this article’s writing, most of these videos have drawn a total of from over 1500 to 2000 online views.

One video shows the capture of 1st Lt. Ronaldo Fidelino and Private First Class Ronel Nemeno. Another shows their days in captivity with the NPA.

A third shows a cultural show done by the NPA for them. A fourth shows their release.

Their release features a speech done by NDF Spokesman Greg Bañares who again stressed that the NPA is not a terrorist group. The ceremonies also feature a sequence showing an NPA unit, its members clean-cut and neatly dressed smartly performing close order drills.

The videos have elicited a few dozen comments, all of them hotly partisan for or against the NPA.

One unfavorable comment in Filipino is a poster claiming he is an OFW coming from Bukidnon. He accuses the NPA of extorting revolutionary taxes from even very small landowners.

In several postings, Jake25 repeats variations of the theme that the NPA is the true army of the people.

The NPA is only one of the many dissident groups worldwide now using YouTube as a propaganda forum.

It is also being used by other political groups considered as legitimate in their countries as a vehicle for projecting their political agendas. Among these are presidential hopefuls in the United States who seek to be the Republican’s or Democrats’ standard bearers in the November 2008 US presidential elections.

(NDF search link on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/results? search_query=national+democratic+ front&search=Search. YouTube [www.youtube.com], owned and controlled by Google, is an online portal where anyone on the planet with Internet connection can post videos with subjects anything under the sun, which then can be freely accessed as well – ed.)

Manila Times

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Communist rebels killed in clashes in Isabela, Camarines

Communist rebels killed in clashes in Isabela, Camarines

Tuesday, July 31, 2007 01:02 PM

MANILA (AFP) - Government forces in the Philippines have killed five Maoist guerrillas in clashes that also wounded one soldier, the military said Tuesday.

Fighting between an infantry patrol and the rebel New People's Army (NPA) near the northern town of San Mariano on Monday killed three rebels and wounded one soldier, said the army division commander, Major-General Rodrigo Maclang.

The troops recovered a rifle, hand grenades and high explosives from the scene, he said.

On the same day, two NPA rebels were slain in a firefight with another infantry unit near the town of Calabanga southeast of Manila, said regional military spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Rhoderic Parayno.

No government casualties were reported.

The 7,000-strong NPA has been waging a Maoist rebellion since 1969 in one of Asia's longest-running communist insurgencies.

Philstar.com

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Philippine Maoist Rebels Claim Killing 31 Troops, 38 Firearms Seized In May

Komfie Manalo - AHN Correspondent

Manila, Philippines (AHN) - The spokesman of the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People's Army Gregorio "Ka Roger" Rosal said communist rebels have killed 31 members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines and the Philippine National Police, while seizing some 38 firearms from security forces since May 3.

Rosal said the firearms include high-powered weapons such as M-60 machine guns.

The CPP, and its armed wing, the NPA have been waging Maoist-style guerilla warfare in the Philippines since the 1970s.

Rosal said communist rebels launched over a dozen tactical offensives in at least seven provinces in the last two weeks.

He said the communist rebels, which the CPP claimed to be operating in more than 100 guerrilla fronts across the country, lost only one rebel fighter and listed two others as wounded.

AHN

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Phillippines Maoists News

Rebels kill 3 soldiers after blasting tower

COMMUNIST rebels blew up a cellphone transmission tower and killed three soldiers but suffered a casualty in a daylong gunfight in Baleno town, Masbate, an Army spokesman said yesterday.

Government troops were chasing rebels suspected of bombing a communications tower on the island province when they came under attack on Sunday, regional spokesman Lt. Col. Rhoderick Parayno said.

He said the outnumbered troops battled the New People’s Army guerrillas for several hours, but failed to hold their positions. By the time reinforcements arrived, the rebels had advanced, killing three soldiers and wounding two others, Parayno said in a statement.

After the attacks, the Southern Luzon commander, Lt. Gen. Alexander Yano, ordered the military to intensify counterinsurgency operations, Parayno said.

“The guerrillas withdrew toward the northwest carrying their casualties,” he said.

Reports reaching Camp Gen. Siemon Ola said the three soldiers killed were all members of the Ninth Infantry Division based in Masbate, and that the slain rebel remained unidentified.

In other violence, one soldier was killed and three were wounded in a clash with rebels in nearby Camarines Norte on Friday, police reported.

Also in the south, four suspected rebels fatally shot a former government militiaman in Sorsogon, and in neighboring Albay, six guerrillas shot to death a man they accused of being a military informer on Saturday, police said.

The rebels have been fighting for 38 years in Asia’s longest Maoist insurgency. The guerrillas, who claim to have a presence in 71 out of the Philippines’ 81 provinces, have recently stepped up attacks, prompting President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to order security forces to cut the 7,000-strong guerrillas force in half by 2010.

The rebels walked away from Norwegian-brokered peace talks in 2004 after accusing the government of instigating their inclusion on United States and European lists of terrorist groups. AP with Arlie Calalo and Mar Arguelles

Phillipines News

Saturday, April 07, 2007

Gregorio "Ka Roger" Quote

Communist Party of Phillippines
gregario ka roger phillippines communist
"All NPA units are ordered to increase the number, intensity, and frequency of tactical offensives as the people's army's main contribution to efforts to rapidly weaken and eventually oust the present Arroyo government that relentlessly inflicts suffering on the Filipino." -- Gregorio "Ka Roger" Rosal in Bigwas

Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) releases "Bigwas" a documentary on the New Peoples Army

Video features celebrating NPA anniversary now posted on YouTube

The Information Bureau of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) today announced that the recently released video documentary “Bigwas” and two other revolutionary music videos have been posted on YouTube. The documentary and music videos were released recently in conjunction with the celebration of the 38th founding anniversary of the New People's Army (NPA).

“Bigwas” is a feature documentary that exhorts the New People's Army (NPA) to intensify its tactical offensives to deal armed blows against the Arroyo regime as punishment for perpetrating the extrajudicial killings, abduction, torture and harassment of activists and members of progressive organizations and terrorizing their mass constituencies.

CPP spokesperson Gregorio “Ka Roger” Rosal said that “We take the opportunity of posting 'Bigwas' and other forthcoming documentary and music videos on the internet to make information on the New People's Army more widely accessible to the public and thus serve to inspire a greater number of Filipinos in their efforts to resist the Arroyo regime's brutal state terrorism through all forms of struggle.”

Internet users can view “Bigwas” by accessing the following addresses:

Part 1

Link to part 1

Part 2

Link to Part 2

Source:Leftspot

Sino Proletaryo presents revolutionary songs Pagbati and Panaghoy

Sine Proletaryo has also produced music videos featuring two original revolutionary songs, namely “Pagbati” and “Panaghoy,” which can also be viewed on YouTube through the following addresses:

Pagbati (MTV)

Link to Pagbati

Panaghoy MTV

Link to Panaghoy