Sumilao (Bukidnon) farmers in “walk for land” now in Luzon

Posted on November 11, 2007. Filed under: A developing province, Bukidnon, Issue of the Day in Bukidnon, People First issues in the Province |

Ten years after their famous hunger strike in 1997, the militant Sumilao Farmers are back on the streets, this time, in a “march for land” from Bukidnon to Manila.

As of the November 7 (Day 29) update from Balaod Mindanao, the farmers are reportedly in Calbayog, Samar.

The Sumilao farmers started the march on October 10 from Impasug-ong municipality to Cagayan de Oro, 56 kilometers away, then walked across Northern Mindanao to Surigao City, take the ferry across Visayas and hike towards Manila, according to Raul Socrates Banzuela, national coordinator of the Pambansang Kilusan ng mga Samahang Magsasaka (PAKISAMA) in this initial report on MindaNews.com.

Here’s on how they started the “walk for land” in this more recent MindaNews report.

Why do they have to take the long walk?

According to the MindaNews report: “To recall, the Mapalad farmers staged a 28-day hunger strike before the DAR central office in Quezon City 10 years ago following a series of disappointments in their quest to get back their land.

The DAR, on November 14, 1994, put under compulsory coverage of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law the 144-hectare property.

The Norberto Quisumbing Sr. Management and Development Corporation (NQSRMDC) had applied for conversion of the land from agricultural to agro-industrial. This was denied by the DAR but appealed before the Office of the President (OP). Then Executive Secretary Ruben Torres set aside DAR’s decision and approved the conversion on March 29, 1996.

The DAR moved for reconsideration which was denied on June 23, 1997. The OP also said the March 1996 decision had become final and executory.

The DAR filed a second motion for reconsideration. On November 7, 1997, the OP modified the March 1996 decision by allowing the conversion of approximately 44 hectares of the land adjacent to the highway and distributing the remaining approximately 100 hectares traversed by an irrigation canal and found suitable for agriculture to qualified beneficiaries.

Then President Fidel Ramos hailed the decision as a “win-win” solution.

But Penas said the “win-win” for Ramos was not “daug” (victory) for them. Instead, he said, “gi-daugdaug mi” (we were exploited).

“We never got the land,” he told MindaNews.

The NQSRMDC, the farmer-leaders said, sold the 144 hectares of land to Eduardo Cojuangco’s San Miguel Foods in 2002, for the latter’s piggery project.

“Piggery is also under agriculture,” Penas said. “Why are they making the land available for pigs and not for us?” he asked in Cebuano.


As it turned out, after the so-called “win-win” decision, the NQSRMDC filed a petition for “certiorari, prohibition and injunction with urgent prayer for a temporary restraining order and/or writ of preliminary injunction” before the Supreme Court which the Court granted on April 27, 18.

The high court set aside the November 7, 1997 “win-win” order of the Office of the President and denied the motions for reconsideration “with finality” on November 17, 1998.

On November 3, 2004, Mapalad filed before the DAR a “petition for cancellation and/or revocation with prayer for the issuance of a Cease and Desist Order” against the NQSRMDC and San Miguel Foods, Inc.

The DAR dismissed the petition on October 27, 2006 for lack of jurisdiction, saying the power is “lodged with the Office who issued the order of approval.”

Penas and Merida said there was a violation of the land conversion because the law provides that development must take place within one year on the land converted for non-agricultural use and must be completed within five years. In the case of the NQSRMDC, no such development was made on the land.

The NQSRMDC had cited as reason for conversion of the agricultural land to agro-industrial, its plan to set up the Bukidnon Agro-Industrial Development Association (BAIDA). The BAIDA was supposed to have included a Development Academy of Mindanao; Bukidnon Agro-Industrial Park; Forest Development; Support facilities, including a 360-hotel room, restaurants, dormitories, housing; a Mindanao Sports Development Complex and a commercial mall.

But even the DAR regional office in Cagayan de Oro, in a memorandum for Secretary Nasser Pangandaman last month, had proposed that a “notice of coverage” be issued on the 144-hectare land for immediate distribution.

Dated September 25 this year, the memorandum of DAR OIC regional director John Maruhom recommended that the DAR and the Office of the President should take note of the June 20, 2005 Memorandum from the regional office that “there has been no development in the NQSRMDC property that can be associated with the landowners’ conversion application; that San Miguel Foods, “assuming that it may be considered as successor-in-interest, be declared as to have violated the strict rules governing the approval and implementation of the Conversion Order by not limiting itself to the development proposal submitted by NQSRMDC;” and that a notice of coverage on the 144-hectare land “be immediately issued to place the said landholding for coverage under the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program in pursuance of the DAR’s commitment to accelerate the completion of Land Acquisition and Distribution.”

A copy of Maruhom’s memorandum was furnished the Office of the President. The Office of the President dismissed the farmers’ appeal on October 3.

The farmers’ lawyers in Cagayan de Oro – the Balay Alternative Legal Advocates for the Development of Mindanaw (Balaod-Mindanaw) – is filing a motion for reconsideration on the October 3 decision.” (End of quote on the MindaNews report)

(Bukidnon Reporter: It is a pity I haven’t blogged about this much earlier. But I think it is never too late for me to post in this platform about updates, conditions and issues my kababayans, the Mapalad farmers from Bukidnon, have in this journey. At least in blogging about their walk, I will walk with them in my way own way. )

 

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WHo are funding the Mapalad farmers? I would suppose there are a lot who would finance them considering the property in question is prime property tsk tsk. WHere did these Mapalad farmers came from anyway? Are they realy from Sumilao or were they just PLANTED there?


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