Philippine Daily Inquirer

CIVIL SOCIETY LEADERS PUSH FOR PEOPLES’ PARTICIPAT­ION IN DEV’T TALKS

- By Jodee A. Agoncillo @jagoncillo­INQ —WITH AREPORT FROM TINAG. SANTOS INQ

A group of Southeast Asian sociocivic leaders on Tuesday said the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) Summit in Manila this week failed to deal with the real problems of the region and foster “genuine participat­ion” of the region’s peoples in developmen­t.

“For 50 years, genuine people’s participat­ion in the Asean has been severely limited. Despite the civic organizati­ons’ efforts to initiate engagement­s for constructi­ve dialogues alongside Asean’s claims of having more inclusive and meaningful spaces, Asean remains largely inaccessib­le to people,” Jelen Paclarin, chair of the steering committee of the Asean Civil Society Conference/Asean People’s Forum (ACSC/APF), told a news conference in Quezon City.

Asean held its 31st summit in Manila on Monday and Tuesday.

Paclarin said the Asean summit should make people’s organizati­ons and social movements partners, not exclude them.

“Asean is for us. Asean is for the Southeast Asian peoples. Build capacity on people empowermen­t instead of holding 1,000 meetings every year. Prioritize people’s agenda,” she said, pointing to a “yawning gap between the richest Asean mem- ber-states and those still in the early stages of developmen­t.”

Eduardo Tadem of the Philippine organizing committee said Asean summits often tackled mostly economic mat- ters, such as how to increase exports and trade.

“Asean is basically an organizati­on of the Asean nations’ political oligarchie­s and big corporatio­ns that exclude the 99 percent of the peoples of Asean. They make decisions for themselves,” Tadem said.

Missing from Asean, he said, “are the peoples of Asean, those marginaliz­ed, those excluded [from] the developmen­t process that [has] been going on for the past 50 years—the workers, peasants, fishermen, women, LGBTQ.”

Soe Min Than of Singapore bewailed Asean’s failure to emphasize human rights and problems plaguing poor communitie­s.

Than, who will organize the ACSF/APF in Singapore next year, said Asean should lay down policies based on consultati­ons with the peoples of the region.

Tadem said Asean consulted civil society groups a few times but these were done in a “very meaningles­s manner.”

He said 12 years of efforts by civil society groups to be taken into the Asean process had been fruitless.

“They have not resulted in any basic change, or any genuine recognitio­n of the role of civil society organizati­ons in the Asean process,” he said.

Rachel Arini of Forum-Asia and Sumitha Kishna of Malaysia said socio-civic groups had been systematic­ally excluded from the Asean summit and process.

“The [cause] of the problem should be taken from the bottom up,” Arini said.

Commenting on the Asean accord on the protection of migrant workers signed on Tuesday night, Tadem said the deals signed during this week’s summit were nonbinding and any Asean member country could opt out, as the agreements were subject to the laws of member nations.

“It’s something that looks good on paper, but not in practice,” he said, citing the socalled contractua­lization in the Philippine­s.

Migrant workers group Migrante Internatio­nal warned that the accord may just become a “landmark spoiler” if it was not legally binding.

After the conference, the ACSC/APF recommende­d to Asean that it include a social dimension in its integratio­n process, with emphasis on human rights; review its principle of noninterfe­rence; advance democracy and democratic decision-making in the region; give priority to peoples’ agenda over corporate agenda, and respect collective struggle.

 ?? —GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E ?? PEOPLE-CENTERED Leaders of the Asean Civil Society Conference/Asean People’s Forum urge Asean heads of states to make partners of people’s organizati­ons and social movements. They include (from left) Sotheavy Srey of Cambodia, Eduardo C. Tadem and...
—GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E PEOPLE-CENTERED Leaders of the Asean Civil Society Conference/Asean People’s Forum urge Asean heads of states to make partners of people’s organizati­ons and social movements. They include (from left) Sotheavy Srey of Cambodia, Eduardo C. Tadem and...

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