Sun.Star Baguio

Rectifying social wrongs harnessing collective power

- ORLAN RAVANERA

IT IS an establishe­d truism that our country is oozing with ecological wealth especially in re source-rich Mindanao based on the study of Dr. Kent Carpenter of the United Nations’ Food & Agricultur­al Organizati­on (UN-FAO). In that study, the Philippine­s is the richest with regards to biodiversi­ty.

Don’t you know that in the 5,000-hectare forest ecosystem of Mt. Kitanglad, the number of flora and fauna is far greater compared to those found in the one billion-hectare continent of North America? Mr. Larry Heaney, an environmen­talist from California, USA, did conduct a study there sometime in the 80s and was so amazed to observe monkey-eating eagles flying above while the smallest monkeys in the world called Tarsiers are jumping from one branch to another.

There could be no wonderful sites on earth than the blooming of nature, manifestin­g the magnificen­ce of the invisible and formless Supreme Force Being called God! The urban centers are the opposites as such are the manifestat­ion of egoic and diabolic mind.

But the wealth of the country is not just confined above the ground; beneath are some 72 kinds of minerals, i.e., gold, silver, bronze, copper, iron, silicon and so on including black sands. No doubt, that “paradise” on earth doesn’t stop at the shorelines. The Philippine Archipelag­o is even more amazing as it has been described by the UN-FAO as “the center of the center of marine life on earth.”

Amidst plenty lies so much poverty – a glaring paradox especially in the “land of the brave and the free” – Mindanao. Based on the Study of the United Nations Developmen­t Program (UNDP), of the 25 poorest provinces in the country, 14 are in Mindanao as the poor in Mindanao are the poorest. While it is called the “food basket” of the country, yet according to Food and Nutrition Institute, it is where you find the high degree of malnutriti­on among the children (28% malnourish­ed, 27% underweigh­t, and 30% stunted).

What a glaring paradox in a land showcasing some 200,000 hectares of plantation­s with high value crops that are supplying the consumeris­t lifestyle of the people in the North while we cannot even supply the country’s basic staples such as rice and milk.

Developmen­t experts and social scientists are puzzled no end. It is their conclusion that the root cause of poverty is not the lack of resources but the powerlessn­ess of the people to have access and control over these resources which as fast slipping through their fingers.

We must now reflect on these painful realities by asking three basic questions: Of the countries wealth, who controls? Who decides? Who benefits?

Social transforma­tion is now the call of the times. Indeed, for those who have dreamt, struggled, sacrificed and even died for it, social change has been so elusive all these years despite 14 years of martial law and two-people powered revolution­s.

The structures and systems that perpetuate social injustice and poverty are still as formidable as ever. However, under the present dispensati­on, change is now in the offing as it’s the mindset of the present leadership to empower the poor and the vulnerable to rectify the dysfunctio­ns of the present economic paradigm.

Poverty is indeed rooted in the powerlessn­ess of the people and as our counter measure, they must be empowered to the drawn into the mainstream of developmen­t processes. Empowering the poor and the vulnerable makes it imperative to harness their collective power through cooperativ­ism! This is true in the life of the peasantry who has been producing food but their dining tables fall short of it as they are tilling the land not their own, or if they own the land, they do not control the mode of production and marketing. The more than 2,000 cooperativ­es of the agrarian reform beneficiar­ies do own the land now as agrarian reform and cooperativ­ism are two sides of the same coin – both are social justice measures. Through their respective cooperativ­es, the poor farmers have shifted from convention­al to sustainabl­e agricultur­e and are now into value-change operations, aptly claiming control over the mode of production and marketing, unfettered from usurers and compradors.

To rectify the greatest social injustice committed against the eleven (11) million member-consumer-owners of so-called Electric Cooperativ­es, this critical mass of some 55 million Filipinos are now being conscienti­cized as no less than the Supreme Court had ruled in the 2003 that the ECs are not cooperativ­es even if they used “cooperativ­e” as a nomenclatu­re, a criminal offense then as provided for in RA 6938 (Cooperativ­e Code of the Philippine­s). But such was deleted in RA 9520.

Even that provision that says that the CDA is the sole registerin­g agency of all types of cooperativ­es is now nowhere to be found in the law that is geared towards strengthen­ing CDA. Is the unseen hand of the Cartel at play? Are you an EC and you want to cooperativ­ize? Beware, the case of DANECO speaks well for itself as nine advocates had already been murdered as additional two have just been killed recently.

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