Farmers’ slay undermines PH legal system
QUEZON CITY - It is with great sadness and anger that Friends of the Earth Asia Pacific have received news of the murders of Datu Victor Danyan, as well as seven members of his family and community, by the Philippine armed forces on December 3, 2017, in their ancestral territory in Lake Sebu, South Cotabato.
Datu Victor and the T’boli–Manubo Sdaf Claimants Organization (Tamasco) communities are long-time partners of the Friends of the Earth Philippines/Legal Rights and Natural Resources Center in their struggle against human rights violations by Consunji-owned companies encroaching on ancestral territory for coffee plantations and coal operations.
The killing of Datu Victor was perpetrated a year after the Consunji company was granted an extension to their 25-year coffee plantation permit that expired in 2016. An extension granted through legal manipulation, without free prior and informed consent from T’boli-Manobo communties. No one gains from the death of Datu Victor and the T’boli-Manobos other than Consunji’s corporate interests.
These murders came only a month after the commemoration of the Philippine congress’ enactment of the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (Ipra) 20 years ago. Their deaths serve as an indictment of the Philippine legal system, which remains uncaring, irresponsive and ineffective in upholding the rights of indigenous peoples over corporate interests.
The killing of Datu Victor was perpetrated a week after the President Duterte government suspended peace talks with the Communist Party of the Philippines and pronounced a crackdown on suspected Communist rebels. The attempt by the Philippine military to justify the killings by labelling Datu Victor a “communist rebel” simply does not hold. Datu Victor fought tirelessly from 1991, when the coffee plantation was first granted a license, for legal and peaceful means in seeking redress for these corporate landgrabs, despite continuous persecution by company guards and government military forces.
We condemn the continued government and corporate security forces’ attacks on defenders of communities and territories fighting against corporate plunder and environmental destruction. We call on the Duterte government to cancel the coffee plantation and coal operation permits inside the Tamsco ancestral domain. We call on the Duterte government to hold to account the perpetrators of attacks and violations against the T’Boli-Manobos including those responsible for the killings of Datu Victor, his two sons, his son in law, and four other members of his community on 3 December 2017. - Friends of the Earth of Asia Pacific Quezon City - It is with great sadness and anger that Friends of the Earth Asia Pacific have received the news of the murders of Datu Victor Danyan, as well as seven members of his family and community, by the Philippine armed forces on December 3, 2017, in their ancestral territory in Lake Sebu, South Cotabato.
Datu Victor and the T’boli–Manubo Sdaf Claimants Organization (Tamasco) communities are long time partners of the Friends of the Earth Philippines/ Legal Rights and Natural Resources Center in their struggle against human rights violations by Consunji-owned companies encroaching on ancestral territory for coffee plantations and coal operations.
The killing of Datu Victor was perpetrated a year after the Consunji company was granted an extension to their 25-year coffee plantation permit that expired in 2016. An extension granted through legal manipulation, without free prior and informed consent from T’boli-Manobo communties. No one gains from the death of Datu Victor and the T’boli-Manobos other than Consunji’s corporate interests.
These murders came only a month after the commemoration of the Philippine congress’ enactment of the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA) 20 years ago. Their deaths serve as an indictment of the Philippine legal system, which remains uncaring, irresponsive and ineffective in upholding the rights of indigenous peoples over corporate interests.
The killing of Datu Victor was perpetrated a week after the President Duterte government suspended peace talks with the Communist Party of the Philippines and pronounced a crackdown on suspected Communist rebels. The attempt by the Philippine military to justify the killings by labelling Datu Victor a “communist rebel” simply does not hold. Datu Victor fought tirelessly from 1991, when the coffee plantation was first granted a license, for legal and peaceful means in seeking redress for these corporate landgrabs, despite continuous persecution by company guards and government military forces.
We condemn the continued government and corporate security forces’ attacks on defenders of communities and territories fighting against corporate plunder and environmental destruction. We call on the Duterte government to cancel the coffee plantation and coal operation permits inside the Tamsco ancestral domain. We call on the Duterte government to hold to account the perpetrators of attacks and violations against the T’Boli-Manobos including those responsible for the killings of Datu Victor, his two sons, his son in law, and four other members of his community on 3 December 2017. - Friends of the Earth of Asia Pacific