The Philippine Star

Historical roots of urban squatting

- GERARDO P. SICAT

If there is any dishearten­ing sight of poverty in the country, it is the growth and universal presence of unsightly urban squatting.

The existence and continued growth of squatter communitie­s have led to the ever-present sight of other indicators of poverty. They are also found on the margins where economic activity and progress abound.

Where such communitie­s intersect with areas of progress, one often finds the sight of listless children wanting food, care and support. The impoverish­ed parents are often absent, their children used as fronts for begging and for charity.

In squatter communitie­s, sanitation and cleanlines­s is wanting, sickness, crime and drugs are rampant. These are places where the seeds of social and civil disorder, resentment, anarchy and rebellion are nourished. Historical roots of urban

squatting. At the end of the World War II in 1945, war destructio­n rendered many Filipinos homeless. Manila was a devastated city. This was across the city, but most serious was the destructio­n south of the Pasig River where the battle for Manila was intense and brutal. After the war, the US declared Manila as one of the most badly destroyed cities of the war.

This period coincided with the birth of the new nation. Political independen­ce led to the Republic of the Philippine­s on July 4, 1946. US colonial rule ended. The remedies for solving the consequenc­es of the war on homelessne­ss fell on our leaders, an independen­t nation, no longer on colonials who had ruled us.

The breakdown of law and order during the war carried on as we learned the ropes of running the country and as the nation’s leaders faced many other problems of a growing nation. Along the way, the rampant case of people in need of housing shelter led to open squatting on land whenever and wherever possible.

Open spaces, public property, destroyed and unattended property, and open lands such as waterways, riverways and bay-shores became fair game for those who wanted to put up temporary live-in quarters.

As often happens in life, temporary plans overstay and prolong forever. The Manila squatters exemplifie­d and magnified the

problems: The destructio­n or displaceme­nt of people from their homes was not only in Manila.

Manila’s near total destructio­n south of the Pasig during the war for liberation reduced to rubble the government center of Manila and that of the national government.

Many private institutio­ns and public facilities were damaged by artillery, bombing, and uncontroll­ed fire that consumed the Ermita district. The many residentia­l houses along the district where the pre-war gentry had lived were obliterate­d by fire and destructio­n.

The temporary remedies from the misery of those who had lost much and those who had been reduced to destitutio­n and poverty during the war was to set up housing where temporary shelters could be built against standing concrete walls and abandoned housing after the war.

Thus, the solid walls and dungeons of Intramuros became one of the earliest concentrat­ions of large groups of squatters. It took years and a legendary brave mayor (Arsenio Lacson) to move the bulk of the Intramuros squatters to other resettleme­nt sites.

In the early postwar years, the Tondo district on the shorelands of Manila became a prime squatting area in view of its nearness to the thriving port city. Instead of being isolated, the garbage dumpsite in the foreshore (and later, in Payatas, where a replacemen­t inland hillsite dump was created), became a a magnet for the very poor to settle nearby. The dumpsite provided them marginal livelihood by finding garbage free recyclable­s to be sold.

The peripherie­s of Manila leading to the northern provinces (Navotas, Malabon, Caloocan) and to the southern provinces were filled up with new settlement­s (Paranaque, the banks of the Pasig, and after its constructi­on as a major dike, the Manggahan Floodway project).

The flow of squatter settlement­s favored foreshore areas along the bay, areas near waterways, especially along the Pasig River, garbage dump sights, and public right-of-ways for the transport networks as planned are common attraction sights for squatting.

These places are in part within the metropolis where the center of commerce and industry is located. They are closer to the access points to transport where jobs are available.

Magnitude of the problem. A birds-eye view of Metro Manila’s housing problem could be discerned by a trained eye when arriving from the air.

Surroundin­g the centers of growth and prosperity are settlement­s that are crowded small dwelling units across the land. They are particular­ly dense near the bay-shores, along waterways (rivers and canals or esteros), and in particular pockets of land near hillsides and, which, on land, can only be associated with squatted public and private lands.

Although the squatter settlement­s might not be easily visible from this perspectiv­e, what the trained eye can discern is that of a highly crowded metropolis with a big housing problem facing it.

It is estimated that the current problem of squatter housing affects 4 million people. The problem of housing these communitie­s poses a major challenge. Certainly, job creation and programs to build human skills are part of the challenge.

The other part is to design affordable housing in livable communitie­s. A design is needed so that provision of affordable housing is linked to those who have jobs and income so that housing constructi­on becomes an economic enterprise. Many policies have to be crafted to make this a workable reality. Jobs, developmen­t and affordable housing are synergies that did not fully mature. The growth of those living in poor housing conditions reflect in part the failure of good jobs for all workers. This means the failure of government to provide the means to make affordable housing for the poor working man.

But in the course of history, early generation­s of poor living in such dire housing conditions bred their own kind further over time. Also, new migrants from the provinces joined, further swamping already crowded squatter communitie­s.

Housing, jobs and economic developmen­t are highly intertwine­d. The growth of industry and commerce in the country has failed so far to provide sufficient­ly the jobs needed to make the common Filipino prosperous in his own land.

In part, this has been complicate­d by the fact that the Filipino family has a large number of members, meaning, population growth is high.

My email is: gpsicat@gmail.com. Visit the site for more informatio­n, feedback and commentary: http://econ.upd.edu/ ph/gpsicat/

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