Manila Bulletin

Red-tagging forces Maginhawa Community Pantry to stop operation

- By MARTIN A. SADONGDONG

The community pantry on Maginhawa Street in Quezon City, which was set up to provide food items for people severely affected by the pandemic that inspired others to open their own, was forced to temporaril­y stopped its operation after it was linked to the communist rebels by the government's anti-insurgency task force and the police, the organizer said on Tuesday, April 20.

In a Facebook post, Ana Patricia Non, who organized the Maginhawa Community Pantry, said volunteers had to stop distributi­ng goods and accepting donations after they were red-tagged on social media.

“Malungkot po dahil hindi muna maipapamah­agi ang goods na inihanda namin buong maghapon dahil po sa red-tagging na nagaganap (It is saddening that we will not be able to distribute the goods that we prepared all day because of the redtagging incident),” Non said.

“Mabigat sa pakiramdam ko kasi maganda po ang intention ko noong binuo ko ang community pantry at ilang araw na din po na napakarami­ng pinagsisil­bihan nito at ganoon din po ang tulong na dumadating (It is difficult for me because I only have good intentions when I decided to put up the community pantry and it really helped a lot of people for many days now, and donations are pouring in, too),” she added.

The community pantry on Maginhawa was dubbed as the mother of all community pantries in the country as it inspired other people to set up their own in various parts of the country that include Mindanao. The community pantry works on the concept of encouragin­g people to donate whatever they can while urging the intended beneficiar­ies to get what they just need.

Non initially establishe­d a makeshift pantry loaded with basic necessitie­s and as soon as it became viral in the social media, a number people began to donate food items. The community pantry also debunked the stereotypi­ng of poor people as greedy since testimonia­ls in the social media revealed that they would indeed get what they just need even if no one is looking.

As soon as community pantries spread like wildfire in various parts of the country, the suspicion of some people and other groups started to become true – community pantries are now being linked to communist rebels.

Non herself posted several screenshot­s of social media posts shared by the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) through their official Facebook page, Quezon City Police District (QCPD), and other social media users alleging that the community pantry was a work of front organizati­ons of the Communist Party of the Philippine­s (CPP) and the New People's Army (NPA).

“Ito ba ang taus-pusong pagtulong? (Is this what you call sincere assistance?),” wrote the NTF-ELCAC in one of its social media posts while sharing a photo bearing the face of Kabataan Party-list Rep. Sarah Elago, apparently suggesting that the establishm­ent of the community pantries was associated with the CPP-NPA. Elago has repeatedly been associated by the NTF-ELCAC with the CPP-NPA although the progressiv­e lawmaker already refuted the allegation­s.

The social media posts claimed that the establishm­ent of community pantries was “being exploited” by the CPP-NPA to cultivate hate against the government, particular­ly to highlight the lack of assistance during lockdowns.

Non denied being a part of any communist organizati­on, adding that she is now afraid for her safety.

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