Sun Star Bacolod

Group demands government subsidies for rice, sugar farmers

- BY TERESA D. ELLERA

WORKERS belonging to the General Alliance of Workers’ Assn. (GAWA) is demanding government subsidies for rice and sugar farmers who are affected of the Rice And sugar tarifficat­ion laws.

“Government subsidies for our rice and sugar farmers is very important for their economic survival”, Gawa through its chair Wennie Sancho said.

Amidst the brouhaha over the adverse effects of the implementa­tion of the Rice Tarrificat­ion Law on the economic plight of the rice farmers, we are raising our apprehensi­on on the move of the industrial users and beverage companies to lobby for the importatio­n of High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) in lieu of domestic sugar. This is alarming for the workers in the sugar industry, Gawa pointed out.

They further said that the playing field in the sugar industry is being transforme­d in favor of sugar import liberaliza­tion. This will produced a few winners and a large number of losers. The winners will be the transnatio­nal corporatio­ns, the Chinese taipans and bankers involved in sugar trading and the stock market operation of big business corporatio­ns brokering business in internatio­nal sugar market trading.

The losers include the workers and the farmers in the local sugar industry and agricultur­e who are discrimina­tely and adversely affected by the economic liberaliza­tion policy of the government such as the Rice Tarrificat­ion Law and the impending Sugar Import Liberaliza­tion scheme which had emboldened the beverage companies to resurrect the issue on the importatio­n of HFCS.

“The workers enhance our national competitiv­eness of our industries like rice and sugar by drowning us in a flood of imported rice and sugar which is not a solution. What we need is a forward-looking program of restructur­ing. Competitiv­eness is not something that automatica­lly comes about as a result of simply opening our borders by lifting the quantitati­ve restrictio­n on imported rice and sugar,” Sancho in a statement said.

“The government should put substance to its call for workers empowermen­t through the empowermen­t of the masses. So far, the government­s’ approach to economic developmen­t is through the classic trickle-down approach. This trickling down process can take forever before poverty can be wiped out in the country,” Sancho added.

Meanwhile, major labor groups forged a covenant of solidarity yesterday.

The groups include the National Congress of Unions inphilippi­ne Agricultur­al Commercial the Sugar Industry of the Philippine­s Industrial Workers Union (NACUSIP)(PACIWU) led by Roland Dela Cruz and Her nan iBraza and Congress of Independen­t general Alliance of Workers Organizati­ons (Cio)associatio­n (GAWA) led by Benjie Dela Cruz and Wennie Sancho.

The covenant according to the group aims to strengthen themselves as the primary social economic force and labor unions as the vehicle for social change and transforma­tion.

“We pledge to assist and support one another by extending our collective strength and effort through collective social actions in support of our brothers and sisters who are on strike and by joining public rallies and demonstrat­ion to uphold the advocacy of the labor movement. We also pledged to champion the cause of the poor and the needy, more particular­ly to organize the unorganize­d workers and to defend them in our struggle against all forms of labor contractua­lization,” the group said.

They added that in their quest for labor justice they shall extend legal assistance to unorganize­d workers and shepherd them in the midst of their discontent­ment.

We shall oppose and expose all forms of labor exploitati­on and oppression by the unscrupulo­us employers in order to uphold the dignity of labor. We shall whole heartedly embrace and adopt the principle of social justice as the cornerston­e of this Covenant of Solidarity. Social justice is not a mere catchy slogan to express concern for the plight of the poor and the downtrodde­n, particular­ly the workers in the sugar industry, threatened by the sugar import liberaliza­tion scheme.

The end of social justice is to ensure the dignity, welfare and security of all workers. The beneficiar­y of a social justice policy should rightly be, therefore the common worker, the “little man” so-called the slums dwellers, the landless, the tillers of the soil the laborers, the economical­ly underprivi­leged, the group added.*

 ?? SUNSTAR FILE PHOTO ??
SUNSTAR FILE PHOTO

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