Amid Climate-Fueled Food Crisis, Filipino Forces Open Fire on Starving Farmers
Police
and army forces in the Philippines unleashed bullets on a starving
crowd, killing 10, for demonstrating for drought relief
A
wounded farmer is assisted by other demonstrators after Friday's mass
shooting by security forces in the Philippines. (Photo: Kilab
Multimedia)
4
April, 2016
Police
and army forces shot at about 6,000 starving farmers and Lumad
Indigenous people demonstrating for drought relief in the Philippines
on Friday, ultimately killing 10. Observers characterized the
security forces' action as "a strafing."
"The
government's response to hunger is violence," said Zeph Repollo,
Southeast Asia campaign coordinator for 350.org, in an email
to Common
Dreams.
Three
protesters were immediately killed, and by Monday the death toll had
risen to 10 as more demonstrators succumbed to injuries.
The
farmers and Indigenous people had been blockading a highway in the
Cotabato province for four days in a desperate plea for government
aid, after this winter's record-breaking
temperatures produced
a three-months-long drought that has destroyed their crops and now
threatens their lives.
The
demonstrators were asking the government to provide 15,000 sacks of
rice to ease the hunger crisis. Provincial governor Emmylou Mendoza
has refused to engage the protesters.
"The
government’s policy of systematic land grabbing combined with
the intensified El Nino pushed our farmers and indigenous peoples to
heighten their struggles with sweat and blood in defense of their
right to land and life," wrote Repollo in a statement.
After
an especially intense El Nino created a months-long drought and the
local government ignored their plight, farmers and Indigenous people
blockaded a highway to publicize their need for relief. (Photo: Pinoy
Weekly)
"Why we came down here is not to make trouble. We just want to demand for rice, because of the situation of El NiƱo is leaving our tribes hungry. What happened yesterday, we didn’t start it. They started it by beating us. We wouldn’t be angry if we weren’t beaten up or attacked. We’re having a crisis. We don’t have anything to eat or harvest. Our plants wilted. Even our water has dried up."
"Our
farmers—the country’s food producers—are battered the hardest
and are left in poverty and hunger," Rapollo said. "Civil
disobedience will continue to escalate until the government stops
playing deaf and blind to the genuine cry of the people."
Seventy-eight
people were still under arrest on Monday, Rapollo said, and a local
Methodist Church is sheltering many protesters who escaped the
bullets. Rapollo also reported that no members of the armed forces
have been relieved of duty or investigated for Friday's shooting.
The
state-sponsored violence in the Philippines portends what turmoil may
come as the planet continues to warm, creating more disastrous,
extreme weather events worldwide, environmental activists note.
"The conditions that prompted the 3-day blockade gives us a glimpse of what’s ahead if decisive and just actions in addressing climate change remain in the periphery," said Repollo.
"The conditions that prompted the 3-day blockade gives us a glimpse of what’s ahead if decisive and just actions in addressing climate change remain in the periphery," said Repollo.
"This
is not a distant reality to anywhere in the world," Repollo
wrote to Common
Dreams,
"unless we change the system that feeds [on] hunger, injustices,
and climate catastrophe."
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