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VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN AND CHILDREN

Violence is experienced by the Filipino people due to the worsening condition of landlessness, unemployment, and development aggression. Communities are devastated due to mining projects in rural areas, housing demolitions in urban centers. Pushed to the wall, the Filipino people assert their rights for food and freedom, jobs and justice. Such assertion is answered with state violence, which greatly affects women and children.

assault on women and children


BONDOC PENINSULA, QUEZON Bondoc Peninsula and the rest of the south of Quezon serve as the center of agricultural production in the region due to its large productive tracts of land. These areas are also rich in minerals. Aside from being part of the hacienda belt, the south of Quezon is a target area for various projects such as the biodiesel plant in Gumaca, power plant in Pagbilao, Ogdel Bechtel Coal Fire Thermal Powerplant Extension in Atimonan, and a dam project in Macalelon. As clearing operations for these projects intensifies, people face widespread poverty and dislocation. As a result, people assert their right to life and livelihood. Sadly, the government perceives such assertion as rebellion and it has applied its counter-insurgency program, the Oplan Bayanihan program. Massive military operations occur in the region where eight battalions of the Philippine military are presently deployed in 22 towns of Bondoc Peninsula and south of Quezon. Various human rights violations were experienced by the people of Quezon, particularly affecting women and children. Mothers express fear every time the soldiers search their houses. Children are frightened since the soldiers use their schools and village halls as detachments. TAMPAKAN, SOUTH COTABATO, 18 October 2012 - indigenous woman leader Juvy Capion was killed allegedly by state agents. Juvy, 28 years old, was a Blaan woman leader from Tampakan, South Cotabato. She was killed together with her two children John Mark and Jordan. Juvy was a member of KALGAD, an organization of Lumad who are keenly opposing and campaigning against the SMI-Xtratas mining of gold and copper in the quadri-boundary of South Cotabato, Davao del Sur, Saranggani, and Sultan Kudarat in Mindanao. Around 30,000 Blaan were driven out of their ancestral lands as a result of SMIs Tampakan project. Children EJK Victims, July 2010-June 2013 what is oplan bayanihan? Oplan Bayanihan is a program of the Aquino

Oplan Bayanihan, just like the operational plans of the previous administrations, brought about different forms of violence against women and children, namely:

Under the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) signed under Joseph Estradas administration, the launching of Balikatan exercises has been possible since 2002. In these Balikatan exercises, the whole country becomes accessible to US troops. For women, the increased presence of US soldiers are indicative of further sexual abuses and exploitation. They become vulnerable to prostitution, trafficking, and sexual violence such as the case of Nicole, a young woman who was raped by US soldiers in 2005.
Center for Womens Resources | November 2013

Source: Karapatan Monitor, 1st Quarter (April 2013)

administration that aims to curb elements that oppose the government. It is a copied version of the 2009 Counter-Insurgency Guide (COIN) of the US. Different from the previous operational plans, Oplan Bayanihan puts emphasis on non-combat strategies such as alleged delivery of social services in places where there is increased resistance from the people. This of course, is apart from the usual military tactics that they employ.

Joven Cabe, 9 Sunshine Jabinez, 7 Christian Noceto, 15 Michael Mancera, 10 Richard Mancera, 7 Rodilyn Aguirre, 6 Manuel Pamintuan, 14 Gerald Oreza, 4 Gaily Miraato, 6 Dada Botawon Haron, 5 Asmayra Usman, 4 Jordan Manda, 11 John Khali Lagrimas, 14 John Mark Capion, 13 Jordan Capion, 13 Roque Antivo, 8

Under the worsening crisis of poverty that beset the people, women and children experience increasing violence. According to the 2008 National Demographic and Health Survey, 55% of poor women have experienced violence, compared to 12% of women in the upper income decile. This means that poor women are more susceptible to violence.

NEOLIBERAL ECONOMIC POLICIES


LIBERALIZATION PRIVATIZATION DEREGULATION landlessness unemployment price hikes dislocation low wages demolition contractualization

POVERTY

Rape and domestic violence

5,180

rape cases in 2012

14 women or children victims daily 1 victim every 1 hour and 42 minutes 7 out of 10 victims are children

What compounds the problem is that those who are supposed to be protecting women and children are the ones who are violating them the military, the police, and the paramilitary units of the government or the CAFGU (Citizens Auxilliary Force Geographical Unit). The Center for Womens Resources (CWR) was able to monitor 12 cases of rape involving soldiers from the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and police from the Philippine National Police (PNP) as perpetrators in 2012. One of the rape cases involved two 16-year-old girls in Mankayan, Benguet who were raped by military elements. In 2012, there were 15,181 recorded cases of domestic violence and physical abuse of children, according to the PNP-WCPC. This means that every day, there are 41 cases of violence against women and children or one case every 34 minutes and 37 seconds.

Sex trafficking, prostitution


Poverty is the main reason why women and even children engage in prostitution. This also puts them in a situation open to other forms of abuse such as trafficking.
In February 2012, eight women victims of trafficking were rescued from a Korean bar in Baguio City. Three of them were minors and three were pregnant. According to GABRIELA, the victims were recruited from Mindanao where each of the women were assured PhP10,000 for their families. But when they were transported to the bar in Baguio, the recruiter reneged on the promised PhP10,000 and instead only gave PhP100 each for their food. The victims were forced to work from 8PM till 4AM; and from 4AM till 6PM, they were locked inside their quarters and were only allowed to go outside to buy their food.

According to Talikala, an organization that upholds the rights of prostituted women based in Davao City, there is an estimated 4,000 women and children who are victims of prostitution wherein the youngest is 9 years old while the oldest is 60 years old. The different forms of prostitution continue. In Iloilo, there were reported cases of sex for rice or prostitution in exchange for a kilo of rice. In Navotas and Davao, cases of akyat-barko or prostitution in ships are still rampant. There were also reported cases of prostitution in exchange for a bag of grocery or any food. In young students, there were also reported cases of prosti-tuition or prostitution in exchange for payment for tuition which usually happen every start of the semester in June or October.

Despite the increasing violence, women and children do not remain victims. They are actively participating in the struggle of the people to oppose the programs and policies that reduce and further expose them to poverty and violence. That is why it is a challenge for women to study and to mobilize more women to collectively fight for their democratic rights.
127-B Scout Fuentebella, Bgy. Sacred Heart, Quezon City, Philippines, 1103 (02) 920-1373 / (02) 411-2796 | www.cwrweb.org | cwrgrl@gmail.com facebook.com/cwr1982 | @cwr1982 | cwrawe.wordpress.com

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