Showing posts with label locoa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label locoa. Show all posts

Saturday, June 21, 2014

Make it look easy, Indonesia

Philippine Daily Inquirer
Commentary
By Denis Murphy


INDONESIA, the Philippines’ sister republic to the south, has solved one of the great cultural-political dilemmas of modern times: It has shown that Islam and democracy are compatible. Most talk on this matter focuses on the West and the Middle East and is very negative about the chances of the two cultures living in peace with each other. Just recently, for example, the ouster of President Mohammed Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt was seen by some writers as “the death of political Islam.” Indonesia has solved the problem and made it look easy. There was none of the riots, battles, or furious demonstrations we have seen elsewhere.

Wardah Hafidz, an Indonesian woman who has led national urban poor movements for years, told us: “It will not be Islam’s fault if it and democracy part ways. It will be the fault of the people’s culture and history.” Wardah views Islam from the point of view of the very poor, from which point of view both poor Muslims in Indonesia and poor Catholics in the Philippines see their God as the source of all mercy and loving care. They don’t see why that Holy God of theirs would be interested in politics.

We should remember that Indonesia is the third largest democratic country in the world, with 200 million people. Some 86 percent of them are Muslim, so it is the largest Muslim country in the world. It is a democratic and Muslim giant, so what happens there has significance for both democracy and Islam.

We were still interested in seeing how Islam was lived out in ordinary life among the people, so we went last May 30 to a political rally of presidential candidate Joko Widodo in Surabaya. Except for the language, it was like any political rally in Manila, Davao or Cebu. The grounds were packed with young and old, mostly poor people, but many well-off people as well, about 12,000-15,000 all together.

Widodo spoke softly, as if he were in a conversation with the crowd; he told jokes that had the people laughing. It took the people a second or two to understand the meaning of his jokes, it seemed to me, and then they laughed as though they saw then how the funny story could make a political point. He talked very briefly and then was whisked through the people, who pushed in to see and touch him.

It was his third stop of the day that began at dawn 1,000 kilometers away in Jakarta. He would fly to Bali for the final stop. When I asked myself what person he called to mind, I thought of Abraham Lincoln—that is, his manner and plain dress spoke of Lincoln. We’ll have to wait to see what he does for his country, should he be elected.

One night we visited a community along the Surabaya River. The government had allowed the families to stay near the river if they would chop three meters off their houses and build a road instead. They did that with a great deal of suffering, but now they have permanent homes along a lovely waterway. Late in the evening the young girls and women danced—this was the modern, naughty, total-effort dancing we see in Manila. Some wore the veil (hibab). I watched an old woman near me in full Muslim dress. Her face wasn’t covered in the way we often see in other Muslim countries. She was beaming like she would burst as she imitated the young women as best she could. Faster went the music, and she looked for someone to bump hips with. Alas, I was the only one near her. She wasn’t ready for that meeting with the secular world.

At a seminar I asked a young Muslim girl wearing the veil what the Koran had to say about the poor and helping the poor. Her name was Habi (Love). She told me: “Muslims are told we should be with the poor people. It is a demand to live in peace and modesty and to love and care for the poor people in need.”

Muslims seem just as much at home in the politics and democratic and secular world of Indonesia as Christians are in Manila.

Indonesians speak softly, even when they are angry, but that doesn’t mean they are all gentle people. There is a movement now in Indonesia urging people not to forget the past, and to remember the estimated one million people—communists, communist sympathizers, people simply interested in justice and a better life, and personal enemies—who were slaughtered by the army of General Suharto in the mid-1960s as he climbed to power.

Sri Wiyanti Eddyono, formerly of the National Commission on Women and a longtime pro bono lawyer for urban poor causes, told me that the people are also asked to remember the plunder of the Suharto years and the human rights atrocities in East Timor and Aceh, and to watch out that the friends and relatives of Suharto don’t rise again to power.
We, too, should not forget. The Philippines has had just as many sorrows and villains as Indonesia.

The people I met are well aware of the limitations of their democracy, just as people here are aware of this country’s weaknesses. They are especially worried about the growing income gap between the rich and the poor, and the strains it puts on democracy, and the growing power of foreign investors and multilateral lending institutions.

Most of all, the people we met wanted their leaders to be close to and listen to the people, and include the opinions of the people in their decision-making.

Leaders of the Philippine government also need to listen more carefully before they decide what to do with the poor. It is frightening in a way to find the government deciding how and where the poor in the areas devastated by “Yolanda” will live, when there has been almost zero consultation with them on housing matters, according to a recent Oxfam survey. Only 7 percent of the people interviewed in the study had been consulted in any way on the question of housing.

Denis Murphy works with the Urban Poor Associates (urbanpoorassociates@gmail.com).


Read more: http://opinion.inquirer.net/75788/make-it-look-easy-indonesia#ixzz35iYIpyDy 
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Thursday, March 24, 2011

Save Boeung Kak Lake Residents from Eviction

Press Release

March 25, 2011

“Save Cambodia’s Boeung Kak Lake Residents from eviction,” chanted a group of urban poor protesting in front of Cambodia Embassy on Friday. These groups belong to LOCOA (Leaders and Organizers of Community Organizations in Asia), an Asian regional network of urban poor organizations.

This mobilization is a show of solidarity with the people of Boeung Kak Lake amid mounting criticisms over forced displacements in Cambodia. Through LOCOA, Task Force Anti-Eviction (TFAE) in the Philippines and other Asian country members, were able to monitor evictions in Boeung Kak Lake, Phnom Penh, Cambodia since it started in 2009.

(Task Force Anti-Eviction (TFAE) is composed of various people’s organizations and NGOs such as Urban Poor Associates (UPA), Community Organizers Multiversity (COM), and Community Organization of the Philippine Enterprise (COPE))

UPA deputy coordinator Ted Añana said, “We were informed that the remaining lake residents were harassed to leave their homes to make way for high rise buildings and shopping centers.”

LOCOA’s research show that under the 2001 Cambodian Land Law, the Boeung Kak Lake residents have a legitimate claim on the land they have been occupying since the early 1980s. The people are also proposing a land sharing scheme that will allow them to use less than 12 percent of the entire 133 hectares of the project. The lake residents view this as a win-win solution.

In a letter to Governor Kep Chuktema of Phnom Penh, TFAE member Jose Morales said, “We ask you then as Governor of Phnom Penh, to put an end to the threats of eviction and intimidation of residents who have been asserting their rights and resisting evictions. Please recognize the Boeung Kak Lake people’s proposed land sharing scheme and let them participate in the development planning process of the Boeung Kak Lake project.”

On March 21, Monday, LOCOA members in Bangkok, Thailand staged protest demonstrations at the Cambodian and Chinese embassies. But to their dismay, no representatives from the two embassies accepted their letters. They ended up stapling their letters on one of their banners with messages “Listen to the People!” “Open negotiations on land sharing on Boeung Kak Lake!” and hanged them in the embassies’ entrance.

On March 23, a group of urban poor in Dhaka, Bangladesh also showed their solidarity with the Boeung Kak Lake residents by rallying in front of Cambodian embassy. Other Locoa members in Korea, Indonesia, and Mumbai are preparing mass actions in support of Boeung Kak Lake residents.

Añana concluded, “Massive evictions are happening in Asian countries and we believe that if the people of Asia unite to stop eviction, there is a great possibility that Asian governments will observe the housing rights of the poor.” -30-

Friday, October 8, 2010

Asian Urban Poor Leaders Unite Against Evictions

Press Release
October 8, 2010


“No to evictions and Yes to adequate housing” were the words of Asian urban poor leaders in a press conference held on Friday, October 8, 9:00 AM at Tree House Restaurant, Matalino St., Brgy. Central District, Quezon City. The twenty-one Asian leaders in their native dress linked arms with Filipino urban poor as a way of solidarity against eviction.

This was organized by Coordinator of Leaders and Organizers of Community Organizations in Asia (Locoa), in cooperation with Task Force Anti Eviction composed of Urban Poor Associates (UPA), Community Organizers Multiversity (COM), and Community Organization of the Philippine Enterprise (COPE).

Jeff Wong, Adviser to Four Regions Slum Network in Thailand said, “Asian urban poor leaders and NGOs are here in observation of World Habitat Month, the time of year when urban poor citizens all over the world reassert their right to live in the city.”

“There are an estimated one billion urban poor around the world. In LOCOA member countries, as in most all Asian countries, the most pressing problem is the situation of forced evictions of slum communities. We are optimistic that through international cooperation we can enforce citizens’ right to adequate housing,” he added.

According to Task Force Anti Eviction, there is a trend in Metro Manila and its surrounding provinces, that when there is intention to evict a big number of families it is not accompanied by a comprehensive housing plan for the affected families. This manifests a disregard for the housing rights of the poor and must be given a second look by the present government.
“On the100th day of President Noynoy Aquino and in observation of habitat month, we urge him to look at the problem of the urban poor and study the plans of his administration in implementing projects affecting the poor. One example is the intended Ferry boat terminal project in Laguna which will lead to eviction of fisherfolk. But we are very hopeful that the President will heed the call of the people,” said COM training director France Clavecillas.
Philippine Task Force Anti Eviction and with the rest of 10 Asian country members of Locoa (Korea, Cambodia, Thailand, Indonesia, Bangladesh, India, Taiwan, Japan, and Burma) called on their respective national governments to declare a moratorium on evictions and include the “people’s plan” being offered as an option to be included in the government’s response to eviction threats.
Sadaruddin, a community organizer of Urban Poor Consortium in Indonesia, shared their recent success in resisting eviction. The provincial government passed a law in 2007 allowing the residents of Surabaya, united in the people’s organization Stren Kali, to do on-site development. He said, “There the slogan, ‘renovation not relocation’ was listened by the government.” Unfortunately, in 2009, the national government changed the policy regarding buffer zones along the rivers, so the communities are once again facing the threat of forced eviction today. Nevertheless, the people remain committed to continuing their struggle until they attain permanent security of tenure.

Felomina Cinco, president of Nagkakaisang Mamamayan sa Legarda and residing along the stretch of Estero de San Miguel said, “We are still facing eviction despite our persistent presentation of our proposed housing plan. But with the workshop together with other Asian urban poor leaders, we regained hope and were inspired by the experience of struggle of our urban poor friends in Stren Kali who, like us, are determined to carry forth with their fight for the right to carry out upgrading and remain on site.

For her part, Fides Bagasao, LOCOA coordinator said, “This event aims to strengthen the appeal of the Filipino urban poor to the new government to be a defender and promoter of housing rights of the poor, unlike the previous administration which was internationally notorious for its massive and often violent demolitions. We are all united in the goal of improving the quality of life of the poor. We will collectively work to ensure better habitat for today’s and future generations.” -30-

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