Saturday, October 17, 2009

Public High School Area Conference, Iloilo City, 17 October 2009

Students from Numancia Integrated School, Mina National High School, Bacolod City National High School, and Sum-ag National High School met at the Boracay Hall of the DepEd Regional Office VI to share their ideas on environmental management and education. These student leaders brought with them project ideas that were drawn discussed during their school conferences. Prior to the area conference, each school held meetings to identify and draw-up their respective project proposal for the environmental project that they would pursue. These student with the help of their science teachers developed their project proposals.

The projects discussed include the Mangrove Rehabilitation and Management in Purok Seawall, Barangay Taytay; Waste Management Proposal of Numancia Integrated School in Numancia, Aklan; and the Tree Planting and Environmental Education in Mina National High School, Iloilo.

As part of the area conference, the students selected Mary Ann Dela Cruz of Sum-ag National High School to represent the group to the forthcoming National Conference scheduled in February 2010. In this National Conference, delegates from other Area Conference will share their experience, selec the representative to the international conference, and help develop the Philippine Agenda that will be presented at the International Children and Youth Conference on Environment in Brazil (June 2010).

Mr. Warlito Rosareal, School Principal of Sum-ag National High school, Mr. Medsil Carillo, Principal of Numancia Integrated School, Ms Nely Garote from Negros, Ms. Ann Baldove, Cowa Gratuito and Dr. Ruben Z. Martinez of the Charter for Human Responsibilities facilitated the area conference.

Friday, October 16, 2009

Iloilo Area Conference in Preparation to the National and International Conference for Children and Youth on Environment. 16 October 2009

Iloilo Area Conference in Preparation to the National and International Conference for Children and Youth on Environment. 16 October 2009

Student representatives from 26 schools from the province of Iloilo, Antique, and Negros Occidental met to share their initiatives on environment. The conference is part of the preparatory process that will culminate in June 2010 with the International Children and Youth Conference in Brazil. The Iloilo Area Conference is the first of the Area conferences in the different parts of the country. A representative will be selected for each Area conference to represent the region in the National Conference in Quezon City. The National conference in turn will select the delegates to the International Conference in Brazil.

The Iloilo Area Conference was spearheaded by Rev. Exequiel F. Guanzon of the National Association of Secondary Schools of the Philippines (NASSPHIL) in coordination with the Department of Education (DepEd), Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), UNESCO-Philippines and the Charter for Human Responsibilities – Philippine Facilitating Team.

Dr. Elsa Consibet of DepEd gave the welcome remarks and Ms. Lourdez Armada of Kaunlaran Learning Center Foundation (Miag-ao) discussed the private school initiative on environmental education. Ms. Ann Baldove, Youth Desk Coordinator of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources led the discussion on coastal and marine resources management. Dr. Ruben Z. Martinez discussed the preparatory process for the National and International Children and Youth Conference in Quezon City and Brazil in 2010.

Participants shared their ideas on how to manage the environment, and promote environmental consciousness. Through their initiatives, the student leaders hope to contribute in mitigating global warming, and enhance bio-diversity conservation of the rich marine and coastal resources of the Visayan Sea. There are lessons to be learned from the past such as the disaster brought in by typhoon Frank and the more recent Ondoy and Pepeng. Student leaders hope to sustain the project they initiated. Some of the proposed projects are already on-going activities which have been initiated by the student leaders, which they hope to continue and expand to engage more student to help in promoting environmental education.

The area conference was capped with the election of the representative to the national conference in February 2010. Blessed Bea Plondaya from Iloilo City was elected as their representative to the national conference. She bested four other candidates nominated by their respective groups. The other nominees are: Jesha Faye Abo-abo of Negros Occidental, Kalil Joshua Socobos of Filamer Christian College, Harjeet Jalaf of St. Anthony’s College, Reyna Fe Quilantang of Kaunlaran Learning Center.

The area conference is just the beginning of the student movement that would contribute to the advocacy for environment. Participants of this conference were inspired by the theme, Let’s Take Care of the Planet, Ating Kalikasan, Ating Pananagutan. Kilusan ng Kabataan, Alay sa Mundo.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

'Gibo' plays Datu Sumakwel in Panay


Speaking in flawless Ilongo, Defense Secretary Gilbert Teodoro wowed Panayanons when he addressed them during this year’s Binirayan Festival. In his message, he thanked them for inviting him to the festival as he also reiterated earlier pronouncements that he will submit himself to the selection process as the administration’s bet for the 2010 presidential elections amid queries of how his plans will take form.

While very much known as a son of Tarlac who speaks the dual language of his province, Ilokano and Kapampangan, Teodoro is rarely heard speaking visayan. Before a crowd at the Malandog Beach, in Hamtic, Antique, site where the 10 Bornean Datus first landed, Teodoro said his piece in their native tongue that surprised many of those present.

Teodoro gamely played “Datu Sumakwel” for this year’s festival by joining the “biray” with Cebu Governor Gwendolyn Garcia as his “dayang-dayang.” That meant setting sail on a boat from the port of San Jose, Antique’s capital town to Malandog Beach in Hamtic town in a well decorated boat to re-enact the landing of the 10 Datus in Panay. Datu Sumakwel is the leader of the 10 Malayan Datus who fled from Borneo to escape the rude and tyrant Datu Makatunaw of the Shri-Visayan Empire and found a new home in Panay. Popularly know as the “Legend of the 10 Bornean Datus” but historians refer to as “The Barter of Panay”, the story says, it was here when the leader of the Aetas named Marikudo and his wife Maniwangtiwang gave up the land to the foreigners in exchange of a golden salakot and a golden necklace. It is thus from this legend that the Island of Panay had been dubbed “ the cradle of civilization” as from here on the foundations of governance such as the balangay was formed.

The presence of Secretary Teodoro with Governor Garcia gave rise to speculations that the two will be running mates in 2010. Garcia could only respond in jest when asked if she is Teodoro’s vice president in the coming polls. For his part, Teodoro says Gov Garcia will be a good running mate should such team-up take form.

Garcia was at the Binirayan festival to bring Cebu’s one million donation to the province of Antique as part of the sisterhood pact of the two provinces. The amount was meant to sustain cultural development activities of the province.@ (jmclemente)

Saturday, May 30, 2009

‘Tanglad’ goes mainstream, yields essential oils

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By Jo Martinez-Clemente
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 21:42:00 06/28/2008

Filed Under: Economy, Business & Finance

BACOLOD CITY -- IN HER time, your lola must have boiled this for use as antiseptic to wash off acne or even athlete’s foot. Today, in the generation of take-home dinners, we are familiar with its tangy taste that flavors litson manok.

“Tanglad” or lemon grass, a backyard plant, is going mainstream as its oil is now being extracted for industrial use.

What is abundant in the country is the West-Indian lemon grass or Cymbopogon citratus variety. It contains active ingredients such as the myrcene, effective as antibacterial and pain reliever. Its other active components are citronella, citronellol and geranilol.

The lemon grass is 65- to 85-percent citral. The combination of higher myrcene and citral makes the lemon grass oil less irritating to the skin and thus a good ingredient for cosmetics makers.

Its antibacterial ingredients, on the other hand, can be used for pharmaceutical purposes.

Negros farmers

A nongovernment group called the Alternative Indigenous Development Foundation Inc. (Adfi) wanted to provide farmers with alternative sources of income.
Set up in 1990, the Adfi is a proponent of sustainable agriculture through organic, diversified and integrated farming systems.

In 2004, Adfi chose as their project site an isolated upland area of Mambugsay in the South of Negros. According to Aladino Moraca, an officer of the Adfi, it was a training at the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) that introduced the Adfi to lemon grass oil essence and there, they saw the prospects of lemon grass oil production as a good project.

After years of research the Adfi was able to establish the viability of lemon grass for essential oil as well as fabricate a high-efficiency distillery plant. Farmers were encouraged to plant lemon grass in their backyard or in patches of idle lands. In time, the Mambugsay Essential Oil Producers Association was born. Adfi provided the distillery plant and a ram pump for the provision of water while farmers committed to grow the grass using organic fertilizers. The first plant started operations in 2005 and today, a second plant had been established in Escalante, Negros Occidental.

According to Nelson Cabalu, Adfi’s coordinator on Organic Agriculture and environmental protection, even as the planting areas were only in patches, the total land planted to lemon grass has reached 6.2 hectares. They expect to increase this to 10 ha during the year as membership has also grown from 28 to 42 farmers.

Distilling process

To extract oil from lemon grass, Adfi fabricated a distiller that can process 400 kilos of lemon grass leaves per load. On a rainy day, this can yield an average of 1.5 liters of oil but higher at 1.9 to 2 liters during dry months. It takes 2 to 3 hours to produce the oil doing a very simple process: Hydro steam distillation, condensation and cooling to separate the oil from the water.

The water acquired from this distillation process is called Hydrosol or Hydrolat. As a by-product, it is a pure natural water or plant water essence that contains the same components of the oil but in lower concentrations. This makes the water very suitable in the production of skin care products such as lotions and creams or even as facial cleansing toner in its pure form.

To ensure a steady supply of leaves, farmers have scheduled harvesting. It takes six months to grow the lemon grass but once the leaves are mature for oil extraction, farmers cut the leaves but retain about 15 to 20 centimeters of the plant rooted on the ground so it can grow leaves again. Second cropping can be done after two months.

Fair Trade

According to Moraco, the Adfi practices fair trade thus farmers are paid based on actual oil produced by their leaves. A liter of oil will give a farmer about P1,200.

Adfi develops products from the oil so they can have revenues they can plough back into their programs. Aside from selling organic unadulterated lemon grass oil to industrial users, they also have “Negros Oil” which Adfi’s Enterprise Development Coordinator, Marilyn Celis, says is used in aromatherapy by mixing lemon grass oil with virgin coconut oil.

They also sell Hydrosol to industrial users. Aside from Manila and Cebu, Celis says they also get orders from France and Brussels but hopes that more will get interested in using lemon grass oil for their products.

Last year, the Adfi took part in a Business in Development Challenge (BID Challenge) mounted by the Philippine Business for Social Progress (PBSP) and won P100,000 as one of the 10 finalists. Their prize money, says Celis, enabled them to develop a new product line out of Hydrosol. The product branded as “Citra Pure” is a hand sanitizer that will soon be out in the market.

http://business.inquirer.net/money/topstories/view/20080628-145358/Tanglad-goes-mainstream-yields-essential-oils

Antique honors ‘Lola Masing,’ comfort woman

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By Jo Martinez-Clemente
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 00:56:00 03/08/2008

Filed Under: Regional authorities

SAN JOSE, Antique – She was born on Dec. 8, the Feast of the Immaculate Concepcion and died on April 6, a Good Friday. Through most of her 78 years, Tomasa Dioso Salinog or “Lola Masing” suffered in silence, carrying a cross brought upon her by a war she would rather forget but could not. And so, way into her twilight years, she decided to unload her burden, tell her story and recover her dignity.

Lola Masing rose to become an icon for Filipino women for her “undaunting and uncompromising quest for justice.”

On the occasion of her 79th birth anniversary last year, her province of Antique gave her an accolade – the “Lola Masing Center for Culture and Peace.” Set up in a permanent place at the Museo Antiqueño in the capital town of San Jose, it was dedicated to her, “an Antiqueño comfort woman who in her struggle for justice showed the world dignity despite poverty.”

Under the auspices of the Binirayan Foundation Inc. (BFI), the center is envisioned to be a multimedia resource facility that will provide learning and instructional materials and services on culture, gender and peace studies.

“The story of Lola Masing is also a story about Antique,” says Alex delos Santos, executive director of the BFI. “This was how we were during those times and how Lola Masing picked up the pieces of her life in itself is a story of courage and determination that should inspire us. And we hope that through this center, we will share and continue to draw such inspiration.”

Who is Lola Masing?

Lola Masing was one of the so-called “comfort women,” a term coined during the Japanese occupation of the Philippines during World War II to refer to those who were forced to provide sex to Japanese soldiers.

Born in Pandan town in 1928, Lola Masing lost both her parents early in life. Her mother Patria died a month after she was born. Her father Evaristo took her to San Jose where she completed her elementary education.

Lola Masing was barely in her teens when the war broke out – and tore her apart. Evaristo was beheaded while resisting Japanese soldiers who broke into their house. She, in turn, was abducted by soldiers assigned to the Wakamura Detachment and brought to a house near a garrison on Gobierno Street, where she was raped and abused. She escaped several months later, only to be captured and raped again. She was only 13 then.

In December 1943, the garrison was moved to Davao, but those who remained in Antique did not spare Lola Masing. Her captor, a certain Colonel Okumura, and his friends sexually abused and enslaved her, forcing her to do household chores.

Freedom from abuse came with the 1945 liberation of the Philippines, but it was not until 47 years later when she came out to tell her story, that she freed herself from the ugly images of the past.

Seeking justice

In November 1992, Lola Masing heeded a call for Filipino comfort women to come out and demand justice. She first told her story to an Antique-based lawyer, Roberto Operiano, who helped prepare her documents.

She sold her blanket to raise her fare money to go to Iloilo City. From there, the story of Lola Masing and those of others like Rosa Henson of Pampanga would be told over and over, across the country and in other parts of the world, especially in Japan.

In April 1993, Lola Masing, along with 17 other surviving Filipino comfort women, filed a case with the Tokyo district court, demanding justice, apology and legal compensation from Japan for the abuses committed against them during the war.

In a court hearing held in October 1993, Lola Masing explained what brought her to court:

“I decided to file a lawsuit because I know this is one way to obtain justice for the wrong done to me by the Japanese Imperial Army. My testimony, as well as those of other comfort women, points to the fact that a war crime of rape and sexual slavery had been committed against us.

“As a surviving victim of war, I can only offer my experience to serve as a lesson for all governments and the international community that wars bring only violence and women become the most violated human being in times of war.

“I demand from the Japanese government to fulfill its legal responsibility, sincerely apologize and grant compensation to all victims of sexual slavery. Justice cannot be fully served unless the Japanese government faces its responsibility. This is the only expression of justice that I understand.”

In 1998, the court dismissed the case. Paul Kazuyoshi Okura, representative priest of the Catholic Tokyo Archdiocesan Committee for Justice and Peace who was with her, described the scene:

“Lola Masing started crying. She said, ‘I cannot go back to Antique in shame like this. I want to die here now.’ A lot of Japanese people cried with her. I felt terribly sorry because it was the Japanese government and the judges, who do not recognize their own responsibility for the crimes, who are at shame.”

Lola Masing and her group filed an appeal with the Tokyo appellate court, but this, too, was dismissed in December 2000.

On Christmas Day in 2003, the Supreme Court of Japan dismissed the case with finality and nailed it down for good.

While the case was being heard at the Tokyo district court, an Asia Women’s Fund was allegedly set up by Japan from donations of Japanese citizens and intended for the comfort women. Lola Masing rejected the offer.

Says Yuichi Yokota, Lola Masing’s lawyer: “I met Lola Masing for the first time in November 1992 in Iloilo City. I was gripped by the overwhelming severity of the sexual violence that Lola Masing had suffered from the Japanese Army and was taken by deep shame as a Japanese person.

“From the following year in April 1993 through December 2003, for 10 years and eight months, I took on a litigation struggle with Lola Masing claiming compensation from the Japanese government. The Japanese judiciary refused to adopt any legal remedies. As a sole solution, the Japanese government established the Asian Women’s Fund which conceals and hinders state responsibility and tried to impose this fund to Filipina, Korean, Taiwanese and Dutch women survivors.

Human dignity

“In December 2000, amid heightened energy of the Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal, Lola Masing rejected this fund, resolutely pronouncing that this fund does not fulfill her sense of justice. Our hearts were overcome. Thanks to Lola Masing, I was able to deeply appreciate afresh the magnificence of valuing human dignity,” says Yokota.

Moved by her resoluteness, concerned Japanese citizens formed a group called the Para kay Lola Masing Network-Japan (PLMN-Japan) to support the Filipina in her struggle there. Members had repeatedly visited her at her home in Antique. Beyond death, the group is supporting the Lola Masing Center for Culture and Peace alongside the Asia Women’s Rights Center-Malaya Lolas.

Lola Masing was a member of Malaya Lolas, which was organized in 1996 by the Filipino comfort women. The group has 102 members whose experiences under the Japanese Imperial Army had all been documented. About 30 of them had already died.

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/regions/view/20080308-123465/Antique-honors-Lola-Masing-comfort-woman

Growing gem trees from Sibalom’s riverbeds

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By Jo Martinez-Clemente
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 22:25:00 05/10/2008

Filed Under: Economy, Business & Finance

SIBALOM, Antique -- “Golden wishes do not grow on trees,” says an old scouting song, but jade, jasper and onyx do.

Called gem trees, these are produced by a farmer in this town who goes by the monicker “batologist.”

When he started scouring the riverbeds that embrace Mt. Porras here—picking tiny stones left and right and throwing back some, here and there—people had thought this man was one “unfortunate soul” who needed psychiatric help.

That was more than 10 years ago when Leovic Gellangarin, a 54-year-old farmer from Barangay Iglanot was still learning about semiprecious stones that lay abundant in his town of Sibalom.

Today, Mang Leo runs a backyard business of stonecraft producing a variety of items—from pendants to home decor made of these gems from the river.

‘Batologist’

Today, he is regarded as the towns’ “batologist,” being a disciple of Sibalom’s acknowledged gemologist, Florentino Esponilla.

Mang Leo says his enchantment with precious stones was sparked in 1994 when he met Esponilla in the province’s capital town of San Jose during a stonecraft demonstration mounted by the provincial government, the Department of Science and Technology and the MIRDC Machine Designs.

There, Mang Leo says, he watched Esponilla grind, cut and polish the stones to bring out their natural shine. Before he knew it, he was already deep into learning the different types of gemstones that form part of Antique’s rich natural resource.

Mang Leo looks at Esponilla as the Father of Sibalom’s Gemology, saying that he was the first to know and learn about the gemstones.

Driftstone, sei seki, gem trees

Under the label “Mr. Gemstone Craft,” Mang Leo’s items include gem trees, paperweights, mosaic, souvenir and collector’s items and pendants.

He, however, takes pride in creating an item he calls the “driftstone,” a new art form he invented, he says, that makes use of “powdered” gemstones that are embedded into driftwood.

He also says he has become an expert in sei seki—a Japanese term that means water and stone, but he uses it to identify stones he was able to gather that were “carved by water” to form various things like animal figures, islands and even color-abstracts.

Mang Leo explains that he has mastered the art of “reading the sei seki and seeing something in the stone’s natural form.”

For instance, a heart-shaped blue colored stone was fashioned into a pendant.

He says his most popular item is the gem tree. He shapes the gems into leaves and flowers and he fashions them into “trees” of different shapes and sizes using a design machine he made himself.

Mang Leo says he gets inspiration from bonsai plants. As the entire process is very delicate and intricate, it takes him a day to finish a medium-sized gem tree.

Price depends on the kind of gemstones the tree is made of. A medium-sized gem tree that is about 8 to 6 inches in height made of white jade would cost around P3,000. A smaller size of the same kind would go for about P1,200.00.

Mini trees for office tables that would have just a couple of branches and a few leaves would cost between P100 and P200.

Mang Leo says people buy his gem trees for different reasons but most buy them for luck.

Tektite wish

Mang Leo says his goods are yet to find national exposure as he has yet to join a trade fair in Manila. But he has already made inroads into the local market as once a month he gets invited to participate in trade fairs in Iloilo City.

Mang Leo knows that the rivers surrounding Mt. Porras—like Imparayan river where he gathers his gemstones—are within the Sibalom Natural Park, a biodiversity conservation area, but he stresses that people are allowed to gather stones in the area.

What is forbidden, he says, is outright extraction or quarrying.

The one stone he has kept for himself is a wishing stone called tektite.

And with his tektite wishing stone, Mang Leo’s wish is for government to help more entrepreneurs who want to further refine their craft and improve their business.

http://business.inquirer.net/money/topstories/view/20080510-135771/Growing-gem-trees-from-Sibaloms-riverbeds

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Vol.1 No. 1 - Special Report 3

We are back!

LIST OF ACCUSED IN THE JAVIER MURDER CASE

John Paloy

Commanding Officer 323rd Company, Philippine Constabulary, San Jose Antique. Arraigned Nov. 9, 1987, Court decision: guilty beyond reasonable doubt

Vicente Vegafria

Member, Philippine Army, 47th IB assigned at the Headquarters Service Company in Aklan, detailed as security officer of Assemblyman Arturo Pacificador, Arraigned Nov. 9, 1987

Court decision: guilty beyond reasonable doubt

Eduardo Iran alis Boy Muslim

Remains at large up to present

Court Decision: case to be archived to be reinstated upon arrest

Rodolfo “Ding” Pacificador

Son of Arturo Pacificador and executive assistant in his MPWH office, Remains at large up to present, Court Decision: case to be archived to be reinstated upon arrest

Atty. Avelino Javelana

Lawyer, representative of Assemblyman Pacificador for the canvassing of votes in the 1984 elections and for the presidential snap elections in 1986, Apprehended May 12, 1989. Arraigned June 26, 1989, Court decision: guilty beyond reasonable doubt

Assemblyman Arturo Pacificador

Lawyer and Antique Representative to the Batasang Pambansa, Deputy Minister, Ministry of Public Works & Highways, surrendered March 8, 1995, Arraigned Aug. 20, 1999, Court Decision: Acquitted for failure of prosecution to prove his guilt beyond reasonable doubt

Ramon Hortillano

Enlisted in the Philippine Constabulary in 1983, detailed as security to Pacificador in 1984 documented through letter request of then PC Chief Fidel Ramos approved by then Defence Minister Juan Ponce Enrile, Arraigned Nov. 22, 1999, Court decision: Guilty beyond reasonable doubt

Henry Salaver

Works in the office of the Sports Complex of Senator Edmundo Cea from 1972 till his arrest on May 10, 1990, Arraigned Feb. 5, 1993, Court decision: guilty beyond reasonable doubt.

Eleazar Idemne

A Philippine Constabulary trainee assigned in Bicol but was arrested and put on stockade when he fired his armalite on New Year’s eve 1984 after which he was summarily dismissed. Arrested Nov. 22, 1992, Arraigned Feb. 5, 1993, Court decision: guilty beyond reasonable doubt

Arleen Limoso

Philippine Marine, assigned in the Marine Intelligence Division Detachment in Bicol in 1986 went ot his hometown in Iloilo for vacation. Visited his friend Jose Seguera during his break., Arraigned Jan. 28, 1993, turned state witness, discharged as accused, per order of Nov. 20, 2000

Romeo Nagales

Mamber of the Philippine Constabulary, friend and classmate of Indemne at the Philippine Constabulary training., Arraigned Nov. 9, 1987, Turned state witness, discharged as accused per order of May 11, 1989

Rolando Bernardino

Arraigned Dec. 8, 1988. On Jan 8, 2003 Antique Prov’l Warden Chief Inspector Heracleo Severino reported that when he assumed his post on Oct. 25, 2002, Bernardino was no longer inside the jail. Court decision: guilty beyond reasonable doubt.

Jose Delumen

Hired twice by Boy Muslim to drive for him whom he met through a friend during a fiesta in Bicol, 1985. Arraigned Nov. 9, 1987, In August 4, 1989, case against him was dismissed for failure of prosecution to present evidence against him.

Oscar Tiauson

Mechanic, driver and painter of motor vehicles. Was hired to paint vehicles which he said carry the initials NIA. Submitted self for investigation by the CIS on July 29, 1989. Arraigned Aug. 7, 1989 Court decision: acquitted for failure of prosecution to prove his guilt beyond reasonable doubt

Jimmy Punzalan

Member of the Philippine Constabulary, detailed as additional VIP security for Pacificador based on mission order dated January 29, 1986 issued by Region 6 Commander Dionesio Tan Gatue, Jr, Arraigned Sept. 24, 2001. Court decision: acquitted for failure of prosecution to prove his guilt beyond reasonable doubt

Henry Seguera

Works as checker at the San Jose Port in Antique, Arraigned Sept. 27, 1999, Court decision: guilty beyond reasonable doubt, as an accomplice

Jose Seguera

Joined the Philippine Marines in 1977 and transferred to the Philippine Coast Guard in 1984. Was detailed as close-in security of Pacificador same year. He was with Pacificador in Manila February 10-11, 1986, Arraigned Sept. 27, 1999, In Jan. 3, 2003 court order allowed him to post bail. Court also considered in favor of accused his employment with the Witness Protection Program with the Dept. of Justice

Jesus Garcia

Name was not in the original and amended information but was arraigned and pleaded not guilty on July 18, 1988. Case dismissed for failure of prosecution to present evident against him August 4, 1989

Special Report 1, Arturo Pacificador

Special Report 2, Evelio Javier

WV Magazine, Volume 1, No. 1, May 2005

Vol. 1 No.1 - Special Report 2

We are back!

Evelio Javier: The Marking of a Hero

Jo Martinez-Clemente

“Here in the rotunda,

Trampled by all kinds of feet

Heeled, shoed, slippered or soled

Level all walks in countless

Declarations, speeches,

propaganda, promises.

We recount all cracks on the cement,

And calculate what it’s worth

To smoothen the pavement.

Because here, one man’s boots

Pounded our hearts as he fled

From assassins we can now name

But never dare spell out.

On the eleventh hour of reckoning

The ballots of freedom

The eleventh of February 1986

We heard the volley of gunfire that

made this park a tomb.

Here is where we bury all hate.

Here we unearth our greatness.” 

Excerpts from EBJ Freedom Park By Alex delos Santos


“Evelio Javier, director of Corazon Aquino’s campaign in the remote province of Antique, was sitting on the lawn in front of the capital building, taking a break from a debate over contested votes in his region, when a white vehicle pulled into the driveway. Without warning, a man in a black knit skit mask leaped out and started shooting. Javier jumped up and ran. Zigzagging across the building’s broad concrete plaza, he tried to escape the relentless barrage of bullets. At least one hit its mark. Javier stumbled and fell into a small fishpond. Somehow, though, the fleeing man struggled to his feet and staggered across the street. By this time, other gunmen had begun to close in. Two approached from the left. Another, brandishing a .45 pistol, appeared in front of a warehouse. Javier ducked into an alley and tried to hide behind an outhouse door. But the masked killer found his prey and finished him off with a burst of gunfire.”

This report of the Time Magazine in its February 24, 1986 issue is repeated many times over in various forms the last 19 years. Not only was his story narrated before the Courts in testimonies of eyewitness to his tragic end but also in songs and poems of those who never knew nor met Evelio Javier but whose martyrdom inspired them.

Like Ninoy Aquino, Evelio Javier came to us at a time when we needed an icon to keep the patriotic fire burning, fortify our ranks and make firmer our resolve to end years of dictatorship in the country. And we did.

Countless men and women in various shades and hues of the political spectrum have died in the struggle against the Marcos Dictatorship. No matter how one divides the country’s political epoch or color each segment, red, yellow or white, the fact remains that it is the big strides taken by Ninoy and Evelio that created the icons thereby giving names and faces to the much needed heroes of our time.

Sadly though, the memory of Evelio Javier would fade fast with time, unless sustained.

Let us take cue from students at the University of the Philippines in Iloilo City. I asked a group most of them in their third year why they don’t come to class on February 11 and what makes it a holiday, they don’t know. I asked if they know who Evelio Javier was. They also didn’t know except for one who by chance was from Antique.

Antique Governor Salvacion Zaldivar – Perez is correct in saying that “Javier belongs to everybody.” It is probably in this context that Republic Act 7601, was passed. The law declared February 11 as an official non-working holiday in all of Panay to give time to people in the region to commemorate the Martyrdom of Evelio Javier.

Javier is revered and dearly remembered in his own home province. But as one of Panay’s modern day hero, how dwells the man in the consciousness of the rest of the region?

The Man

Evelio Javier was elected Governor of Antique in 1972 and at 29 was the youngest governor in the Philippines then. He won over incumbent Governor Julian Pacificador and made his mark by garnering one of the biggest majorities in the history of Antique’s gubernatorial contest.

At the end of his term, Javier went to the United States to study at the Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government. He obtained his Masters in Public Administration. His study focused on International Development, Public Management and Political Analysis. As a student, Javier has shown scholastic excellence and leadership. He graduated First Honors from Antique’s San Jose Elementary School in 1955. He then went to the Ateneo de Manila for his High School and graduated in 1959. He completed his Bachelor of Arts Degree in History and Government in 1963, also at the Ateneo where he was a scholar of the Asian Social Institute. From here, he moved to Ateneo’s law school. During his last year, he was simultaneously Student Council President and editor in chief of the Palladium. Earlier during his undergraduate years, he was news editor and later associate editor of the Gidion, the official publication of Ateneo. He completed his Bachelor of Laws in 1968 and passed the bar the same year. Still, Evelio Javier extended time in Ateneo to be part of its teaching force. He was with both the College and Law faculty from 1968 to 1971.

A true blooded Antiqueno, Evelio Javier was born on October 31, 1942 in Lanag, Hamtic. He is eldest in a brood of four. His father Everado is a lawyer from Hamtic while mother Feliza is a school teacher from Culasi. He also married an Antiquena, Precious Bello Lotilla from Sibalom town with whom he had two sons, Francis Gideon Everado and David Ignatius.

In 1984 he returned to Antique and ran for Assemblyman against incumbent Arturo Pacificador. He lost but filed before the Supreme Court a petition to nullify the proclamation of Pacificador as winner of the election. Three years after, the Supreme Court would posthumously rule in his favor.

Tributes and accolade

The decision of the highest court however was not bereft of the country’s sentiments at the time. Taking note of the incidents in between including the assassination of Javier which according to many brought the case to a close, Justice Isagani Cruz wrote with fervent passion:

“It is so easy now, as has been suggested not without reason, to send the records of this case to the archives and say the case is finished and the book is closed.

But not yet.

Let us first say these meager words in tribute to a fallen hero who was struck down in the vigor of his youth because he dared to speak against tyranny. Where many kept a meekly silence for fear of retaliation, and still others feigned and fawned in hopes of safety and even reward, he chose to fight. He was not afraid. Money did not tempt him. Threats did not daunt him. Power did not awe him. His was a singular and all-exacting obsession: the return of freedom to his country. And though he fought not in the barricades of war amid the sound and smoke of shot and shell, he was a soldier nonetheless, fighting valiantly for the liberties of his people against the enemies of his race, unfortunately of his race too, who would impose upon the land a perpetual night of dark enslavement. He did not see the breaking of the dawn, sad to say, but in a very real sense Evelio B. Javier made that dawn draw nearer because he was, like Saul and Jonathan, “swifter than eagles and stronger than lions.”

In the same decision. Justice Cruz took note of a letter the Court received earlier from an 82 year old woman who introduced herself as the sister of the late Justice Calixto Zaldival. But she also introduced herself as “the mother of Rhium Z. Sanchez, the grandmother of Plaridael Sanchez and Aldrich Sanchez, the aunt of Mamerta Zaldivar. I lost all four of them in the election eve ambush in Antique last year.” With such introduction, along came her plea: “Before I die, I would like to see justice to my son and grandsons.’ May I also add that the people of Antique have not stopped praying that the true winner of the last elections will be decided upon by the Supreme Court soon.”

From here, Justice Cruz wrote: “That was a year ago, and since then a new government has taken over in the wake of the February revolution. The despot has escaped, and with him, let us pray, all the oppressions and repressions of the past have also been banished forever. A new spirit is now upon our land. A new vision lines the horizon. Now we can look forward with new hope that under the Constitution of the future every Filipino shall be truly sovereign in his own country, able to express his will through the pristine ballot with only his conscience as his counsel.

This is not an impossible dream. Indeed, it is an approachable goal. It can and will be won if we are able at last, after our long ordeal, to say never again to tyranny. If we can do this with courage and conviction, then and only then, and not until then, can we truly say that the case is finished and the book is closed.” 

The case

The latest contribution to the dearth of literature written about Evelio Javier, is a 156 page decision of Antique’s Regional Trial Court Branch 12 that took 18 years to complete. And this is the one that many hoped would enshrine the true measure of justice in this country. But, has it? 

It is worth noting too that 10 of the 18 years of the case were spent in limbo when the Supreme Court on Sept. 22, 1989 issued a restraining order enjoining Hon Bonofacio Sanz Maceda, then presiding judge from further acting on the cases. This restraining order was lifted on June 19, 1999 when a motion from the solicitor general sought for the continuation of the hearings.

To the Javier family, even as most of the accused were found guilty of the crime, the acquittal of Pacificador is still in wanting of justice for their beloved Beloy. Be that as it may, judgement had finally been made and once more, only time and history canever tell if indeed it was served well.

LIST OF ACCUSED IN THE JAVIER MURDER CASE

Special Report 1, Arturo Pacificador

WV Magazine, Volume 1, No. 1, May 2005

Vol.1 No.1 - Special Report 1

We are back!

Arturo Pacificador: Waiting for History

Jo Martinez-Clemente 

Assemblyman Arturo Pacificador had gone to most countries of the world twice as the Philippines’ representative to the International Parliamentary Union during the time of deposed President Ferdinand Marcos. For nine years though, his galaxy shrunk to a corner of the Antique Rehabilitation Center. Accused of masterminding the 1986 murder of former Governor Evelio “Beloy” Javier, Pacificador had been under preventive detention since 1995, until recently.

On October 12, 2004, Judge Rudy Castrojas of the Regional Trial Court Branch 12 in Antique handed down his decision to the 18 year old murder case. Pacificador was acquitted. The prosecution failed to establish his involvement in Javier’s murder “beyond reasonable doubt.”

This was the same premise that freed the former assemblyman from an earlier case where he was similarly tagged as the mastermind. Hi direct involvement or link can not be established to the killing of nine supporters of Javier in Sibalom town on the eve of the May 1984 Batasan Pambansa elections. The decision was penned by Judge Nery Duremdes of the Regional Trial Court Branch 11.

Only time can ever tell how Pacificador will be treated or remembered by the people. For now however, despite his double acquittal, Pacificador is seen as a villain by the thousands who had placed their beloved Beloy in the sacred corners of their hearts.

Who indeed is Arturo Pacificador?

In the February 24, 1986 issue of Time Magazine that reported the murder of Javier, it attributed the rash of killings in the country to what is called as “gangland violence” and likened Pacificador to a “warlord”

It says: “Opposition leaders and many residents immediately claimed they knew who was behind the killing: Arturo Pacificador, a Marcos crony who is assistant majority floor leader in the National Assembly. Pacificador has operated like a warlord in Antique, wielding political patronage with his connections in the ruling party and the power he has amassed under Marcos.

Opponents say he has ensured his power through alliances with the legitimate armed forces and ties to less reputable mercenaries known locally as goons.”

Time magazine also described Pacificador, then 55 years old as “an attorney who reportedly won Marcos’ loyalty by purging references to bought votes from the record of the 1971 Constitutional Convention.”

Even the Supreme Court of the Philippines in its decision of September 22, 1986 which posthumously granted the petition of Javier to nullify the proclamation of Pacificador as the duly elected representative of Antique in the 1984 Batansang Pambansa elections alluded to his “pomp of power” and to what the Time Magazine described as gangland violence.

Setting the tone for its decision, the Supreme Court Justice Isagani Cruz wrote:

“The petitioner (Javier) and the private respondent (Pacificador) were candidates in Antique for the Batasang Pambansa in the May 1984 elections. The former appeared to enjoy more popular support but the latter had the advantage of being the nominee of the KBL with all its prerequisites of power. On May 13, 1984, the eve of the elections, the bitter contest between the two came to a head when several followers of the petitioner were ambushed and killed, allegedly by the latter’s men. Seven suspects including respondent Pacificador, are now facing trial for these murders.

The incident naturally heightened tension in the province and sharpened the climate of fear among the electorate. Conceivably, it intimidated voters against supporting the opposition candidate of the ruling party……It was in this atmosphere that the voting was held and the post election developments were to run true to form.”

“Antique in 1984 hewed to the line and equaled if it did not surpass the viciousness of elections in the other provinces dominated by the KBL. Terrorism was a special feature, as demonstrated by the killings previously mentioned, which victimized no less than one of the main protagonists and implicated his rival as principal perpetrator. Opposition leaders were in constant peril of their lives even as their supporters were gripped with fear of violence at the hands of the party in power.”

Even as the Supreme Court decision cited various legal basis for nullifying Pacificador’s election and rendering the acts of the Commission on Elections as illegal, it did not fail to mention what it perceived as Pacificador’s extension of power at the Comelec. “Another matter deserving the highest consideration of this court but accorded cavalier attention by the respondent Commission on Elections is due process of law, that ancient guarantee of justice and fair play which is the hallmark of a free society.

Commissioner Opinion ignored it. Asked to inhibit himself on the ground that he was formerly a law partner of the private respondent, he obstinately insisted on participating in the case, denying he was biased.”

“Given the general attitude of the Commission on Elections towards the party in power at that time and the particular relationship between Commissioner Opinion and Pacificador, one could not at least be apprehensive, if not certain, that the decision of the body would be adverse to the petitioner, as in fact it was. Commissioner Opinion’s refusal to inhibit himself and his objection to the transfer of the case to another division can not be justified by any criterion of propriety….”

Hero’s grandson

Pacificador thou had not for once denied association with the Marcoses. In fact, in a visit to him by this writer at his detention house in 2004, on display at his receiving room are a number of memorabilia with the Marcoses.

Still to others, Pacificador could never be a villain having served the Province of Antique as its representative to the 1972 Constitutional Conevntion and to the Batasang Pambansa.

In fact, other members of the Pacificador family had occupied various government posts in Antique like his brother Julian who became mayor of Hamtic and the capital town of San Jose and there after as Governor of the Province.

He was however defeated by Evelio Javier in the 1971 gubernatorial race when he sought another term.

Pacificador is also a direct descendant of Antique’s acclaimed revolutionary hero, General Leandro Fullon. In abiographical sketch written by Aida Ricarze for the book “Maaram,” it noted that Fullon had two children, Pacita and Arturo. Arturo died an infant while Pacita got to marry Roberto Pacificador, Jr from Pototan, Iloilo. The couple had 8 children, the sixth in the brood is Arturo Pacificador.

On Justice and Freedom

Right from the start, Pacificador had hoped for an acquittal. In an interview with him in February 2004 when the long drawn hearing was finally submitted for resolution, Pacificador said then, if he gets an acquittal he will go around the province and dictate the remaining years of his life to public service, if he won’t get it, Pacificador says he is ready for and not afraid of anything. “I will face it. I know eventually, if I do not get justice here, I will get it somewhere else.” Nine years of incarceration, Pacificador claims that the experience had not changed his concept of freedom.

“I don’t believe that my freedom is curtailed except the freedom to go out. At my age, I don’t really need to go out.” he said.

And rightly so, unless one is considered a hardened criminal and placed in a cell, the majority of the detainees at the Antique Rehabilitation Center live in cottages and in some cases with their families. Pacificador shared cottage with three others two of whom are already serving time.

The absence of high protective walls and the rustic ambience of the 20 hectare rehabilitation center nestle along Binirayan hills gives the inmates an air of freedom. They plant, they cook, they play, sing videoke, have their own fiesta celebration and even build their own cottages.

The only kind in the country managed by the local government, the center was established in 1972 by then Governor Javier hardly knowing that some years later, it would be home to be very people accused of his own murder.

Asked if they were treated fairly in relation to how the trial proceeded, Pacificador had this recap:

“The delay in trial is not fair enough, we were expecting a speedy trial. We hold the longest TRO in the world, nine years. Under the law, upon your arrest and within 30 days, you will be arraigned. After the arraignment trial will start but will not exceed 180 days, this is the provision of the speedy trial act. When I surrendered in 1995, I was arraigned only in 1999, four years after. Why? because the Supreme Court ordered the lower court not to hear the case here – the longest TRO.”

Pacificador on Javier

Pacificador agrees to the accolade given to Javier, but for a different reason. Asked how he feels about Javier being revered as a hero, Pacificador says he is happy about it because it vindicates Marcos. “I am glad that he is declared a hero because that will vindicate President Marcos. Evelio was a Marcos man, as a matter of fact, in 1984, he was the handpicked candidate of Marcos as member of Parliament representing the province of Antique,” Pacificador said. Pacificador took note of an alleged handwritten note from Marcos addressed to the local officials of the province and passed around that time which said that his candidate to the Batasan was Javier. “As his handpicked is now a hero, then Marcos is vindicated,” he said. But Pacificador also gave a different view of the man who he said used to call him “tatay.”

“During his school days, Mr. Javier was a companion of my daughter, they were the so called activists and they used to have a meeting in my house, they sleep in my house. As a matter of fact, he used to call me “tatay.” The next thing I knew, we were running against each other for the 1971 Constitutional Convention representative for the province of Antique, luckily I won that elections. After that he ran for Governor of the Province against my brother Julian who was then the incumbent. He won.”

Pacificador debunks observations that the province’s slow development having been in the bottom 20 for long was due to the feuding of political families particularly the Pacificadors and Javiers.

“Not really he said, I was congressman when Javier was Governor but we worked together for the good of the province.”

“We were fighting on principle, we were howling at each other during radio programs but when it comes to working together for public service we never had any serious quarrel, I support him, he supports me,” he said.

Asked what sets him and Javier apart, Pacificador said it was more ideological. “He is quite a leftist, I am not. I am on the right not even in between. I am with the right because I support the principles of free enterprise, the principles of a democratic government, the principle that sovereignty resides in the people. These are the principles that the rightist stand for compared to the leftist which is – that the source of power is from the barrel of the gun and that the instruments of production belong to the state, things like that.”

“I believe that in social justice all you have to do is to give everybody equal chance. I do not even believe in Magsaysay’s concept that those who have less in life should have more in law. Just give everybody a level playing field.” he said. 

Simple wish

To be the main respondent in a celebrated case that even brought out one of the country’s modern day hero, Pacificador indeed had so much to wish for. As history writes itself, the simplest of these wishes is that his province mates remember him from another vein that counts 30 years of his life as a public servant.

Says he: “I just want to be remembered as the man who have dedicated himself to the service of the people of Antique. What more would I aspire as a legacy to my people here than the sincere and honest service I have rendered them during my term in public service.”

LIST OF ACCUSED IN THE JAVIER MURDER CASE

Special Report 2, Evelio Javier

WV Magazine, Volume 1, No. 1, May 2005