Consumers Domain
International Women's Day
(March 8 is International Women's Day. I would like to yield this space to a Unity Statement of various women's organizations and network under the banner of Martsa ng Kababaihan).
A Woman's Place is in the Struggle: Women's Groups Statement on the occasion of International Women's Day (IWD) 2006
International Women's Day is rooted in the centuries-old struggle of ordinary women to participate in society on an equal footing with men. In ancient Greece, Lysistrata initiated a sexual strike against men in order to end war; during the French Revolution, Parisian women calling for "liberty, equality, fraternity" marched on Versailles to demand women's suffrage. In 1909, the first National Woman's Day was observed in the United States on 28 February. The Socialist Party of America designated March 8 in honor of the 1908 garment workers' strike in New York, where women protested against working conditions.
In the Philippines, IWD has been a marking point for many women's groups to look again at the courageous 'herstory' of our foremothers who joined the struggles for independence and women's right to suffrage. In the 1970s at the height of the tyrannical rule of the Marcos regime, many women from all social classes joined hands to actively support the anti-dictatorship struggle. In 1983, when Ninoy Aquino was murdered by the elements of the dictatorship, thousands of women poured into the streets and bravely marched in defiance of the Martial Law regime. That women's march proved to be a milestone in the history of the Filipino people's reclaiming of our democratic rights.
Today March 8, 2006, women are once again defying another repressive government, that of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's. Despite the lifting of Proclamation 1017 which declared a State of National Emergency, the intimidation, harassment and curtailment of human rights continue: six legislators, among them, Representative Liza Masa, are technically under arrest for alleged rebellion and sedition, old charges that are clearly dug up to justify government's actions. Charges have been filed against some media outfits and press freedom continues to be threatened. Activists and critics of the current administration are harassed, intimidated and even murdered. Gloria boasts that the alleged coup plots against her administration have been nipped in the bud, but declares that she would not hesitate to reinstate the State of National Emergency if she thinks that the "national interest" is put to risk.
Women ask: whose national interest is being protected? Is Gloria's national interest the same interest of women and men who clamor for decent employment, livelihood, food and housing of poor households? Is Gloria's "national interest" that of the State and the rights and welfare of its citizens, or does she equate the State with herself and her political survival?
The question of legitimacy has hounded Gloria from the very beginning of her assumption into power. Seeking an electoral mandate in 2004, she was proclaimed president amid widespread reports of massive systematic cheating. Successive scandals have rocked her administration-the jueteng scandal, the "Hello Garci" tapes, the fertilizer fund scam, misuse of public funds, restiveness in the military due to corruption issues, etc.
Her response has been to impose calibrated pre-emptive response (CPR), EO 464, and Proclamation 1017. It is the response of a regime under siege.
Women have found no support from Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, a woman president. Her 10-point development agenda makes no mention of any gender concern. She has denied official support for full reproductive health and family planning services, thus putting at risk women's health and lives. The National Commission on the Role of Filipino Women that is mandated to ensure gender responsive policies has one of the smallest budgets in the bureaucracy. Despite the 25th year of the celebration of the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women or CEDAW, to which the Philippine Government is a signatory, the fundamental rights of women remain a pipedream to millions of women who are daughters, wives, mothers to millions of households.
Constituting one-half of society, we, women, have every right to voice our concerns and to demand what is just and equitable for ourselves, our children and families.
We demand that the Arroyo administration be held accountable for abetting feminization of migration and poverty. Filipino women migrants continue to suffer the effects of migration that include intense loneliness and separation from their own children and loved ones, alienation in foreign lands, and their vulnerability to various forms of violence while in overseas work.
We hold the Arroyo administration accountable for the ill-health and deaths of girls and women, mothers and wives, because of policies that deny them their reproductive rights and access to reproductive health care.
Women have become more vulnerable to disasters, natural or man-made, as experienced by those in the Ultra tragedy and Southern Leyte mudslide. But Gloria is tragedy herself as she imposes her anti-poor, anti-people mining and logging policies.
We demand that Gloria step down, for the sake of our millions of women and their families whose quality of life has deteriorated over the years as a result of her insensitive, anti-women, anti-poor policies and programs.
We want a government that truly respects, protects and promotes women's human rights.
We want a government that heeds and provides for the basic needs of its people and ensures their rights and welfare.
In these trying times, a woman's place is in the struggle for defending our civil liberties and democratic rights, and for the political and social transformation necessary to bring about a better life for the majority of our women, their families and communities.
OUST GLORIA!
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