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  1. Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    3,305
    #1
    By Edson C. Tandoc Jr.
    Inquirer
    Last updated 09:11pm (Mla time) 05/09/2007


    MANILA, Philippines -- A band of protesters demanding the withdrawal of soldiers from urban slums ended up being driven out by the residents themselves Wednesday.

    The incident at the Parola Compound in Tondo was ironic as the soldiers were ready to pull out of the community as ordered by the Armed Forces of the Philippines.

    Hours after Armed Forces Chief of Staff Hermogenes Esperon Jr. announced Wednesday his order for troops to pull out of depressed Manila communities, angry residents at Parola Compound in Tondo surrounded a Roman Catholic bishop and about 50 demonstrators calling for the soldiers to leave, and screamed at them to leave the soldiers alone.

    "Lumayas kayo [Get out!]," the residents shouted.

    "They apparently knew we would be coming so they had already prepared," Manila Auxiliary bishop Broderick Pabillo told the Philippine Daily Inquirer as he was being escorted out of the crowded Gate 17 Alley in Parola Compound, Tondo.

    Marching under the scorching heat, more than 50 protesters braved the crowded and narrow alley Wednesday noon, planning to hold a short rally in front of the multipurpose center at the edge of the alley, where seven soldiers were staying.

    They were condemning the deployment of Army personnel in 26 areas in the metropolis since 2006, fearing the soldiers were on a mission to influence the results of the elections.

    "We get feedback that the soldiers were campaigning for certain party list groups," Caloocan Bishop Deogracias Iñiguez Jr. said.

    "Their mere presence also sends a signal, since we know that the military is under the command of the administration," Iñiguez added.

    Some residents were startled when the group started chanting. But when they realized what the message was, many of them started yelling back.

    "We don't want them to leave," 41-year-old mother Nene said, saying the number of robberies and brawls dwindled since the soldiers arrived in their area.

    The residents said the soldiers’ night patrol kept the neighborhood safe. They were also thankful for the multipurpose center the soldiers renovated, the day care center and public toilets they built and the medical missions they conducted.

    "They have been helping us. Only drug addicts and criminals would want to drive them away," said 42-year-old Peter, who has been staying at the area in the last two decades.

    Protest organizers tried to explain that soldiers should be deployed in combat areas in the provinces, but not in the metropolis. The jeers of the residents prevailed, however.

    Half-naked men, grandmothers and children gathered in front of the multipurpose center, preventing the protesters to get near.

    "Lumayas kayo (Go away)!" the residents yelled.

    On the upper floor of the center, three soldiers quietly observed the confrontation.

    Second Lieutenant Jereco Niwane said they had been in the area since December 2006 and were deployed to render community development services.

    Asked why many residents were defending them, he said: "We don't know."

    The protesters said the soldiers had no business in the metropolis, because peace and order should be handled by the local police.

    But 32-year-old mother Mary Jane said the nearest police precinct was hundreds of meters away.

    "They (police) come here only if we call them, unlike the soldiers who are easy to call," she said.

    Niwane said there were instances when people sought their help in catching criminal suspects. "We respond to calls for help but we coordinate with village watchmen and Bantay Bayan members in doing arrests," he told the Inquirer in Filipino.

    A rally organizer admitted it was not the confrontation they expected. In their advisories to the media, organizers hinted at a possible confrontation between them and the soldiers.

    "We were surprised with the residents' reaction," Kabataan party list member Enrico Almonguerra said in Filipino.

    "We are now seeing the effects of the deception of the military, that they are here to solve criminality, repair roads and hold medical missions," he added.

    "But that is not their job. The police is in charge of peace and order. The Department of Health is there. The Department of Public Works and Highways should repair the roads," Almonguerra also said.

    The group just transferred to Isla Puting Bato in Baseco Compound, where organizers invited residents to an interfaith prayer.

    ----

    Catholic ako pero hindi ako magdadalawang isip sigawan ibang bishop satin. ayaw ko maging komunista ang pilipinas.

  2. Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Posts
    21,384
    #2
    Yung sa may Payatas, may umiiyak pa. Ayaw ng mga residente na umalis yung mga sundalo. Nawala raw kasi yung mga riots at gulo, sa Payatas mula nang ma-stationed ang mga PA roon.

  3. Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Posts
    4,313
    #3
    About 5 months na pala ang mga sundalo sa area. These soldiers are doing community services (road repairs, medical missions etc.). Kaya napamahal na ang mga residente sa kanila.

  4. Join Date
    May 2005
    Posts
    651
    #4
    sampal sa CHR who recommended the pullout of soldiers on grounds of human rights violation. utak isda...

    the only ones feeling violation are the holdupers, snatchers and other criminals.

    we can see that they want peace, we all do...

  5. Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Posts
    4,293
    #5
    hay naku mga criminals talaga.

  6. Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    45,927
    #6
    the urban poor see and feel the benefits of having soldiers around.

    Those protesters DO NOT LIVE THERE. They dont know what it's like.

    All they care about is their leftist agenda.

  7. Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Posts
    1,266
    #7
    At least for once, let's appreciate the role of our soldiers. Ngayon alam na ng tao na ang mga militante eh mas pinangangalagahan pa nila sariling interest nila kesa sa totoong interest ng mga mahihirap. Call it social injustice! Only the enemies of the state revile our soldiers. May namatay pa nga na sundalo trying to help someone. Saludo ako kahit na siya pa yung may pinaka mababang rangko!

  8. Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Posts
    227
    #8
    Yan ang problema sa mga militanteng yan e. Basta naka-fatigue, taas agad sila ng mga pulang signs nila sabay sigaw ng paulit-ulit na rhetoric about human rights, militarization,etc. Community service na nga ginagawa ng mga sundalo, reklamo pa sila nang reklamo. Bakit di sila gumawa ng active role para patahimikin ang lugar na yun. Tapos sabayan na rin nila ng mga medical mission at community service. At least maaalala kayo ng mga tao dahil sa kabutihan, hindi dahil sa talsik-laway nilang protesta. Sinawaan din ang mga residente ng Parola sa kanila apparently. At yun namang aux bishop, bumaba sana siya sa level ng mga residente doon. Obvious na wala siyang alam sa sitwasyon ng nasasakupan niya. Imbes na maging instrumento siya ng divisiveness, sana namagitan na lang siya para malaman niya at ng mga kasama niya kung papaano pa sila makakatulong pa. Sarado na kasi ang mga utak e!

    Sa mga sundalo ng PA, good job!

  9. Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    3,305
    #9
    Hindi ko magets kung bakit yung leftist na mga yan ay ayaw gawin ng mga sundalo ang mga ganito...








    wala pa ako nakikitang project na magandang ginawa ang mga nagrarally na mga yan..binabagsak lang nila ekonomiya.

  10. Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Posts
    787
    #10
    The problem is many of these protesters live to protest. Maybe it helps give meaning to their empty lives.

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Slum dwellers repel protesters calling for troops pullout