Quantcast
Article Index |Advertise | Mobile | RSS | Wireless | Newsletter | Archive | Corrections | Syndication | Contact us | About Us| Services
 
  Breaking News :    
Advertisement
Census
Sta Lucia Realty

INQUIRER ALERT
Get the free INQUIRER newsletter
Enter your email address:

 
Inquirer Headlines / Regions Type Size: (+) (-)
You are here: Home > News > Inquirer Headlines > Regions

  ARTICLE SERVICES      
     Reprint this article     Print this article  
    Send as an e-mail     Send Feedback  
    Post a comment   Share  

  RELATED STORIES  

GALLERY
 
Zoom ImageZoom   

LAST HAUL “Tiempo muerte” (dead season) they call it in Negros sugar farms when workers are left idle for several months after the season’s final harvest. A “sacada” delivers the final load of sugarcane stalks to a waiting truck in Hacienda Victorias in Victorias City in Negros Occidental province. LYN RILLON





imns



Red leader slams plan for sugar workers

By Carla Gomez
Visayas Bureau
First Posted 05:04:00 02/09/2009

Filed Under: Employment, Agriculture, Agrarian Reform

BACOLOD CITY—The top communist guerrilla leader in Negros Occidental criticized as palliative the province’s program to help sugar farm workers cope with the so-called dead season when there’s no work for them.

Frank Fernandez, former priest and spokesperson of the National Democratic Front (NDF) in Negros, said the program was only meant to divert focus from the basic problems that beset the farmers.

The province outlined the program that included selling cheaper rice to sugar farm hands who would be out of work. Fernandez described it as “a short time reprieve and diversion in addressing the problem of poverty and hunger.”

The provincial government announced that it was allocating P15 million for food-for-work programs that will pay rice to jobless sugar farm workers performing menial jobs.

The Provincial Sugar Industry Task Forces also sought the release by the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) of forfeited Sugar Amelioration Funds to help the farm workers.

Enrique Miguel Lacson, task force chair, said authorities were seeking the release of P30 million for rice subsidy, but the DoLE this week said the unreleased amount was only P16 million.

Funds for the subsidy program would only end up in the pockets of politicians running in the 2010 elections, Fernandez warned.

“If there is aid coming, it will only be for a few kilos of rice for the farm workers. This is only a drop in the bucket compared to the lion’s share of the landlords who are in fact in control of the reactionary power here in Negros,” he said.

Farm workers are kept poor because they have no land to till despite the expiring Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law, Fernandez said.

He said top officials of the provincial government were the ones leading attempts to evade agrarian reform by applying their lands in Kabankalan City for reclassification from agricultural to industrial or commercial.



Copyright 2010 Visayas Bureau. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

To subscribe to the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper in the Philippines, call +63 2 896-6000 for Metro Manila and Metro Cebu or email your subscription request here.

Factual errors? Contact the Philippine Daily Inquirer's day desk.
Believe this article violates journalistic ethics? Contact the Inquirer's Reader's Advocate.
Or write The Readers' Advocate:

c/o Philippine Daily Inquirer
Chino Roces Avenue corner Yague and Mascardo Streets,
Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines
Or fax nos. +63 2 8974793 to 94


Share

RELATED STORIES:

OTHER STORIES:



  ^ Back to top

© Copyright 2001-2010 INQUIRER.net, An INQUIRER Company

The INQUIRER Network: HOME | NEWS | SPORTS | SHOWBIZ & STYLE | TECHNOLOGY | BUSINESS | OPINION | GLOBAL NATION | Site Map
Services: Advertise | Buy Content | Wireless | Newsletter | Low Graphics | Search / Archive | Article Index | Contact us
The INQUIRER Company: About the Inquirer | User Agreement | Link Policy | Privacy Policy

Advertisement
Xoom
BizLinq
Themes and Motifs
INQ GAMES