a message from our sisters in the Philippines on International Womenʻs Day 2012....
Philippines International Women's Day Statement: 
 Unity Statement, March 8, 2012 
 Filipino Women March against US Military Expansion in the Philippines and the Pacific
On  the occasion of the International Women’s Day 2012, we, Filipino women  declare in strongest terms possible, our opposition not only to  increased presence but to U.S. military presence per se on Philippine  soil.
The United States is increasing its military  presence in Asia-Pacific, in particular in the Philippines, and the  Philippine government is showing no qualms in allowing this to happen.
A  news account recently reported of the United States’ plan to increase  its military aid to “boost” Philippine defense; the promised aid will  amount to US$144 million, reflecting an increase of more than US$20  million on the previous amount. In another earlier news article, U.S.  Ambassador to the Philippines Harry Thomas was quoted as saying his  government had spent US$50 million for the upgrading of Philippine  military facilities.
The Washington Post in January 2012  also reported that Philippine officials were in the United States to  conduct initial talks with representatives of the Obama government  “about expanding the American military presence in the island nation…”  More high-level and intense discussions will take place this March.
The  same Washington Post piece quoted a senior Philippine official as  saying “We can point to other countries: Australia, Japan and Singapore.  We’re not the only one doing this, and for good reason. We all want to  see a peaceful and stable region. Nobody wants to have to face China or  confront China.” The US has “about 600 Special Operations troops in the  Philippines, where they advise local forces in their fight with rebels  sympathetic to al-Qaeda,” the report also confirmed.
But  really disturbing news was on the use of U.S. drone in the January  bombing in Parang, Jolo, which came out in Hong Kong-based Asia Times  Online. “A United States-supported airstrike that destroyed with  causalities an Abu Sayyaf hideout on the remote island of Jolo in the  southern Philippines represented the first known use of the unmanned  aerial assault craft in the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP)  counter-insurgency operations against terrorism-linked rebel groups,”  said the article.
We recognize the continuing insecurity  in the Asia-Pacific due to the contending claims of Southeast Asian  countries, including the Philippines and China over the Spratly Islands.  But time and again it has been the call of people’s movements and civil  society groups throughout the region that this territorial conflict  must be resolved by multilateral dialogue among the countries involved  and not with the intervention or through the posturing of a military  power like the US.
We don’t deny the reality of terrorism  that continues to unfold in many parts of the world, even as many of  these have been a result of and have been further intensified precisely  by U.S. policies, but the Philippines should not be drawn into this  US-led war on terror. The Philippine government should instead stand  side-by-side with other nations and peoples who call for multi-polar  ways of looking at and resolving these conflicts. Without being  isolationist and immune to geopolitical realities, the Philippine  government must not at all costs surrender our sovereignty.
Why  a stand against militarization? Militarization is not only about the  presence of warm uniformed bodies, as it spills over other aspects of  women’s lives. It exists and persists because of force that turns into  violence—which is not anymore just about fighting the enemies using  destructive weapons, but about militarization itself as a weapon that  creates and supports a culture of violence; the same force underpinning  rape, assault on women’s bodies and minds, trafficking and prostitution,  domestic abuse, discrimination against those with differing gender  orientation.
This is not at all different from another  form of violence that also oppresses and ravages Filipino women—economic  marginalization resulting from the neo-liberal policy orientation of  government.
Neo-liberalization has meant for Filipino  women labor contractualization or flexibilization, which hasn’t only  further decreased employment opportunities, but has also caused many  women to labor in oppressive situations, mainly characterized by  depressed wages and insecure working conditions.
Privatization  and deregulation, even of basic services and resources considered  national patrimony, are also cornerstones of a neo-liberal economy. And  it’s not only women in the labor sector and urban areas who are  continuously assaulted by these economic policies, which have also  opened the agriculture sector to big business, private investments,  easing out small and medium-scale landholders and producers. Until now,  women in the agriculture sector have remained invisible and their  contributions un-quantified in official statistics; yet the more  privatization occurs, the more they lose whatever access to lands and  land resources they have been able to fight for inch by inch. With  privatization and foreign investments becoming the order of the day, the  completion of the land and distribution aspect of the agrarian reform  program is becoming more and more a distant reality, even as it has been  made clear that the current government is no longer prioritizing  agrarian reform.
On another level, the persistent  intervention of religious fundamentalism in the realm of public  policy-making results in depriving women of vital health services, which  could cause them their life.
The P-Noy government cannot  claim to be on the “straight path” as long as it continues to ignore the  economic, social and sexual violence committed against women, while it  upholds the primacy of neo-liberalization and militarism. The alignment  of the P-Noy regime with the US, as shown by its support for increasing  US troop presence in the Philippines, is of deep concern to us and we  will continue to struggle against it.
To the powers that  be, we say NO to U.S. military expansion in the Philippines and  Asia-Pacific! NO to the Philippine government’s support for this  expansionism! On March 8, 2012, and beyond, listen to the sounds of our  feet marching, to our voices singing protest, to our poetry, stories,  testimonies and speeches shouting out our opposition, and watch us  transform this opposition into more actions of resistance!
Signatories:
Akbayan–Youth  • Amnesty International • Alliance of Progressive Labor • Asian Circle  1325 • Bagong Kamalayan • BATIS • Batis-AWARE • Buklod • Bukluran ng  Manggagawang Pilipino – Kababaihan • CATW-AP • Center for Migrants’  Advocacy • Center for Overseas Workers • Development Action for Women  Network • Focus on the Global South • Free Burma Coalition • Freedom  from Debt Coalition • Initiatives for International Dialogue •  Kababaihan-Pilipinas • KAISA-KA • KAMP • LRC-KSK/FOE-Phils. • MATINIK •  Medical Action Group • Partido Lakas ng Masa • Partido ng Manggagawa •  PAHRA • PEACE • PKKK • Piglas Kababaihan • PREDA • SARILAYA • Transform  Asia • WEDPRO • WomanHealth Phils. • Women’s Legal and Human Rights  Bureau • Welga ng Kababaihan • Women’s Crisis Center • YSAGE • World  March of Women – Pilipinas
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