SiGAw is an organization serving Filipinas in the Los Angeles community. We strive to build a strong Filipina women’s mass movement, recognizing that the problems of the Filipina diaspora are linked to the root problems of the Philippines. SiGAw addresses the rights and welfare of women through education, organizing, campaigns, and cultural work. SiGAw is a member organization of GABRIELA-USA and BAYAN-USA.

Posts Tagged: women

Text

GABRIELA-USA’s Statement on the Centennial of International Women’s Day

On March 8, 2011, over ten thousand women in the Philippines took to the streets, in what are the largest International Women’s Day actions organized by GABRIELA, the world-renowned Filipino women’s alliance.  The women demanded relief from the economic crisis in the form of price controls of basic goods, national wage hikes, immediate repatriation and protection for migrant women, comprehensive reproductive health services, education for all, and housing for poor families.  In addition, GABRIELA highlighted their unity with the rest of the Filipino people in calling for fundamental change and national liberation.   

 

Filipino women across the US are participating in activities throughout the week of March 8 to commemorate International Working Women’s Day and expose the dire impacts of the long-term global economic crisis on the lives of Filipinas in the nation and around the world. Filipino women are taking to the streets and are engaging their communities to confront and expose the role of U.S. imperialism in the prolonged crisis of joblessness and increased attacks on women’s rights and livelihood. 

 

In the Philippines, women face an economic crisis of epic proportions as the prices of basic commodities like sugar, rice, and gas continue to increase beyond affordability. Households suffer as utility rates skyrocket, leaving families no choice but to live without electricity or running water. On top of the increased prices of commodities, the Aquino administration also imposes an excessive 12% tax called the Expanded Value Added Tax (EVAT). With every increase, it is traditionally the women who must carry the burden of managing the household and its shrinking budget.

 

In the United States, Congress continues to balance the budget on the backs of women and children by proposing cuts to basic services like health care assistance to pregnant women, new mothers and children, education, and reproductive healthcare. Republicans are attempting to pass a budget that cuts nearly $60 billion in federal funding, a move that would do irreparable damage like slash 700,000 jobs through 2011 and strip all funding from Planned Parenthood, the largest women’s health provider in the nation.

 

As these attacks against women are being committed, both the Aquino and Obama administrations continue to paint a rosy picture that claims that the economic crisis is lifting and that the lives and welfare of Filipinas and other women are not in danger.

 

GABRIELA USA chapters are participating in activities throughout the nation such as a women’s day rally in Harlem, a mother’s march in Los Angeles, a domestic violence vigil in Seattle, and a forum on women’s issues in San Francisco, to expose the true nature and situation of Filipinas, as well as take action in commemoration of the historic militant women’s movement that continues today. The demands of Filipino women for protection against unfair price hikes and cuts against social services light a fire that fuels women to take to the streets and fight against anti-women and anti-people policies.

 

“The centennial of International Women’s Day is an important reminder and inspiration for us to continue to struggle for full women’s emancipation, especially as we are confronted with relentless attacks against women’s rights, and the erosion of social services that women and children need more than ever,“ stated Raquel Redondiez, Chairwoman of GABRIELA-USA. 

 


On this occasion, we honor the legacy of Gabriela Silang, and all of our grandmothers, sisters, daughters, and especially all the working women who have dared to organize and struggle in defense of their rights and for the advancement of future generations of women.  

Join GABRIELA USA in standing in solidarity with our sisters and mothers worldwide struggling against U.S. imperialism’s attacks on our women’s basic rights, our families’ livelihood, and the public social safety net. 

 

MABUHAY ANG KABABAIHAN!

Long Live International Women’s Day!

Text

In honor of all the working women around the world, SiGAw welcomes you to celebrate International Working Women’s Day and Women’s History Month with us at several upcoming events:

Friday, March 4, 2011 7:00pm – 9:00pm Ka Bel Documentary: US Premiere. A remarkable story of how a son of peasants became a working-class hero. Crispin Beltran (also known as “Ka Bel”) was a defender of women’s rights. $10 admission (proceeds go to Kilusang Mayo Uno – a genuine worker-led labor center in the Philippines). @ Filipino Migrant Center in the Grace United Methodist Church 2325 E. 3rd St, Long Beach 90814

Sunday, March 6, 2011 6:00pm Mujeres de Maiz 14th Anniversary Live Art Show: Soldadera de Amor – an interdisciplinary, intercultural, intergenerational experience honoring International Women’s Day and Women’s Herstory Month. @ The Paramount 2708 E Cesar Chavez Ave, LA 90033 http://www.mujeresdemaiz.net/

Saturday, March 12, 2011 11:00am Mother’s March for Everyone’s Survival, End Budget Cuts, Poverty, Discrimination, War & Other Violence. Gather outside of Dept of Child and Family Services office 425 Shatto Pl, LA 90020 http://globalwomenstrike.net/events/los-angeles-mothers-march-everyone’s-survival

Tuesday, March 29, 2011 7:00pm SiGAw and International Action Center Solidarity Dinner. Come meet other women’s organizations in Los Angeles and find out more about the International Women’s Alliance (IWA), an anti-imperialist, anti-patriarchal, anti-racist, and anti-sexist formation uniting the powerful forces of women around the globe to advance the worldwide movement for social justice, democracy and peace. To RSVP contact Terrie at (213) 537-8278 or sigawla@gmail.com. 

Text

As the people of Egypt take to the streets demanding the ouster of President Mohammed Hosni Mubarak’s regime, the world also bear witness to the courage of Egyptian women, showing that the woman’s place is in the struggle.  GABRIELA National Alliance of Women in the Philippines expresses our solidarity with the women and the people of Egypt, recognizing the justness of their struggle. On the same note, we commend the people of Egypt in standing up to the fascist regime of  President Hosni, in demanding for their basic rights and democratic reforms.

 

As in Egypt, women in other parts of the world are reeling from the protracted global economic crisis as US-backed governments, like the Mubarak regime, continue to oppress and repress the people in dissent.  The burgeoning poverty is further marginalizing women, displacing them from their jobs and dislocating them from their sources of livelihood. As governments adopt austerity measures that spell less social services, women and their children are being denied their basic right to health and education.

 

The commodification of women intensifies, further making women prey to sexual exploitation and abuse. In situations of wars of aggression and national political turmoil, rape of women is considered collateral damage. These are the very reasons why women are taking active part in the people’s fight to topple US-backed oppressive regimes and why women are globally linking  struggles to oppose US imperialism’s onslaught on women’s lives. Their active participation and even leadership in the on-going struggle in Egypt serve as inspiration to other women all over the world fighting for national liberation and women’s emancipation.

 

The Filipino women are one with the rest of the world in calling on the Mubarak regime to cease attacking the legitimate people’s protest and immediately step down. We are one with the people of the world in calling for US imperialist to stop sending aid to the Mubarak regime and stop attacking the people’s rights to struggle by supporting fascist regimes.

 

The Filipino women call on the rest of the exploited women of the world to link arms and strengthen our solidarity against the intensifying onslaught of the US imperialism through local puppet governments against our lives and livelihood. We call on the women of the world to support the struggling women of Egypt and other countries.

 

Long live the women of Egypt!

Long live international solidarity!

Down with the Mubarak regime!

Down with U.S. Imperialism!

 GABRIELA Philippines
35 Sct. Delgado St, Brgy. Laging Handa
Quezon City, 1103 Philippines
TeleFax: (632) 374 44 23
E-mail: gabwomen@yahoo.com

GABRIELA is a grassroots-based alliance of more than 200 women’s organizations, institutions, desks and programs in the Philippines. We seek to wage a struggle for the liberation of women and the rest of our people.

Text

Philippine Official Says Victims Were Sexually Mutilated

*By CARLOS H. CONDE*
*The New York Times
Published: November 27, 2009*

DAVAO CITY, the Philippines — Most or all of the 22 women among the 57
people massacred Monday in the southern Philippines were sexually mutilated,
the authorities said Friday, adding grim details to the catalog of horrors
that has already emerged.

“Even the private parts of the women were shot at,” the justice secretary,
Agnes Devanadera, said on national television. “It was horrible. It was not
done to just one. It was done practically to all the women.”

While work continued to identify all the dead, the National Union of
Journalists of the Philippines said that it appeared that 30 journalists and
their assistants had been killed. About a dozen of the victims were the
relatives, lawyers or supporters of Esmael Mangudadatu, a local politician
whose determination to challenge the entrenched Ampatuan clan in a
gubernatorial election apparently touched off the violence.

Investigators said that the rest of the victims, perhaps as many as 15,
happened to be stopped at a checkpoint along the highway in Ampatuan, a town
in Maguindanao Province, when the convoy of Mangudadatu supporters and
journalists was stopped by police officers and militiamen loyal to the
Ampatuans. They were killed to eliminate witnesses, investigators said.

Ms. Devanadera said that several of the men accused of taking part in the
slaughter had surrendered and offered to testify. Though the killings
violated a traditional custom against harming women, the men seemed to be
troubled more by the deaths of the journalists and the bystanders.

“They are bothered by their conscience because they thought that only the
Mangudadatus would be shot,” Ms. Devanadera said.

Andal Ampatuan Jr., a local mayor who is suspected of having ordered the
killings, turned himself in Thursday, protesting his innocence. He is
expected to be charged with murder next week. Ms. Devanadera told The
Philippine Daily Inquirer that Mr. Ampatuan’s brother Zaldy and his father,
Gov. Andal Ampatuan Sr., the clan patriarch, were also under investigation.

Mr. Mangudadatu’s wife, Genalyn, his two sisters and two lawyers working for
him were among the women who were mutilated and murdered. He said on
Thursday that his wife had been shot “in her private parts.”

Ms. Devanadera said that the zippers of the women’s pants had been undone
and that some of the women had had their pants pulled down. She said the
authorities were still trying to determine whether the women had been raped,
but “it is certain that something bad was done to them.”

Felicisimo Khu, a police superintendent, said Wednesday that the women’s
bodies had been found separate from the men’s.

At least one witness, according to Ms. Devanadera, told investigators that
Andal Ampatuan Jr. was on the scene giving commands but that it was not
clear whether he fired a gun.

On Friday, Mr. Mangudadatu, leading a 50-vehicle convoy guarded by soldiers
and heavily armed police officers, finally filed his certificate of
candidacy to run for governor of Maguindanao — precisely what the others
were on their way to do when they were murdered. “I had to do it,” he said
in a telephone interview on Friday. “I owe it to my dear wife, to my family,
to my supporters and to all those journalists who died while doing their
job.”

President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo has been under intense pressure to pursue
and prosecute the killers. The Ampatuan family is her closest political ally
in the southern Philippines and played a critical role in her 2004 election
victory. Her government has assisted the Ampatuans and other area clans in
building potent militias to combat the secessionist and Islamist
insurgencies that have plagued the region.

On Friday, she ordered Interior Secretary Reynaldo Puno to take direct
control of the autonomous region in Muslim Mindanao, a collection of
provinces on and near the island of Mindanao, and to suspend local, police
and military officials if necessary to proceed with the investigation.

A military spokesman said Friday that two ground commanders of the armed
forces in Maguindanao had been relieved of their commands. The military on
Thursday took control of the provincial capital, Shariff Aguak, and other
towns, a day after disarming dozens of militiamen employed by the Ampatuans.

The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines, the largest media
group in the country, urged the government on Friday to form a special court
to try the suspects. “This is to help ensure that no whitewash will happen
and to identify the roots and those responsible for this unimaginable
crime,” said Nestor Burgos Jr., the group’s chairman.

http://carlosconde.com/2009/11/28/philippine-official-says-victims-were-sexually-mutilated/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+carlosconde+%28Carlos+Conde%29&utm_content=Twitter