38 Years Later, Jabidah Still Haunts a Persecuted People

Thirty-eight years ago, the Marcos military murdered dozens of Moro men in a carnage that sparked the Islamic rebellion in the Philippines. The anguish and the outrage remain to this day.

Related story: The Songs of Jabidah?

By Cheryll D. Fiel
davaotoday.com

DAVAO CITY ? Almost four decades later, the anguish and the thirst for justice remained.

Today, March 18, the country?s Moros commemorate the killing by the Philippine military of 28 Moro men on the island of Corregidor 38 years ago, in a carnage that has come to be known as the Jabidah Massacre.

The men had been trained by the dictator Marcos to take part in his plot, called Operation Merdeka, to invade Sabah, a state on the northern part of Malaysia, just south of the Philippines. According to various accounts, when the men found out about Merdeka, they refused to participate and were promptly slain by the military. Several of the men were not accounted for and are presumed dead.

One man, Jirin Arula, survived the slaughter, however, and went on to expose the massacre, which subsequently fueled the rebellion led by Nur Misuari, founding chairman of the Moro National Liberation Front. To this day, the fire ignited by the massacre still burns, according to Moro leaders.

The massacre, according to the IQRAA Islam Foundation, which held a rally here on Friday to commemorate the incident, “ignited the flame of the Bangsamoro people’s legitimate struggle for their right to self-determination.
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Rising Joblessness, Underemployment Refute ?Improving Economy? Claim

MANILA — Employment statistics from the recently released January 2006 Labor Force Survey (LFS) belies government?s claim of an improving economy, according to independent think-tank Ibon Foundation. The January 2006 LFS actually paints a picture of a weak, worsening economy unable to generate long-term, sustainable jobs, the foundation said.

According to the LFS, some 2.8 million Filipinos failed to find work in January 2006, up by 15% from 2.5 million in the same period last year. The decrease in jobs came from the industry sector, which shed some 95,000 jobs mostly from the manufacturing and construction sub-sectors. In a strong, vibrant economy, manufacturing should be the backbone of the country?s industrial sector and a major source of job creation.

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Special Report: A Life in Pain

(davaotoday.com photo by Carlos H. Conde)

A 26-year-old mother endured six long years of abuse, neglect and fear. Like other survivors of domestic violence, she went through the cycle of pain and confusion. It took the wisdom of a boy to finally set her free.

Related Stories
A Costly Fight Against Domestic Abuse

Exploitative Ambivalence: How Davao City Profits from Prostitution

By Germelina A. Lacorte
davaotoday.com

DAVAO CITY — The first thing she noticed when he became her boyfriend was he did not like the way she dressed. Tall and slender, she was fond of wearing tight-fitting clothes, which he said was calling the men’s attention to her. This was often the cause of their early quarrels.

At that time, when he used to slap her, she thought it was her fault. She started wearing loose T-shirts. “It made me look like a hanger because I was very thin,” Sarah (not her real name) recalled.

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Special Report: A Costly Fight Against Domestic Abuse

According to data from City Hall?s Integrated Gender and Development Division, most of the women victims of domestic violence end up not filing any case against their abusive spouses. Many incur heavy expenses as they try to pursue their case. In many instances, the legal expenses dissuaded victims from filing cases.

By Rolando Pinsoy
davaotoday.com

DAVAO CITY ? For much of the eight years that she was married to her husband, Kathy endured the violence.

The abuse occurred practically every day. The last straw was last year, when he kicked her on the forehead. The kick was such that her head slammed the wall.

Kathy, a 33-year-old mother of two from Ma-a, immediately decided that enough was enough. She filed a case in court against her husband, and demanded custody of the children and monthly financial support from him.

Kathy, in a way, is fortunate because her family supports her, particularly in the expenses she incurs ? more than 2,000 pesos per hearing — each time the court hears her case against him. But the case still drags on.

?Depressing,? she said. ?The case is not really moving at all. I might become another statistic listed among the dropped cases. I have not even reached the middle part of my legal struggle.?

Kathy?s case is just one of the dozens of cases filed against spouses that have not prospered in court. According to data from City Hall?s Integrated Gender and Development Division, most of the women victims in these cases end up not filing any case against their abusive spouses. Many, like Kathy, incur heavy expenses as they try to pursue their case. In many instances, the legal expenses involved dissuaded victims from filing cases.
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Special Report: A Life in Pain

Davao By Night (Photo By Barry Ohaylan)

City Hall?s policy on prostituted women, which criminalizes them on the one hand and legalizes them — through the city?s collection of fees — on the other, has been decried for its tendency to victimize these women twice over.

By Jetty Ayop-Ohaylan
davaotoday.com

DAVAO CITY ? At around seven in the evening, the club opens. At eight, Michelle puts on her makeup and slips into the ?dress code? — skimpy underwear with lace trimmings and a pair of sandals with three-inch heels. At nine, as male costumers start coming in, the show begins. The lights become a kaleidoscope of red, orange, blue and green.

On stage, Michelle dances almost nude. She has to dance to three songs and, just like any of other dancers in the club, her performance would become more daring as she removed a piece of what she wears each time a new song begins.

She would end the night either being ?tabled? by customers or taken out to God knows where. Michelle is a ?taxi dancer,? the city?s classification of women like her who are likewise engaged in prostitution.

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