
MANILA (UCAN): More than 500 farmers marched on the streets of Manila, the Philippines, to vent their grievances over government’s failure to properly implement an agrarian reform scheme adopted 36 years ago.The farmers travelled from various provinces including Palawan, Rizal and Batangas, and gathered outside the headquarters of the Department of Agrarian Reform [DAR] in Quezon City on June 10.
The demonstrators called on the president, Ferdinand Marcos Jr,. to immediately complete agrarian reform and distribute land to beneficiary farmers under the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Programme [CARP] and other land reform laws.
The farmers’ protests received backing from several farmers’ and civil society associations in other parts of the country.
Another major protest rally was held at DAR regional office in Negros Occidental province where the farmers made demands emphasising the “discrepancies between the programme’s goals and the reality experienced by farmers.”
Danny Carranza, secretary-general of Movement for Agrarian Reform and Social Justice [Katarungan], said, “Land distribution is the main feature of redistributive land reform because it shows the actual transfer of power on the land, from big landlords or corporation to actual tillers.”
The demonstrators called on the president, Ferdinand Marcos Jr,. to immediately complete agrarian reform and distribute land to beneficiary farmers under the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Programme [CARP] and other land reform laws
Carranza said, “This means that tillers are empowered to decide, what to produce, when and how to produce, and to benefit directly from the fruits of their labour.”
He explained that the reason why the distribution of lands has remained in limbo up to now is because of the “resistance to land reform by big and powerful actors, and government’s lack of political will,” among others.
“And the law gave landlords the escape route to evade agrarian reform such as the Stock Distribution Option,” which allows them to gain compliance with the agrarian reform law by distributing stocks rather than actual land to the farm workers, Carranza added.
Rico Cajife, a former farmer organiser in the Eastern Visayas region, said that land distribution is important to the farmers “because it gives the poor the power to live with dignity.”
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Cajife said, “The poor will be able to have a livelihood and ensure their food security.”
Asked why the land distribution programme is still in limbo after 36 years, Cajife echoed the same reason: “The power is in the hands of the big landlords and oligarchs.”
The distribution of land under CARP is necessary for the security of the farmers. If their land is not being acquired by them and being titled, there is a chance that it will be repossessed by the original owner
Dhon Daganasol
Dhon Daganasol, another Katarungan farmer leader based in Carigara town, in Leyte, the central Philippines, said land reform implementation is crucial for farmers.
“The distribution of land under CARP is necessary for the security of the farmers. If their land is not being acquired by them and being titled, there is a chance that it will be repossessed by the original owner,” Daganasol, a farmer since 1980s, explained.
Daganasol’s family successfully acquired the rights to their farmlands. He expressed sympathy for the farmers who are still struggling to get land titles from the government.
DAR-Eastern Visayas regional information officer, Jose Alsmith Soria, maintained that the distribution of land for agrarian reform beneficiaries has been ongoing in the region.
Marcos Jr. made a committment to farmers to complete the distribution of all land titles to reform beneficiaries before his term ends on 30 June 2028, Soria said.
“We have about 29,000 hectares of land for distribution, with about 11,000 more agrarian reform beneficiaries to benefit in the Eastern Visayas region,” Soria said.
Farmers’ group Task Force Mapalad said that when Marcos came to power in June 2022, the government still had 173,340 hectares of land nationwide for distribution.