kyig6809@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu (Ken Ilio) (10/31/90)
Recently, GABRIELA, an umbrella organization of several women's group in the Philippines released the following statement concerning the US bases in the Philippines. Comments and discussion are invited in soc.culture.asean: Bases of exploitation We, in GABRIELA Commission on Children and Family, sees the US bases as an antagonist to our cause and we join the other nationalist groups in the effort to unite the Filipino people in demanding for the immediate dismantling of the bases. And we shall reiterate why. First, the US bases provide an excuse for the US government to interfere in our internal affairs. Last month, the US government announced as part of its base aid program that they will provide the Armed Forces of the Philippines with weapons to be used in our govern- ment's counterinsurgency program. And we all know that it is the innocent Filipino people who suffer most from this. Worse, our children are not spared. Children suffer with their families when their place is caught in a crossfire. Children become internal refugees when their families are displaced in cases of zoning. In fact, there are 4500 internal refugees in makeshift camps set up in 35 of 73 provinces nationwide. The result of this are children traumatized by their experiences in war zones. Not to mention the horror of children being executed, raped/sexually abused, disappeared and/or detained. Secondly, the presence of the US bases means the presence of threat of nuclear attack or counterattack from the enemies of the US. This is a reality that confronts us now in the face of the Middle East crisis. If the US so decides to get fully involved in the Middle East crisis, their military bases in the Philippines is the most strategic base they can use to attack Iraq thus dragging the Philippines into a war we do not want. It is enough that Filipino women working in Iraq and Kuwait suffer from this war. We do not need to bring the war to our country so that millions more of women be raped. At the same time, a war is not necessary in creating a nuclear explosion. The mere human factor can cause a nuclear explosion that will kill 5.2 M Filipino men, women and children. Such an explosion will also cause 270,000 cases of spontaneous abortions, 840,000 cases of genetic disorders and 17,000 square miles of radioactive land and water. This is the kind of terror the US bases pose on us - a terror our children will inherit and eventually live. Lastly, we must tackle the social cost of the US bases in the Philippines. The bars and nightclubs around the US military installations had been the scene of the continuous exploitation of women and children. Women, in their attempt to overcome their miserable condition, subject themselves to becoming part of the R & R of the foreigners. At least 100,000 Filipino women are prostitutes. And the business of prostitution leads to several unfortunate consequences. The cases of AIDS in the Philippines has risen to more than 100 this year. An average of one "souvenir baby" born daily had caused the increase in the number of abandoned children. There are 26,000 out-of-school youths in Olongapo City (where Subic Naval Base is) alone, of which 3000 are abandoned street children. Growing in a decadent society, these children have accepted flesh trade as the norm and a number of them engage in it. There is an estimated 20000 child prostitutes in the Philippines. In these conditions, children are vulnerable and prime targets of sexual abuse. Most of the Filipino women and children living within the periphery of the US bases have been violated of their rights. Yet most Filipino people refuse to acknowledge this because it has been this way for decades. The US bases has created a society that ignores or tolerates the exploitation of its women and children. And this is enough reason to dismantle the US military bases. ----- Ruth H. Manglalan GABRIELA ----------------------------------- It may seem that this is an internal Philippine problem, but the degradation of Philippine women around the bases are to such an extent that it requires international attention. Perhaps this posting could forge some form of solidarity between groups outside the Philippines and groups working with women's issues in the Philippines concerning social problems which arise because of the presence of the US bases in the Philippines. Discussion and comments are welcome in soc.culture.asean and soon, in soc.culture. filipino (if ever it will be created). Ken Ilio University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign