Hacienda Luisita

April 30, 2005

Little by little, I'm trying to see all of the Philippines. Last week, on my way home to the USA from Cebu, I stopped off in Manila so I could travel up to Tarlac Province in northern Luzon.

The busy MacArthur Highway (named after Gen. Douglas MacArthur) which traverses Tarlac, is full of heavily-loaded sugar cane trucks. Where do they all come from?

sugar cane truck, Tarlac

Much of the sugar comes from Tarlac's most (in)famous piece of real estate, Hacienda Luisita. Comprising 6400 hectares (15,814 acres), Hacienda Luisita is the second largest single piece of contiguous land in the Philippines (after the 20,000-hectare Canlubang Sugar Estate of the Yulos in Laguna.) The estate was purchased in 1957 by the Cojuanco-Aquino family, one of the small number of oligarchic families who "own" the Philippines.

Entrance to Hacienda Luisita, San Miguel, Tarlac City.
Hacienda Luisita

When I got off the jeepney in San Miguel, my first stop was the Las Haciendas de Luisita sales office. Part of the vast hacienda has been converted into a residential development. To quote the sales brochure, "Enter the world of Hacienda Luisita....a 121-hectare of five villages named after the second generation Cojuanco sisters: Carmen, Corazon, Josefine, Pacita and Teresita. A sprawling community surrounding the Luisita Golf and Country Club....with individually titled lots, a fully operational sports complex, Spanish-Mexican inspired multi-purpose community clubhouse, function room, swimming pool and picnic area."
The sales agents inquired about the whereabouts of my Filipina wife, and offered to sell me a beautiful residential lot ready for immediate construction priced from only P750,000 (13,888 dollars.)

Haciendas de Luisita sales office

The sales agents suggested I tour the Hacienda and look at some of the available lots....but upon discovering that I hadn't brought my car ("You're riding a JEEPNEY?!?"), they suggested it might be better if I were to come back another time.
I decided it was time to see the Hacienda. I asked around and was advised to ride a (motorized) tricycle into the estate. For once I followed local advice, P60 for a one-way ride. We drove past miles of pastoral sugar cane fields.

tricycle ride sugar cane fields, Hacienda Luisita

In about five miles we arrived at the great Central Azucarera de Tarlac, Hacienda Luisita's sugar refinery and one of the largest in the Philippines.

Central Azucarera de Tarlac

Clustered outside the gates of the refinery were a number of grass shacks full of families. The sign on the fence reads:
ITULOY ANG LABAN NI KGD ABEL LADERA PARA SA KATARUNGAN NG MGA MINASAKER SA HACIENDA LUISITA!"
("CONTINUE THE FIGHT AND STRUGGLE OF ABEL LADERA FOR JUSTICE THE FARM WORKERS OF HACIENDA LUISITA!")

strike banner

Excerpt from an article in LabourStart online journal November, 2004:

14 DEAD, 133 ARRESTED, HUNDREDS MISSING IN THE VIOLENT DISPERSAL OF HACIENDA LUISITA STRIKE

In a violent strike dispersal in Hacienda Luisita last November 16, 2004, 14 people were killed, including two children aged 2 and 5 years old who died from suffocation from teargas lobbed by the police and army dispersal teams. One of the victims was allegedly strangled after being shot and his dead body hanged in the factory's gate. At least 35 people were reported to have sustained gunshot wounds, 133 were arrested and detained, hundreds were wounded and another hundred still missing. The carnage is a gruesome reminder of the infamous Mendiola Massacre and Lupao Massacre, which also arose from the peasants demand to own their land.

More than 5,000 sugar mill workers and sugarcane farmers of Hacienda Luisita went on strike last Nov. 6. Members of the Central Azucarera de Tarlac Labor Union (CATLU) barricaded the factory's Gate 2 while members of the United Luisita Workers' Union (ULWU) simultaneously locked up the mill's Gate 1. CATLU is the employees union while ULWU is the farmworkers union.

The strike arose from the deadlock in the negotiations for a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) between CATLU and Hacienda Luisita, Inc. (HLI) and the illegal dismissal of 327 farm workers belonging to ULWU last Oct. 1. Among those illegally dismissed were ULWU president and vice president, Rene Galang and Ildefonso Pingul, respectively, and eight other union officers.

On its part, CATLU demands a P100 (US$ 1.78) salary increase and hospitalization benefits. But the Central Azucarera de Tarlac (CAT) management said that it can only provide a measly P12 wage hike and a P12,000 bonus. Series of negotiations ensued between CATLU and the management but the latter stood pat on its decision thereby resulting in a deadlock.

More than the issue of wage and jobs, land distribution, land distribution remains to be the major demand of Hacienda Luisita workers. The workers, led by ULWU, are calling for the scrapping of the Stock Distribution Option (SDO), which the Cojuangcos used to purportedly escape land distribution to its tenants under the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP). Ironically, it was then Pres. Corazon Cojuangco Aquino, whose family owns the Hacienda, who signed the CARP law in 1987.

Complete article

More articles on the massacre:

Kasama article
Bulatalat analysis
Gate 1, site of November's massacre. Today it's a quiet place, the giant sugar refinery behind it still shut down by the continuing strike.
Gate #1, Hacienda Luisita

 

Martyrs: Photos of striking workers killed by soldiers and police.
Martyrs

Here at Gate #1 is an encampment of striking azucarera workers, members of CATLU (Central Azucarera de Tarlac Labor Union.) They have been camped here since November, waiting and hoping that the company will return to the bargaining table (talks are presently deadlocked.)

encampment of striking azucarera workers

I spoke with Rene Tua, an advisor to the CATLU union. He told me that during the last negotiation between the union and the company, they were offered a raise of 48P (.88 cents US) per day. The union is asking for an additional 150P ($2.77 US) per day during the first year of a new CBA (collective bargaining agreement.) The previous CBA expired in June 2004, and the workers have been without one since then.

Rene Tua

In spite of the militant banners and flags, friendliness of the picketers, and enthusiastic curiosity of the children, the scene was depressing. I wonder if the Cojuanco clan has any motivation to even negotiate at all? The future of Hacienda Luisita is clearly not with sugar.

UMA banner children in front of mural

On the way back out to the highway, I passed two new industrial parks within the hacienda.

industrial park, Hacienda Luisita industrial park, Hacienda Luisita

I saw a map showing planned development within the hacienda: the proposed North Luzon Expressway will run right through the middle of the hacienda (it's nice to have friends in high places) and will be surrounded by residential subdivisions and industrial parks. These have much higher profit potential than an industry such as sugar where global prices have dropped and the workers have shown a disinclination to continue living as slaves.

A land use plan (LUP) was prepared in 1996 outlining the planned comprehensive land conversion of the entire Hacienda Luisita into a commercial and industrial complex. According to the Bulatlat online journal, The Hacienda Luisita Land Use Plan shows that the family of former President Corazon Cojuangco-Aquino plan to convert all its agricultural lands in Tarlac into commercial, industrial, residential and recreational parks. Getting ready for the full-blast conversion, several parts of the hacienda have already been converted to alternative uses since 1989: the Luisita Industrial Park 1 (120 hectares), the Aqua Farm and Homesite Phases I and II (50 hectares), the Luisita Business Park (20 hectares), the recently-converted Luisita Industrial Park 2 / Central Techno Park (500 hectares).
If the plan is fully implemented, more than 5,000 sugar farmers stand to lose their jobs and worse, their right to Hacienda Luisita as farm beneficiaries under the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP).

Interestingly, in 1986 newly-seated President Corazon Aquino announced that land reform for millions of landless farmers would be the central platform of her new government. Yet while she presided over passage of the landmark CARP land reform law, she pointedly excluded from the process her own family estate of Hacienda Luisita. For many, this exposed the hollowness of her commitment to promoting progressive social change in the Philippines.

Earlier, when I had been invited to tour the Las Haciendas de Luisita Homesites, I noticed that one of the five villages was named Corazon. The President who trumpeted land reform has an exclusive residential subdivision named after her, on the family estate which was intentionally excluded from land reform....the true legacy of "People Power" in the Philippines.

Corazon Aquino, 1986
(photo courtesy of Time magazine)
Corazon Aquino

When Hacienda Luisita is full of factories, villas and golf courses, where will these children of sugar cane workers live?

children of Hacienda Luisita

On my way out, I stopped at the new airconditioned Luisita Mall for lunch (yes, that's a Starbucks in the foreground.)

Luisita Mall

Outside the mall, I spotted some advertising banners.

Guns for sale Guns for sale

I guess it's important to keep local security forces well-equipped in order to assure that the Hacienda Luisita Land Use Plan gets implemented without "bothersome interference."


Update 2007

In 1988 then-President Corazon Aquino launched the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law (CARP) as the "centerpiece program" of her administration. She initially vowed to place her family's 6,400 hectare estate under the land reform.

In 1989 her government allowed Hacienda Luisita to adopt the so-called Stock Distribution Option (SDO) under which the 5,000 HLI (Hacienda Luisita Incorporated) workers obtained shares of stock in the company instead of individual titles to the hacienda land. This was widely viewed as an attempt to skirt the CARP redistribution of the hacienda.

In December 2005 the Presidential Agrarian Reform Council (PARC) and Agrarian Reform Secretary Nasser Pangandaman issued an order revoking the SDO agreement, instead directing that the hacienda land be parceled amongst the tenant farmers. Critics interpreted this as a politically-motivated slap at Cory Aquino for having called on President Arroyo to resign following the "Hello Garci" election scandal.

In June 2006, the Supreme Court reversed the PARC order by issuing a temporary restraining order (TRO) against the PARC plan to parcel out Hacienda Luisita to farmer-beneficiaries.

In March 2007, the Supreme Court ruled that sugar lands remained within the coverage of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP.) In response, the Cojuangco family petitioned the court to honor the stock distribution option (SDO) scheme at the hacienda.

As of June 2007, the legal case surrounding the property in still in limbo. The Cojuangco family continues to run the hacienda while the workers who have been tilling the land for years remain in limbo.

 

Update 2010

On May 10, Noynoy Aquino was elected as the new Philippine President. He is the son of Corazon and Benigno Aquino Jr., and says he owns less than a 1% stake in the hacienda. He has suggested the family is considering a scheme to transfer part of the propety to the 10,000 farmer-beneficiaries currently residing there. However, he has bristled at the media attention which the estate aroused during the electoral campign, charging that his opponents were using Hacienda Luisita as a political issue: "Di mahalaga sa kanila ang katotohanan. Kami na nga po ang naaapi d’yan (The truth is not important to these people. We are the oppressed party in this issue.)"
Time will tell what he really plans to do with the hacienda during his presidency.

Please send me your comments about this webpage and about Hacienda Luisita: chrispforr@hotmail.com

 

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