(This article first appeared in the internet magazine bulatlat.com)
The imprisonment of poet Axel Alejandro Pinpin
and musician Alexis Uy shows the reality that
artists cannot escape from political contradictions
of their time.
BY DENNIS ESPADA
Bulatlat
The imprisonment of poet Axel Alejandro Pinpin
and musician Alexis Uy shows the reality that
artists cannot escape from political contradictions
of their time.
And in the midst of what they perceive as an
attack against freedom of expression, the Artists
for the Removal of Gloria (ARREST Gloria), a
broad alliance of artists and cultural groups, stated
that they cannot bring themselves "to be silent at a
time when the forces of darkness have begun to
haul artists to the silence of the graveyard."
Pinpin, 34, an Agriculture graduate of the Cavite
State University, is a 1999 Fellow of the University
of the Philippines (UP) Writers’ Workshop and
author of a self-published poetry compilation titled
Tugmaang Walang Tugma (Rhyming without
Ryhmes). Friends say he had been compiling
poems for a second book at the time he was
arrested.
Meanwhile, Uy, 26, is a member of Artistang
Pangkultura ng Mamalakaya sa Timog Katagalugan
(APLAYA or Cultural Artists of Fisherfolks in
Southern Tagalog) which he helped organize,
aside from working as a researcher for the
Katipunan ng Samahang Magbubukid sa Timog
Katagalugan (Kasama-TK or Federation of Peasant
Organizations in Southern Tagalog).
Being researchers of peasant organizations, both
artists were supposed to take part in protest
rallies in commemoration of Labor Day to be held in
Cavite and Quezon provinces.
Pinpin and his companions – Kalipunan ng mga
Magsasaka sa Kabite (Kamagsasaka-Ka or
Farmer's Federation in Cavite) organizer Riel
Custodio, researcher Aristedes Sarmiento, and
local residents Enrico Ybańez and Michael
Masayes – were nabbed April 28 somewhere in
Sungay village, Tagaytay City by Philippine National
Police (PNP) elements and Philippine Navy
intelligence agents. Last week, they were charged
with rebellion before the Tagaytay City Regional
Trial Court while being detained at Camp Vicente
Lim in Canlubang, Laguna.
Meanwhile, Uy together with 14 farmers belonging
to Kongreso ng Magbubukid para sa Repormang
Agraryo (KOMPRA or Peasant Congress for
Agrarian Reform) were seized April 30 while
traveling on a bus going to Candelaria and kept in
isolated detention at the Philippine Army's Southern
Luzon Command (Solcom) headquarters in Camp
Nakar, Lucena City.
Their captors presented them to the media as New
People's Army (NPA) rebels involved in an alleged
anti-government "destabilization plot.”
Peasant advocates
While officials of the PNP and the military insists
that they have recovered "evidences" linking the
suspects to so-called "destabilizers," they did not
elaborate on the connection to reinforce their
claims.
On the contrary, Kamagsasaka-Ka stated, there
appeared to be signs of torture inflicted on the
suspects. They expressed worry after seeing on
TV newscasts video footages showing Custodio
limping, Sarmiento's bandaged leg and Pinpin
looking as though he was suffering from asthma
attacks.
They also said the police took away a large sum of
money that belongs to the farmers. The cash was
reserved to purchase pardo (muscovado) and
kapeng barako (a native coffee variety) under the
Fair Trade Agreement signed in 2004 between the
farmer's group and the Vancouver-based non-
government organization Shuswap Association
for the Promotion of Eco-Development (SAPED) for
the purpose of raising the prices of sugar cane
and unrefined coffee in Cavite and Batangas.
"Nakapagtatakang hindi ipinapahayag ng
pamunuan ng pulis na nakuha din nila ang
halagang mahigit 400,000 piso na noong oras na
maganap ang pagdukot sa lima ay nasa pag-iingat
nina Pinpin at Custodio" (It is a wonder why the
PNP leadership did not say that they also
confiscated the P400,000 that Pinpin and Custodio
were holding when the five were arrested),
Kamagsasaka-Ka spokesman Rogelio Galit told
Bulatlat.
Colleagues from Kasama-TK, meanwhile, said the
allegation that Uy is an NPA member is false, with
the latter having graduated recently from the
University of the Philippines (UP) College of Social
Work and Community Development. In fact, Uy has
been working on two research projects: one is a
case study on the implementation of the
Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP)
in the Bondoc Peninsula and the other is about the
coconut industry in Quezon, in preparation for the
CARP's 18th anniversary on June 10.
Uy has been recently released, but is reported to
be under continuing surveillance.
Resisting restraint
Citing the cases of Pinpin and Uy, the Arroyo
administration is like telling artists that they "are
free only for so long as they refrain from
challenging the ruling clique and the manner in
which it 'orders' the country," ARREST Gloria
declared in a statement.
"To prohibit dissent is to curtain freedom of
expression,” the ARREST Gloria statement
read. “As lawyer and historical conversationist
Trixie Angeles said, 'Without freedom of
expression there can be no artist.'"
ARREST Gloria, together with the poets' group
Kilometer 64 has called on artists and writers to
work together for the release of Pinpin and resist
all attempts by the government to impose restraint.
Bulatlat.com
Posted at 1:46:07 pm by stexposure