VIDEO: All-out peace, all-out justice

LET the healing begin.

Peace advocates, civil society organizations, and communities across the Philippines commemorated the National Day of Healing for Truth, Justice, and Peace on March 6, 2015. The activity also falls on the 40th day since the Mamasapano tragedy on January 25, 2015, which killed at least 67 Filipinos.

Here in Metro Manila, more than 25 networks of civil society organizations gathered at the World Peace Bell in Quezon City Memorial Circle.

The atmosphere was festive in the morning as different activities were held, including soil painting, clay sculpture, and singing of traditional songs, among others. Several national figures joined the event and expressed their solidarity with the peace advocates.

In the afternoon, All Out Peace Campaign convenors led an interfaith peace rally.

“We feel there is that need now — right after the Mamasapano tragedy— that the general discourse of the land especially spewed by media, both social and mainstream, is the demonization of the Moro people,” Gus Miclat, executive director of the Initiatives for International Dialogue (IID) and convenor of the All Out Peace Campaign told PCIJ.

Last week, separate resolutions were filed in Congress declaring March 6, 2015 as a National Day of Healing for Truth, Justice, and Peace “to remember those who perished in Mamasapano as well as the thousands of lives lost from decades of armed conflict.”

According to the Senate Resolution 1204, the Mamasapano tragedy has “likewise caused a national divide threatening to polarize the country and its peace-loving peoples, with some sections issuing condemnation, hasty judgement and espousing bloody retaliation.”

For its part, the Lower House’s version—House Resolution 1952—stressed the urgent need to “pause and re-asses” the common aspirations of the people to bring solutions to the country’s problems.

“Let us never give up on our quest for peace. The road to peace could sometimes by bumpy and painful, but peace is not impossible,” the House Resolution reads in part.

Here are the sights and sounds during the activity in this video short by PCIJ deputy multimedia producer Cong B. Corrales

Herstory: Progress in education, work but not quite leaders yet

By Cong B. Corrales

WOMEN in the Asia Pacific region have yet to achieve gender equality across the professions, a century after the Socialist Women’s International demanded and declared March 8 of every year as International Women’s Day across the globe.

In the workplace, the region’s women are fast becoming as active as the men.

In politics and business, however, they still fall way behind men, according to an index of annual surveys on gender equality.

The happy news is that in the 2015 Index, the Philippines has landed among the top countries to have the “highest ratio of female-to-male business leaders for the ninth consecutive year.”

Started in 2007, the surveys are conducted every year by the MasterCard Worldwide Index of Women’s Advancement among 8,235 women from 16 countries in the region. The survey features an annual gender equality index based on employment, education, and leadership opportunities.

In the latest Index released recently, the Philippines landed on Top 3 slot, securing an overall index score of 72.6. New Zealand topped this list with 77, followed by Australia with 76. Singapore came in fourth in the list with 70.5.

Women in 10 of the 16 countries surveyed outnumbered men in tertiary education and gross enrolment rate, showing that women in the region are “increasingly more educated than their male counterparts.”

INFOGRAPHICS by Cong B. Corrales

INFOGRAPHICS by Cong B. Corrales

“While there is a strong correlation between tertiary education attainment and business leadership in markets…women in the majority of markets across Asia Pacific are lagging behind in business leadership despite their educational qualifications,” the Index reads in part.

The 16 countries surveyed for the Index are: Australia, Bangladesh, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam.

Under the capability component of the Index, the Philippines, along with New Zealand, Vietnam, Sri Lanka, and Thailand, scored 100 each. The data, the Index said, indicated that women in these countries are at par or better represented in secondary and tertiary institutions than their male counterparts.

WOMEN paddle their own canoes, literally, in Artex compound in Malabanon City. Women here earn by paddling boats that ferry passengers to and from their homes | Photo by Cong B. Corrales

WOMEN paddle their own canoes, literally, in Artex compound in Malabanon City. Women here earn by paddling boats that ferry passengers to and from their homes | Photo by Cong B. Corrales

“Of the three major components, capability remains the strongest indicator of Asia Pacific women’s progress towards gender parity for the ninth consecutive year,” according to Index.

The employment component, for its part, remains the second strongest component over the nine-year period from 2007 to 2015, the survey showed.

“With the exception of Indonesia (78.4) and Malaysia (75.9), women across the majority of markets in Asia Pacific are making progress towards becoming as economically active as their male counterparts, scoring above the 80-point mark for employment,” the Index reads.

However, leadership opportunities in the 16 countries surveyed remain the weakest component from last year, and also across the nine-year period since the annual research was launched in 2007.

A MOTHER holds up a broken plate to symbolize their demand for lower food prices during a Women's Day Month celebration on March 8, 2011 in Bacolod City, Philippines | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

A MOTHER holds up a broken plate to symbolize demands of protesters for lower food prices during a Women’s Day Month celebration on March 8, 2011 in Bacolod City, Philippines | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

Only New Zealand (50.6) and the Philippines (50.1) have more than 50 women business owner, business leaders, and government leaders for every 100 male counterparts, in their respective countries.

“(The) Philippines, Singapore, and Indonesia show the most marked advancement in women’s leadership since 2007, gaining 12.2, 8.7, and 7.5 index points, respectively,” the Index reads in part.

In the overall index score, India (44.2), Bangladesh (44.6), and Sri Lanka (46.2) need to do more in achieving gender parity. While Singapore showed the largest improvement by gaining 0.4 index points from the same survey last year, Thailand (59.4) displayed the largest overall decline of 7.2 index points from last year.

The scores are indexed to 100 males to indicate how women in each of the 16 countries surveyed are faring in achieving socio-economic equality with men. A score under 100 indicates gender inequality in favor of males, while a score above 100 indicates inequality in favor of females.

“Study after study shows how public and private sector companies – and their bottom lines – benefit from having more women in leadership. In fact, companies with more women in leadership outperform those who do not,” said Georgette Tan, group head of communications for MasterCard-Asia Pacific.

A RETIRED woman sugarworker in Negros Occidental, Philippines | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

A RETIRED woman sugarworker in Negros Occidental, Philippines | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

Carrying the theme “Make It Happen,” this year’s International Women’s Day (IWD) owes its beginnings to the working women in the early 20th century who organized strikes against low wages, lack of protective legislation, and poor working conditions.

The Socialist Party of America organized the very first “Women’s Day” on February 28,1909 in New York. It was in commemoration of the 1908 strike of the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union.

Inspired by their American socialist counterparts, German socialist Clara Zetkin and the Socialist Women’s International proposed in August 1910 that March 8th of every year be declared as International Women’s Day.

It is because of the history of organizing by working women around the world that the United Nations officially recognized IWD in 1977.
In the Philippines, the Philippine Commission on Women (PCW) has adopted the theme: “Juana, Desisyon Mo ay Mahalaga sa Kinabukasan ng Bawat Isa, Ikaw Na!” for the 2015 National Women’s Month Celebration.

“In a highly competitive global market, companies are beginning to understand why integrating talented women into leadership structures is imperative for sustainable economic growth and innovation in both developed and developing markets,” said Tan. – PCIJ March 2015

Gender divide in the PH Senate: 207 males, 18 females in 88 years

By Rowena F. Caronan

THE PHILIPPINE SENATE is 99 years old this year. Its roster enrolls the names of 225 senators, including only 18 or less than 2.2 percent who are women,

By all indications, to this day, the gender divide in the Philippine Senate remains wide and deep.

Seasoned male politicians, have always dominated the chamber. The first woman senator was elected in 1947, or a decade after Filipino women won suffrage in 1937.

From 1947 to 1965, only one woman completed the 24-member Senate. Geronima T. Pecson, the first woman senator, served from 1947 to 1953. Pacita Madrigal-Gonzales became the second woman senator in 1955. Maria Kalaw-Katigbak came in third in 1962.

In 1986, the number of women Senators quadrupled when Kalaw-Katigbak, Senators Eva Estrada-Kalaw, Magnolia W. Antonino, and Tecla San Andres-Ziga were elected. This number slid back to two in 1970, and barely improved in the next elections.

Over the last 30 years, on average only three women had served in the Senate.

Drag image to the left to see full table.

In the 2010 elections for the 16th Congress, however, voters sent six women to the Senate, the highest number ever obtained by women.

Senator Pilar Juliana ‘Pia’ S. Cayetano, and Miriam Defensor-Santiago are completing their terms until 2016. Senator Lorna Regina ‘Loren’ B. Legarda was re-elected, while Senators Maria Lourdes Nancy S. Binay, Grace Poe, and Cynthia A. Villar won seats in the 2013 senatorial elections.

Nancy Binay is the eldest daughter of Vice President Jejomar C. Binay, while Poe is the daughter of the late Fernando Poe Jr., the “King of Philippine Movies” who lost his bid for the presidency in 2004 to Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.

A PCIJ story in 2013, however, highlighted a bleak picture of women’s participation in the country’s electoral process. Feminist experts interviewed for the story stressed that a rising number of women in politics does not necessarily reflect progress in representation for women. They pointed to an emerging trend of women candidates running only as benchwarmers or substitutes for father, brother, or spouse who belong to political clans. In fact, this case seems to apply to many of the 17 elected senators.

For starters, Pacita Madrigal-Gonzales was the daughter of Senator Vicente Madrigal. Vicente lost his re-election bid in 1953 and later supported his daughter’s candidacy in 1955.

PCIJ TABLE by Rowena Caronan

PCIJ TABLE by Rowena Caronan

Both Magnolia Antonino and Luisa Ejercito Estrada replaced their husbands whose political careers had just ended. In 1969, Magnolia ran in lieu of husband Senator Gaudencio Antonino, who died a day before his re-election bid. Luisa ran and won as senator after the ouster of her husband, then President Joseph Ejercito Estrada.

Similarly, Pia Cayetano inherited the Senate seat vacated by her father, and Cynthia Villar, by her husband. Pia became a senator in 2004, following the death of her father Sen. Renato Cayetano, in 2003.

Cynthia took the place of her husband Senator Manuel B. Villar Jr., whose second term ended in 2013.

Meanwhile, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, daughter of President Diosdado Macapagal, continued her father’s political career. The election of Nancy Binay, daughter of Vice President Jejomar Binay, to the Senate was considered a move to widen her family’s political influence beyond Makati City.- PCIJ, March 2015

Women: The right to vote & serve

By Fernando Cabigao Jr.

IT WAS 78 years ago when Filipino women first gained the right to vote and to run for public office. That happened on April 30, 1937.

But Filipino men of some education and property had claimed that right 30 years earlier in 1907.

Act 1582 became the first legislation on elections enacted by the Philippine Commission during the American occupation period. It allowed male citizens 23 years or older and of legal residence the right to vote.

Yet still, to qualify as a voter, Filipino males must have held a government position before Aug. 13, 1898; own real property worth P500 or pay P30 of established taxes a year; and able to speak, read, and write in English or Spanish. Act 1582 took effect on Jan. 15, 1907.

During the Commonwealth period, the 1935 Constitution stated that only Filipino men who are 21 years or older and are not disqualified by law can vote. They must also be able to read and write, and resided for a year in the Philippines, and for at least six months in the municipality where they are voting, before election day.

On April 30, 1937, the right of suffrage was extended to Filipino women, after 447,725 of them voted for it in a special plebiscite.

Article V of the 1935 Constitution that limited the right to vote to men set a condition that suffrage may also be extended to Filipino women if 300,000 of them will vote in favor of the motion in a special plebiscite to be held within two years after the adoption of the Constitution.

The general elections held on Dec. 14, 1937 became the first balloting in the country in which Filipino women were allowed to vote and run for public office. Subsequent elections saw many Filipino women winning in various local positions across the nation.

Among the notable ones were Carmen Planas (City Councilor, Manila in 1937 and 1941), Elisa Ochoa (first woman member of Congress, 1941), and Geronima Pecson (first woman senator, 1947).

In the May 2013 elections, female voters had already outnumbered male voters – there were 893,418 more women than male voters out of the 50,896,164 total registered voters in the country that year.

But in terms of the number of candidates who ran, the women still represented a minority in the last elections.

Of the 44,448 candidates, only 18 percent or 7,921 were women. Of the 33 candidates for senator, only eight were women.

Too, of the 630 candidates who made a bid for the 234 slots for district representatives, only one in six or 125 were women. - PCIJ, March 2015

References:
* Aning, Jerome. “Women mark anniversary of right to vote.”

* Official Gazette. “The 1935 Constitution.”

* Official Gazette. “Women in government.”

* Official Gazette. “Statement: The Deputy Presidential Spokesperson on the 76th anniversary of Women’s Suffrage in the Philippines.”

* Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism. “Benchwarmers or True Leaders? Women candidates a puny minority in nat’l, local races.”

* PhilippineLaw.info. “Act No. 1582, Election Law.”

* PhilippineLaw.info. “C.A. No. 34, An Act to Provide for the Holding of a Plebiscite on the Question of Woman Suffrage.”

* Presidential Museum and Library. “1937 Plebiscite.”