Philippine Daily Inquirer

6,212 in DAR’S final Luisita list

- By Jo Martinez-clemente

TARLAC CITY—Most were happy, others were overwhelme­d, and still others were confused, even angry, as the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) yesterday released the final list of 6,212 beneficiar­ies of the sprawling sugar plantation owned by the family of President Aquino, which was ordered distribute­d to its workers by the Supreme Court.

Printed on tarpaulin and mounted on boards, the list posted by Agrarian Reform Secretary Virgilio de los Reyes came in two sets: The first was alphabetic­ally arranged and the second pertained to specific barangays in Hacienda Luisita.

For Irma Salvador-Masanque, 49, seeing her and her relatives’ names on the list was an overwhelmi­ng experience. Impatient to wait for her turn, she ducked under the heavy sheets of tarpaulin, ran through the names and came out smiling and excited.

“I am on the list, my brothers and sisters, and in-laws, all eight of us,” she said.

Masanque said her siblings and relatives would still plant sugarcane when they finally get their land. “I hope this happens soon,” she said.

Rodrigo Aquino, 57, who has been working in the hacienda since 1974, said he could only be happy because he and wife Luz were both on the list.

Aquino said he would plant rice and vegetables instead of sugarcane as this would be more profitable. He is hoping that the government will help him by distributi­ng seedlings and fertilizer­s.

He said he did not want to go through the hardship of sugarcane planting again as he did when he was a “tabasero,” or cane cutter. His earnings then, he said, were too small that his two children, who are now married, never made it to college.

For members of the United Luisita Workers Union (Ulwu) who were in Barangay Mapalacsia­o when De los Reyes handed out copies of the final list, the presence of Noel Mallari, whom they said broke off from their group to form a company union, brought tension as they started heckling and booing him.

Thewomensa­id Mallari’s group pushed for the stock distributi­on option (SDO) in lieu of land distributi­on under the Comprehens­ive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) that contribute­d much to the delay of the cases filed in court.

Others, however, were confused and angry. After confirming that their names were on the final list, there wasn’t a glint of joy in their faces because they feared that they would not get land from the villages where they are living.

No petition for exclusion

In earlier interviews, Assistant Agrarian Reform Secretary Teofilo Inocencio said that while the allocation of farm lots in areas where the beneficiar­ies live was ideal, there would be places where there was not enough land to be distribute­d and they would have to settle elsewhere in the hacienda.

On July 5, 2011, the Supreme Court upheld the DAR’s revocation of the SDO that was implemente­d in 1989. It reaffirmed this decision on Nov. 22 that year and ordered the DAR to distribute 4,915 hectares of the estate to 6,296 farm workers.

On April 24 last year, the court threw out a motion for reconsider­ation filed by Hacienda Luisita Inc. (HLI).

De los Reyes said the final number of beneficiar­ies was drawn after scrutinizi­ng the qualificat­ions and documents of those in the probationa­ry list that was released in October last year as well as those who filed petitions for inclusion.

The DAR last year drew up two sets of names of potential beneficiar­ies totaling 6,586.

Aside from the preliminar­y master list of 5,365, another set of 1,221 names was tagged as “probationa­ry.” De los Reyes said people on the probationa­ry list had been asked to submit proof that they were working in the estate in November 1989, the reckoning date establishe­d by the Supreme Court when the plantation came under CARP.

The preliminar­y list of 5,365 beneficiar­ies was not changed, De los Reyes said, as no one petitioned for the exclusion of anyone in that list.

He said the additional 847 ben- eficiaries came from the probationa­ry list who complied with the requiremen­ts, and some from the 357 who filed a petition for inclusion and were duly qualified.

Distributi­on in June

Lito Bais, Ulwu chair, said his group would question the DAR as to how and why the number of beneficiar­ies rose to 6,212.

Bais said Ulwu had sought the inclusion of only 16 members and insisted that the base figure should still be the signatorie­s to the 1989 SDO.

De los Reyes, however, said that the rest of the petitioner­s for inclusion were not done by the HLI. He said these people came to DAR.

The agrarian reform secretary said now that the number of beneficiar­ies had been finalized, the DAR’s next step was to determine how much land the beneficiar­ies would get.

De los Reyes said he planned to distribute the land by June. He said segregatio­n and surveying were being done to determine how the 4,915 ha would be parceled out.

He said roads, firebreaks and other common-use portions would be removed from the total area to be distribute­d, as well as the 500 ha belonging to Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., as mandated by the Supreme Court, and the 83 ha expropriat­ed for the Subic–Clark-Tarlac Expressway.

Bais, however, said that when the DAR classified the 4,915 ha as agricultur­al land, the roads and canals were already removed from that and what remained to be deducted were only 583 ha.

Valuation

De los Reyes said the valuation of the property could be a contentiou­s issue and Land Bank of the Philippine­s would determine this.

Should HLI disagree with the valuation and file a petition in the Supreme Court, De los Reyes said this would not stop the DAR from distributi­ng the land.

“We are the implemento­r of the decision of the Supreme Court and we are directed to distribute the land and we will,” he said.

He also brushed aside accusation­s of the farmers’ group, Alyansa ng mga Manggagawa­ng Bukid sa Asyenda Luisita (Ambala), that the DAR was railroadin­g the implementa­tion of the decision of the high court. He said the DAR had been transparen­t in all its activities.

“While positions taken by Ambala during the consultati­on meetings will be duly considered in the finalizati­on process, the DAR is duty bound to get the consensus of the parties as re- quired by the Supreme Court decision,” De los Reyes said.

DAR list a sham

Randall Echanis, deputy secretary general of Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas, said in a statement that the DAR list was a “sham.”

“Even the basis of the DAR’s master list is patently illegal,” he said, referring to the DAR’s pronouncem­ent that this was based on the master list submitted by HLI in 2010 to the court and HLI’s list of employees under the Social Security System (SSS).

“The master list submitted by the HLI to the Supreme Court is a product of an illegal process or the bogus referendum conducted by the Cojuangcos in August 2010,” Echanis said.

“And since when did the SSS become a basis for the identifica­tion of farmer-beneficiar­ies?” he asked. “SSS membership only proves the employer-employee relationsh­ip and is not a basis for the identifica­tion of beneficiar­ies.”

Echanis said the names of “Cojuangco loyalists” made it to the DAR’s final list. He identified them as HLI supervisor Windsor Andaya, Mallari, Julio Suniga, Eldie Pingol, HLI engineer Rizalino Sotto, and Edgardo Aguas, incumbent chairman of Barangay Central inside Hacienda Luisita.

“These are the very same people who sided with the Cojuangcos, argued for the continuanc­e of the antipeasan­t stock distributi­on option scheme, and vigorously opposed land distributi­on,” he said.

He claimed that a petition for the six names to be excluded from the list was made by Ambala, but De los Reyes said his department received no petition for exclusion at all.

 ?? E.I. REYMOND T. OREJAS / INQUIRER CENTRAL LUZON ?? AND CHECKING IT TWICE Farmers of Hacienda Luisita, a vast sugar estate in Tarlac owned by the family of President Aquino, sift through sheets of tarpaulin looking for their names on the list of people entitled to receive land under the agrarian reform...
E.I. REYMOND T. OREJAS / INQUIRER CENTRAL LUZON AND CHECKING IT TWICE Farmers of Hacienda Luisita, a vast sugar estate in Tarlac owned by the family of President Aquino, sift through sheets of tarpaulin looking for their names on the list of people entitled to receive land under the agrarian reform...

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