Philippine Daily Inquirer

Coco farmers want cash But solon urges placing P100B in trust fund

- By Delfin T. Mallari Inquirer Southern Luzon and Leila B. Salaverria

LUCENA CITY—Militant farmers want the multibilli­on-peso coco levy fund to be returned directly to them, but Senator-elect Francis Pangilinan says giving them cash may not be the most effective way of helping them improve their lot.

President-elect Rodrigo Duterte has directed his legal team to begin moves for the release of the P100-billion coconut levy fund to the farmers.

Coco levy refers to the tax extracted from coconut farmers during the martial law years, ostensibly for the developmen­t of the coconut industry.

“The direct return of the multibilli­on-peso coconut levy fund to small coconut farmers is long overdue,” Antonio Flores, secretary general of Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (KMP),

said in a statement on Friday.

He said Duterte’s legal team should consider “direct cash distributi­on” to the farmers and use of the fund for genuine developmen­t of the coconut industry.

Flores said the small farmers had prepared a proposal for the distributi­on of the funds.

Arvin Borromeo, coordinato­r for Coco Levy Fund Ibalik sa Amin (Claim)-Quezon movement, also said direct cash aid would be a just and legitimate solution to the small farmers’ poverty.

Borromeo said the cash aid proposal was not new, adding that it was first put forward by Sen. Joker Arroyo in April 2012.

Trust fund

But Pangilinan sees problems with direct cash distributi­on.

“There is a need to determine the mechanism to be put in place to release the coco levy fund to the real farmers as envisioned by the incoming administra­tion,” Pangilinan said in a statement.

If the P72 billion in the national treasury would be distribute­d outright to 3 million coconut farmers, each farmer would get only around P20,000, he said.

“This is about the same amount a copra farmer earns in one year and will clearly not go very far in addressing the plight of the impoverish­ed farmer,” he said.

Pangilinan said he would refile a bill that would establish a perpetual trust fund for the P72 billion in the treasury, with the interest to be used in financing programs for the farmers.

He said the Supreme Court had ruled that the coco levy fund is a public fund, and should be used only for the benefit of the coconut farmers and the coconut industry.

Use of the fund should be in accordance with law, he said.

Farmers’ fund

KMP and Claim propose the establishm­ent of a “Genuine Small Coconut Farmers’ Fund,” which will not be part of the general funds and will be used only for the benefit of coconut farmers.

Cojuangco’s shares

Under the proposal, the entire coco levy fund and its assets, including but not limited to United Coconut Planters Bank and the coconut oil mills that were acquired using the fund, will be administer­ed and used for the benefit of small farmers and of the coconut industry in support of national industrial­ization.

Aside from direct cash distributi­on, the farmers’ groups also want the incoming Duterte administra­tion to recover the shares representi­ng 20 percent of San Miguel Corp. (SMC) held by businessma­n Eduardo “Danding” Cojuangco Jr.

“Cojuangco must also be held accountabl­e for the plunder of the fund,” Flores said.

Cojuangco’s shares were part of the 47-percent SMC share block sequestere­d by the government after the 1986 Edsa People Power Revolution.

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