Saturday, April 23, 2011

Lumads take up case of slain Lumad leader, landgrabbing to GPH peace panel

Press Release
April 19, 2011

Lumads take up case of slain Lumad leader, landgrabbing to GPH peace panel

Davao City --- Lumad leaders shared optimism that the government peace negotiators can take up the case of Datu Dominador Diarog, whose 3rd death anniversary is on April 29, remains an unsolved extra-judicial killing linked to a dispute involving the land-grabbing by a powerful religious cult leader. Fresh incidents of land-grabbing coupled with abusive military operations have again been reported early this month in Sitio Kahusayan, Brgy. Manuel Guianga, Tugbok District, this city.

GPH representative to the peace talks Ednar Dayanghirang in a forum on Land, Life and Justice organized by the Solidarity Action Group for Indigenous Peopls (SAGIP) here at Haran House, UCCP, said he will talk to the Office of the Presidential Affairs for Peace Process (OPAPP) to follow up the case of the 2008 killing of Kahusayan leader Datu Dominador Diarog and the continuing landgrabbing of their ancestral lands by the influential group of Pastor Apollo Quiboloy.

In the past week, lumads from Kahusayan are again restless as 3 backhoes arrived together with a platoon of army soldiers from the 84th Infantry Battalion were deployed to their community, threatening to bulldoze their ancestral lands.

“This renewed attempt to completely drive us away from our ancestral lands is condemnable. We appeal to the conscience of the masterminds behind these landgrabbing attempts to leave us and our land in peace. We also demand that the long overdue resolution of the Davao City Council to remove the barb-wired fences put up by Quiboloy around our peoples’ lands. We have waited long enough and we see no progress in what the Davao City Council has promised to do,” said Diolito Diarog, one of the council leaders of the Kahugpungan sa mga Lumad sa Kahusayan (KSL) and PASAKA spokesperson.

“The pine trees surrounding the palace of Quiboloy and the fences put up to deny us of our access to our traditional hunting grounds, sources of water, have worsened the poverty and hunger we experience. Continued militarization by government troops paid to serve the ones lording over us in Quiboloy’s palace has never since allowed us to live in peace and bounty, affecting our culture, threatening the development of our tribe,” said Diarog. #

For Reference:

DIOLITO DIAROG

Deputy Secretary General

PASAKA

Contact: 09303035126

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