HE SAYS |
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Aldrin Cardon |
Some see roses, others blood in the announced compromised, limited land distribution package meant to put an end to the nagging Hacienda Luisita issue, which, even with efforts from its owners, the Cojuangcos who have been out of and in power through the Aquinos, would continue to hang around Noynoy Aquino’s neck like a sinker or a floater, however one wishes to see it.
Like it did to Cory, Hacienda Luisita will reflect Noynoy’s success (or failure) in government’s land reform program, and since 1986, it has become the main soil of contention between the landlords, in this case represented by the Cojuangcos, and the farmers, long agitated to owning what they till, which they claim as their right as infused by the tenets of different communist thoughts, but clearly guaranteed in advanced countries’ social justice programs.
The United Luisita Workers Union (Ulwu) rebuffed the Cojuangco offer to distribute about one-third of the 6,500-hectare plantation, or equivalent to the amount of stocks distributed during the term of Cory as their version of the failed Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (Carp). The Ulwu rejection guarantees the continuation of its fight to claim the whole hacienda from the Cojuangcos, who have developed a large part of the land to non-agricultural purpose.
Source: The Daily Tribune
URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100809com7.html
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