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The following is a report by award-winning Voices of Our Future citizen journalist Malayapinas on the horrific recent massacre of 57 people in Maguindanao, a province in the southern Philippines in which two of her  friends were brutally murdered. It is reprinted here at the request of World Pulse Magazine, and includes their explanatory introduction:

Since childhood Malayapinas has seen the dark side of globalization and violence in the Philippines.  She walked to school barefoot after early morning hours selling eggs and cigarettes to ship passengers in her nation’s ports. She toiled in the banana plantations to earn her way to college and became a young mother. Since secret military forces abducted her trade-union husband, she has raised her voice for local health, fair trade, and food security. Her dream is to see the Filipino people live to the fullness of their potential and women free to chart their own destiny. She faces numerous death threats for speaking out.  Her name has been changed for her protection.

Malayapinas is an award-winning Voices of Our Future citizen journalist correspondent for World Pulse Media , which covers global issues through women’s eyes from over 140 countries.  The Voices of Our Future program provides rigorous web 2.0 and citizen journalism training for emerging women leaders who are reporting from the frontlines of social change in some of the most forgotten corners of the world.

MY CRY FROM THE ISLANDS OF BLOOD

I am crying with anger at the shocking news of Monday’s mass slaughter in Maguindanao, a province not far from my home in the southern Philippines. Ever since I learned that my two women lawyer friends were among the casualties, my body has turned numb.

Concepcion “Connie” Brizuela, 56, and Cynthia Oquendo, 35, were stalwart human rights defenders on cases of extra judicial killings in Mindanao under the Arroyo government until the very end. We were together in our advocacy to stop political killings here in the Philippines.

I will never forget the laughter of Connie. She was so gentle in her ways but so firm and brave in confronting human rights violators. Cynthia was a quiet one who stood proudly for what she believes in.

On that fateful Monday, they had been traveling with a delegation of mostly women and journalists that were stopped by armed troops. They were on their way to file a Certificate of Candidacy for the May 2010 election for Buluan Vice Mayor Ishmael Mangudadatu in the provincial capitol of Maguindanao. Mangudadatu is vying for a governatorial seat against the incumbent Governor Andal Ampatuan Sr. of Maguindanao Province come May 2010 national election.

Their bodies were among the fifty-seven found buried in shallow graves, allegedly murdered by one hundred policeman and para-military troops of the Ampatuans, the ruling warlord clan in Maguindanao. Some were reportedly raped, decapitated, and chain-sawed. Two of the bodies were pregnant women. Faces of the some of the victims were so mutilated they couldn’t be identified by families.

The torture was horrific. “My wife’s private parts were slashed four times, after which they fired a bullet into it,” said Vice Mayor Mangadadatu in an interview published by the Philippines Daily Inquirer. “They speared both of her eyes, shot both her breasts, cut off her feet, fired into her mouth. I could not begin to describe the manner by which they treated her.”

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According to IRIN, in the Philippines there are an,

estimated 14,000 pregnant women exposed to septic surroundings at evacuation camps. Their plight has been neglected as an overwhelmed government struggles to come to terms with the magnitude of the flooding.

After Ketsana, super-typhoon Parma slammed into northern Luzon island on 3 October, bringing week-long rains that triggered heavy landslides and flooding, further deepening the crisis. The death toll from Parma has reached almost 300, while the toll from Ketsana is 337, the government said.

More than 6.3 million people have been affected by the killer storms, over 400,000 of whom are in evacuation centres. Many areas were still isolated by landslides as of 12 October, and the UN World Food Programme (WFP) and the US military have scheduled airlifting tonnes of food to the devastated areas.

When Ketsana hit, the priority was to save those trapped by the floods, then find evacuation sites for the hundreds of thousands who lost their homes. And with much of the health infrastructure destroyed in Manila’s eastern suburbs, these pregnant women have been largely neglected, the UN Population Fund’s (UNFPA) Philippines country director, Suneeta Mukherjee, told IRIN.

“They are very vulnerable because they can’t stop from delivering when their time comes,” Mukherjee said. “The number one problem is that the whole thing could be septic, the mother and the baby could get infected and die.”

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