Bacolod: Sugar industry at edge of extinction – ARB manifesto

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    BACOLOD CITY – Various organizations of sugar farmers and agrarian reform beneficiaries allied with the National Congress of Unions in the Sugar Industry on the Philippines (NACUSIP) Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Council yesterday issued a manifesto, raising their collective voices against what they called injustice, corruption, and utter neglect that has allegedly pushed sugar industry to the edge of extinction.

    In a press briefing recently, farmers and agrarian reform beneficiaries presented their demands to the Philippine government and outlined their expectations for the upcoming public consultation on the present state of sugar industry in the country, on January 23 in Talisay City, Negros Occidental.

    Our livelihoods are being destroyed, our families driven to poverty, and the very backbone of the sugar industry shattered—all due to the greed and incompetence of those entrusted to protect us, they claimed.

    The public consultation on Friday was jointly presided by Senator Francis Pangilinan, chairperson of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Food, and Agrarian Reform, and Representative Mark Enverga, chairperson House Committee on Agriculture and Food, as facilitated and hosted by Negros Occidental Third District Rep. Javi Benitez.

    The activity aimed to gather key stakeholders to discuss the pressing challenges faced by the sugar industry, particularly the sharp decline in millgate sugar prices, and to explore possible policy and sectoral responses.

    The ARBs demanded full disclosure of Sugar Order No. 8, immediate removal of David Sanson, who represents farmers in the Sugar Board, and amendments to the SRA charter.

    They also called on the government to urgently implement a Sustainable Sugar Buying Program that guarantees a fair and stable floor price for their produce, immediate release of emergency cash assistance to all ARB farmers in distress, immediate and unconditional one-year moratorium on all penalties and interests for loans from the Land Bank of the Philippines for farmers and cooperatives.

    In the manifesto, the sugar farmers also called on lawmakers to stand with them, and investigate why imports have been prioritized over their hard-earned harvests. (Gilbert Bayoran via tvds photo by tvds/nacusip)

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