KA
BEL REMEMBERED BY THE FILIPINO MIGRANT WORKERS IN ROME
Five years ago, the world of working masses has lost a
leader, and a fighter. Cong. Crispin “Ka Bel” Beltran (Januar 7, 1933 – May 20,2008),
politician and labor leader and staunch critic of the then Pres. Gloria M.
Arroyo for her anti-worker, anti-people politics, died following A 14 FOOT fall
from the roof of his house he was repairing.
Ka Bel became a labor leader in his early 20’s when he
headed the Yellow Taxi Drivers’ Union and the Amalgamated Taxi Drivers
Federation (1955 – 1963). He also served as vice Administrator of the
Confederation of Labor Unions of the Philippines and was vice president of the Philippine
Alliance of Nationalist Organizations fro 1963 to 1972.
In August 1982 to 1984, he was arrested and detained at
Camp Crame, Quezon City, and his 10 children lived on his small earnings from
selling rubber slippers and selling fish in the market. His wife Osang
delivered his speeches at rallies, and eventually did volunteer work at the
Task Force Detainees of the Philippines.
In 1984, when KMU president Felixberto Olalia died of
pneumonia in his detention cell, Ka Osang successfully planned a daring escape
plan amid his kidney ailment, but he endured blows, punches and kicks from his
guards. Beltran became a fugitive of justice in Central Luzon, and was
protected by insurgents.
In 1986 President Corazon Aquino ordered the release of
Beltran and of all political prisoners. He joined the party-list elections as a
second nominee of Bayan Muna in 2001 and won a seat in the House of
Representatives. He won a second term in 2004 and a third term in 2007 as
Anakpawis representative.
Beltran joined the Kilusang Mayo Uno in 1955. He became
the Chairperson of the organization in 1986 following the murder of Rolando
Olalia. From 1993 to 1999, Beltran was the Chairperson of BAYAN.
On February 25, 2006, Beltran was arrested shortly after
a state of emergency was declared by President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. He was
charged with inciting to sedition. He was subsequently implicated in an alleged
plot to overthrow the government of Arroyo.
Crispin 'Ka Bel' Beltran (January 7, 1933 – May 20, 2008)
was a Filipino politician and a labor leader. A staunch critic of President
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, his imprisonment in 2006 and 2007 on disputed charges
of rebellion and sedition drew international attention. As a member of 13th
Congress of the Philippines with the Anakpawis or the 'Toiling Masses
Partylist' and former chair of Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU), a militant and
progressive labor movement, he was a major figure in contemporary Filipino
history.
An international campaign was organized calling for the
immediate release of Beltran. One group, the 'Free Ka Bel Movement' has local
chapters in Southern Tagalog, Davao and Cebu and international chapters in Hong
Kong, Japan, US, Canada, Australia and Switzerland. Some 99 parliamentarians
from across the world supported the release of Crispin Beltran coming from 11
countries and 13 parliaments, including the Netherlands, Cambodia, Burma, New
Zealand, Belgium, Chile, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, the European
Parliament, Switzerland, Denmark, and the Flemish Parliament. Beltran also drew
support from Keith Locke, MP, Foreign Affairs Critic of the Green Party of New
Zealand.
Beltran remained in detention until June 2007, when the
Supreme Court of the Philippines voided the charges against Beltran and several
other leaders affiliated with leftist groups.
On January 4, 2008, Beltran filed House Resolution 299
with the House of Representatives of the Philippines to investigate the murders
and harassment of trade union / labor leaders in the Philippines. He cited the
2007 annual Survey of Trade Union Rights Violations of the International Trade
Union Confederation: "33 of the total 144 cases of trade union killings
worldwide happened in the Philippines; and 800 cases of beatings and torture of
trade unionists in the country."
On May 20, 2008, Beltran fell 14 feet from the roof of
his Bulacan home, which he had been repairing. He sustained severe head
injuries and was declared dead at 11:48 a.m. by attending physicians at the Far
Eastern University hospital, aged 75. He was survived by his wife Rosario, with
whom he had eleven children.
Upon his death, Beltran was lauded by his colleagues in
the labor sector as the "Grand Old Man of Philippine labor".
MalacaƱan Palace also released a statement through a spokesperson calling
Beltran "one of the most respected labor leaders in the country" and
a "vital figure" in Philippine labor.
His demise was mourned in as far away as Rome where the
Ugnayan ng Manggagawang Migrante Tungo sa Pag-unlad (UMANGAT), a group of Filipino migrant workers held a
memorial gathering in his honor.
Ka Bel will always be remembered by the Rome migrant
workers as a great leader and the lone lawmaker who ever RAISED VOICE In behalf of
OFWs.
MABUHAY SI KA BEL!!!
MABUHAY ANG MANGGAGAWANG PILIPINO!!!
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