Feature:
The personalities behind the building names
Addu Trivia p3
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Why great love stories happen in college
Fiesta 2008 in technicolor p 5-8
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ATENEWS |
3rd Year Asian Studies Students Goes Asian Escapade
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p 12
The buzz on the Cheerdance Tickets
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ATENEWS “END THE SILENCE OF THE GAGGED”
THe official STUDENT publication of ateneo de davao university Vol. 54 No. 3 November 2008
Davao City, Philippines
CBA negotiations continue, Deadlines extended
by Hyangelo Hao and Bai Shaima Baraguir
Mr. Neil Ryan Pancho, AdDUCFU President, said that the negotiations they initiated more than six months ago are still going on with important provisions of the CBA still not set in stone.
CAPTIVATING Ateneans marked the University’s 60th anniversary with astonishing colors and priceless joy. / Mick Basa
MOA-AD:
In a statement issued by the CFU Negotiating Team last Nov. 7 entitled “Consider This,” the union decried the “lackadaisical treatment” the AdDU management has offered the issues they raised including proposed changes in hiring rates, wages, teaching loads, and benefits among others. AdDU Personnel Director Esmeraldo Lampauog on the other hand said that the negotiations are “going well, going smooth [sic] with the union.” “We are trying to balance out. What we give is taken from tuition. If we commit too much, it will be pass [sic] on to tuition. In every tuition increase, 70% goes to the salary and benefits of the faculty, 20% to the facilities, and the 10% to the operations of the school. We keep the demand within that regulation,” he added. Currently, the hiring rates for new teachers are P7,700 for applicants with a Bachelor’s degree, P9,054 for people with a Master’s degree and P10,263 for Doctoral degree holders.
ÜCBA, 11
The other side of the coin by Bai Shaima Baraguir
“In any war, the field of battle suffers worse devastation than either army.” – Salman Rushdie, Midnight’s Children, 1981 This sentence fairly summarizes the scenario regarding the conflict in Mindanao. With a number of internally displaced persons (IDPs) reaching to more than 250,000, people getting killed in evacuation centers and poorconditioned makeshifts, people overwhelmed by fear and refusing to go back home, human rights violations, civilian residences raided, suspension of school classes, farms and crops destroyed, investments and economy severely affected, and Muslim-Christian relationships starting to divide, there is a necessity to know the root of all these atrocities so as to provide solution at the end of the day. Late 2007, the public first heard of the MEMORANDUM OF AGREEMENT ON THE ANCESTRAL DOMAIN ASPECT OF
THE GRP-MILF TRIPOLI AGREEMENT ON PEACE OF 2001, better known to the public as the MOA-AD. It calls for the passing of laws regarding Ancestral Domains for the Moro people and its right for selfdetermination. The MOA-AD opens a plebiscite for the reclaiming of ancestral lands of the Bangsamoro people in Mindanao. A plebiscite demands the vote of the whole electorate and the people affected by such matters if they want to be part of the future Bangsamoro Juridical Entity (BJE). Thus, as drafted on the official and legal documentation foreseeing the MOA-AD between the GRP and MILF, the MOA-AD, in its purest essence, talks about the root conflict in Mindanao, resolving it, and thus, ending the war in Mindanao. History of Mindanao: A flashback Long before migrants from Luzon settled
here, Mindanao is known throughout the Philippine archipelago as the Land of the Moros. “The Land of the Pirates” as Gregorio Zaide quoted it. From the 16th century when Shariff Kabunsuan first landed on the shores of Rio Grande de Mindanao, a large portion of the indigenous people living in the southern part of the island converted into Islam. There are ten ethno-linguistic groups which are primarily Islamic in religious affiliation: Maranao, Maguindanao, Tausug, Sama, Sangil, Iranun, Kalibugan, Yakan, Jama Mapun, and Molbog. 1521, the first Spanish fleet arrived at the shores of Limasawa and converted the people into Christianity. On 1565, after numerous failed expeditions by many Spanish navigators, Miguel Lopez De Legazpi managed to take hold of the lands on the North and thus, the
colonization of the Philippines started. Prior to the Spanish occupation of the Philippines, several datuships and sultanates have already been established in Mindanao. On 1450, seventy-one years before Ferdinand Magellan’s “discovery of the Philippines”, the Sultanate of Sulu was established. An Independent state in its own right, it fought the Spaniards for 333 years and had remained free until 1898. On the other, the Sultanate of Maguindanao was formed in 1619 by the famous Sultan Kudarat from the two datuships of Maguindanao and Rajah Buayan. They fought the Spaniards and remained free until the signing of the Treaty of Paris. The Treaty of Paris, signed on June 20, 1898, marks the bilateral agreement of Spain and USA upon the selling of the Philippines as an “Insular Possession” for 20 million Mexican dollars. What followed afterwards
ÜMOA-AD, 10