Tag Archives: Agusan del Norte

The Impact of Local Armed Conflict on the Family Life of Women in Three Agusan del Norte Villages

Introduction

For over forty years now, localized armed conflict has featured in some parts of the Philippines. In particular, the conflict between the communist guerillas of the New People’s Army (NPA) and the government security forces continues to claim a number of lives in the countryside.

Conflict poses a multilayered challenge to those living in the areas affected by it. Basic services are interrupted as heightened security hampers mobility. Desiring safety, people opt to remain indoors until the threat has passed. Households suffer as it is deemed unsafe to go out to till farms or to fetch food, water, and other essential items. Schools shut down or become the site for local governance to gather evacuees fleeing from violence and crossfire. In particular, for women who are traditionally expected to keep the social fabric of family and community together, the unwelcome descent of conflict into their communities renders critical their role to attend to the care and nurturance of family and community members. Efforts to support women become more essential when they are caught in conflict situations.

Gender roles in family interactions have traditionally been defined by the division of productive and reproductive labor among family members. Beginning at a young age, girls are socialized for motherhood roles: to care for the young, the sick, and the elderly; to manage the home; to foster social relations, emotional growth, and psychological well-being of family members; to educate and nurse; and, when necessary, to earn from the home to augment family income.’ recognized and dignified. They are as yet to be equitably represented in any major peace negotiations, even though they are the ones most affected by war when it happens. Despite their limitations in terms of access to resources, skills, and participation in social networks, community women demonstrate a capacity for social action to bring back normalcy at the soonest possible time in the wake of violence in their communities.

Not much is known about how women experience conflict and postconflict situations in the affected areas of Mindanao. The security situation in the countryside often cautions media and local government officials against travel to these parts until the state security sectors would have declared these areas safe. This prevents accurate information about the community from reaching decision makers and relief workers, especially at the height of conflict when the community most needs help. In this situation, the communities are rendered isolated, and the people there are left to their own devices.

This paper explores how women experience conflict and post conflict situations in three selected barangays in two Agusan del Norte municipalities. Barangay Guinabsan in Buenavista and Barangays Camagong and Jaguimitan in Nasipit were randomly chosen from among the six barangays in these two towns that had been touched by counterinsurgency operations from 2000 to 2005. Through systematic sampling of households in these three barangays, the women and mothers were surveyed. Secondary data sources and key informant interviews were also used to enrich the findings from the household survey. Among the seventeen key informants interviewed were the chieftain of the Higaoanon2 tribe, barangay officials, barangay health workers (BHWs), para-teachers, and former NPA combatants who are now residing in Barangay Jaguimitan.

The Research Sites

The conduct of the study in all three barangays had been coordinated with the local government unit (LGU) and other pertinent agencies. Despite the active threat of violence, the researchers were able stay long enough in the area to observe and gather data.

At the time of the study in early 2006, an Army detachment manned by a few Artny regulars and more paramilitary elements of the Citizen Auxiliary Forces Geographical Unit (CAFGU) — mainly men from Lomboy4ri and Balatacan — had been recently located about a hundred meters from the residential cluster in Lomboyan. The residents reported that while the detachment was still under construction, the Army regulars were housed by the locals, such that the soldiers have developed close interpersonal relations with the residents. Indeed, during the interviews, the residents expressed their appreciation for the location of the detachment in the area. They believe that the troops’ presence protects the village from harassment by NPA bands in transit that used to divest them of corn and food stocks with impunity.

In running after the NPA rebels, the detachment soldiers figured in encounters at the outskirts of the sitios. These violent episodes wreaked havoc on the farmers’ cultivated fields, as the combatants chased each other through the landscape. Some houses were burned down or were riddled by the bullets exchanged. It was unclear as to who exactly was responsible for trampling the farm lots and for burning and firing at the houses. What is generally accepted is that the damage to the residents’ property was sustained due to the firefights between the government troops and the rebels.

Barangay Jaguimitan, Nasipit, Agusan del Norte

Located to the north of Barangay Culit and east of Barangay Camagong in Nasipit, Agusan del Norte, Barangay Jaguimitan has a total land area of 3,654,485 square meters. The barangay lies in the northwest mountain ranges of Agusan del Norte where the Alpha Company of the 29th Infantry Battalion of the Philippine Army confronts the Front 21 A and B forces of the NPA.

From 2000 to 2005, there have been reports of armed encounters between the government troops and the NPA, notably in Sitios Salaysayon and Tagbabacon, where heavy fighting required the deployment of helicopter gunships and truckloads of ground troop reinforcement. Bombs and boot tracks damaged the farmers’ crops and there were many times when the residents had to flee as the firefights got intense. Back in the 1970s, logging operations had extended to Barangay Jaguimitan, and some Cebuanos who were then part of the operations opted to settle there. Three decades after logging operations ceased late 2005 to gather data, The residents appeared comfortable with the presence of the government troops in the community. Hinandayan was also hosting several refugees from nearby sitios who had fled because of the ongoing offensives launched against the NPA. Sitio Mimbahandi, on the other hand, had been put under a “red flag” condition,4 and a complement of the. Army Scout Rangers had been deployed there.

Family Life in Three Conflict-Affected Barangays of Agusan del Norte

It was observed in all three barangays that there was very little inter-ethnic tension among the settlers and the indigenous Higaoanons. As neighbors, they were tolerant of each other’s ways and freely engaged in cordial interactions.

Most of the households surveyed for this study belonged to Christian settler families that commonly had nuclear family arrangements. The domiciles had enough living space to accommodate five people. Some of the larger houses had three bedrooms. In Sitio Lomboyan, most houses did not have doors. Flimsy curtains were dropped to cover the entrance or a slab of wood is placed there to bar dogs from coming in while the people retired for the night.

Their Higaoanon neighbors, on the other hand, had more extended family arrangements, with grandparents often coming to live with their married son or daughter. Higaoanons also have an extended sense of family and would welcome even distant relatives to stay for as long as they like or need.

The residents are united by a bond of close communal relations in a climate of trust and mutual assistance. They share what little they have with each other and are familiar with the details of each other’s daily lives and family concerns. It was observed that neighbors seemed to feel relatively free to come and go or sleep over in each other’s homes as night falls. They were not particular about where to sleep —on the floor, on benches, or resting against the door. When dropping by, neighbors freely join in whatever activity the family is doing —sharing their food at mealtime or lending a hand in housework.

Empathy and sensitivity to the feelings of others were interpersonal skills that parents sought to enhance in their children. While discipline of the young was recognized to be the sole authority of parents, the residents and liaise with the health officials stationed in the BHS. Most of the women — even those who are not BHWs — know basic applications of herbal treatment and first aid, unlike the men who aver that such knowledge is only for women. However, some men expressed that they gather the needed plants for herbal concoctions when such are needed by women and could not be found nearby.

The rural folk place a huge premium on their children’s schooling. Either or both parents may show up for PTA conferences, recognition ceremonies, and school programs or inquire from school authorities about their children’s performance. However, there are aspects to this shared responsibility for the education of the young that are divided across gender. Women purchase school supplies and help tutor the young to do their assignments and projects for sewing and cooking classes while men secure the finances for school needs and help in projects involving carpentry and farming.

Among the Higaoanons, especially those who are in the insular sitios of Barangay Camagong, there is a general belief that men should be more educated than women. This sometimes translates to tension about allowing the schooling of girl children beyond that grade which boys in the family are able to complete.

Generally, the land that residents own or work on consists of small parcels, over which family members have shared control and access. Some of these lots had already been covered by a Certificate of Land Ownership (CLOA) issued by the Department of Agriculture (DAR) in the name of the husband. In this regard, husbands have control over the family land and may sell or loan against the land without need of the wife’s agreement.

The residents grow enough corn for consumption and chicken feed. For household income, bananas are harvested weekly, while coconuts are harvested every month. The activities of gathering and bringing these cash crops to the trading area — the basketball court in Lomboyan or the barangay center — involve many family members in order to make the job faster.

Vegetables grown in the farm are for family consumption. Because there are no refrigerators, the household members have to go out several times a day in order to pick vegetables for meals. The frequency with which someone in the family passes by the banana fields in order to pick vegetables allows them to keep an eye out for anything that needs attending in their farms
just so many household chores that could be assigned to keep . the young busy and out of each other’s hair. Livestock are also kept close to the home for fear that the outsiders would take them. While tending the animals is normally a shared responsibility, in conflict situations this becomes the responsibility of the womenfolk as the livestock are gathered nearer the family domicile and men have their hands full.

The women dread the time when the combatants catch up with each other in their community. They fear that the flimsy walls of their homes would not keep them safe from stray bullets. They know when combatants come upon each other because this is unmistakably signaled by the sound of gunfire:

“Makadungog man mi ug buto-buto. Grabe gyud and kabalaka kay hadlok mi kaayo (We could hear gunfire. We worry greatly for fear of our safety).”

They also know of at least one woman in the neighborhood who experienced some temporary psychological disturbance, which they attribute to her exposure up close to an exchange of fire between the government troops and the rebels. The women shared that their exposure to violent encounters when these happened rendered them distracted, absent-minded, and indecisive. According to one of them,

“Dili mi kahuna-huna kung unsay buhaton. Wala man gani mi kabantay nga wala pa mi nilung-ag kay mura na-busy naman ang mga tao pamantay sa pagbuto (We can’t think about what to do. We do not notice that we have yet to cook because everybody is busy watching out for something to explode).”

The explosions tell them whether the fighting is drawing nearer their homes. When an exchange of gunfire happens within earshot, all household activities cease. Women become extremely stressed and cannot concentrate, but at the same time have to be more vigilant in making sure that every member of the family is accounted for.

The outbreak of conflict in the vicinity also puts a temporary halt to the harvesting and trading activities for cash crops that are the source of household income for daily needs. Those who need money at the time when trade in the sitios had been suspended have to brave the road to the barangay center. When operating in the vicinity, the military personnel do not restrict the movement of the residents, however, their very presence causes the villagers anxiety. They know that bullets could fly any time while the farmers are on the road.

In Sitio Balatacan, both the military and the rebels are known to maneuver on the same road from the sitio to the barangay proper. Civilians who carry large baskets could sometimes be mistaken for combatants trying to disguise themselves. There had been times when community men had been beaten up on the road allegedly because they had been thought to be so disguised. The residents report that they do not really know which side was responsible for the beating; they only that the men who did so were armed with rifles. These incidences have caused women to fear for the safety of their men who go to the barangay center to trade when military operations are going on.

As soon as it is announced by the soldiers that their area had been cleared, the community folk would hasten to check their farms and secure whatever they could salvage that had not been damaged by the fighting and transit of the combatants. Trading would resume even as people inventoried their losses.

As the combatants pulled out, social workers come in to distribute relief and medical supplies. Women are often the ones who make representation for the family to avail of the limited post conflict support from government agencies.

Agriculture is the main source of income for the residents and what little money they hold mostly comes from trading the cash crops they grow. In Barangay Guinabsan, the amount of produce that they trade is limited to how much they can harvest and haul by hand in time for the truck that comes on Mondays. Most of the residents therefore only earn enough until the next trading day and not much cash is in circulation in these sitios. It is more the norm for people to buy things on credit from the neighborhood stores and pay when they are able to sell their produce. Living in a closely-knit community, neighbors have a general idea of each other’s ability to pay. They know when others come into money and could then afford to pay off their loans.

Women are generally accepting of their life condition and only worry about being short of cash when children have school needs that require paying or buying. Money becomes a source of marital discord when the family finances are disrupted because of avoidable circumstances. When men drink, for example, it affects their .  productivity at tending the fields or preparing the harvest for trading. When men gamble at numbers or card games, they might lose money that wives expect to use for the needs of the family.

To stretch as much resource as they could, the residents maintain subsistence farming to put food on the table. For family consumption, women maintain vegetable gardens in the backyard while men grow small plots of edible roots alongside the main crops they cultivate for trading. Also, their knowledge of herbal remedies allows them to save on medical consultations and the purchase of prescription medicines.

The limited finances on hand become a big problem for women during a conflict situation when a little more cash could open up more alternatives to keep the family together and safe. The financial difficulties are compounded when the weekly trading is suspended because this not only means a depletion of family resources, but also the suspension of its replenishment. Conflict situations require belt tightening and much creativity on the part of the women to meet the dietary and other daily needs of the family members, especially as in addition to cash shortage, they also have to contend with limited mobility.

Sickness in the family had a way of energizing social support. When mothers get sick, for example, their children readily pull together to accomplish the daily household chores, such as cooking, housecleaning, and washing clothes. As these are considered womanly tasks, these are often done by girls. However, in cases when there is no other female in the household, the sons are expected to deal with what needs to be done.

When children get sick, the women in the community are quick to share their homegrown remedies in the hope of effecting recovery at the soonest possible time. Grapevine network gets the message quickly to the BHWs who would readily respond to any and all medical concerns of their neighbors.

In conflict situations, however, sickness in the family is an added burden for women. Because the support network for health-related concern consists mainly of other women also, the limited mobility of the BHWs and other community women during these times puts the responsibility solely on the poor mother.

But while there is close personal relationship among residents and social support for families in crisis, these do not translate to a shared regard for undertaking democratic processes necessary for community development. Community meetings that are intended for active social participation in assessing needs and identifying shared resources are more often than not ignored. Residents often choose to work their farms rather than walk a long way to where the meeting is to be held. Some who have at one time or another attended community meetings discontinue attendance because the meetings, in their experience, took too long to start or were postponed for lack of quorum. The gatherings that are most attended are those that are called to discuss livelihood projects where people have an expectation to be given direction on how their immediate families could benefit. It is observed that community meetings are more attended by women than men.

Public meetings to discuss communal strategies and to influence the players to the conflict in the locality have never been called. When asked about it, the women replied that they can only pray and support each other emotionally through the violent times. They believ4 that the only actions they could do would be to try and ensure the safety and survival of the family. They do not seem to believe that they have control or influence over the military or the rebels, such that any attempt to talk or negotiate with the combatants on their part would require them to overcome their fear of antagonizing either or both.

The Impact of Conflict Elements on the Family Life of Women in Barangay Jaguimitan

In the predominantly Higaoanon households in Barangay Jaguimitan, conflict situations had a more drastic effect on community women. The elderly often live with the family of their married son or daughter’ and their care is the responsibility of the wife. Aside from the needs of the children, women must also address the particular needs of the elderly. Because the older persons often suffer physical debilitation and other geriatric ailments, they may have special requirements to be considered, especially during those times when there is a need to evacuate the homes.

Higaoanon society is patriarchal, with much authority vested on the husbands and the male elders. Like their Christian neighbors, the Higaoanon women also follow the division of labor along gender lines. All chores for family upkeep — laundry, gathering of firewood and foodstuff, cooking, childcare, and tending vegetable plots, and caring for fowl — are considered womanly undertakings. As in neighboring Barangay Guinabsan, carpentry is for males while sewing is for females. Men in Barangay Jaguimitan are averse to learning how to sew, but it is allowed for a woman to learn carpentry. The women also contribute to agricultural labor at all phases from land preparation to harvest. They say that,

“Ang bae kung kinahanglan ang tabang sa uma kinahanglan naa pud sila kay ikaon man pud na namo tanan (If females are needed in the farm, they have to be there also because it feeds us all.)”

Higaoanon women prioritize the needs of everyone else in the family. While they recognize their location in the gender divide, they do not hold the boundaries to be rigid:

“Ang tarbaho sa mga bae sa balay gyud. Pero dili pasabot pasagdan ra na sila. Ang mga bana angay pud mutabang sa balay pag way trabahuon (Women’s work is really in the home. But that doesn’t mean that they should be left to it. Husbands should also help out when they don’t have work to attend to).”

Men decide on the disposition of family resources that include the parcel of lot that they farm and the livestock that they raise. Women are only consulted about selling the family land when such was brought into the marriage from her side of the family. Men also have the final say on health care, use of tools owned by the family, shelter requirements, and disbursement of income. Men decide what to plant and women seldom argue about their husbands’ choice. While wives help out in the farm, they say that

“Pagkahuman sa pag-ani uban mi sa among mga bana sa pagbaligya sa mga mais. Usahay diha ra sa barangay kuhaon. Ang kita niini ang bana gyud ang magkapot (After the harvest, we accompany our husbands to sell the corn. Sometimes, it is sold in the barangay.8 Husbands hold the money).”

A woman only holds money if the husband gives it to her to purchase foodstuff, medicine, or other household needs. Mostly, Higaoanons have little need for cash as they live off the land. Women seldom speak out against their husband’s decisions, trusting that whatever their husbands choose would be for the good of everybody. Women only attempt to persuade when it is about deciding on what vegetables to plant for family consumption.

They also weigh in on where to locate the family domicile, although more often than not they usually end up building it near the house of the husband’s parents. The consideration often involves safety and proximity to help in case of need. The size depends on the material to be had on the land — bamboo, straw, rattan, and logs. Men build while women arrange the interior. The decision to construct or to leave the house is a conjugal decision. On the possibility of evacuation from fighting, a respondent said,

“Puede man mi maghimo utro ug balay kon mamakwit mi. Dali ra man mi makahimo ug balay kon mamakwit man gani (We can always build another house if we were to evacuate. It is easy to build a new one.)”

Women look after the schooling and health requirements of the children. They make sure that children go to the schoolhouse in Sitio Salaysayon when the teacher is there. They are the ones who actively seek help when someone in the family is ailing. The traditional healer or hilot is oftentimes the one they approach to counsel and assist in these cases as the midwife assigned in the health center nearby seldom reports to her post.

In times of conflict, however, those affected flee to the school house where the social workers from the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) would base relief operations. The teacher often stays away until the community has been declared safe, and so classes are suspended while the teacher is out and the schoolhouse is being used as an evacuation center. The residents, however, opine that they prefer to live among relatives than to stay in the school house. This living arrangement poses a difficulty in accessing relief services as the government workers would only serve those displaced who have sheltered in the schoolhouse.

When conflict came to Jaguimitan, the women report that it was a strain on their part to keep everyone safe. Curious children often looked out the window when the firing erupted and had to be reminded always to get down and keep safe. Worse, the government troops entered the sitio on high alert, seemingly holding everyone suspect. Some women reported that they were even lined up to have their legs inspected for evidence of bullet wounds and scratches that would tell the soldiers whether they took part in the recent offensives, most likely against the troops.

This suspicion may have been because some residents in Sitio Tagbabacon are former NPA combatants who had since availed of the government’s amnesty program and have returned to the folds of the law. When conflict in the vicinity erupts, however, their true sympathies are rendered suspect by both the military and the NPA. Some among the rebel returnees have chosen to go back to the hills. Some who have remained in the sitio are reportedly still being wooed by their former comrades to rejoin the rebel movement. Some of them also have since joined the CAFGU.

When the soldiers came to Tagbabacon, they purportedly detained and questioned some of the locals. Like wildfire, it was rumored in the neighborhood that arrests were being made. Those who feared that they too would be suspected of being rebels left their families to hide out somewhere before the soldiers could hold them for questioning.

They endorsed the family money to their wives before going away. As one respondent recounted,

“Ang uban nidagan pagkahibalo nga nay dakop sa mga laki nga suspetsahan nga rebelde. Igo nalang gyud nagtugon sa mga asawa nga magtago sila para dili maapil ug dakop (Some of the men bolted when they heard others were being arrested on suspicion of being a rebel. They just told their wives that they needed to hide so as not to be included in the arrests).”

In the months after the start of the fighting in Barangay Jaguimitan, some of the men returned when they judged that the government troops did not hold their loyalty suspect after all. However, the women continued to experience difficulties in living amidst the conflict. Some of their neighbors had fled community, and there were times when those who were left behind were rendered isolated.

Some Higaoanon households in Salaysayon evacuated and sought shelter among their relatives in Sitio Mimbahandi in neighboring Barangay Camagong. The Christian settlers, on the other hand, fled to . the covered court in the barangay center or to the school house in Sitio Salaysayon where the DSWD personnel provided relief assistance.

Food in the conflict-affected sitios was scarce as the farms got damaged, and people found their mobility hampered by the security situation. While there were sardines, rice, and noodles that were rationed by the DSWD personnel, those who were not staying in the Salaysayon Elementary School and in the Jaguimitan covered court were not qualified to avail of these. Those who received tried to share what they could with those who opted to stay in their homes.

Travel between sitios required the residents to secure a note from the commanding officer of the soldiers who were in the area. Even going to their farms was also difficult as the military personnel had marked off some areas there where the rebels were still reportedly hiding. Security was so tight for some weeks that even the barangay • captain had to secure the authorization of the military to go from place to place and check on the residents.

Because of lack of social participation on their part, the residents have little practice at arriving at collective decisionmaking on matters affecting them and their area. Traditionally, residents only gather when someone in the neighborhood dies.” Also, for community meetings that are called for parenting and health seminars, religious activities, and community clean up, it is usually the women who show up. Public meetings are seldom utilized for community decisionmaking.

Conflict happening in the community therefore challenges the ability of the people to generate the political will and consensus to influence events. Mostly, they look to the barangay captain for direction. A nongovernment organization (NGO) tried to help the women get organized for better social participation, but the residents were wary because coming to meetings meant time away from their daily tasks. Also,’some of them were afraid to participate lest they be identified to have “leftist” sentiments.

So while community work falls within the purview of these rural women, they have limited capacity to organize-and be organized. Their social involvement and participation can only be such were if permitted by their husbands and when they are free of their domestic obligations. Still, it was the women who showed up for a community meeting with the mayor of Nasipit, the community leaders, datus, and Army commanders that was called some weeks after the community got caught up in the military operations.

The Impact of Conflict Elements on the Family Life of Women in Barangay Camagong

The Higaoanons in Sitios Mimbahandi and Hinandayan were more insular than those in Barangays Jaguimitan and Guinabsan who lived in mixed communities with the settlers. Living in seeming isolation in these sitios, the people were not engaged in agriculture for trade. Instead, they only farmed for subsistence.

Agricultural practices were labor-intensive, and most families were of necessity large enough to have more hands to work the field. Perhaps for the same reason, the household arrangement was often extended. So was the Higaoanon’s sense of family. With so many relatives in the neighborhood, children felt free to frequent other households to eat and sleep over.

The Higaoanon women keep alive and propagate the traditions of the tribe. Questions about marriage and where the newlyweds would live are decided by the elders, with the foremost consideration being how the couple could still help out in the productivity of the bigger family of origin. Oftentimes, this would mean that the bride would live with her in-laws. Marrying outside the tribe is frowned upon as settler women are seen as rebellious to tribal ways.

Women’s tasks in the household extend beyond the confines of their immediate household. Though their husbands are the ones to harvest the fields, the wives ensure that the yield is shared among the members of the extended family. Women are always on call for when men need assistance to harvest the fields and bring in the yield from the farm to the house. They also help their neighbors and relatives at harvest time.

The women are expected to take care of the children and of the other family members. They are to do all the household chores, often with the help of their daughters, nieces, and young boys in the family. When the boys are old enough, they are freed from domestic chores and are expected to work in the fields with their fathers.

The extended family is an advantage especially during conflict situations. The .men are expected to protect the family against external threats. When families need to flee the fighting in their communities, they have to go together. Nobody is allowed to stay behind. This means more hands to carry the household possessions and the comfort of number while on the road.

It is the culture of the Higaoanons that except for the bae or the wife of the datu, women are not allowed to take part in any political meetings in the community. They may listen in, but at no time are they allowed to speak. During conflict situations, these community meetings decide whether the residents would evacuate or not.

The conflict episode in late 2004 to early 2005 did not require any of the families to evacuate even as much of their cultivated fields sustained war damage. Instead, the sitios became the sanctuary for many of their relatives in nearby areas who had to leave their homes as the violent confrontation drew nearer. The burden of more mouths to feed required more work for the women, especially since it was actually safer for the women than the men to go out of the house to secure food. Armed groups were more permissive of women moving about, and so it fell upon women to take up the farming activities, such as land preparation, that were usually done by the men. Men, however, continued to exercise their right to make decisions for the family. For example, while it was the women who lined up for the relief goods being rationed by the DSWD to the conflict-affected residents, it was the men who decided how and when these family resources would be used.

Higaoanons who had experienced several conflict episodes in the past have already adjusted themselves to the need to move out just as soon as the data says so. These isolated sitios are a transit area for the rebels and ever so often, the military set up a patrol base here. When this happens, security is tight in the community. Recently, however, some local men in Sitio Hinandayan were conscripted into the ranks of the CAFGU, and this had somehow warmed the reception of the community folk for the government troops. In Mimbahandi, however, the people remain ambivalent to members of either armed group whom they see to have turned their area of residence into a battle zone.

The presence of the military or armed groups in the local community has devastating effects on the lives of women. Women in these sitios expressed that they are afraid of strangers who carry guns. They have similarly come to fear the sounds of war — helicopter flying, bombs going off, and volleys of gunfire. They also resent both the soldier and the rebel for putting them and their community in the crossfire. As much as possible, the residents do not talk to outsiders who bear guns — be they soldier or rebel — for fear that they might be suspected of sympathizing with either.

How Community Women Adjust to Conflict Situations

Conflict episodes in the community push the family members closer together as the experience provides them the opportunity to openly succor and comfort each other through the hardships and deprivation. It also requires them to work as a team, anticipate each other’s needs, and be physically present for each other.

Local conflict, however, poses adjustment on the family roles that women and men play. In places where neither of the contending armed groups suspects the men to be loyal to the other side, the men are the ones who negotiate whatever needs the family has that have to be sourced from outside. Women are confine_d to the home to care for the children and to look out for their safety.

In NPA-influenced Sitio Tagbabacon, however, men are wary of evoking doubt as to their political sentiments. The perception of being suspect could disrupt family life and men and husbands choose not to draw further unwelcome attention to themselves. The suspicion on their men has repercussions on the women also as they have to put up with the physical inspections and domicile searches until the troops are satisfied that the residents are not aiding or spying for the enemy.

Among the Higaoanons in Barangay Camagong, the mobility of men is hampered when local conflict comes into the community. Women bear the brunt of the work needed for the upkeep of the family as they take on the role of food procurers and social services providers for relatives who come seeking safety. Moreover, they have to defer to their husbands on decisions about the allocation of family resources and work in what the men allow when trying to manage what needs to be done.

It was also observed that while Christian settlers in these Agusan del Norte villages were more inclined to access the support provided by government agencies, the Higaoanons on the other hand much preferred staying with relatives. This has an implication on the accuracy of official data generated about the internally displaced as records often reflect only those who have been documented to stay in the designated base of the reliefworkers, such as the elementary school, covered court, or other public installation that have been turned into evacuation centers. Those who seek refuge among relatives are. not likely to be listed as internally displaced and may not therefore be qualified to access whatever meager government support there is.

In conflict and postconflict situations when these villages could be temporarily rendered isolated, women only have each other to run to. Mercifully, community relations and gender role prescriptions encourage this form of social support for the women. On the other hand, local conflict limits the mobility of women, thus hindering them sometimes from seeking aid or giving it to other women. In Barangay Camagong, the relative safety of women to move around means that they would be more at risk of being caught in crossfire in cases of violent encounters between armed groups.

This study also found that rural women lack the voice to be part of the communal decisionmaking or to generate the kind of influence that would allow for immediate and positive changes to their difficult circumstances. Also, while women report some stresses, trauma, and emotional disturbances, there has yet to be any attempt made by pertinent government agencies and civil society groups to understand and address the psychological needs of women in conflict and postconflict situations.

There is therefore the need to examine more fully the experiences of women in conflict and postconflict situations to better support them in accomplishing their family roles. Women’s voices have to be brought out in the discourse that argues for more peaceable resolution of the armed conflict that often puts their families and communities in the middle of violent confrontations.

Barangay 10, Agusan Del Norte

A Profile of Barangay 10

The municipality of Buenavista is one of the coastal towns in the province of Agusan del Norte. It is 16 kilometers east of the city of Butuan, and has an approximate coastline length of six kilometers. Marine and inland fishing  are the primary sources of livelihood among coastal residents of Buenavista which includes the fishing villages: Sacol, Manapa, Abilan, and Barangays 8, 9, and 10 of the poblcaion. Barangay 10 covers two purok, namely Calangaman and Tangka. Its shoreline stretches to almost two kilometers. It has a total land area of 7,200 sq. kilometers, part of which is seashore land. The barangay, which is along the way to the famous Tinago Beach, can easily be reached  by walking or by tricycle.

In the 1972 survey, the total number of households was 219 with 5-6 members per household. Barangay 10 residents are young; 60 percent of them are 21 years old and below. Almost all of the residents are Catholics. The majority speak Cebuano because its inhabitants come from the different Cebuano-speaking provinces of Visayas and Mindanao. A sizeable number are also migrants from Leyte and Bohol.

Most of the houses are made of mixed materials, i.e., wooden/ cemented walls with G.I. roofing or wooden walls with nipa roofings that are in poor state of repair. Almost all homes have a radio and wooden sala sets. Many homes also have one or two fishing boats placed upside down, under or beside the house, thus giving the impression that these have not been used for some time. It is apparent that many fishing households had seen better times.

Sunday is supposedly a day of rest, but for fishermen, it is another day to go out to sea and fish. Instead of sleeping after the Sunday fishing trip, the fishermen huddle in sari-sari stores to drink tuba or cheap wine, exchange pleasantries, or talk about their problems. Others relax by playing volleyball or by mending their nets on the shore. The wives are not to be outdone. They relax on Sundays, by keeping abreast with barangay events while mending their husband’s net or making a new one.

Despite its proximity to the market place, the barangay has numerous sari-sari stores as the main source of income. Since the barangay is near beach resorts, the sari-sari stores make good business from excursionists.

Barangay 10 is a recipient of many government projects which have improved the living condition in the area. The projects include a water system, electricity, fish landing, and the dike; but the people about the construction of the dike and the fish port. They believe that these construction projects result in the slow erosion of one portion of the shore, causing destruction to homes.

The cheerful atmosphere in the area during Sundays conceals the inner fears of the barangay residents. The people fear that time will come when the whole barangay will be eaten up by the sea. In a conversation with a senior citizen of the barangay, it was learned that a big portion of the land had already been washed out so much so that many of the houses had to be moved back.

In recognition of the almost total dependence of Barangay 10 residents on fishing, the Ministry of Human Settlements had granted fishing loans to a big number of fishermen. With the release of the funds, the fishermen have reasons to look forward to a better tomorrow.

This discussion on the study’s findings is divided into four sections: a profile of the fishermen, fishing activities, participation in organizations, and the fishermen’s needs and aspirations. The profile covers the fishermen’s demographic characteristics, levels of living, consumption and expenditure patterns, and the morbidity incidence in respondents’ households. The section on fishing activities describes the fishermen’s knowledge of their craft and their technology, production activities, and their sharing and marketing arrangements. The last two parts describe the participation of the fishermen in different village organizations, their attitudes towards different government projects and their needs and aspirations in life.

Profile of Fishermen

The mean age of the respondents is 36.6 years with a standard deviation of 11.22 years. The youngest respondent is 20 years old, while the oldest is 70. A close look at the data shows that the respondents are relatively young with 60.6 percent belonging to the 20-39 age group. The middle-aged, or those who belong to the 40-59 age group, comprise 30.3 percent while the remaining three percent are 60 years old and above. A great majority (89 percent) of the respondents are married.

The study also reveals that majority of the respondents are immigrants to the place. Only 26 percent of them were born in the barangay under study. Fourteen percent were born in the other barangays of Buenavista. Another 14 percent of the respondents were born in other places of the same region (to which the municipality of Buenavista belongs). A greater percentage (42.4 percent), however, was born in the Visayas, while only three percent are migrants from Luzon. The respondents’ length of stay in the area ranges from one to 56 years. On the average, the respondents have lived in the area for 20.3 years.

Of the 99 respondents, 97.9 percent have received formal education. Seventy percent have reached the elementary level while 18.6 percent reached the high school level. Only 6.2 percent reached college.

Almost all (98.99 percent) of the respondents are Catholics while the rest are affiliated with the Iglesia ni Kristo.

Cebuano, the major language in the municipality, is reported as the mother tongue of 95 percent of the respondents. The remaining 5 percent claimed Ilongo, Tagalog and Binutuanon (a dialect of the natives of Butuan ) as their mother tongue.

Socio-Economic Profile

The houses in Barangay 10 are generally constructed out of strong and light materials. Of the 99 fishermen respondents, 25.3 percent have houses built of light materials, that is, wooden walls and nipa roofings. Of this group, 19.2 percent are in a poor state of repair. Only three percent of the respondents have dwelling units with galvanized iron roofings and cemented walls, most of which are in a poor state of repair. The remaining 71.7 percent of the houses are built from mixed materials. These houses are temporary in nature and are built along from shore.

Only nine percent of the respondents own the houses and the lot they occupy. Forty percent own the houses but not the lots on which their houses stand. They do not pay lot rentals, however, because their houses are built on shoreland. Another 40 percent own their houses but pay for the lot rental. Two percent rent both the house and the lot they occupy. The remaining include those who rent both the house but not the lot (8 percent), those who do not pay any rent (3 percent), and those who have other arrangements aside from those already mentioned (2 percent).

The single detached house is the dominant dwelling unit in Barangay 10. This comprises 85 percent of the houses occupied by the 99 respondents. The remaining 15 percent are barong-barong (12 percent), duplex (1 percent), commercial buildings, and others (2 percent).

The houses occupied by the respondents have rooms ranging from one to three. Almost one-half (48 percent) of the respondents live in a single-room dwelling units. All household chores and activities are done in this limited space by household members. Forty-four percent of the respondents occupy two-room dwelling units, while a small 8 percent are occupants of houses with three rooms.

Electricity provides lighting to 55 percent of the dwelling units in the sample. The remaining 45 percent still use kerosene. Wood appears to be the main cooking fuel used by the respondents in Barangay 10. Not one of them uses an electric stove or LPG for cooking.

The major source of water supply for most respondents (96 percent) is the artesian well constructed through the barangay development program. The remaining four percent have their own pump wells.

Almost two-thirds (72 percent) of the fishermen have toilet facilities such as the open pit, the antipolo type, or the water-sealed type of toilet. The remaining two percent who do not have any private means of disposing their waste make use of the wide seashore, especially in the evenings.

The radio is the most common household appliance in the barangay. Sixty-one percent of the respondents have radios and claim to listen to it everyday.

Some (37 percent) own inexpensive dining sets made of ordinary wooden materials. A good number (48 percent) of them also own sala sets made of light wooden materials. Televisions and refrigerators are rarely found in the fishermen’s homes; only two percent of the respondents own these expensive appliances.

Livestock raising can be very helpful in times of financial crisis, but this activity is a rarity in Barangay 10. Only 35 percent of the sample have chickens, the average number being 1.1 per household. Similarly, only 25 percent raise pigs.

Three-fourths of the respondents own fishing boats, majority (55 percent) of which are motorized. Almost all (92 percent), however, own the fishing gear they use. The most commonly owned gear is the multiple hook (73.5 percent). The other types of gear used are big nets (20.4 percent) and small nets (5.10 percent).

Rice and fish are the staple food of the fishermen. Around 92 percent indicated that they eat rice and 89 percent said they have fish each meal. Fifteen percent prefer corn grits, however, as their staple food. Dried fish is a supplementary food in the fishermen’s diet. In the absence of fresh fish, dried fish takes its place. Meat and eggs are rare items in their menu. Only 16 percent can afford meat, and only three percent can buy eggs.

The total amount spent by each household is broken down daily, weekly, monthly, and annually. The total daily expenses on food per household member is P2.35. With an average of six members per household, the family will need at least P14.10 daily in order to survive. This would imply that the family spends P5,146.50 annually for food alone. If this amount is computed against the family’s income, there exists a shortage of P1,753.85. This suggests that the difference between the actual income and the actual expenses on food is taken from other sources like the middlemen, the loan sharks, or their suki (regular customer).

Fishermen and members of their households suffered varied ailments a year before the survey. The most common ailments, were flu with fever (98 percent), and colds (95 percent).

During the year prior to the interview, 184 members of the respondents’ households got sick. Of these, 96 percent needed medical treatment, but because of financial problems and the distance to the hospital from the area, only 30 percent were actually brought to a physician. The remaining seventy percent resorted to self-help treatment by herbolarios in the barangay and in nearby barangays.

Fishing Activities

Ninety percent of the respondents interviewed reported that fishing is their primary occupation. They have engaged in fishing from one to 45 years, with 16 years as the mean. Seventy-six percent said they acquired their fishing skills through experience. As children of fishermen, they learned how to fish from their parents and enhanced this knowledge through experience. Some fishermen, about 14 percent of them, obtained new knowledge by attending seminars conducted by the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources. However, none reported having been able to make use of the skills they had learned in these seminars. One reason is that they could not afford to buy the necessary equipment to try out new fishing methods.

Almost all of the respondents (95 percent) are engaged in offshore fishing, spending between three to seven days in the sea and an average of eight hours per fishing trip. A majority of them (75.8 percent) own the boats they use; 55 percent of the boats used are motor powered. The others rent (17.2 percent) or work as crew members (7.1 percent). Three-fourths of the fishermen use multiple hooks, while the rest use big or small nets.

Sharing Arrangement

Sharing arrangements are either in kind or in cash. They affect only 24 percent of the respondents, particularly boat renters and hired crew members. Of this 24 percent, only six percent receive their share in cash, and the rest receive theirs in kind. Their sharing practices- classified as 20-80, 50-50 or 75-25- are based on several conditions: who spends for fuel, who owns the fishing gear used, who shoulders the expenses on food, etc.

Production

Fishermen consider the months of March, April, May, June, and part of July as peak fishing months. At this time, the fishermen stay out at a sea longer because the weather is good and the sea is calm. This does not necessarily imply that their catch will be abundant, however. The catch is more likely to depend on the kinds of boat used by the fishermen, the gear he uses and whether he is engaged in off-shore or deep-sea fishing. In contrast, then lean period is of a longer duration. when the sea is rough, fishermen seldom go out to fish. To insist on fishing is to incur great risk. It is not even certain that they can bring home something for the family consumption.

As expected, the productivity of the fishermen during the lean months is very minimal, and their income may not be enough to make both ends meet. At these times, the fishermen, as household heads, resort to borrowing money, even at high rates of interest, so the family can survive. Borrowing money from middlemen, or any other source, can partly explain why fishermen, especially those who have no other sources of income aside from fishing remain poor. During the lean months, the fishermen sometimes return home empty-handed and may have already spent some amount for gasoline and food. If they are fortunate, they may catch enough to earn the equivalent of P152.00 a month.

I based on the theory of supply and demand, it can be assumed that there is no great difference in the income of fishermen during peak and lean months. Other factors however, such as the kind of fish caught during the lean months also influence that marketability of fish. Thus, even if the supply of fish during the lean months is less and the demand for fish is great, we cannot assume that the fishermen’s earnings during the lean months will be more. The fishermen’s catch may be classified into two categories, namely: a) biggest catch for one fishing trip in a year with the corresponding cash value, and b) the smallest volume of catch for one fishing trip with the corresponding cash equivalent.

Values

The results show that “salvation” is perceived as the most important value; 97 percent of the fishermen rate it as “very important.” This is followed by “self respect” (96 percent), social recognition (91 percent), family security (89 percent), sense of accomplishment (82 percent), and comfortable life (68 percent).

More than one-half (71.1 percent0 of the respondents expressed a great desire to have their children finish college. Considering that the average educational level of the respondents is only Grade 5, it is not surprising that they have high hopes for their children. Education has always been regarded as the key to the improvement of one’s lot. It means better opportunities, better jobs, and better salaries. So when parents desire to have their children finish college, they hope that one day they will be able to enjoy a better life. This hope is captured in a fisherman’s statement: “Maayo na lang kung makahuman ang among mga anak aron naay among kasaligan sa among katigulangan.” (“It is good if our children could finish a college degree so that there is someone we can lean on during our old age.”)

Marketing

Eighty-two percent of the respondents report that their catch is both for sale as well as for consumption. Selling is done by the fishermen themselves, their wives, or their children. Almost one-half (48 percent) of the respondents said that they sell their catch themselves. The other half of the respondents said that the selling is done by the wife or the children. Some of the fishermen (20.2 percent) said that even while they are still at sea, they are able to sell their catch because some buyers go out to meet them. About 13 percent sell their catch at the fish landing. A larger percentage (34.4 percent), sell their catch at the town market, while 26.3 percent sell their catch outside of town, most probably in Butuan or in Nasipit where the demand is greater and the price is higher. Forty percent of the respondents sell their catch to the middlemen, 37 percent to final sellers, and only 18 percent to final consumers.

On the average, the biggest sale reported by the fishermen recorded P702.00, and the smallest, only P45.00. The largest volume of fish sold, on the average, was 73 kilos, while the smallest was 5 kilos.

Participation in Organization

The majority of the fishermen (59.7 percent) who were interviewed are not members of any organization, although half of them expressed interest in joining religious organizations. They do not join any organizations because their time can be used for more productive activities. Moreover, membership in any organization is a drain on their pockets since every now and then, members are asked to give financial contribution. Worse, they do not receive the corresponding benefits from these organizations.

Of the 30 who are members of organizations, more than one-half (18) belong to religious organizations, while the rest belong to different socio -civic organizations. Nine out of 30 members are officers and their length of membership varies from 1-18 years, with three years as the average. Asked to rate their participation in the organizations, the members rated themselves as very active (31.2 percent), active (43.7 percent), and slightly active (18.8 percent). Their rating was based on the number of meetings that they have attended and the activities that they have participated in. Despite the problems that they have experienced, lack of funds and lack of cooperation for example, they report that they have received benefits from the organization, foremost of which are financial and social.

Considering the popularity of religious organizations and the importance of receiving financial aid, Alay Kapwa sa Kalipay ug Kasakit is one organization worth mentioning here. It is an exclusive organization, open only to the members of the Dona and the Banaria families, and it is not solely dependent on member’s contribution as its source of funds. the primary aim of the organization is to give financial aid to the members at times of kasakit (sorrow, like death) and kalipay (joy, like weddings). The organization raises funds by asking the members a monthly contribution of P5.00. The amount is placed in pundo (common fund0 and kept by the president of the organization. At the same time, they supplement their funds by selling firewood (done by the male members) and by making nets for the fishermen (done by the female members).

Awareness and Attitudes Towards Government Projects

Majority of the respondents (94.9 percent) are aware of several government projects which have been undertaken in their barangay at one time or another. They were able to identify projects which fall under one of the six government projects identified in the survey. They were also able to rank these projects according to the benefits received.

The level of awareness of the respondents of the Kilusang Kabuhayan at Kaunlaran (KKK) is very high; it ranks first among the projects mentioned. This high degree of awareness stems from the fact that it is one of the most recent projects launched but he government. However, the actual benefits derived from the project is very low: only 5.7 percent of the respondents said that they have been benefited by KKK. It receives in fact, the lowest rating in terms of actual benefits granted. Since KKK is a new project, it has not yet reached many people and therefore few respondents have been benefited by it. The respondents  also reported that of the six government projects mentioned, they have derived more benefits from the water system, electrification, and infrastructure projects. Their level of awareness of these projects is low however.

Attitude Towards Government Projects

Fifty percent of the fishermen agree with the statement that government projects serve only the interest of organized groups in business and labor but are not concerned about the needs of the people in general. In turn, forty-nine percent disagree with the statement that the government is undertaking so many things including those that the government has no right to do. The negative attitude of the fishermen towards government projects arises because they have not been recipients of benefits from the different government projects. It is worth noting that despite their disappointment, they still believe that the government is engaged in the right kind of activities.

Needs, Aspirations and Perceptions

Despite many problems, 42.8 percent of the fishermen said they are “happy” about life as a whole, while 33.7 percent said they are “just happy.” Sixty-five percent also said that they are “happy” about their ability to satisfy their family’s wants and needs. Nineteen percent, however, said that they are “neither happy nor unhappy.”

With regard to their participation in organizations, 87.5 percent said that they are “happy” about it , while only 12.5 percent are not certain of their feelings. However, a majority (56.3 percent) are happy about the government projects which are undertaken in their community. When asked if the projects can improve the living conditions of their families, 73.9 percent of the respondents said “yes.” They strongly believe that the government can greatly help improve their living conditions and the economic progress of their community. This belief is shared by 89.7 percent of the respondents. They believe that this could be done by the government of their fishing loans are approved. They shall then be able to buy new fishing equipment and hopefully increase their catch. Eventually, they said, this will lead to the improvement of their lives.

The results also show that more than one-half (51.5 percent) of the fishermen assess their current status as below the middle positions (steps 2 and 3 ) of a 10-rung leader, while only 25.3 percent assess their current status in the middle positions (steps 4 and 5 ). However, circumstances were different five years ago.  More than one-half (51.5 percent) assessed themselves to be in the middle positions. This statement is supported by comments like “Arang-arang ra ang among kahimtang niadtong miaging mga tuig (Our living conditions were a lot better in the past years).” As to where they would place themselves in the ladder 5 years from now, 26.3 percent said that they will still be in the lower positions, whereas 39.4 percent hope to rise to the middle positions.

Comparing the self-assessment of the fishermen five years ago and now, the results indicate that they perceive an improvement in their socio-economic status and anticipate a better life ahead of them, especially five years from now. This anticipation of improvement is expressed in statements like “Pag-abot nimo sa ubos, wala na kay laing padulngan kung dli sa taas, (When you reach the bottom, you have nowhere else to go but up).”