Fact Sheet 2009 | UPLB

December 2009 | University of the Philippines Los Baños

In December 2009, the second installment of Fact Sheet was exhibited at the University of the Philippines in Los Baños, Laguna. Co-organized by the UPLB Zoom Out Multimedia Collective, the Southern Tagalog eXposure and KARAPATAN – Southern Tagalog, the exhibit comprised of new and old artworks (from the 1st Fact Sheet exhibit in 2008).

However on its second day, the exhibit was sabotaged by suspected military agents employed by the university administration known as the community support brigade (CSB). Some of the artworks and exhibit materials were stolen in two succeeding incidents.

Notably, the incident has prior warning from the venue’s  guard-on-duty, mentioning possible sabotage by ‘CSB operatives’, citing the political bearing of the exhibit.

Despite the incident the Fact Sheer pushed through.

UPLB Zoom Out statement on the harassment and sabotage of the Fact Sheet Exhibit by the UPLB Administration

We, artists, cultural workers, and concerned citizens, demand the UP Administration and call upon concerned government entities, the House of Representatives and the Senate, through its Committees on Human Rights and Public Security for the conduct of an instant and thorough investigation on the systematic campus militarization and the role of military elements and the community support brigade (CSB) in perpetrating campus counter-‘terrorism’ measures in the University of the Philippines Los Baños (UPLB). This develops following the recent theft and arbitrary loss of several artworks and other paraphernalia during the FACT SHEET Human Rights Exhibit last 08-11 December 2009 at CAS Annex 2 Lobby, UPLB.

FACT SHEET is a human rights themed visual arts exhibit that aimed to expose the incessant human rights hostilities in the Philippines curated by multimedia group UPLB Zoom Out Multimedia Collective and Artists’ ARREST, an alliance of artists. The art works were based on real human rights cases and abuses summed up in fact sheets.

On December 8 and 9, said exhibit experienced deliberate harassment and acts of sabotage when artworks and other paraphernalia were purposefully stolen from the lobby and stock room of CAS Annex 2, UPLB in two successive attempts.

Notably, the incident has prior warning from the guard-on-duty in the aforementioned venue, mentioning possible sabotage by ‘CSB operatives’, citing the political bearing of the exhibit.

Needless to say, the military and the CSB, along with the private guards, have been inutile in securing the buildings and works of students, which was quite ironic because it was for security reasons that they are on such post. More so, judging from their acts of deliberate surveillance and the corroboration of the duty guard, they have been instruments in sabotaging the exhibit.

The throngs of military, private guards and CSBs deployed in the campus, and the surveillance cameras installed in buildings, did not at all help in providing security, and may perhaps been placed as instruments to intimidate students to freely exercise and conduct political activities. In a number of cases, the CSB has been caught taking pictures and videos of student leaders during protests, which, we can say, is quite ‘lethal’ given the pattern it follows in the killings and abduction of political activists, including student leaders.

As Philippine artists and concerned citizens who feel that artistic freedom has been jeopardized in this event, we believe that the artistic repression during the FACT SHEET Exhibit is part of the systematic campus repression and state fascism that the government and the powers-that-be are sowing. We believe that the incident is not an isolated case, but is part of the larger ploy of the UPLB administration to paralyze the ever-growing student movement in the campus; and on the larger scale, the reactionary government’s desperate move to silence its staunchest critics, among which are progressive groups and students.

For this to happen in a university touted to be as “bastion of democracy” and liberal thinking is a slap to the face of the UPLB Administration. In a number of times that the safety of student leaders have been put to risk by maliciously accusing as members of the New People’s Army, the UPLB Administration has kept mum and has remained lame. This only proves how the Administration and its forces have encouraged the perpetuation of military-sanctioned terror and fascism inside the university.

It has been said that “a country without culture is like a person without a soul.” Artists and cultural workers mirror our society through artful expression of its heritage and visions. Thus, as responsible and socially awakened artists and citizens, we cannot and will never let this curtailment of artistic freedom continue. We will strongly and vehemently defend, not only our artistic, but our civic rights as well.

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