Filipino children sit in front of their slum homes in Manila, Philippines. Activists are trying to organize slum dwellers in order to provide them with a political voice. Jay Directo/AFP/Getty Images |
Fast economic growth in many countries often carries a high price for
some of the poorest residents: Vast slums are cleared by urban planners
and commercial developers, sometimes by force.
But there's a growing international movement of activists who are fighting for slum-dwellers' housing rights.
Phnom Penh: A Rising Lake
Workers
pump sand and water into Phnom Penh's Boeung Kak Lake in the heart of
the Cambodian capital. Residents say developers are doing this to force
them out of their ramshackle homes in exchange for minimal
compensation.
City workers in the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh, demolish wooden houses in Boeung Kak Lake as a man in the water collects his belongings on Jan. 14. Heng Sinith/AP |
Glassmaker Cham Phutisak looks helplessly at the mud gushing toward his house.
"We
residents are living through great difficulties now. The sand and water
are flooding our homes," Phutisak says. "We are afraid we might be
electrocuted in the water or bitten by poisonous insects."
Residents
say the developer behind this project is a senator from the ruling
party, backed by Chinese investors. Community organizers have lobbied
the U.N. and launched protests in Phnom Penh and at Cambodian embassies
overseas. In recent weeks, protesting lake residents have clashed with
riot police.
But activist Tuol Srey Po says
it's hard to unite the frightened residents. She's part of a loose
alliance of nongovernmental organizations called the Four Regions Slum
Network.
"Some people are afraid of joining
our network. They moved away, feeling our efforts were as futile as
trying to break a rock with an egg," Po says. "Cambodia has only just
recovered from civil war, and they don't want to face death again."
Manila: Slum Dwellers Want Autonomy
Neighbors
chat and children play as the fetid green waters of the Estero De San
Miguel flow by their shacks. Community organizer Filomena Cinco shows
visitors around.
"Around maybe 200 meters
from here is the passage to Malacanang Palace, where our president
lives," Cinco says. "That's why the government wants this community to
be demolished and be relocated in a far, far place."
The
government also wants to clean up the estero, or canal, to prevent
flooding. But residents don't want to move, says Cinco, because their
jobs are here. The community has hired architects to draft renovation
plans for the neighborhood. Cinco says that if the government approves
the plan, the community will come up with funding.
"There
are slum dwellers who really want to develop themselves, to upgrade
their places," Cinco says.
"The slum upgrading is the best for them
because they know what they want and let the people decide what is best
for them."
Denis Murphy, executive director
of the NGO Urban Poor Associates, has lobbied Philippine President
Benigno Aquino III, who has declared a moratorium on demolishing the
slum.
Murphy says activists here are inspired
by the tactics of Saul Alinsky, the activist who organized Chicago's
slums in the 1930s. He says the slum dwellers carry a clear political
message for city hall.
"Look, we are hundreds
of thousands of urban poor people here, squatters," he says. "If we're
on your side, governing the city is much easier. If we're the enemy,
you'll have no end of problems.
"Every time you want to do something, we'll oppose it."
Bangkok: A Transitional Period
In
Bangkok, farmers and slum dwellers are camped out in front of the old
parliament. There are so many demonstrations going on , it's hard for
this group to find an empty street corner.
Nutchanart
Thantong, a Four Regions Slum Network activist, says the upcoming Thai
elections present her group with an opportunity to press its cause.
"At
the moment, it's a transitional period and it's a good time to inform
the current government that if they don't solve the problem, they surely
won't get our vote," Thantong says.
Civil
society groups, fighting to make sure development does not come at the
expense of the poor, may be taken for granted elsewhere. But their
survival has been hard won under authoritarian and post-authoritarian
governments in Southeast Asia.
NPR
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