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several parts of the country, men fight tooth and nail to
feed their hunger. And in some, like in the province of Bohol,
hunger is responsible for fueling latent insurgency.
“Widespread poverty
breeds insurgency insurgency,” ,” said Bohol Governor
Erico B. Aumentado, “ And this can can’t ’t
be handled militarily militarily.” .” If government
soldiers carried bread instead of guns when they hit the field,
they will probably do a better job of quelling the uprising.
Of Bohol’s population of slightly more than one million,
54% wallowed in abject poverty in 2000.
Three of every 10 barangays
are hotbeds for conflict in early 2002. To address the worsening
situation, the Bohol Poverty Reduction Program was created
in July 2001.
The goal was to reduce poverty
incidence by at least 2% yearly by increasing access to services
and fueling economic growth.
From 2002 to 2005, 16,928
new jobs were created in the farm and tourism sectors. Child
malnutrition was also addressed, and access to sanitary toilets,
potable water sources, and education were increased.
A total of 17,138 households
in 348 barangays benefited from the program and 30,000 more
are being eyed for the program’s next phase.
The result was encouraging.
In 2002, communist insurgents belonging to the CPP-NPA had
four fronts in Bohol. By 2005 only one remained. Of the 400
barangays, only 36 had communist presence.
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