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Thursday, November 6, 2014

Life on the tracks of Filipino rail taxi ‘driver’ featured in Australian TV feature!


November 6, 2014
by benign0
Amidst the horrors of Metro Manila’s infamous perma-traffic can be found interesting stories of how ordinary Filipinos cope with the mess left by decades of administrative neglect. Australia’s SBS world documentary program Dateline featured the heartwarming story of Genaro Daclison, a Filipino father of two who made his living pushing a rail trolley on foot along Manila’s railway tracks in exchange for fare from obliging commuters. The original story was aired back in March 2010 and the feature was re-aired last Tuesday on the occassion of Dateline‘s 30th anniversary.
Daclison was interviewed and a couple of days in his life captured on video by Dateline correspondent Mark Davis in 2010. The story of Daclison’s life on the tracks, the dangers he faced shuttling paying Manila commuters on an illegal rail trolley he pushes on foot, and the baffling contrasts between the slums along Manila’s railways and “normal” life just over the fence from where Daclison lives and work reveals a world even many Filipinos are unaware of. For 18 years, Daclison lived this way.
Reporter Davis observes of the circumstances that underlie Daclison’s way of life…
Like many large Asian cities, Manila’s private and public transport systems have long passed the point of overload, a system of choked roads designed it seems, to ensure that you can get nowhere fast. – unless you’re on one of these [refers to Daclison's rail trolleys]. Intense gridlock has encouraged one little flower to bloom in the transport wasteland – the trolley cars of Manila.
Carving through traffic jams on one these little trolleys is a breeze, but not exactly a pleasure, with the thought of 1,000 tonnes of train looming around the corner.
Asked where and how he and his nine- and six-year-old sons live beyond the time they spend working the tracks, Daclison responds, “Me on the trolley with my two kids in the side car, a rolling side car – that’s my house.”
Davis adds more context…
At the entrance to the university [adjacent to the squatter camp where Daclison lives], a dozen or so trolley drivers live and ply their trade. This camp is as illegal as the trolleys themselves. Periodically there will be a raid by railways police here but the service the trolley guys provide buys them a lot of friends and a bit of tolerance. No-one else can cut 30 minutes off a bus or taxi ride downtown with a 5- or 10-minute trundle.
Considering that they share the tracks with thousand-tonne trains, both the rail taxi drivers and their passengers “know the drill” whenever the sound of a train’s air horn blasts from around the corner as Davis observes…
When the horn blows, you get off and move to the side – very quickly. As soon as the train passes, it’s back on board to enjoy another 2km or 3km of open road. Apart from some apparent safety flaws, the trolleys are everything public transport is meant to be – cheap, reliable and always on the move. And on the face of it, all the staff seem pretty chirpy too.
Thanks to seed funding from Australian viewers, Genaro now runs a safer business!(Photo source: SBS Australia)
Thanks to seed funding from Australian viewers, Genaro now runs a safer business!
(Photo source: SBS Australia)
Since the original broadcast four years ago, Daclison has established a successful mobile restaurant business with the help of donations from Dateline‘s viewers. A happy ending for a man and his family who were lucky enough to have captured the hearts of generous Australian viewers.
Unfortunately, Daclison may likely be the rare exception. Hundreds of thousands of Filipino families live in similar conditions not just along Manila’s rail tracks but also in other vacant, largely-neglected, spaces in the Philippines’ premiere megalopolis. Many of these parcels of land are government-owned lots such as the ones through which rail tracks are laid. But many of these pieces of prime real estate are privately-owned. Philippine land owners have also expressed frustration around the difficulty of developing land settled by squatters such as Daclison, many of whom organise themselves into formidable blocs of voters that Filipino politicians pander to.
For now, nobody in the Philippine government seems to be up to the task of solving these issues at a systemic level. And it is up to the private individual initiatives of ordinary good samaritans to open doors for hard-working and conscientious poor folk like Genaro Daclison.

http://getrealphilippines.com/blog/2014/11/life-on-the-tracks-of-filipino-rail-taxi-driver-featured-in-australian-tv-feature/

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