So you think we've got it tough. Frank Woolf
the director of administration and publishing for the Motorcycle
Philippines Federation, has been contacting bikers around the
world in an attempt to raise their profile in a fight for riders
rights
in the Philippines. I'd already talked to Frank through email,
when we set up a link exchange
with http://motorcyclephilippines.com , I
was only to glad to help.
I hope you'll join with us in wishing the riders
of the Philippines our best wishes and morale support.
Please help by distributing this article.
Motorcyclists Ride to Protest anti-motorcycle proposals
A counselor in Quezon City proposed a no backriders law. A counselor
in Marikina wants to ban full face helmets. Another counselor in
Marikina wants riders to register their helmets. A senator wants
a law to force riders to paint their plate number on their helmets.
We are already banned from the country's safest roads and forced
onto the most dangerous roads because over 30 years ago a police
rider was killed after he was ordered to remove his safety helmet.
On Friday June 10th 2005 hundreds of riders joined in a protest
starting in Quezon City to say ENOUGH! We are fed up with laws
that put us in serious danger for no good reason. We are fed up
with being used as the scapegoat or the excuse when the law is
not enforced. We are ready and willing to help in whatever way
we can but we will no longer stand by and see innocent riders penalized
for the actions of others.
For the last six years motorcycle riders in the Philippines
have been actively fighting against laws, legislation and even
rules dreamed up by construction companies that put motorcycle
riders in danger or restrict their freedom as tax paying motor
vehicle owners.

The ban on motorcycles using the tollways which are the safest
possible roads forces riders to use service roads that are
probably the most dangerous in the country and was started
over 30 years
ago when motorcycle riding presidential escorts were told to
remove their helmets and ride wearing straw hats. One had an
accident on SLEX and was killed because he was not wearing
a helmet so they blamed the road and banned motorcycles from
tollways!
Years later after the Makati Regional Trial Court court said
the ban was illegal but the PNCC introduced a new ban on all
bikes less than 400cc (about 99% of bikes) because in the words
of the chairman at that time "People who can't afford to
ride bikes over 500cc are poor and uneducated". He was argued
down to 400cc but the ban has nothing at all to do with safety
for bikers or anyone else.

While much of the modern world is actively encouraging the
use of motorcycles to reduce congestion and pollution the
Philippines is largely doing the opposite and being anti-motorcycle.
There
are notable exceptions like motorcycles not being included
in
the "colour coding" scheme that bans car drivers from
using their vehicles in city centres on one day each week.
In recent months it has become clear that because motorcycles
are the only vehicles that can slip through the chaotic,
lawless mess of Manila traffic criminals are sometimes using
them as
getaway vehicles. Instead of investigating why the PNP cannot
stop them or helping the PNP, one counselor decided to introduce
a no backride law (no passengers on motorcycles). Another
decided that because these criminals are hard to recognize
when wearing
full face helmets he would introduce a ban of full face helmets
while another said everyone passing through their part of
the city must register their helmets! Lastly a senator decided
he would introduce a law that all motorcyclists must paint
their
name and plate number on their helmet!

Thousands of riders have saved for years to buy a bike to
reduce their commuting costs, often with a second member
of the family
riding on the back being taken to work or school. These
people would be forced to continue their payments on the bike,
or
sell it at a loss, while members of the family are forced
to use public
transport vehicles that statistics show are the most dangerous
vehicles in the country and certainly kill far more people
than motorcycle riding crooks.
Riders passing through a certain part of town would have to
find city hall (assuming it is open at the time) to go
and pay for a sticker before they can continue. Many riders
like
myself
pass through this area at night so they, presumably, would
have to make a separate trip (about three hours for me)
just to get
a sticker to pass through at night when nobody can see
it anyway.
Painting your name and plate number on your helmet would
mean damaging very expensive safety equipment. If you have
more
than one bike you would need multiple helmets at a cost
of between
2,000 and 30,000 pesos each and what would it achieve anyway?
Do assassins and other criminals ride slowly when escaping
the scene of the crime if they have stickers or numbers
on their
helmets? Are murderers and robbers afraid to disobey the
no backride rule when zipping through the traffic to escape?

All these rules of course would have little or no effect
on criminals who are bold enough to walk up to someone
in broad
daylight in
a crowded area, shoot someone then jump on the back of
a bike and disappear. If they cant wear a full face helmet
they will
just wear a half face helmet and add a bandana and sunglasses
like many messengers do. If the law says they can't backride
they will arrive at the scene separately, the killer
does his evil deed, jumps on the bike and disappears as usual.
Stickers
and painted numbers can easily be duplicated or stolen.
If
the law enforcement agencies are unable to catch them
now
what difference
would stickers and these rules make? The only people
affected are the innocent motorcycle riders.
On June 10th members of the estimated 120,000 member
Motorcycle Philippines Federation (MCPF) said enough
is enough. In
spite of the fact that it is very difficult for most
people to
get time off work, somewhere between 600 and 1,000 riders
met at
the Quezon Memorial Circle to inform counselors and senators
that they will no longer be used as scapegoats and excuses
for poor law enforcement.
The Federation that consists of the motorcyclephilippines.com
web site, the Philippine Scooter Federation, The Motorcycle
Advocates of the Philippines, The National Racing Association,
the Motorcycle
Riders Course and hundreds of other clubs and federations
all over the country. The federation has all the top
people and
experts in every aspect of motorcycling at their disposal
and has made
it very clear that they are ready and willing to do everything
they can to assist the government at every level.
Obviously the MCPF has made its presence felt as the
backride ban and the painted helmet proposals have already
been
withdrawn.
A few weeks ago the Office of the President requested
the MCPF to draft a motorcycle usage incentive policy
for the
country.
When the riders gathered at Quezon Memorial the staff
of Quezon City Councilor Ariel Inton met with the riders
and
MCPF directors
to sign an agreement of cooperation and recently Senator
Richard Gordon agreed to work with the MCPF on motorcycling
related
issues.
Directors of the MCPF and presidents of motorcycle clubs
are due to meet with Mayor Bayani of Marikina on Monday
June 20th.
The MCPF would like to make it clear that this is a law
enforcement problem, NOT a motorcycle problem. Crooks
use all sorts of
vehicles but nobody penalizes innocent motorists. While
the MCPF will help in any way possible we are not a law
enforcement organization and do not have the authority
or the means
to
do the PNP's job for them.
Posted in support of Frank Woolf
Director for Administration and Publishing
The Motorcycle Philippines Federation
http://motorcyclephilippines.com |