LINGAYEN, Pangasinan -- The Office of the
Ombudsman has filed graft charges against Pangasinan governor Amado Espino and
several provincial government officials for over P10 million in illegal black
sand mining trade in the Lingayen Gulf area.
Aside from Espino, the Environmental
Ombudsman filed two counts of graft against Provincial Administrator Rafael
Baraan, Cynthia Camara and Lolita Bolayog of the Alexandra Mining and Oil
Ventures, Inc.
Also indicted were Pangasinan Housing and Urban
Development Coordinating officer Alvin Bigay, Alexandra Mining directors Cesar
Detera, Edwin Alcazar, Denise Ann SiaKho Po, Annlyn Detera, Glenn Subia and
Emiliano Buenavista and Michael Ramirez, Gina Alcazar and Avery Pujol of Xypher
Builders, Inc.
In the joint resolution, the Environmental
Ombudsman said that when Espino assumed as governor in June 2007, he crafted
the Site Development Plan that would turn the area into an eco-tourism complex,
with the development of two 18-hole golf courses at par with international
standards.
Immediately after, a negotiated contract was
entered into between the local government and Alexandra Mining with soil
remediation activities conducted in Barangay Sabangan as pilot area.
On June 29, 2011, a Small Scale Mining Permit
(SSMP) was issued in favor of Alexandra Mining.
Barely three weeks later, Baraan issued
a Notice of Cancellation of the SSMP and ordered Alexandra Mining to vacate the
area.
A memorandum of agreement was entered into
between Espino and Xypher Builders on Aug. 8, 2011 for the removal of metallic
materials from the sand pile already vacated by Alexandra Mining.
Upon request for investigation made by
residents of the affected barangays, the investigating team of the Mines and
Geosciences Bureau of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources of
Region I issued a report on Oct. 18, 2011 recommending that the SSMP in favor
of Alexandra Mining be cancelled as it was not issued with an Environmental
Compliance Certificate (ECC).
It also said that the Alexandra Mining should
be penalized for putting up a mineral processing plant sans ECC and that a
cease and desist order be issued stopping the mining firm from further
extracting beach sand pending the resolution of the issue.
On Oct. 26, 2011, the provincial government
issued a gratuitous permit, authorizing Xypher Buildings and the Provincial
Housing and Development Coordinating Office to extract and utilize loose and
unconsolidated materials, and recover magnetite sand in Sabangan.
Espino also issued a Mineral Ore Export
Permit in favor of Xypher.
The Environmental
Ombudsman discovered that both Alexandra Mining and the Xypher Builders are not
registered contractors with the Philippine Contractors Accreditation Board.
It also found out that
the ECC was issued later in favor of Baraan for the Lingayen Golf Course
Project only on Jan. 2, 2013.
Alexandra Mining is
not registered as a legitimate business establishment in Lingayen.
Aside from the
criminal indictments, Baraan and Bigay were found administratively liable for
grave misconduct and meted with the penalty of dismissal from the government
service.
Meanwhile, the
complaints against Lingayen mayor Ernesto Castañeda, Jr., Sabangan Barangay
chairman Hector Fabiana, Estanza barangay chairman Mario Navarro, Malimpuec
barangay chairman Delfin Velasco and provincial consultant Eric Acuña were
dismissed for lack of merit.
Ombudsman
ConchitaCarpio-Morales re-activated the Ombudsman Environmental Team in
May 2012 to handle cases filed with the office against government officials and
individuals accused of violating environmental laws.
The team is headed by
Deputy Ombudsman Gerard Mosquera as Environmental Ombudsman.
The provincial
government has remained mum, as of press time, on the indictment of Espino, Jr.
and 13 other officials by the Office of the Ombudsman (OMB) in connection with
the alleged operation of unlicensed mining firms extracting black sand on
government property in the province.
“Wala pa dahil wala pa
naman kami narerecieve na kopyang joint resolution (There’s no comment yet
because we have not yet received a copy of the joint resolution),” said
Provincial Information Officer Butch Velasco, when asked about the case filed
by the OMB.
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