The Scrap Mining Act of 1995 Network welcomed
the recommendations of Secretary Gina Lopez and the Department of Environment
and Natural Resources (DENR) of their audit of mining firms and sites to
suspend 20 mining companies.
“We appreciate that
among those listed are the Lepanto Consolidated Mining Co., Benguet Corporation
and Oceana Gold. These three companies are responsible for the wanton
destruction of indigenous peoples' ancestral lands and pollution of rivers in
Northern Luzon,” the gtoup said in a statement.
“However, we urge
Secretary Gina Lopez and the DENR to also suspend and immediately stop the
operations of Taganito, Philex Mining Corp., and FCF Minerals for the
well-known and publicized disasters caused by their mining activities.
“We also call on Sec.
Lopez and the DENR to cancel the permit of Lepanto and immediately stop its
expansion; and to revoke the contracts of the Sagittarius Mines Inc. (SMI) and
Toronto Venture Inc. (TVI) in Mindanao. The SMI and the TVI expansion in
Zamboanga have not yet started full-blown activities but they have already
killed legitimate community leaders and harassed those who oppose their
operations.”
Sec. Lopez and
the DENR in their audit and decisions should highlight the violations of
indigenous peoples' collective rights and how large-scale mining endangered the
lives and livelihood of farmers and indigenous peoples. Most of these mining
companies violated and continue to violate the right to self-determination of
indigenous peoples. Most of these mining companies were able to operate without
securing the genuine consent of IP groups and communities.
The Scrap Mining
Act of 1995 Network was established in response to the growing call to repeal
the Philippine Mining Act of 1995, and the enactment of a new mining law that
respects the rights of the indigenous peoples, protects the environment, upholds
the national patrimony and aims to reorient the mining industry towards
developing national industrialization.
The present Philippine
Mining Act of 1995 and government policies on mining follow a colonial pattern
where all our minerals are extracted and exported to industrialized and
powerful countries instead of having a mining industry that supports the
genuine industrialization, rural modernization and building a self-sufficient
economy, the group said.
Their statement said
indigenous peoples' rights are violated and lives lost with the kind of mining
that the government continues to promote. Economic displacement and loss of
livelihood occur whenever mining operations take place in indigenous
communities. Legitimate opposition to large-scale mining operations face the
brutality of company private guards and the state security forces.
“We pose the challenge
to Secretary Gina Lopez and the DENR to decisively revoke the mining
permits and stop mining operations that violate people’s rights and wantonly
destroy the environment. Further, we urge Secretary Gina Lopez, the DENR and
the Duterte government to reorient the mining industry to truly support
national industrialization, respect the rights of the indigenous peoples,
protect the environment and uphold the national patrimony. We also call on the
Philippine Congress to heed the call of the Filipino people, immediately repeal
the Mining Act of 1995 and enact the Peoples Mining Bill.”
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