Benguet police, locals clash over mine project
>> Sunday, September 23, 2012
MANKAYAN, Benguet – Security has been tightened in this mining town after violence marred the serving of a writ of preliminary injunction against protesters of a gold exploration project on Monday.
Six
Cordillera police officers including regional deputy intelligence head Supt.
Chief Glenn Lonogan and Supt. Darnell Dulnuan were injured in a scuffle with
residents from Barangay Tabio.
Local
folks reportedly blocked nine provincial sheriffs who were supposed to hand
down the court’s order to allow the Far Southeast Gold Project to fence off a
private property of Lepanto Consolidated Mining Company (LCMC) meant for
drilling.
Three
others – PO2 Neil Cabanse, Police Officer 1 Jhona Likinio and PO1 James
Dang-ay, with the police officials were hit with stones and logs hurled by
protesters.
Early
Monday morning, court sheriffs were blocked by about 100 residents reinforced
by militant group members.
The
court officers, policemen and officials from the Commission on Human Rights –
Cordillera, led by Regional Director Harold Kub-aron tried but failed to forge
any agreement with the protesters and were pushed away and pelted with rocks.
Henry
Longay, chief sheriff, said they were there to enforce the court order by
Regional Trial Court Branch 64 Presiding Judge AgapitoLaoagan to allow LCMC to
fence the area in sitio Madaymen owned by the mining firm.
But
the protesters insisted they will not end their blockade “until justice is
done,” claiming they were unaware of the court move.
The
Far Southeast Gold Project, a joint venture between LCMC and the South
Africa-based Gold Fields Inc., started the drilling in the disputed area in
Madaymen late December 2011.
But
land claimants (two of the eight families laying claim to the land) with the
help of some residents stopped the operations.
The
protesters eventually built a shack in the area to secure the site and ignored
court orders for them to vacate.
The
protesters sought reprieve from the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples
and the NCIP issued a 20-day Temporary Restraining Order last March 14 but
denied a petition for injunction on the protesters on April 14 and ordered the
protesters to allow FSGRI to conduct its drilling activities.
The
drilling is for exploratory purposes prior to FSGRI's plan to mine an ore body
more than a kilometer deep and some areas in Mankayan already agreed for
similar activities.
0 comments:
Post a Comment