HAPPY
WEEKEND
Gina
Dizon
The murder of a Department of
Environment and Natural Resources chief from Quirino adds to the killing of
environmental activists issuing a clear message that killers do not
discriminate.
The assailants kill anyone who gets along
their way to prevent them from logging the trees. The victim may either be a
woman or a man, a church worker , a government employee or a
non-government worker, a village leader, a doctor, a foreigner or
professional. No one is exempted from the greed and ruthlessness of
killers of environmental-workers and activists.
Alfredo Almueda, 59, community environment
and natural resources officer of the Maddela-Nagtipunan area, was shot dead in
Barangay Villa Sur past midnight on New Year’s Day, while he and forest guards
Gene Martin and Ronaldo Calonge were at a DENR checkpoint. Also, DENR
forest specialist MelaniaDirain was shot and killed in her office in Sanchez
Mira, Cagayan Feb. 7 last year.
Almueda and Dirain are victims added to
environmentalist Dr. Isidro Olan, executive director of Lovers of Nature
Foundation who was shot on October 29 last year. Olan is a known activist
against destructive mining and illegal logging operations in southern
Philippines.
Botanist Leonard Co who documented herbal
plants in the Cordillera and now being used as resource for alternative
medicine was allegedly caught in crossfire between the military and rebels in a
forested area in Kananga, Leyte on November 15, 2010. Also, Dr. Gerry Ortega,
known for his stand against mining in Palawan was killed on January 24, 2011
Priests are not spared.Fr. Jose Francisco
Talaban, Aurora-based parish clergyman active against the controversial Aurora
Pacific Economic Zone (APECO) was almost killed when his convent was strafed in
2010.
Also, Italian priest and environmentalist Fr Fausto
Tentorio was shot dead in Cotabato on October 17, 2011. Village leaders are no
exception whether they are indigenous peoples or not. Their children are
not spared in the killers’ brutal and inhuman acts.
B’laan village leader Daquil Capion known to
be against the Sagittarius Mines Incorporated (SMI) is the target of assailants
out to get him. His pregnant wife and two children aged 13 and 8
years old, were instead killed October 18, 2012 when their farmhouse was
allegedly strafed by a unit of the Army’s 27th Infantry Batallion.
Village leader Timuay Lucencio Manda who
opposed illegal mining in Bayog, Zamboanga Del Sur was ambushed resulting in
the death of his 11-year old son Jordan on September 4, 2012.
This country mourns the death of
environmental activists and workers along with their families, committed to
their work of saving nature and where along the doing of their work is killed.
Sad and equally calls for condemnation are the acts of the killers and
their masterminds. A cruel and inhuman act of disrespecting life and dignity of
humankind should not go unpunished and perpetrators and masterminds should be
held accountable for their acts.
Meantime, military men, government officials,
and corrupt DENR men are reportedly identified in intelligence reports as cited
in newspaper accounts to be behind illegal logging.
In Compostela Valley and Davao
region of Mindanao, these were ravaged by recent typhoon Pablo
resulting to the death of 1,050 persons and 800 missing, Illegal logging
had been noted to have contributed to the typhoon- induced landslides while local
officials have been identified to be behind illegal logging.
From his investigations, columnist Ramon
Tulfo of the Philippine Daily Inquirer identified Davao Oriental Rep. Nelson
Dayanghirang (1st District); Gov. Corazon Malanyaon and her brother, Cateel
Mayor Camilo Nunez as having abused permits given by the DENR by cutting down
trees not covered by the permits in the mountains of Baganga and Cateel towns
in Davao Oriental province.
In Bicol ravaged areas resulted to deaths of
hundreds of persons brought about by typhoons Akang and Monang in
1994. Again, politicians, military
men and corrupt DENR men were reportedly behind illegal logging there.
Governors of six Bicol provinces during their terms in 1994
are one in blaming illegal logging as the principal cause of landslides and
flashfloods.
DENR reports 20 years ago noted Bicol has
541,000 hectares where illegal loggers left only 108,000 hectares. In 1994,
Bicol region DENR executive director Pedro Caleon said people responsible for
rape of forests should be held responsible.
What happened in the Bicol region rings a
heavier and more deathly disaster in Ormoc, Leyte in 1991 when landslides and
flashfloods drowned more than 5000 persons, noted to have been caused by
massive commercial and illegal logging reportedly perpetrated by military men,
local officials and corrupt DENR men.
The story has not changed a bit these past
two years.
With typhoon Sendong hitting Aurora province
two years ago, scattered pieces of logs and timber were carried downstream from
the mountains, an evidence of massive logging in the area. It’s no different in
2004 when typhoons “Unding,” “Violeta,” “Winnie,” and “Yoyong”
showed fallen trees and logs clearly manifesting massive logging in this area.
Ruthless illegal and large scale commercial
loggers don’t care if their operations will cause deaths of people and
destruction of property along with the mountains getting bald in exchange for
money to satisfy their greed and material fulfillment.
They remain accountable to their acts. The
government’ system of making them accountable remains the call. And while
environmental activists persist to save nature and save lives, let
government do the rest of being on their side with President Benigno Noynoy
Aquino's Matuwid na Daan which remains to be seen.
Now here comes a move from the DENR to hand
over central control of the anti-illegal logging operations to the
military with the creation of the Anti-Illegal Logging Task Force (AILTF).
What awaits the fate of forest protection and
biodiversity preservation with alleged perpetrators of illegal logging being
given the task of anti- illegal operations? I wonder.
The remaining 15% of forest cover continues
to be threatened. Eighty two percent of original forest cover since the Spanish
times has been lost in the country having the thinnest forest cover in
Southeast Asia. Among 89 tropical countries, the Philippines are one of 11 with
the lowest forest per capita along with degraded and threatened watersheds.
Human deaths from threats of landslides in
this disaster prone and vulnerable country remain high.
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