Indigenous peoples' partylist Katribu assailed the lifting of the moratorium on new mining applications, announced by the Mines and Geosciences Bureau last week.
According to Leo Jasareno, the
moratorium on new mining applications was lifted March 18.
The partylist group scoffed the
MGB moratorium, claiming that communities was “pretentious and a populist
maneuvering.”
“In one sense, this declaration of
a moratorium lifting is a waste of energy for the MGB,” Kakay Tolentino,
KATRIBU Partylist Secretary General claimed. “Yet this action remains deeply
deplorable.”
"Indigenous peoples are
embattled by the incursion of mining corporations in their ancestral
territories as it is. The moratorium did not ease off the threat to dislocate
communities, nor did it stop the violations of our rights. But this lifting
will further embolden mining corporations to force their way in our
communities,” Kakay Tolentino, KATRIBU Partylist Secretary General said. “Amid
the killings and other atrocities committed against our people, this action of
the MGB is like a warrant that violations of our rights is endorsed by the
government.”
The MGB issued a ban on new
mining applications on January 2011, after the industry garnered flak from
environmental groups and human rights organizations.
“Mining corporation have been
reeling in the good favor of this administration. It has awarded SMI-Xstrata an
ECC, and allowed the reopening of Philex Mining Corporation. These corporations
are human rights abusers and environmental violators yet are favored by the
administration--Aquino has finally dropped the act. No more pretending that its
is protecting the environment, patrimony, and people,” declared Tolentino.
The partylist group formerly
condemned the the issuing of an Environmental Compliance Certificate (ECC) to
Xstrata earlier this year. The mining giant and military personnel at their
payroll is held responsible by human rights organizations for the massacre of
an indigenous Blaan family. Philex, on the other hand, was allowed to
temporarily operate after it spilled 20 million metric tons of mine waste to
tributaries in Benguet and Pangasinan.
The partylist group finds the
timing of these ‘favors’ to mining corporations as suspicious. “It’s no secret
that mining corporations are backdoor financiers of candidates. The Aquino
administration must be desperate to rake in cash with their recent dealings in
the mining sector. Of course, their candidates might be piling up cash to pay
up for those campaign TV ads,” Tolentino chided.
KATRIBU Partylist called for the
scrapping of the Mining Act of 1995, and the revocation of EO 79 enacted last
year.
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