DENR to hire 315 ex-CPLAs as forest guards in Cordillera
>> Tuesday, August 20, 2013
BAGUIO CITY -– The Cordillera office of the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) will be hiring 315
former members of the defunked Cordillera Peoples Liberation Army (CPLA) to be
deployed as forest guards to preserve and protect the region’s deteriorating
watersheds from illegal loggers and poachers.
Clarence Baguilat, DENR-CAR regional
director, said the new forest guards will be hired by the agency this month to
ensure that the region’s remaining watersheds and forested areas will be spared
from the activities of illegal loggers that would greatly affect the region’s
status as the watershed cradle of Northern Luzon in the future if nothing will
be done to enhance regreening efforts.
“We want to deploy more forest guards
in critical watersheds in the different parts of the region so that we will be
able to significantly reduce the number of illegal logging activities and help
improve the regreening of the forests for the benefit of the present and future
generations of Cordillerans,” Baguilat stressed, citing that all the six
provinces in the region will be getting their share from the forest guards to
be hired.
Mountain Province, Abra, Apayao and Kalinga
will be receiving 60 forest guards each province, Benguet will be getting
additional 30 forest guards while Ifugao will be receiving 24 forest guards.
The DENR- CAR official said the hiring of the
former CPLA members as forest guards is pursuant to the commitment of the
Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process to provide gainful
employment to them in exchange for the surrender of their firearms and for them
to go back to the mainstream society and live a normal life.
Baguilat agreed with the earlier contention
of Bauko Mayor Abraham Akilit that there is an urgent need to deploy additional
forest guards to preserve and protect the undisturbed forest of the Mount Data
watershed and to prevent owners of commercial vegetable farms in Benguet from
invading the same and ruining the remaining forest cover in the area.
Considering that Mount Data is the headwaters
of the Chico, Agno, Abra and Magat rivers, Baguilat pointed out the need to
maintain the remaining undisturbed forest and expand the reforestation
activities in order to significantly increase the forest cover in order to have
abundant water supply for the rivers which will be used for domestic,
agricultural, industrial and power generation activities, especially for people
living along the river systems and even those in the lowlands.
He explained the forest guards to be hired
will be given specific assignments in strategic watersheds regionwide so that
the primary goals and objectives of the National Greening Program (NGP),
especially for the region alone will be realized and even exceeded so that
people will be able to enjoy and reap the fruits of having a sustainable
watershed.
Baguilat expressed support to the long
standing proposal of Mayor Akilit to fence the metes and bounds of the Mount
Data watershed to prevent unscrupulous owners of commercial vegetable farms in
the nearby towns of Buguias and Mankayan from invading the undisturbed forest
in the town, thus, the need for the vigilance of the people living in the
boundary areas to police their own ranks and for them to get their acts
together against the encroachers in their places. -- Dexter A. See
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