By Andrew Mangibin
BAGUIO CITY — Environmental activists joined the
Makabayan Bloc in the House of Representatives in filing House Bill 6450 that
seeks to impose a 25-year moratorium in prospective open-pit mining projects in
the country.
The group filed the bill
on March 3, the 25th anniversary of Republic Act 7942 or the Philippine Mining
Act of 1995, which, according to them, caused "unbridled destruction by
open-pit mines for export" in the last 25 years.
Kalikasan People's
Network for the Environment (KPNE) National Coordinator Leon Dulce stressed
that President Rodrigo Duterte's pronouncements against open-pit mining,
coupled with the late former environment secretary Gina Lopez's Department
Administrative Order and other local ordinances, being defied by mining
corporations provides the impetus for the passage of the bill.
According to him,
open-pit mining operations have high environmental risk and records of human
rights violations to local communities. He cited the cases of mining projects
in Mindanao like Tampakan in South Cotabato and King King mine in Compostela
Valley.
The KPNE coordinator
urged the government to halt the operations "until we have a National
Industrialization Program that will ensure a needs-based, rights-based, and
environmentally safe utilization of our mineral resources."
Lia Alonzo, Executive
Director of the Center for Environmental Concerns (CEC)– Philippines and bill
co-filer, said that damage to ecosystems and landscapes from 25 years of
open-pit mining's "destructive methods" must likewise be compensated
with 25 years of respite from such practices.
"We must learn from
our bitter experiences of ecologically disruptive open-pit mining such as in
the OceanaGold mine in Didipio (in Kasibu), Nueva Vizcaya, and the Philex
Padcal mine in Benguet," she added.
The Philex Padcal mine
is notable for spilling 20.6 million metric tons of toxic mine tailings onto
tributaries leading to the Agno river in 2012, due to the structural failure of
its tailings dam. Meanwhile, an environmental investigation mission conducted
by CEC and Advocates of Science and Technology for the People on OceanaGold's
Didipio operations found that the water pollution in the affected area was 2-8
times above safety levels for biological and agricultural purposes.
A Congressional hearing
was also held last month regarding Oceana Gold's reported human rights
violations reported in the United Nations Commission on Human Rights. However,
groups opposing the company's operation noted the inquiry only served as a
platform for the Oceana Gold's campaign to renew its Financial and Technical
Assistance Agreement.
Lumad activists, who
were among those who backed the bill's filing in the house, slammed open-pit
mining projects for the militarization in Mindanao communities who continue to
resist "destructive" mining operations and related activities.
Alviena Wali, a South
Cotabato Lumad representing Save Our Schools Network – Mindanao, decried the
military presence in their ancestral lands, even before the establishment of
commercial mining operations.
"At least 12
environmental defenders have been killed since 2001 for opposing the Tampakan
mine's threats to our [ancestral] domain's forests, fields, schools, and
villages," she said. -- nordis.net
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