By Hanah Tabios
BAGUIO
CITY -- The Dept. of Tourism condemned the recent vandalism incident which led
to the closure of the famed Bamboo Ecopark in St. Francis Xavier Seminary here
in Liteng, Pacdal.
The park, which has been likened to Kyoto’s Arashiyama Bamboo in Japan, opened to tourists late last year.
The park, which has been likened to Kyoto’s Arashiyama Bamboo in Japan, opened to tourists late last year.
Philippine Bamboo Foundation Inc. president
Edgardo Manda announced on his Facebook account the temporary closure of the
tourism destination due to vandalism Monday.
“Some visitors do not respect the place and
have defaced bamboo culms (or poles) by engraving their names and relieving
themselves along the pathway,” he said.
A joint project of the Philippine Bamboo
Foundation Inc. and the Diocese of Baguio, the Baguio City Public Information
Office said the ecopark was an expansion of the National Greening Program to
boost livelihood projects in Baguio.
It was part of the envisioned one million
hectare bamboo plantation of the country’s commitment to the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations to reforest 20 million hectares by 2020 in an effort to
improve the environment.
Manda said there were 26 identified pilot
areas in the country for the project, including Abra and downside Mount Pulag,
in Kabayan, Benguet, which undergoes assessment to identify bamboo species fit
for these areas.
Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo Puyat
appealed to all travelers looking to visit tourism destinations around the
country that have already gradually reopened to practice responsible tourism at
all times.
“We wish to remind tourists of the important
role they hold in ensuring the survival of the tourism industry amid the
pandemic,” Puyat said.
She said that the DoT will also continue
working with local government units, private stakeholders, and relevant tourism
in intensifying its advocacy for sustainable tourism in the country.
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