The Phnom Penh Post

Boracay barred off from tourists

- Ayee Macaraig

THE Philippine­s is closing i t s best-known holiday island Boracay to tourists for up to six months over concerns that the once idyllic whit e - s a nd re s or t has become a “cesspool” tainted by dumped sewage, authoritie­s said on Thursday.

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has ordered the shutdown to start on April 26 for a maximum period of half a year, his spokesman Harry Roque said.

“Boracay is known as a paradise in our nation and this temporary closure is [meant] to ensure that the next generation­s will also experience that,” Roque told reporters.

The decision jeopardise­s the livelihood of thousands employed in the island’s bustling tourist trade that each year serves two million guests and pumps roughly $1 billion in revenue into the

Philippine economy.

Experts said the measure also appeared to contradict the government’s own pro-developmen­t policy for the island, including the recent approval of a planned $500-million casino and resort on Boracay.

The threat of closure first emerged in February when Duterte blasted the tiny island’s hundreds of tourism-related hotels, restaurant­s and other businesses, accusing them of dumping sewage directly into the sea and turning it into a “cesspool”.

Authoritie­s said Thursday some businesses were using the island’s drainage system to send untreated sewage into its surroundin­g turquoise waters.

The Environmen­t Ministry says 195 businesses, along with more than 4,000 residentia­l customers, are not connected to sewer lines.

But within weeks of Duterte lashing out at the local businesses, the Philippine­s gave the green light for Macau casino giant Galaxy Entertainm­ent to begin constructi­on next year of the casino and resort complex.

“The casino contradict­s all the efforts now of cleaning up and making sure Boracay goes back to the state where it doesn’t violate its carrying capacity,” former Philippine environmen­t undersecre­tary Antonio La Vina told AFP.

He added that the area has seen “unlimited” developmen­t because “local government units and the national government agencies did not do their job of enforcing rules on land use, environmen­tal impact assessment”.

Authoritie­s said they would use the closure to build new sewage and drainage systems, demolish structures built on wetlands and sue officials and businessme­n who violated environmen­tal laws.

The impact of the decision was already being felt, with domestic airlines announcing they would scale back the number of flights to the jumping off point to the 1,000-hectare island.

Malaysian low-cost carrier Air Asia has suspend- ed all of its domestic and internatio­nal flights to Boracay until further notice.

Officials said they were willing to take a hard line, saying police and potentiall­y even soldiers would enforce the closure.

“We will issue guidelines on how to bar tourists from entering starting from the port,” interior assistant secretary Epimaco Densing told reporters on Thursday.

“Whether foreign or local, they will not be allowed to enter the island.”

The Boracay Foundation Inc, a business associatio­n on the island, had asked the government to shut down only those violating environmen­tal laws.

“It’s unfair for compliant establishm­ents to be affected by the closure,” Executive Director Pia Miraflores told AFP.

Miraflores said that even before the ban was announced, its shadow had hit some businesses hard in Boracay.

Some couples who scheduled their weddings on the island up to a year or two in advance had cancelled their reservatio­ns even before the ban was announced, she said, with tour agents also besieged with client calls on planned trips.

Boracay employs 17,000 people, as well as 11,000 constructi­on workers.

 ??  ?? LIFESTYLE
LIFESTYLE
 ?? AFP JES AZNAR/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Houses for sale at Bulabog Beach on Boracay, a Philippine island that has rapidly become a major travel destinatio­n, March 28.
AFP JES AZNAR/THE NEW YORK TIMES Houses for sale at Bulabog Beach on Boracay, a Philippine island that has rapidly become a major travel destinatio­n, March 28.

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