The Phnom Penh Post

Philippine­s deadliest Asian country for land defenders

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THE Philippine­s was the deadliest country in Asia for land and environmen­tal defenders again last year while slipping to second most dangerous in the world behind Colombia, a watchdog said on Wednesday.

A total of 43 defenders were killed in the archipelag­o – the vast majority on the fertile and resource-rich islands of Mindanao and Negros – compared with 30 in 2018, UKbased NGO Global Witness said in a report.

Nearly half of the killings recorded since President Rodrigo Duterte took power in 2016 have been linked to the armed forces or paramilita­ry groups, it said.

Indigenous leaders, farmers and State employees charged with protecting the environmen­t were among the victims.

More than half the deaths were related to agribusine­ss, Global Witness said. Sixteen killings were linked to mining – the highest in the world.

Nearly half of those killed lived on Mindanao, where the army has long maintained a heavy presence in the fight against communist and Muslim insurgents.

The island was under martial law until the end of last year.

Large numbers of defenders were also killed on Negros, a sugar-producing island in the central Philippine­s that is also heavily militarise­d and where activists have long campaigned for land reform to reduce inequality and poverty.

Global Witness said: “Defenders living in Mindanao and Negros made up almost 90 per cent of land and environmen­tal activists killed in the country in 2019.”

Kaylo Bontolan, a leader of the Manobo tribe on Mindanao, was among them.

He was killed in a military airstrike in April last year when he returned to his mountain home to help document violence against fellow tribe members.

Global Witness said: “Like Datu Kaylo, many of those killed were indigenous people asserting their right to self-determinat­ion and their ancestral lands.”

The impact of climate change has dialled up the pressure on defenders as they seek to protect indigenous land rights and stop commercial loggers and miners destroying pristine rainforest­s and polluting the environmen­t.

Global Witness warned: “Rising temperatur­es, landslides and increasing­ly dangerous typhoons make the Philippine­s the country most at-risk of multiple climate hazards.”

While Duterte’s government has acknowledg­ed the environmen­tal threats to the country, the reality is “business as usual”, it said.

“Large companies, influentia­l politician­s and establishe­d landowners continue to make money with brazen disregard for the rights and wellbeing of local communitie­s, and the lives of activists,” it said.

An example, it noted, was the planned China-backed constructi­on of an $800 million hydropower dam on indigenous land in Mindanao that will displace more than 700 households, who say they were not consulted.

The report says 119 defenders were killed during Duterte’s first three years in office – almost twice the number compared with the three years before he took power.

While defenders have long faced deadly reprisals for their efforts, Global Witness said the Duterte administra­tion’s “relentless vilificati­on” of them and widespread impunity for offenders could be driving the increase.

The report highlighte­d the practice of “red-tagging” activists and environmen­tal groups – accusing them of being rebels or communist sympathise­rs – which it said was part of a broader global trend to delegitimi­se communitie­s’ concerns.

A new anti-terrorism law that gives security forces sweeping powers to go after groups or individual­s could put government critics, including defenders, at risk of prosecutio­n, it added.

 ?? AFP ?? The impact of climate change has dialled up the pressure on defenders as they seek to protect indigenous land rights and stop commercial loggers and miners destroying pristine rainforest­s and polluting the environmen­t.
AFP The impact of climate change has dialled up the pressure on defenders as they seek to protect indigenous land rights and stop commercial loggers and miners destroying pristine rainforest­s and polluting the environmen­t.

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