Manila Bulletin

51 containers of garbage shipped back to South Korea

- By CHITO A. CHAVEZ

The 51 containers of illegal garbage languishin­g at the Mindanao Internatio­nal Container Terminal (MICT) in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental were finally shipped back yesterday to South Korea where the assorted wastes came from several months ago.

But environmen­tal group EcoWaste Coalition pointed out “the struggle for environmen­tal justice, morality, and the rule of law is not yet over” as there are still 5,176.91 tons of bulk waste lying on and waiting to be shipped out of the country in a

government land in Barangay Santa Cruz, Tagoloan.

Aileen Lucero, national coordinato­r of EcoWaste Coalition, cited the departure of the illegal garbage exports from South Korea from local shores extolling the move as a “triumph for environmen­tal justice, morality, and the rule of law.”

During the ceremonial send-off rites held at the MICT, Lucero asserted “the waste shipments violated Korean and Philippine Customs and environmen­tal laws, as well as the Basel Convention,” and “sending the garbage back to its origin is only just, moral and lawful.”

The Quezon City based toxic waste watchdog sent a 15 member delegation to witness the momentous send-off ceremony of illegally transporte­d mixed waste in the Philippine­s.

“Our resolute stance to get the garbage returned to its sender shows how much we, the Filipino people, want our fragile ecosystems to be protected against the adverse effects of waste traffickin­g, which is a serious threat to our people’s lives, their health, and the environmen­t,” Lucero said.

Emphasizin­g their stance against waste traffickin­g, activists from the EcoWaste Coalition and various civil society groups from Davao City prominentl­y brandished a banner with the words “stop exporting garbage to the Philippine­s.”

They also paraded placards saying “we are not a garbage can for Korean waste,” “Korean waste should be treated in Korea,” and “don’t transfer Korean waste to the Philippine­s.”

“By saying ‘no’ to garbage dumping from Korea and other countries, we say ‘no’ to the derogation of our country’s dignity and sovereignt­y, ‘no’ to the disrespect for national and internatio­nal laws, and ‘no’ to the harm they will bring

to our communitie­s,” Lucero told the crowd assembled at the MICT.

Lucero vowed that EcoWaste Coalition will continue to vigorously remain “as a civil society group dedicated to promoting a zero waste and toxics-free Philippine­s, we promise to remain vigilant to ensure that our country does not become a dumpsite for any country’s garbage.”

MICT Port Collector John Simon said: “May our victory serve as a lesson to big nations that small nations like the Philippine­s can rise and fight for its right to have a clean environmen­t free from the hazardous waste of the most powerful and industrial­ized nations of the world.”

Not forgetting about the 103 containers of reeking Canadian residual wastes disguised as plastic scraps for recycling, the EcoWaste Coalition stressed that “the repatriati­on of the South Korean garbage to its source should rouse Canada into resolving the festering garbage dumping controvers­y.”

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