Panay News

‘Traslacion’ leaves 468 MT of garbage

- ( Jane Bautista, Russel P. Loreto © Philippine Daily Inquirer)

MANILA – The celebratio­n of the Feast of the Black Nazarene in Manila from Jan. 6 to 10 left behind a staggering 468 metric tons ( MT) of garbage.

A r e p o r t f r o m t h e Manila City government’s Department of Public Services (DPS) released on Wednesday said that the amount of trash collected for the four- day festivitie­s was equivalent to 158 truckloads.

Princess Abante, t he spokespers­on of Manila Mayor Honey Lacuna-Pangan, said that on Jan. 9 alone, the day of the “traslacion,” the procession of the image of the Black Nazarene from Quirino Grandstand in Rizal Park to Quiapo Church which took a total of 15 hours, a total of 128 metric tons of trash were collected, enough to fill 46 trucks.

In January 2020, two months before the government announced the first lockdown due to the pandemic, a total of 394 metric tons were collected after the procession. The event was canceled from 2021 until last year to prevent the spread of COVID-19. For this year, an estimated 6.5 million devotees joined the traslacion but environmen­tal group Ecowaste Coalition lamented that the accumulate­d garbage seemed to indicate “a lack of respect for fellow humans and Mother Nature.”

Elusive dream

“The devotion and sacrifice shown by the devotees of the Dear Lord Nazarene [are] amazing. Indeed, their burning faith never fades,” Ochie Tolentino, the advocate for the group’s zero waste campaign, said in a statement. “A clean traslacion remains elusive.”

I n Rizal Park, which served as the venue for the traditiona­l “pahalik,” vigil and “Misa Mayor” led by Manila Archbishop Jose Cardinal Advincula, the parade grounds and adjacent streets were strewn with garbage collected by personnel from Manila City Hall, Metropolit­an Manila Developmen­t Authority and volunteers from Ecowaste Coalition and the Samahan ng mga Mangangala­kal sa Capulong from Tondo, Manila.

Most of the discarded items

were single- use plastic bags, bottles, cups, cutlery and plates, as well as nonbiodegr­adable polystyren­e food containers, fastfood paper packaging, leftovers, soiled diapers, i mprovised sleeping materials, cigarette butts and disposable vapes, despite the park’s no-smoking policy.

In the Quiapo area, Ecowaste Coalition said that DPS personnel

had to “untiringly” pick up the waste left by devotees, including plastic water bottles, plastic and paper food containers, and leftover food.

“If not collected, these [plastic] bottles would have ended up in landfills or storm drains and esteros, aggravatin­g the risk of flooding in the City of Manila and worsen[ ing] plastic and microplast­ic pollution in Manila Bay and elsewhere,” Tolentino said.

Aside from the hard work of government staff, Green Brigade Team of Quiapo Church and volunteers from the private sector, the group also cited the waste pickers, many of them unorganize­d, who collected the discarded plastic bottles to sell to junk shops.

Despite the “disappoint­ing” results this year, Ecowaste Coalition expressed confidence t hat t he si t uation would improve in the coming years.

 ?? ?? Trash litters the grounds of Rizal Park after millions of devotees leave Quirino Grandstand to join the “traslacion” or grand procession of the Black Nazarene to Quiapo Church.
Trash litters the grounds of Rizal Park after millions of devotees leave Quirino Grandstand to join the “traslacion” or grand procession of the Black Nazarene to Quiapo Church.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines