Philippine Daily Inquirer

HOUSE WANTS TADECO ROADS OPENED AMID DISEASE FEARS

- @VinceNonat­oINQ By Vince F. Nonato

Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez on Tuesday forced the Bureau of Correction­s (BuCor) and Tagum Agricultur­al Developmen­t Company Inc. (Tadeco) to open a road within the banana-growing area to the public, despite protests that it would lead to the spread of diseases that could kill the entire banana industry.

At a hearing on Wednesday by the House good government and public accountabi­lity committee, Alvarez rejected BuCor and Tadeco’s reasoning that roads in the area had to be restricted to prevent the spread of the fusarium wilt, a highly infectious fungal disease deadly to bananas.

“What is important, the fusarium or the people who use the road?” Alvarez asked Supt. Gerardo Padilla of the Davao Prison and Penal Colony (Dapecol) .

‘Gross ignorance’

Padilla tried to explain that BuCor “could open” the road “any time” with clearance from the provincial agricultur­al office.

Alvarez spat: “Why, what’s the right of the provincial agricultur­e to open the government’s road?”

“You are displaying your gross ignorance. How did you become the director there?” Alvarez told Padilla.

Tadeco president Alexander Valoria requested for a month to comply with the Speaker’s directive because of the need to install foot baths and tire dips on the road. Valoria explained that fusarium wilt was spread through soil or water.

1 month ‘too long’

“We need to put in the biosecurit­y measures and we’ll need a little time to build that,” Valoria said.

But Pimentel said “one month seems quite long.”

Alvarez had filed a resolution seeking an inquiry into the deal between BuCor and Tadeco for the use of more than 5,000 hectares of Dapecol land as banana plantation­s.

The Speaker also filed a graft complaint against his erstwhile friend, Davao del Norte Rep. Antonio Floirendo Jr., whose family owned Tadeco.

Floirendo’s scheduled arraignmen­t on Tuesday was postponed.

Tadeco had said it was preparing to file charges against those responsibl­e for the destructio­n of the company’s biosecurit­y barrier at the village of Tanglaw in Braulio E. Dujali town, Davao del Norte, recently.

Valoria described the destructio­n of the barrier as an act of abuse by personnel of the Department of Public Works and Highways.

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