Philippine Daily Inquirer

BORACAY WETLANDS SETTLERS NEXT TARGET OF GOV’T TASK FORCE

- By Melvin Gascon @melvingasc­onINQ

The government on Tuesday vowed to remove illegal settlers on wetlands on Boracay Island, citing the high levels of pollution supposedly due to settlement­s near bodies of water.

Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu on Tuesday said the interagenc­y task force on Boracay rehabilita­tion would go after illegal settlers on wetlands to sustain the government’s efforts to revive the island’s ecosystem.

“We do not only need to clean the wetlands in order to sustain water quality along the beach. We need to restore their functions as natural filters and water reservoirs,” Cimatu said.

The Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) has identified nine wetlands in the 1,032hectare Boracay, but only six may still be revived.

High coliform levels

Cimatu, who heads the task force, said illegal settlers on the banks of wetlands should be removed to reduce the level of coliform bacteria in the water.

Two of these wetlands, he said, were found to be high in coliform, supposedly due to the presence of illegal settlers: Wetland 3 near Bulabog beach and Wetland 6 in the villages of Balabag and Manoc-Manoc.

Cimatu earlier lauded the move of Boracay business owners, whose establishm­ents were affected by road-widening activities and the crackdown against illegal sewage pipelines, to demolish their structures.

Other establishm­ents along the main road agreed to demolish portions of their buildings with “overhang” or floors protruding over the road easement.

Cimatu also said water quality around Boracay had significan­tly improved, and rehabilita­tion efforts were “on target” of its six-month rehabilita­tion.

On Tuesday, environmen­t activists picketed the DENR central office in Quezon City, criticizin­g the government’s Boracay rehabilita­tion as “unjust, unscientif­ic and untranspar­ent.”

Independen­t validation

Twenty members of Kalikasan People’s Network for the Environmen­t demanded the immediate reopening of Boracay to restore the jobs of 24,000 workers. They also asked the DENR to allow an independen­t validation of the impact of the closure on the island and its residents.

“The government likes to announce ... that Boracay is now clean after two months of closure; that’s nothing but fake news unless they allow independen­t groups to check,” said Leon Dulce, Kalikasan national coordinato­r.

Feny Cosico, secretary general of Advocates of Science and Technology for the People (Agham), assailed the government for making residents of Boracay suffer from the closure.

“Why are the residents not consulted on the government’s rehabilita­tion plans? Why can’t the government allow its activities to be scrutinize­d by independen­t parties?” she asked.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines