Sun.Star Baguio

Debris can be Marawi's friend: expert Duterte backs PH hosting bid of 2023 Fiba World Cup

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MANILA -- Battlescar­red Marawi City can be rebuilt with the help of debris from the armed conflict there, a waste management expert said.

Rehabilita­tion work for Marawi may include the use of rubble from structures destroyed following months of fighting between government troops and terrorists, National Solid Waste Management Commission (NSWMC) Secretaria­t Executive Director Eligio Ildefonso said.

"Using most of that rubble will reduce the cost of rehabilita­tion there," he said, adding that this would enable Marawi to literally retain part of its past.

Ildefonso noted that using the rubble is in line with the three Rs of solid waste management (SWM) -- reduce, reuse, and recycle.

"It's still within the ambit of Republic Act No. 9003 (Ecological SWM Act of 2000)," he said.

RA 9003 promotes the three Rs to help protect the environmen­t and reduce the volume of solid waste for disposal.

Terrorists linked to the Maute Group attacked Marawi City in May, setting off an armed conflict that ruined the capital of Lanao del Sur province.

However, after recently declaring Marawi liberated from terrorist influence, the government is already preparing to rehabilita­te the city.

Ildefonso said Marawi's rubble can be used as filling material, or to define planting strips.

"There are creative ways of using the rubble," he said, urging the people to look into the matter instead of merely hauling the debris and disposing them in other areas.

Ildefonso is also advocating waste segregatio­n in Marawi City.

Aside from the rubble, he said, waste there consists of various trash with potential for either recycling, re-use or composting.

Segregatio­n will show which of the trash can still undergo such processes, he said.

The resulting recycled, re-used or composted products, can be for sale or for personal use, he noted.

RA 9003 requires the establishm­ent of materials recovery facilities (MRFs) either in barangay (village) or barangay clusters nationwide.

"The MRF shall receive mixed waste for final sorting, segregatio­n, composting, and recycling," reads RA 9003.

Resulting residual wastes "shall be transferre­d to a longterm storage or disposal facility or sanitary landfill," it states. (PNA) PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte favored the Philippine­s' bid to cohost the 2023 FIBA World Cup, in order to promote the country's basketball sport, as well as its tourism industry, Malacañang said on Saturday.

The Philippine­s, which failed to claim the hosting rights for 2019 event, teamed up with Japan and Indonesia for the 2023 Fiba World Cup.

On Thursday, the three-man Fiba Evaluation Commission inspected facilities in the Philippine­s that can be used for 2023 Fiba Basketball World Cup. The final nod would be given by Fiba Central Board in December.

Abella said the Philippine­s would get another boost in tourism, should it be able to secure the hosting rights in 2023.

"President Duterte backs the FIBA World Cup to support the initiative of Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas Chairman Emeritus Manuel V. Pangilinan and SBP President Al Panlilio," Presidenti­al Spokespers­on Ernesto Abella said in a statement read on staterun dzRB.

"This hosting is very rare and it will unify the country and will have positive impact on basketball and tourism," he added.

China will host the 2019 Fiba World Cup across eight cities. (SunStar Philippine­s)

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