Sun.Star Davao

Center for Trade Union and Human Rights statement on Masara landslide

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THE Center for Trade Union and Human Rights (CTUHR) an NGO working for the labor and human rights of workers in the country’s formal and informal sectors, condoles with the family and friends of the 27 victims who were confirmed dead because of the February 6 landslide that followed heavy rains in Masara village, Maco town of Davao de Oro province.

We call on authoritie­s to work overtime to find the 89 people who remain missing. We express our solidarity with the 31 persons who were injured because of the tragedy, as well as their families and friends. We call on the government to ensure that residents in other villages in Maco are evacuated promptly and provided decent evacuation sites.

We support all efforts to give a decent wake and burial to the dead, to find those who remain missing, to immediatel­y heal the injured, and to immediatel­y evacuate and shelter those who are still in danger.

We are calling on the Ferdinand Marcos Jr government, especially Secretary Bienvenido Laguesma of the Department of Labor and Employment and Secretary Toni Yulo-Gonzaga of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources, to immediatel­y investigat­e the landslide.

The landslide has affected hundreds of workers and residents and deserves the national government’s attention. Its causes should be identified immediatel­y, as these will most likely continue to pose dangers to thousands of workers and residents in the area. Gone are the days when Southern Mindanao is spared by the typhoons and heavy rainfall that affect other parts of the country.

In particular, the criminal accountabi­lity of mining company Apex Mining Co. Inc., should be probed. The company’s denial – its statement that “The place where the slide happened is outside the mine operations area of Apex Mining” – should be examined critically.

A simple perusal of Google Maps would show that the landslide’s location is at most a 40-minute walk from its mining site. Depending on the duration and intensity of mining operations, as well as other factors, mining’s effects can reach places that are distant from actual operations.

Apex Mining’s exercise of its due diligence, as well as the government’s environmen­tal impact assessment of Apex Mining’s operations, should be investigat­ed closely. Were there reasons to believe that this was a tragedy that was waiting to happen? Those responsibl­e for this tragedy should be held to account. (Read full story on sunstar.com.ph/ davao)

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