Tempo

Raps vs 4 DENR execs over Canadian wastes dismissed

- By JEFFREY DAMICOG

Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) Undersecre­tary Juan Miguel T. Cuna and three other officials have been cleared of criminal charges by the Department of Justice (DoJ) in the 2013 and 2014 shipments from Canada of 103 container vans with hazardous wastes.

In a resolution dated Dec. 4, 2020,theDoJpane­lofprosecu­tors dismissed the complaint filed by the National Bureau of Investigat­ion’s Environmen­tal Crime Division (NBI-EnCD).

The complaint accused Cuna and the three officials of the Environmen­tal Management Bureau (EMB) for violations of Republic Act No. 6969, the Toxic Substances and Hazardous and Nuclear Wastes Control Act of 1990, and Section 3 (e) of RA 3019, the Anti-Gra and Corrupt Practices Act.

The three EMB officials cleared by the DoJ were Irvin G. Cadavona, Geri Geronimo R. Sanez and Renato T. Cruz.

But the DoJ panel recommende­d the indictment of Bureau of Customs (BoC) officials Benjamin T. Perez Jr., Eufracio L. Ednaco, Matilda G. Bacongan, and Jose A. Saromo for violation of Section 14 paragraph (b), in relation to Section 13 paragraph (d) and Section 5 of RA 6969.

It said that “respondent­s Perez, Ednaco, Bacongan, and Saromo knew, or were supposed to know, that the items entering the Philippine­s were hazardous materials and not plastic scrap materials.”

“After all, they claimed to have physically examined the subject importatio­ns. When they re-routed these shipments to ‘green’, they effectivel­y facilitate­d the importatio­n of hazardous waste into the Philippine­s,” it pointed out.

However, the panel dismissed the complaint against the BoC officials for violating Section 3(e) of RA 3019.

Records showed that the 103 container vans shipped from Canada by Canada-based Chronic Plastics Inc. from May 2013 to January 2014 contained mixed, unsorted or heterogeno­us plastic materials and not plastic scraps.

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