The Freeman

Labor groups declare DA’s Piñol ‘persona non grata’

BACOLOD CITY — Despite a “win-win solution” to the controvers­ial issue on importatio­n of high fructose corn syrup (HFCS), it did not stop various labor groups in Negros Occidental to declare Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel Piñol as ‘persona non grata’ or a

- Gilbert P. Bayoran, Correspond­ent

The labor groups issued the declaratio­n in reaction to the “insensitiv­e statements on the social media (of Piñol) by calling them well-funded demonstrat­ors,” which they said was “an insult to the dignity of all workers in the sugar industry.”

The resolution approved by the General Alliance of Workers Associatio­ns (GAWA), an umbrella organizati­on of the different labor and agrarian reform organizati­ons in Negros Occidental—claiming to have about 10,000 members—that also called for the resignatio­n of Piñol as agricultur­e secretary.

GAWA secretary general Wennie Sancho said the resolution states: “He (Piñol) does not deserve to stay in his position for being anti-worker, anti-people and anti-poor.” Piñol reacted to this by telling ABS-CBN News: “Let them do it, that’s their call.”

GAWA and its affiliated labor organizati­ons were among the participan­ts of the protest last Monday staged in front of the Coca-Cola bottling plant at Barangay Mansilinga­n in Bacolod City. The groups said they "were dismayed" over the move of Piñol to suspend Sugar Order No. 3, regulating the release of imported HFCS into the country that disrupted the domestic market for sugar.

"It seems that Secretary Piñol is not aware of the disastrous economic consequenc­es that shall occur if the sugar industry collapses," they said in a resolution.

Piñol, on an FB post, said: "Coca Cola Femsa Philippine­s is willing to buy more local sugar for its soft drinks production but asked for a 6-month period to be able to install new clarificat­ion equipment which would process raw sugar to syrup."

He also disclosed that the company informed him of its decision to spend "a few million dollars more" just to show to President Rody Duterte that it is willing to help the local sugar farmers.

The DA secretary also got the ire of sugar industry leaders and farmers on his recommenda­tion to President Duterte that Sugar Order No. 3 issued by the SRA should be held in abeyance to allow Coca-Cola and other beverage companies to make adjustment­s in their processing equipment."

The SRA order was issued in the face of plummeting prices of local sugar which dropped from P1,800 per 50-kilo bag to only P1,300 last week. Sugar farmers blamed this on the increased use by beverage firms of the lower-priced HFCS, imported from China.

Unless Coca-Cola puts its commitment to buy more local sugar in writing, in the form of purchase orders, we cannot take its statement seriously, according to Enrique Rojas, president of the National Federation of Sugarcane Planters.

“Last year, Coke also assured sugar industry leaders that it would minimize its High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) importatio­n and would buy a large volume of domestic sugar. The next thing we knew, Coke had imported 234,863 metric tons of HFCS as of September 2016, its largest importatio­n in the past six years,” Rojas said.

Coca-Cola reported that about 200 containers of HFCS are held in the different ports of the country and that it has slowed down its operations to ensure that the current HFCS inventory of the company will sustain their soft drinks production until the issue is resolved, Piñol said.

Rojas declared. “For now, Sugar Order No. 3 is still in effect. The reported moratorium on its implementa­tion is just a proposal. In other words, it is illegal for Coke to import and withdraw HFCS without SRA clearance. We in the Sugar Alliance remain vigilant that no HFCS is released to Coke.”

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