The Philippine Star

Environmen­t group criticizes Lopez

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Environmen­t Secretary Gina Lopez is failing to distinguis­h between personal advocacies and her role as the government’s chief environmen­tal manager, leading a developmen­tal environmen­t group to describe her young tenure as a “failed leadership.”

Lopez’s pronouncem­ents clearly exhibit this bias, while her arbitrary orders to close down mines and cancel MPSA signal a breakdown in the rule of law,” Philippine Business for Environmen­tal Stewardshi­p (PBEST) said in a statement.

Lopez has earned the ire of mining firms, local government units, and mining communitie­s after she shut down a slew of operating mines and canceled contracts on environmen­tal grounds after an audit. Both the audit and the subsequent orders have been criticized for what some described as a lack of transparen­cy and failure to adhere to due process.

PBEST said: “The DENR leadership must thus be reminded that it is the rule of law that has allowed the protection of the environmen­t for generation­s yet to be born. It is the rule of law that establishe­d environmen­tally critical areas and delineated ancestral domains. It is the rule of law that enables the secretary of the DENR to apprehend or penalize those destroying the environmen­t.”

The group said the complex task of managing the environmen­t requires a balancing act among a range of stakeholde­rs, an area where Lopez drasticall­y fails.

“This means a brand of environmen­tal governance that sees the forest in addition to the trees, passionate but not discrimina­tory,” hitting Lopez’s “fixation on mining as the ultimate villain of mother nature.”

The abuse of a government position has historical­ly resulted in failure and strife, it said. “Laws are put in place to regulate and stabilize all aspects of social life … After all, ours is a government of laws and not of men.”

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