Arab News

Philippine lawmakers defer decision on appointmen­t of environmen­t minister

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MANILA: Philippine lawmakers on Wednesday said they would hold more hearings before deciding whether to confirm the appointmen­t of the country’s environmen­t minister, although some said they were likely to approve the step.

The confirmati­on of Environmen­t and Natural Resources Secretary Roy Cimatu is being closely watched given the policy implicatio­ns for the mining sector in the world’s top nickel ore supplier.

Cimatu, a former soldier, replaced staunch environmen­talist Regina Lopez who was rejected by the same legislativ­e panel in May after less than a year in office. All ministeria­l appointmen­ts in the country go through a similar process.

During her term, Lopez ordered the closure or suspension of 26 of the nation’s 41 mines and banned open-pit mining, measures that Cimatu has not reversed. He has said his team was still reviewing the closure and suspension orders.

“I am not pessimisti­c about his confirmati­on, but we need additional hearings,” Senator Tito Sotto, part of the 25-member Commission on Appointmen­ts, told reporters.

Apart from Sotto, two other senators, Juan Miguel Zubiri and Gregorio Honasan, also expressed support for Cimatu.

“This is a proud moment for me,” Honasan, also a former soldier, said at the hearing. “I can vouch for his competence and integrity.”

The next hearing is set for Sept. 27.

Mining is a contentiou­s issue in largely underexplo­red Philippine­s following past examples of environmen­tal mismanagem­ent. In 1996, a tailings leak at Canadian-owned Marcopper Mining Corp’s copper mine in Marinduque contaminat­ed rivers.

 ??  ?? An indigenous person addresses supporters after rushing closer to the venue of a mining conference to protest alleged incursion of big mining companies into their ancestral lands in Manila on Sept. 6. (AP)
An indigenous person addresses supporters after rushing closer to the venue of a mining conference to protest alleged incursion of big mining companies into their ancestral lands in Manila on Sept. 6. (AP)

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