BusinessMirror

Cimatu organizes DENR ‘police’ team vs environmen­tal crimes

- Jonathan L. Mayuga

ENVIRONMEN­T Secretary Roy A. Cimatu ordered the creation of an “interim environmen­tal law enforcemen­t office” in the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) while waiting for the enactment of a law establishi­ng its own police-like bureau.

Cimatu signed an administra­tive order on June 10 during the DENR’S 34th founding anniversar­y celebratio­n establishi­ng the Environmen­tal Law Enforcemen­t and Protection Service (Eleps) that he hopes would “strengthen environmen­tal law enforcemen­t” in the country.

“We have a growing number of fallen environmen­tal heroes. This is how serious we do our jobs here at DENR, but I hope and pray that no more lives will be lost because of defending our environmen­t,” said in a statement.

“Our Department has many laws to implement, but we are lacking when it comes to enforcemen­t,”

DENR Undersecre­tary for Policy, Planning and Internatio­nal Affairs Jonas R. Leones said. “While we are waiting for the passage of the EPEB [Environmen­tal Protection and Enforcemen­t Bureau], our Secretary has allowed to craft this order to install an enforcemen­t service for the effective protection of our forests and other natural resources.”

Under the DENR administra­tive order, Eleps will cover “all environmen­tal laws as enumerated in the Supreme Court Rules of Procedure for Environmen­tal Cases involving enforcemen­t or violations of environmen­tal and natural resources laws, rules and regulation­s,” such as terrestria­l laws, coastal, marine and aquatic resources laws, aerial law and other environmen­t and natural resources laws.

Cimatu said he ordered the creation of the Eleps “as a defined authority that will promote effective and strong enforcemen­t of environmen­tal laws, establish coordinati­ve mechanisms, utilize science and technology and develop highly competent manpower that will encompass existing enforcemen­t units (e.g., the Environmen­tal Protection and Enforcemen­t Task Force and the Philippine Operations Group on Ivory and Illegal Wildlife) and other enforcemen­t task forces of the DENR.

With bigger scope and functions from the EPETF, enforcemen­t units of DENR’S regional offices, Mines and Geoscience­s Bureau, Environmen­tal Management Bureau, Protected Area Management Office, Provincial Environmen­t and Natural Resources Offices, and Community Environmen­t and Natural Resources Offices will be under the operationa­l control of ELEPS and its supervisin­g officials.

The DENR’S bureaus and attached agencies will also maintain close coordinati­on with ELEPS in networking with national and internatio­nal organizati­ons that address environmen­tal crimes.

The Eleps’s lead team will be from DENR’S Central Office to complement its daily operations.

Among its several functions, the Eleps has end-to-end duties’ from the enforcemen­t, stoppage of ongoing violations, arrest, management of confiscate­d items, investigat­ion, the preparatio­n for prosecutio­n of environmen­tal criminals until execution of decisions by the court.

The Eleps will also coordinate with the Department of Justice, the Philippine National Police (PNP), Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP), the National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI) and government­owned and -controlled corporatio­ns to aid in the prevention and fight against environmen­tal crimes, according to Cimatu.

The new service plans to equip enforcemen­t officers with agencyissu­ed firearms and self-protective gears and provide capacity building to effectivel­y perform their official functions.

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