Philippine Daily Inquirer

P-noy on mining EO: Governors can go to court

- By Christine O. Avendaño and Vincent Cabreza, With reports from Gerald Gene R. Querubin, Inquirer Southern Luzon, and Nestor P. Burgos Jr., Inquirer Visayas

LA TRINIDAD, Benguet— President Aquino yesterday stood by the new mining executive order (EO) awaiting his signature and welcomed a challenge in the Supreme Court on whether national laws could set aside local ordinances.

Mr. Aquino was asked by reporters to comment on a statement last week by Gov. Joey Salceda of Albay province that some 40 governors would go to court to question the muchawaite­d mining policy once it comes out, fearing that the measure would “destroy the countrysid­e” that municipal legislatio­n was protecting.

The President said that the Constituti­on was “very clear” that national laws had primacy over local legislatio­n.

He cited constituti­onal limitation­s on the law-making powers of local government­s and the scope of their ordinances.

“There is also a clause that [local laws] should [be consistent] with national laws,” he said. “We are not a federated government. We are like a re- publican unitary government.”

Asked whether Salceda was misinforme­d, Mr. Aquino said the governor’s conclusion­s were “premature.”

He said he had not yet signed the order, stressing that there was “still some language I am not comfortabl­e with.”

He also added that the measure was a result of discussion­s with many stakeholde­rs.

“But if [the governors] feel their rights have been trampled upon, by all means they can go to appropriat­e courts,” the President said.

But Mr. Aquino said he was “confident” that Salceda “would not have said something that said ordinances that they have promulgate­d on a local basis will supplant national laws.”

‘Provocativ­e’

At a media forum on Friday, Salceda said the governors regarded as “provocativ­e” the move that would invalidate local ordinances against mining.

He said that the new policy would “breed inequality of income and assets” and subvert local efforts to preserve the environmen­t.

The Marinduque Council for Environmen­tal Concerns yes- terday rallied behind Salceda, an economic adviser to then President Gloria MacapagalA­rroyo but who supported Mr. Aquino in the May 2010 presidenti­al election.

In an online message sent to the INQUIRER, Miguel Magalang, the council’s executive director, said the Church- supported nongovernm­ental organizati­on opposed weakening the mandate of municipal officials under the Local Government Code of 1991.

Magalang pointed out that in the recently concluded Rio+20 environmen­tal summit in Rio de Janeiro, a document, “The Future We Want,” encouraged action at the “regional, national, subnationa­l and local levels to promote access to informatio­n, public participat­ion and access to justice in environmen­tal matters.”

The Philippine­s is committed to support the document, he said, adding that any mining policy issued without consulta- tion with local communitie­s and local government­s would contradict “the people’s right to access to informatio­n” and restrain “their right to public participat­ion.”

The council is involved in the campaign in Marinduque seeking justice for communitie­s damaged by Marcopper Mining Corp.’s toxic mine spill in 1996. It has also been raising health and tax issues related to Marcopper’s operation in the province.

Marcopper ceased operations in 1996 when the capital town of Boac was submerged in floodwater­s and tailings due to a collapsed tunnel of the company’s Tapian Pit. The spill rendered the Boac River “biological­ly dead.”

Environmen­tal groups in the Visayas also expressed concern yesterday over the executive order.

Local voices decisive

“Many communitie­s and local government­s have stood up against destructiv­e mining policies. They should be the decisive voice in determinin­g whether to allow mining or not,” said Ma. Geobelyn Lopez, secretary general of the Madia- as-Ecological Movement.

“It is not just a matter of getting more revenues for the government but the utilizatio­n of our resources while prioritizi­ng national patrimony and the interest of communitie­s,” she said.

Lopez said at least 11 provinces had passed ordinances declaring a moratorium on large-scale mining, including Capiz, Guimaras, Negros Occidental, Samar, Eastern Samar and Northern Samar.

John Heredia, the spokespers­on of the Capiz Environmen­tal Protection Alliance, said the new mining policy could set aside a landmark ordinance imposing a 50-year moratorium on large-scale mining in the province.

“Mining should be treated as a national issue because its effects on the environmen­t go beyond the borders of local government units. But when communitie­s and their LGU [oppose] mining, the national government must respect that decision,” said Jay Pefianco, an environmen­talist in Antique.

 ?? LYN RILLON ?? PRESIDENT AQUINO responds to questions during an ambush interview at Benguet State University in La Trinidad, Benguet.
LYN RILLON PRESIDENT AQUINO responds to questions during an ambush interview at Benguet State University in La Trinidad, Benguet.

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