Philippine Daily Inquirer

Zambales chromite theft, hauling continue, says firm

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OLONGAPO CITY—The illegal hauling of chromite in Zambales continues through the operations of small-scale miners given permits by Gov. Hermogenes Ebdane Jr., according to officials of a mining company from which the ore is being taken.

In a statement, Benicio Eusebio, Consolidat­ed Mines Inc. (CMI) president, said small-scale miners in Masinloc town continued hauling chromite tailings stolen from the CMI’s stockpile in Coto Mines.

“There is even a vessel at port ready to smuggle out the contraband,” he said.

Eusebio said the vessel, Tian He 19, which has a loading capacity of 2,900 metric tons, docked at the Golden Harvest Global Port in Palauig town on the night of Aug. 9 and started loading at 10 a.m. on Aug. 10.

Eusebio said the Environmen­tal Management Bureau (EMB) has declared operations of small-scale miners illegal for lack of environmen­tal clearance certificat­es (ECC).

In a previous interview, Lormelyn Clau- dio, EMB director in Central Luzon, said the permits issued by Ebdane to at least six small-scale miners were invalid.

“There’s a provision in the small-scale permits that say they must have an ECC, and they don’t. So what they’re doing [there] is illegal,” she said.

Claudio has issued cease and desist orders (CDOs) to Camilo Esico, Reynaldo Dait, Dennis Ocon, Efren Melgar, Amor Echon and Jeff Elago, who are operating in Coto Mines in Masinloc, for noncomplia­nce with Presidenti­al Decree No. 1586 (Philippine Environmen­tal Impact Statement System Law).

Claudio said the CDOs are still in effect. “So if they are still there, we will reimpose the CDOs and notice of violations,” she said.

But lawyer Danilo Uykieng, chief of the Mines and Geoscience­s Bureau (MGB) in Central Luzon, said he could not act on the CMI request to seize the chromite.

Uykieng said he could not hold MV Tian He 19 and seize its chromite load because the small-scale mining permits issued by Ebdane are considered valid unless declared otherwise by a court.

He said the Philippine Ports Authority (PPA) and the Bureau of Customs (BOC) are the proper agencies that should seize the chromite shipment.

In an Aug. 10 letter, CMI’s Eusebio alerted MGB about the “illegal shipment of chromite stolen from CMI’s Coto Mines.”

The INQUIRER tried to reach Ebdane and his public relations officers on Tuesday but they did not reply to text messages or take calls.

Nelson Castro, provincial environmen­t and natural resources officer, said his office could not act on the Coto Mines case because “we are very busy with the national greening program of President Aquino.”

Castro said the Coto Mines case was the concern of MGB. “We don’t know what the government is doing about that. We don’t know what’s happening there,” Castro said.

Castro, however, promised to verify reports of irregulari­ties in small-scale mining in Masinloc.

Eusebio said the vessel in Palauig is the 12th to arrive in Zambales “with the intent to smuggle CMI’s chromite to China.”

“This operation clearly violated numerous laws time and again,” Eusebio said.

In his Aug. 10 letter, Eusebio appealed to Uykieng to make “law, order and justice prevail in the province of Zambales.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? A CHINESE cargo vessel identified as MV Sheng Yun Lai being loaded with chromite at the Masinloc Bay in Zambales.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO A CHINESE cargo vessel identified as MV Sheng Yun Lai being loaded with chromite at the Masinloc Bay in Zambales.

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