Philippine Daily Inquirer

Arm foresters, DEN Rexec urges

- By Delfin T. Mallari Jr. and Maricar Cinco @Team_Inquirer

LUCENA CITY— The murder of 55-year-old forester Dominador Lucas spurred a call by an environmen­t official to arm forest guards who, like Lucas, risk their lives to prevent further denudation of the country’s mountains.

The call was made as a colleague of Lucas, who asked not to be identified for fear of his life, said Lucas had been “strict” in issuing permits to transport logs and other forest products during his tenure at the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) office in Rizal province.

Lucas was relieved of his duty in Rizal because of threats and moved to the DENR office in Cavite province to “cool off,” according to the colleague.

Eleazar Alaira, Rizal provincial environmen­tal officer, said Lucas headed the DENR-Rizal Compliance Monitoring and Investigat­ion Unit.

Special group

Alfredo Palencia, provincial environmen­t and natural resources officer in Quezon province, said a “special operations group” of forest rangers should be revived in the regional, provincial and community levels.

The group was deactivate­d in 2015.

The group, Palencia said, was “composed of selected and welltraine­d personnel.” “They should be issued firearms,” he added.

On Friday, Lucas was gunned down after leaving his house in Antipolo to head to the DENR office in Tanay, Rizal.

Alaira said Lucas had been handling “so many” cases prior to his killing.

Chief Insp. Rolly Liegen, deputy police chief of Antipolo, said investigat­ors have yet to determine a motive.

He said police talked with Lucas’ wife, who was not aware of any threat to her husband.

Motorcycle assassins

Liegen, citing witnesses, said the gunman wore a face mask under his helmet and rode a pink motorcycle being driven by another suspect.

In September last year, Ruben Arzaga, a village chief in Palawan province and member of an environmen­tal monitoring board, was killed. The case prompted Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu to suggest the arming of forest guards.

Palencia, however, said there were still no guidelines on arming forest rangers.

Last February, armed men believed to be goons of illegal loggers fired at a group of unarmed forest rangers during an operation in Infanta town, Quezon.

DENRforest guards and environmen­tal activists had been raising alarm over continued cutting of trees in Sierra Madre by illegal loggers.

They said logging syndicates had become bolder and now regularly employ armed goons.

Logging hot spot

The northern Quezon section of Sierra Madre is considered a hot spot for illegal logging.

Sierra Madre is home to the largest remaining tract of oldgrowth tropical rainforest in the Philippine­s.

During anti-illegal logging operations that normally last a week, forest guards are equipped only with cameras, global positionin­g system devices, binoculars and solar-powered lights for documentat­ion.

No government troop accompanie­s forest guards during these operations to avoid clashes with communist rebels known to be operating in Sierra Madre.

In an annual report in July last year, London-based nongovernm­ent organizati­on, Global Witness, tagged the Philippine­s as the most dangerous country for environmen­tal “defenders” in Asia in 2016 with 28 forest rangers or environmen­tal activist dead.

Since 2002, Global Witness said a total of 144 environmen­tal activists had been killed in the Philippine­s.

“Half of those killed were indigenous people,” the group said in its report.

 ?? —PHOTO FROM DENR ?? UNARMED A forester, armed with only an ax, joins an inspection of seized logs from Sierra Madre.
—PHOTO FROM DENR UNARMED A forester, armed with only an ax, joins an inspection of seized logs from Sierra Madre.

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