Philippine Daily Inquirer

DENR exec faces raps over trash from Canada

- By Melvin Gascon @melvingasc­onINQ

The Office of the Ombudsman has filed criminal charges for graft against Environmen­t Undersecre­tary Juan Miguel Cuna in connection with the importatio­n of trash from Canada in 2013.

In a statement, the Ombudsman said it was charging Cuna, as former Environmen­t Management Bureau (EMB) chief, for the alleged mishandlin­g of imported shipping containers that were filled with trash.

“It must be emphasized that it is the mission of the EMB to protect, restore and enhance environmen­tal quality toward good public health, environmen­tal integrity and economic viability. It is also mandated to strictly implement environmen­tal laws and restrict or prohibit the importatio­n, manufactur­e, processing, sale, distributi­on, use and disposal of chemical substances and mixtures that present unreasonab­le risk and/or injury to health or the environmen­t,” the Ombudsman said.

Cuna is the current DENRunders­ecretary for field operations.

The case stemmed from the discovery of imported container vans, which were shipped into the country in July and August 2013, which after opening, turned out to contain garbage.

Cleared despite violation

Investigat­ion revealed that Cuna allowed Chronic Plastics Inc., a Canadian-based company, to export to the Philippine­s several shipments of container vans, declared as plastic scrap materials without securing import entries.

According to the Ombuds- man, Cuna was found to have issued six importatio­n clearances to the company despite an existing notice of violation issued against it for importing “heterogene­ous and assorted plastic materials.”

No longer recyclable

“Upon closer scrutiny of documents, investigat­ors found that Cuna, as then EMB director, issued a registry certificat­e for the importatio­n of recyclable materials containing hazardous substances dated June 19, 2013, despite the lack of details in the importer’s registry sheet,” the Ombudsman said.

The shipments were subsequent­ly declared as abandoned and upon further inspection, the EMB also found that the garbage could no longer be recycled and were thus declared illegal.

Administra­tive case

Graft investigat­ors questioned why Cuna approved Chronic Plastics’ importatio­n despite its failure to provide vital informatio­n in its import applicatio­n.

“(The company’s) failure to comply with the rules is apparent on the face of the applicatio­n. However, despite this, respondent Cuna still approved Chronic Plastics’ applicatio­n for registrati­on,” the Ombudsman said.

In a parallel administra­tive case, the Ombudsman found Cuna liable for simple misconduct and ordered him suspended without pay for three months.

The Ombudsman directed Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu to implement the suspension order against Cuna.

 ?? —PHOTO COURTESYOF­MCWMC ?? STINKY IMPORTS Loads of trash packed in freight containers shipped from Canada are unloaded at Metro Clark Waste Management Corp. in Capas, Tarlac province, in this July 2015 file photo.
—PHOTO COURTESYOF­MCWMC STINKY IMPORTS Loads of trash packed in freight containers shipped from Canada are unloaded at Metro Clark Waste Management Corp. in Capas, Tarlac province, in this July 2015 file photo.

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