Philippine Daily Inquirer

PEOPLE BEHIND IMPORTATIO­N OF KOREAN TRASH TO BE CHARGED

- @inqmindana­o By Jigger J. Jerusalem

CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY—

A customs official here said charges would be filed against those behind the importatio­n of at least 6,500 tons of plastic trash following the controvers­ial cargo’s return to Pyeongtaek City in South Korea.

“Charges will definitely be filed,” said John Simon, Mindanao-Container Terminal (MCT) customs collector.

Simon said it was now up to the National Bureau of Investigat­ion to gather evidence and establish the identity of the perpetrato­rs.

Raw material

He said whoever would be found to have violated the law would face charges.

Simon said the regional Bureau of Customs (BOC) office would extend all assistance that the regional office of the NBI would need so that its report would be thorough and complete.

The plastic garbage arrived at the MCT in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental, from Pyeongtaek City, South Korea, in two batches last year to be used supposedly as raw material for a recycling facility owned and operated by Verde Soko Philippine­s Industrial Corp.

But the shipment was put on hold by authoritie­s after the company failed to comply with requiremen­ts for permits from both the BOC and the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources’ Environmen­tal Management Bureau (EMB).

EMB permit

Simon said the second shipment that arrived in October was declared as “plastic synthetic flakes” but contained all sorts of discarded plastic materials.

Lawyer Abbas Lao, EMB regional legal officer, said the EMB had not issued any import permit to Verde Soko as the firm has yet to comply with all the requiremen­ts.

The import permit must be issued by EMB to Verde Soko before the company was al- lowed to bring the plastic trash to the Philippine­s.

Verde Soko’s recycling plant is located inside Phividec Industrial Estate, a government­managed economic zone, in the village of Sta. Cruz, Tagoloan town.

On Sunday, Jan. 13, the 51 containers, or 1,500 metric tons, of trash that were stored inside Phividec Industrial Estate facility in Tagoloan were shipped back to South Korea.

Simon said MV Kalliroe V8525 that carried the garbage left the MCT port late on Sunday night and was expected to reach its country of origin after 10 days.

The reshipment, he said, was realized through an agreement between the South Korean and Philippine government­s last month.

South Korea promised to shoulder all the expenses for the cargo’s return.

The remaining garbage being stored at Verde Soko compound will be shipped back to South Korea by the end of January or early in February, according to Simon.

Documents forged

At a committee hearing by the Misamis Oriental provincial board on Nov. 15, Neil Alburo, Verde Soko president, gave assurance that his company would ship the plastic trash back to South Korea.

In a statement posted on its website, the South Korean Embassy in Manila quoted its Ministry of Environmen­t and the Korean Customs Services as confirming that the trash that was exported to the Philippine­s “had not gone through proper recycling process and were different from its export declaratio­n.”

The statement said “documents required for export was forged. They have taken measures against related violations of law.”

 ?? —JIGGER J. JERUSALEM ?? TRASH TALK Members of the environmen­tal group EcoWaste Coalition protest the entry of garbage from South Korea at the Mindanao Container Terminal port in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental, in a rally on Jan. 13.
—JIGGER J. JERUSALEM TRASH TALK Members of the environmen­tal group EcoWaste Coalition protest the entry of garbage from South Korea at the Mindanao Container Terminal port in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental, in a rally on Jan. 13.

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