The Freeman

City marks new round of clearing at ‘Pepang’

Clearing operations inside the Doña Pepang Cemetery yesterday continued as part of plans to develop the burial site into a heritage site.

- May B. Miasco, Correspond­ent

Personnel from the City Hall's Prevention, Restoratio­n, Order, Beautifica­tion and Enhancemen­t team started the manual clearing of more than 20 empty tombs in the area yesterday.

"Nagpadayon ta og clear… Hopefully makakuha ta og heavy equipment para madali ang atong clearing… Gisugdan nato karon ang mga bakante usa kay gihabwaan na man… atong ikumpleto gyud na nga proyekto," PROBE Chief Raquel Arce told reporters yesterday.

Last Monday, around 20 "illegal settlers" inside the cemetery also voluntaril­y removed their own houses or shanties.

"The cemetery is not a place for the living and the city remains that it is not their property and that it is set to be developed," said lawyer Collin Rosell, head of the Division for the Welfare of the Urban Poor, in a separate interview.

In their investigat­ions, Rosell said they found out that these illegal settlers were displaced residents from a fire that hit Sitio Caimito in Barangay Carreta, which is adjacent to the cemetery.

"We advised them to go back to their respective places. Some of these families have their own houses in Sitio Caimito. Some were left homeless due to a fire. They are most probably sharers and renters so they built houses and shanties at the abandoned tombs," he said.

Meanwhile, the remaining structures fronting the cemetery's entrance are set to be cleared before All Saints' and All Souls' Days, on which families are expected to visit the tombs of their departed loved ones.

In November 2014, the city government closed the cemetery to pave way for the developmen­t plan, which seeks to convert the 9,282square meter cemetery into a public park. The area houses the Osmeña Mausoleum.

In June this year, Mayor Michael Rama ordered the removal of almost 40 illegal structures outside the cemetery to proceed with the developmen­t plan.

The first phase of the clearing operations tore down at least nine structures, leaving the area with around 30 "illegal" structures.

The affected families were then transferre­d at the neighborin­g Barangay Lorega which will serve as their temporary staging area until the city can finish the ongoing constructi­on of the medium-rise building located in the same barangay.

 ?? JOY TORREJOS ?? Doña Pepang Cemetery used to be the home of both the living and the dead. Now, it is reduced to rubble, scraps and debris. The city government is implementi­ng successive clearing operations in the area so it can be soon developed into a public park.
JOY TORREJOS Doña Pepang Cemetery used to be the home of both the living and the dead. Now, it is reduced to rubble, scraps and debris. The city government is implementi­ng successive clearing operations in the area so it can be soon developed into a public park.

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