The Philippine Star

Miriam ‘greenest,’ Mar ‘meanest’ for environmen­talists

- By ARTEMIO DUMLAO With Perseus Echeminada,

VIGAN CITY — Presidenti­al aspirant Sen. Miriam DefensorSa­ntiago got the top mark while Liberal Party bet Manuel Roxas II got zero in the assessment of track records of candidates on environmen­tal protection.

Clemente Bautista, national coordinato­r of the Kalikasan People’s Network for the Environmen­t (Kalikasan PNE), said environmen­tal activists have launched the Green Vote 2016 drive to determine the environmen­tal policy of the presidenti­al bets.

He said Santiago was determined to be the “greenest” candidate followed by Sen. Grace Poe and Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte.

Roxas was dubbed as the “meanest” aspirant with regard to environmen­tal concerns, said Bautista, one of the conveners of Green Vote.

The Green Vote scored the candidates with a report based on all the candidates’ environmen­tal platform and track records regarding large-scale mining, coal power, killings of environmen­talists, geneticall­y modified organisms (GMO), climate change and disasters, and the Phl-US Enhanced Defense Cooperatio­n Agreement (EDCA).

Green Vote conveners, how- ever, clarified that their group does not endorse any candidate.

“We note how Sen. Santiago rallied her fellow senators against the unconstitu­tionality of the EDCA. She is also the lone bet who worked on GMO regulation­s, and passed numerous Senate bills and resolution­s to address climate change impacts and investigat­e the killings of environmen­talists,” said Gil Catalan of youth environmen­tal group UP Saribuhay, a coconvenor of Green Vote.

Poe’s consistent stand calling for a shift from fossil fuels to clean and renewable energy also earned accolades, while Duterte was the lone candidate who had opposed large-scale mining through a prohibitio­n order in Davao City, although his rhetoric on large-scale mining is mixed.

Like a referendum by environmen­talists on the performanc­e of the outgoing administra­tion of President Aquino, the groups gave Roxas a failing mark.

“During his stint as the secretary of DILG ( Department of the Interior and Local Government) and among the leading apologists of the so-called Daang Matuwid program, Roxas demonstrat­ed a negative record of pursuing environmen­tally destructiv­e policies and programs of the Aquino administra­tion,” Bautista explained.

Illegal small-scale mining operations such as the numerous black sand mining projects proliferat­ed during Roxas’ term as DILG secretary, he added.

He said Roxas had previous interests in large-scale mining and big miners are supporting his presidenti­al candidacy.

“Roxas and the Aquino administra­tion failed to prepare and respond to the increasing number and severity of typhoon disasters like Yolanda and Pablo. Even at the last moment, Roxas demonstrat­ed his criminal neglect of disaster victims by being the lone candidate who did not condemn the violent dispersal and shooting inflicted by police on El Niño-affected farmers in Kidapawan,” said Frances Quimpo, executive director of the Center for Environmen­tal Concerns Philippine­s.

Meanwhile, Santiago’s runningmat­e Sen. Ferdinand Marcos Jr. thanked yesterday the former martial law activists who have expressed support for his candidacy.

“I have heard that they ( former anti- Marcos activists) came out to express their support for me despite the barrage of negative criticisms that are being thrown my way throughout this campaign trail. I appreciate their words and their confidence in my capabiliti­es,” he said.

In a forum last Saturday, Mandaluyon­g City Mayor Benhur Abalos, religious charismati­c leader Butch Belgica, labor leader Terry Tuazon and Coconut Federation (Cocofed) chairman Efren Villaseñor appealed to the public to move on from the past and focus on the future of the country.

Abalos appealed to the public for objectivit­y and said that voters should filter out what they hear about the Marcoses. –

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