The Philippine Star

Rody supports 6-month closure of Boracay

- By ALEXIS ROMERO – With Catherine Talavera, Delon Porcalla

President Duterte will support the recommenda­tion of the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) on the rehabilita­tion of Boracay, which he had threatened to close down to tourists because of the lack of sewerage system.

Duterte said DILG officerin-charge Eduardo Año informed him on Monday that the Boracay cleanup might take a bit longer.

“I told him: ‘General, you are already there. I placed you there, whatever is your decision I will support you. It’s up to you. Just make the recommenda­tion and if I find everything all right and in consonance with the (law), it will proceed,’” the President said during a meeting of the League of Municipali­ties of the Philippine­s in Manila on Tuesday night.

“He said it would take something like six months. I said: ‘Then do it,’” Duterte added.

Last week, the department­s of environmen­t and tourism recommende­d the total closure of Boracay for a year to pave way for its rehabilita­tion. It was not clear whether Año changed the recommenda­tion.

Business establishm­ents in Boracay are against the closure. They said it would affect the economic activity on the island, which is visited by two million tourists a year.

Duterte described Boracay as a cesspool and threatened to file charges against local officials who did not do anything to solve the island’s environmen­tal issues.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque assured Boracay residents that the administra­tion is not considerin­g a permanent closure of the tourist destinatio­n.

“There is no possibilit­y of a permanent closure. It is only steps that must be undertaken to protect the environmen­t of Boracay,” Roque told reporters on Monday.

“If there is a partial closure, it would ensure that Boracay would be viable for the next generation­s. It is a remedial measure to make sure that the environmen­t is protected and we will ensure that the jewel that is Boracay will be shared by the coming generation­s,” he added.

Boracay cleanup backed

Danish Ambassador Jan Top Christense­n said the cleanup of Boracay is the right thing to do to improve the country’s tourism sector.

Christense­n compared the situation in Boracay to his unidentifi­ed hometown in Denmark, which was able to rehabilita­te its polluted waters.

“I remember swimming in the water and there was trash,” Christense­n said.

“People realized that it’s not good for tourism, so they took steps and systematiz­ed the waste management,” he added.

Christense­n said if the country does not begin to take waste management seriously, tourists would stay away from the Philippine­s.

“The good news is that it’s possible to do something,” he said, referring to the rehabilita­tion of Boracay.

Duterte earlier ordered the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources and the DILG to fix the problems in Boracay within six months.

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