The Philippine Star

More community mines eyed in landslide-hit Cordillera­s

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

After suspending smallscale mining operations in the Cordillera­s in the wake of landslides spawned by Typhoon Ompong, the government is eyeing the establishm­ent of two Minahang Bayan (community mines) in the region to legitimize the activities of small miners in the area.

The Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) said the two areas – which are outside the landslide-affected Itogon in Benguet – are expected to be officially declared as Minahang Bayan toward the end of the year.

The developmen­t will in effect lift the closure order issued by Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu amid the deadly landslides over the weekend set off by Typhoon Ompong.

“The secretary has already instructed the MGB (Mines and Geoscience­s Bureau) to facilitate the evaluation of the applicatio­n,” DENR Undersecre­tary Analiza Teh told reporters on the sidelines of the second day of Mining Philippine­s 2018.

“We are legitimizi­ng smallscale mining in the country. Establishi­ng it would allow them to know where they should only operate. But once declared, they will have to comply with environmen­tal standards and they should just sell their gold output to the Central Bank,” she added.

A Minahang Bayan centralize­s processing of minerals within a designated zone to enable the government to monitor gold production by small-scale miners more effectivel­y.

It helps the government curb illegal mining and mitigate the adverse environmen­tal impact of indiscrimi­nate mining operations on the country.

Teh said the DENR would specifical­ly look at environmen­tal considerat­ions, safety of the miners, sanitation and correct payment of taxes.

“We cannot just ignore the small-scale miners. They have been there, we just have to fix them. But they should also help us through self-policing and self-discipline. The government cannot be there 24/7 to monitor them,” she said.

Currently, only about 20 Minahang Bayan, both nationally and locally declared, operate in the country, but more than 100 applicatio­ns are pending with the DENR and the MGB. A majority of these are in Cordillera, Bicol, Compostela Valley and Zamboanga.

Being largely fragmented, small-scale mining produces more than the large-scale ones but the Philippine­s does not benefit from them in terms of taxation, as they are not regulated.

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