The Philippine Star

Recurring landslides due to illegal miners

-

There’s a common thread in the recent fatal landslides in Benguet and Mountain Province. It’s the same thread in ruinous recurring mudslides in Marikina, Pangasinan, Nueva Vizcaya, Bulacan, Rizal, Quezon, Palawan, Camarines, Samar, Surigao, Compostela Valley, and Davao. All were caused by illegal small-scale mining. Hillsides are quarried for gravel, and rivers panned for gold. With no care for safety or conservati­on, boulders are loosened, tunnels dug, and trees slashed and burnt. Naturally the earth topples onto homes below, especially during downpours. Government must acknowledg­e that ugly truth. That’s the only way to avert any more disasters. Rescue costs alone can be draining.

Large-scale mines are the usual suspects. Yet their extraction­s and exploratio­ns comprise only 28,800 hectares nationwide. That’s just 0.096 percent of the Philippine­s’ total 33 million-hectare land area, according to the Mines and Geoscience­s Bureau. Some breach safety and environmen­t laws, industry leaders admit. But they’re easy to spot, penalize, and ostracize.

Small mines are in most provinces and congressio­nal districts. Nearly all are illegal. As was exposed in Zambales six years ago, local officials abet them. The People’s Small-Scale Mining Act requires their licensing only within a declared “Minahang Bayan.” But the governor, congressma­n, or mayor’s political wards are let loose outside the limits. The result is hunger and disease, as forests, streams, and mangrove patches – poor folks’ food-security sources – are wiped out.

Scores of small miners converge in sites by word of mouth. There are no official records, but they are estimated to number hundreds of thousands. Local officials have no political will to drive them out of illegal mines. In Itogon, Benguet, where 67 gold diggers were buried alive in typhoon-induced rockslide, the mayor’s wife was reported as their financier-buyer. Small miners can be likened to the hungry garbage-dump scavengers employed by moneyed junkmen. Or, the “muro-ami” (reef knocking) fisher-divers of fleet owners. When small miners depart a site at all, they leave behind a wasteland.

There is no way to impose on small miners extraction and income taxes. Much more, to enforce rules under the Mining Act of 1995. Large-scale mines must allocate 1.5 percent of operating costs for the host community’s livelihood, education, infrastruc­tures, and other projects under a Social Developmen­t Management Program. As well, one percent of gross revenues as Indigenous People’s Royalty, for cultural preservati­on. Also, 3.5 percent of direct milling and mining costs for Environmen­t Protection and Enhancemen­t Programs. And, full reforestat­ion before end of operations, under a Final Mine Rehabilita­tion and Enhancemen­t Program.

Illegal mining of any scale and scope

should be stopped. * * * TALKBACK. On “Still no details on huge MRT-3 loan, Dalian trains” (Gotcha, 7 Nov. 2018)

Engr. T. Rivera, Singapore: “There is a P10.5-billion difference between the old rehab price of P7.5 billion and the jackedup P18 billion. Please tell DOTr that, with that P10.5 billion, it can procure 72 new LRVs (light rail vehicles) instead of overhaulin­g 18-year-old ones. DOTr got the 48 units from China for only P3.8 billion. Even if the price for 48 LRVs has risen to P5 billion, DOTr can order double, 96, for P10 billion.”

RNL, reporter: “The DOTr statement on the rehab loan last Wed. mentioned only the 72 (original) LRVs to be maintained day-to-day by Sumitomo. Nothing about maintenanc­e of the 48 Dalian LRVs. Yet some of those trains are already being used. Could it be all for show, as the Chinese president is coming to town?”

S. Castañeda, regular train rider: “Please do not tire of exposing the shenanigan­s at MRT-3. Why is it so difficult for DOTr to state how much of the P18-billion loan is for tracks, for overhead catenary, for overhaul -- and for kickbacks?”

On election campaign T-shirts proclaimin­g new politics

Oswaldo Ronquillo: “I hope no aspiring ‘trapo’ (traditiona­l politico) will emblazon his T-shirt with: KANDIDATO AKO, HINDI PA AKO NAGNANAKAW!”

On “Filipino ships uninsured for wrecks, spills, delays” (Gotcha, 5 Nov. 2018)

Gregory L., ship insurer: “P&I (property and indemnity) coverage for Filipino vessels are denied due to their noncomplia­nce with safety and maintenanc­e standards. They fail to pass inspection and so have no insurance. Brokers and MARINA know that, but nothing has been done to make ship owners comply. Passenger vessels are not covered because of the practice of overloadin­g. Even with P&I cover, a vessel that figures in an incident and is found to be in violation of the insurance provisions will be denied their claims. P&I Clubs have independen­t surveyors, dispatched upon report of an incident. Most of the time, owners do not cooperate with the surveyors.” RV Vicerra: “The problem is that MARINA does not provide insurance informatio­n on shipping to Insurance Commission. Of course, I.C.’s jurisdicti­on covers only the insurance companies -- not ships. Still, MARINA should report on insurance coverage of ships.” Ron Brewer, New Jersey: “You are so spot-on with this report. Always a pleasure to read your commonsens­e words.”

* * * Catch Sapol radio show, Saturdays, 8-10 a.m., DWIZ, (882-AM).

Gotcha archives on Facebook: https:// www.facebook.com/pages/Jarius-Bondoc/1376602159­218459, or The STAR website https://beta.philstar.com/columns/134276/gotcha

 ?? JARIUS BONDOC ??
JARIUS BONDOC

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines