This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 13, May 8-14, 2005
Bulacan Fishers Hit
Gov’t Inaction on Dump
Two weeks into their concerted
actions to stop the passage of the garbage-bearing barge that passes through the
Obando River, the fisherfolks of the coastal town of Obando now face a bigger
problem – on how to force the government to clean up and close the dump.
BY DABET CASTAÑEDA Residents of Obando,
Bulacan, a coastal town 16 kms north of Manila, hit government inaction over
their demands for the clean up and closure of the Navotas Controlled Disposal
Facility (NCDF), a 10.9-ha dump in the shoreline of the neighboring town of
Navotas. The NCDF is operated by the Philippine Ecological System Corporation (Phileco). In a press conference in
Quezon City May 4, fisherman Boy de Armas told reporters that despite evidences
that the dump causes pollution in the Obando River, local and national
government agencies concerned in waste disposal ignored their demand to close
the NCDF. In the same press
conference, De Armas assailed Phileco for continuing to operate the waste
facility despite its being illegal. De Armas is the
spokesperson of the fisher folk group Pambansang Lakas ng Kilusang Mamamalakaya
ng Bulakan (Pamalakaya-Bulakan). In a phone interview with
Bulatlat, Obando Mayor Zoilito Santiago said he has sent letters of
protest to the National Solid Waste Management Commission (NSWMC), the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), the Office of the
President, the Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA), the Bureau of
Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) and the Bulacan provincial government to
demand the same but his actions seem to have fallen on deaf ears. Santiago came out with a
paid in Manila Standard on Sept. 27 last year stating the dump has caused
“incalculable perils to the marine waters, environment, ecology and health of
the people of Obando.” Pollutant As early as September 2003,
the Fish Health Section of the BFAR recommended the closure of the facility. In
its ocular inspection and conduct of water quality along the vicinity of Navotas
dump on July 11 of the same year, BFAR said the disposal facility is polluting
the river. The continued dumping of more waste in the area, the bureau also
said, “could aggravate the deteriorating condition of the water environment.”
BFAR, which is under the
agriculture department, warned that the river pollution – source of income and
food for both Navotas and Obando fisherfolks – would soon result in a fish kill
in the area. The dump facility, the bureau added, not only endangers the fish
but also poses health hazards on the residents who consume the fishery resources
taken from the river. Curiously, in a newspaper
report on Jan. 12 last year, the DENR “cleared” the waste facility against
allegations that it is causing pollution into the coasts. The report said that
based on water sampling operations conducted by the Environmental Management
Bureau (EMB) in the National Capital Region (NCR) in July, October and December
2003, “there is no evidence to connect the presence of pollution in the river
system to the NCDF.” But Director Albert
Magalang of the NSWMC, in a letter to Navotas resident Joseph Kwe on May 11,
2004, clarified that the Notice to Proceed (NTP) issued to the NCDF “should not
be construed as a permit to operate” but is just a set of technical guide. Further, Reynaldo Alances,
chief of the Environmental Impact Assessment Division (EIAD) of the EMB, in a
separate letter to Kwe said that his office “does not issue Environmental
Compliance Certificate (ECC) for these dumpsite facilities since they are not
considered environmentally acceptable mode of waste disposal,” referring,
particularly, to the dump’s location. The NCDF is a former
fishpond only 50 meters away from several fishponds of Obando and only about 200
meters away from the town’s residential areas. Without a DENR permit, it started
its operations on Oct. 15, 2001. Dare Furious over the national
government’s inaction on the dump issue despite strong opposition from residents
of Obando and neighboring towns, Mayor Santiago challenged government officials
and Navotas Mayor Toby Tiangco to stay in their town for one month and see for
themselves the effect of the dump on the daily lives of the residents.
“If they would not
experience the risks brought about by the dump, then I would rest my case,” he
said. De Armas chided Tiangco for
allegedly protecting the operators of the dump, saying that the government of
Navotas earns about P60 million a month from Phileco for allowing the
maintenance of the dump in their community. Reached by phone, Tiangco
refused to comment on the allegation. Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
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