This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 5, March 6-12, 2005
Danao River:
Rehabilitation for Profit?
Escalante City’s executives
want to rehabilitate an 8-km long river but the residents are opposing it. This
means not only the dislocation of more than 1,000 residents, mostly fisherfolks
and peasants, but also the entry of big capitalists and foreign investors whose
only interest is to plunder natural resources in the name of more profit,
concerned groups say.
BY KARL G. OMBION OLD POBLACION, ESCALANTE
CITY – The local government here is implementing the Save Danao River program.
It is good that the river is being saved, but why is it opposed by fisherfolks
and peasants there? The Danao River is located
at the Old Poblacion of Escalante City, 98 kms north of Bacolod City, Negros
Occidental in central Philippines. It is eight kilometers long and zigzags from
the estuary of Barangay (village) Danao, the Visayan Sea, Tanon Strait, and
inward to the Barangay Danao proper. It is the main source of
livelihood for most of the more than 1,000 residents of Danao, as well as other
neighboring barangays. In addition, it has a small commercial port that
transports passengers and goods to Cebu and other islands in the Visayas. The
port is reportedly owned by a corporation, with the families of Escalante City
Mayor Santiago Barcelona and the Maranons owning stocks. Small fisherfolks and
peasants here vowed to defy Barcelona’s order for them to remove all their
fishing structures like the talabahan (greenshells breeding structures),
panggal (snare structures for crabs) and tangaban (fish cage
structures), to pave the way for the implementation of the program. Barcelona
has given the local fisherfolks until March 3 to remove their structures. In a rally held on the day
of the mayor’s deadline in Barangay Danao, more than 1,000 fisherfolks,
peasants, and other sectors slammed the river program as a destructive
“eco-tourism” program that is biased against poor fisherfolks and farmers
households in and around the area. The protesters were
supported by Pambansang Lakas ng Kilusang Mamamalakaya (Pamalakaya, or National
Federation of Fisherfolk Organizations in the Philippines), Bayan Muna (People
First) and Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (BAYAN, or New Patriotic Alliance).
Steady
destruction Edras Dianon, a fisherfolk
in the Danao River for decades, said that the river helped him send his children
to school and sustain their livelihood. In the 1930s, he recalled that the river
was 18-ft deep and rich in marine resources. But when the forests around the
river were cleared, big commercial fishponds were constructed and the ports were
set up, fish stocks had gradually decreased. Dianon belied Barcelona’s
accusation that the poor fisherfolks were to blame for the current state of the
river, arguing, “Massive illegal logging, too many private fishponds, and the
commercial port and consequent ecological problems were the main causes of
economic and environmental problems now plaguing the river and the communities
around it.” For his part,
Pamalakaya-Negros Secretary General Editho Namion, Jr. said that the presence of
big private land and commercial fishponds in and around Danao River proves who
is to blame for the continued ecological and economic destruction of the river.
Namion particularly
mentioned the 18 hectares of fishponds and mangroves of Barcelona’s family, 200
hectares of commercial fishponds of a certain Javellana, and few other big
landowners-commercial fishing operators. “The destruction of Danao
River can only be blamed on the people who have direct control and disposition
of the lands, river and open waters in the area,” the Pamalakaya leader said. Save Danao River - for
whom? The Save Danao River
program is a city government program aimed to rehabilitate, conserve and make
the river productive. According to Barcelona, the river is endangered because it
is already shallow, and filled with illegal structures. Namion quoted Barcelona
as saying that the people living near the Danao River “should be removed because
they are the ones destroying the river, and they are trash in the eyes of
foreigners and tourists coming and going through the Danao River port.” Bulatlat
research revealed that the program is an integral part of the city’s
Comprehensive Land Use Development Plan that aims to turn coastal barangays into
eco-tourism resorts, commercial fishponds, and establish a modern port center
that will boost trading business with Cebu and neighboring islands. To be affected by the
program is not only Barangay Danao which hosts Danao River Port, but also
neighboring barangays like Sitios Lawis and Magkaya of Barangay Langob; Sitios
Molabog and Talanas of Barangay Old Escalante; Sitio Cagay 1 & 2 of Barangay
Buenavista; Sitios Nabutaan & Napungalan 1 & 2 of Barangay Hunob-hunob; Sitios
Tanguinto, Amparo and old Mabini of Barangay Mabini; and Sitio Lawis 1 & 2 of
Barangay Alimango. About 1,200 households will be uprooted by the program. The program will
particularly clear the fishing structures in the river, and remove residents
around the river to give way to various infrastructures like port expansion,
dike construction and guard posts. Meanwhile, Ben Tuanzon,
Barcelona’s executive assistant, admitted that they have problems enforcing the
removal of “illegal fishing structures” in the Danao River, because the
authority on estuary concerns is with the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic
Resources (BFAR) and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR).
However, he said that they are doing everything to immediately effect “voluntary
demolition” of the said structures pending legal remedies. Save the
people and their livelihood But Bayan-Negros Secretary
General Felipe Gelle, who took part in the fact-finding mission last March 3,
said that the Save Danao River program is “an environmental mask for pushing
through the plan of the city government for water-use and land-use reforms in
favor of the big business, aquaculture businesses, and foreign tourists”. The Comprehensive Land Use
Plan, and the Save Danao River program, according to Gelle, are schemes by
corrupt local bureaucrats to allow the plunder of the area’s natural resources
by foreign big business. If this pushes through, Negrenses will soon witness the
destruction of once beautiful, clean and rich Escalante into a haven of
plunderers, crooks and thugs. Then there will be endless economic, political and
social tsunamis, added Gelle. Fr. Greg Patino, former
director of the Diocese of Bacolod Social Action Center who now heads several
environmental and people’s advocacy campaigns, said that the Save Danao River
program is clearly anti-people, and the people should reject it. Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
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