IP, Environment, Church Groups Picket International Mining Confab
“We have had enough of
big foreign and local companies that compromise environmental protection
and respect for indigenous peoples and their ancestral domain in their
pursuit for maximum profits.” – Rev. Fr. Allan Jose Arcebuche, OFM
BY NOEL GODINEZ
Northern Dispatch
Posted by Bulatlat
Students stage a rally outside the
Philippine mining conference in front of the New World Hotel in Makati
City Feb. 3, during the opening of the International Mining Investment
Conference Photo by AFP |
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BAGUIO CITY —Some 200
protesters, many of whom traveled all the way to Manila from different
regions, greeted the opening of the International Mining Investment
Conference at the New World Hotel last Feb. 3. The two-hour picket
condemned the sell-out of mineral resources to multinational mining
corporations.
The protesters
belonging to the Cordillera Peoples Alliance (CPA), Kalikasan network,
Kalipunan ng mga Katutubong Mamamayan ng Pilipinas (KAMP or Alliance of
Indigenous Peoples in the Philippines), Bayan Muna (People First), and the
Promotion of Church People’s Response (PCPR) converged in front of the
hotel in Makati City at 10 am.
Rev. Fr. Allan Jose
Arcebuche, OFM, of the coalition Defend Patrimony, said “We condemn this
government-sponsored mining summit which promotes the business of massive
extraction of gold mines and other minerals with the grave consequences
being left to poor Filipinos. How many more denuded forests, poisoned
waters, killer flashfloods and displaced communities will it take before
the government seriously stops massive logging and open-pit mining? We
have had enough of big foreign and local companies that compromise
environmental protection and respect for indigenous peoples and their
ancestral domain in their pursuit for maximum profits. We condemn the
latest Supreme Court ruling that declared the Mining Act of 1995 as
legal.”
Joan Carling, chair
of the Cordillera Peoples Alliance (CPA), said the conference aims to get
foreign investors interested in 23 mining projects yet the affected
communities of these projects have not been consulted properly.
The 23 mining
projects are
Batong Buhay Copper-Gold Project
in Pasil, Kalinga;
Far-Southeast Gold Project, Itogon Gold
Project, and the
Teresa Gold Project in Mankayan,
Benguet;
Padcal Expansion Project in
Tuba, Benguet;
Didipio Copper-Gold Project in
Kasibu, Nueva Viscaya and Nagtipunan, Quirino;
Adlay-Cagdianao-Tandawa Project
in Surigao del Sur and Claver, Surigao del Norte;
Amacan Copper Project/Hijo Gold Project,
Diwalwal Direct State Utilization Project, King King Copper-Gold Project
in Compostela Valley;
Aroroy Gold Project in Masbate;
Boyongan Copper Project in
Surigao del Norte and Agusan del Norte;
Canatuan Gold Project in Siocon,
Zamboanga del Norte;
Mindoro Nickel Project in
Oriental Mindoro;
Nonoc Iron Fines Project and
Nonoc Nickel Project in Surigao del Norte;
Palawan Nickel Project in
Bataraza, Palawan;
Pujada Nickel Project in San
Isidro & Gov. Generoso, Davao Oriental;
Rapu Rapu Polymetallic Project
in Albay;
San Antonio Copper Project in
Marinduque;
Siana Gold Project in Surigao
del Norte;
Tampakan Copper Project in
South Cotabato; and
Toledo Copper Project in Cebu.
Furthermore, Carling
emphasized that there is “an obvious lack of transparency in the process
of planning and identification of these projects” wherein the government
has “disregarded the rights of the affected communities” as well as “the
protection of the environment.”
She also warned that
conflicts will arise in the areas of these projects because “the people
will continue to assert their rights and defend their resources” from
mining companies.
She also criticized
the government for believing that corporate mining is a solution to the
chronic economic and financial crisis citing the experiences of Zaire,
Bolivia and Sierra Leone which relied primarily on foreign investments to
develop their mining industry but until now have remained among the
poorest of nations. Furthermore, these countries are facing catastrophes,
disasters and conflicts brought about by the operations of mining
corporations.
Tax
holidays
Carling criticized
the government for giving out tax holidays and incentives to foreign
mining corporations while bleeding the Filipinos dry by way of additional
taxes like the increase of the value added tax.
“We demand the full
respect to our collective rights as indigenous peoples and the patrimony
of the Filipino people over our natural resources. We will not allow the
plunder of our land and we will resist and expose all attempts of
deception and coercion by the government and mining companies,” Carling
ended.
In Mindanao,
religious groups particularly the Sisters Association in Mindanao (SAMIN),
Rural Missionaries of the Philippines, and the Religious of the Good
Shepherd, and non-government organizations affiliated with the Initiatives
for Peace in Mindanao (INPEACE) have “vowed to take the fight in the
communities and work with Lumads and farmers in Mindanao in opposing the
entry of foreign mining firms in the country.”
Moreover, the groups
vow to support mass actions of communities as the only way to “reverse”
the Supreme Court’s legalization of the entry of transnational, open-pit
mining in the country led by American, Canadian, and Australian corporate
giants.
According to Sr.
Carmen Dianne Cabasagan, SAMIN chairperson and INPEACE Convenor, the
Supreme Court decision on the legality of the Philippine Mining Act “was
clearly rushed to please foreign investors attending an the international
mining conference.”
The mining
conference, organized by the Philippine Chamber of Mines and supported by
the Office of the President, Department of Environment and Natural
Resources, and the Department of Trade and Industry is aimed to put the
Philippine mining industry “back on the global map.”
According to a
conference flyer, the country’s mineral deposits are spread across nine
million hectares and are “worth a potential US$840 billion.” Bulatlat
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