Centuries-old trees cut, mineral-rich soil set for China
THE Supreme Court on Tuesday issued a writ against Environment Secretary Ramon Paje, a mining company and the Philippine Ports Authority to stop them from leveling a mountain in Zambales even as the Cabinet secretary was partying with President Benigno Aquino III to mark his department’s 25th anniversary.
The Court issued its writ in response to a petition filed by Agham Rep. Angelo Palmones, who was acting on the complaints of residents that the mining company LNL Archipelago Minerals Inc. was cutting down centuries-old trees and leveling a mountain to build a seaport that will be used to ship soil rich in chromite and other minerals to China. The clearing operations were being guarded by 200 men armed with AK47 rifles, reports said.
In April, Palmones and Laguna Rep. Danilo Fernandez, chairman of the House committee on ecology, went to inspect the destruction of the environment and mountains in Zambales that traverse several towns of Pangasinan.
They said they were escorted by policemen armed only with pistols when confronted by men carrying heavy firearms.
Fernandez urged Paje to issue a cease-and-desist order against the mining company, but the secretary took no action. Palmones went to the Supreme Court to seek relief.
In its resolution, the Supreme Court en banc issued a Writ of Kalikasan against Paje, LNL Archipelago Minerals Inc. president Lawrence Lenio, and general manager Philip Floria, Philippine Ports Authority general manager Juan Sta. Ana, and Zambales police provincial director Supt. Francisco Santiago Jr.
The writ was issued after Palmones told the Supreme Court that in April 2012, LAMI and its agents, with heavy earth-moving and hauling equipment and armed with high-powered firearms, started to cut mountain trees and vegetation.
Worse, they started to flatten a mountain in Barangay Bolitoc, Sta. Cruz, Zambales, which serves as natural protective barriers of the residents of Sta. Cruz, Zambales and the residents of some of the towns of Pangasinan, which is adjacent, from typhoons and floods,” Palmones told the Supreme Court in a 12-page petition.
Palmones attached 60 pages of annexes containing photos of the site before and after the leveling of the mountain, with the soil pushed towards the sea and destroying the corals and natural habitat of the fish. The Court also received sworn statements from complaining residents who said they were never consulted about the clearing operations and who demanded that the natural resources there be preserved.
The mining company, backed with heavily armed men, told residents the Department of the Environment and the PPA had authorized them to flatten the mountain.
Worse, Palmones said, Santiago of the Zambales police provincial office covered up the mining company’s activities by issuing a report falsely stating there was no leveling of the mountain. A copy of Santiago’s report was also attached to Palmones’ petition.
Palmones said the permit to construct issued by the PPA to the mining company did not authorize it to cut down trees, much less flatten a mountain, for its port construction.
He said the environment compliance certificate issued by the Environment Department was only “a planning tool” and not a permit.
Palmones said he had included Paje and other government officials as respondents because they failed to act on the complaint despite undisputed evidence presented to them and with no less than Fernandez, as chairman of the House committee on ecology, recommending that the DENR issued a cease-and-desist order.
As of June 4, or more than a month after Palmones and Fernandez raised the alarm, the mining company’s backhoes were still flattening the mountain, the lawmaker told the Supreme Court.
“Respondent LAMI is destroying and continues to destroy the environment by cutting mountain trees and leveling a mountain to the damage and detriment of the residents of Zambales and of the nearby towns of Pangasinan, without any of the concerned government agencies and officials stopping such illegal actions and or worse, condoning the same,” Palmones told the court.
In an interview, Palmones said the residents wanted the remaining mountains found to be rich in mineral resources to be left unharmed.
He said the raw soil mined from the mountains were being shipped to China for processing because the LAMI did not have the capacity to process the ore.
LAMI needed the seaport to cut on travel time and cost as ships could bring in more mountain soil and rocks for export than these would be shipped by land because trucks can only carry limited tons of raw soil and rocks,” Palmones told the Manila Standard.
“The mountain trees and the mountain being destroyed by respondent LAMI serve as natural protective barriers of the residents of Zambales and of the residents of some nearby towns of Pangasinan from typhoon and floods,” Palmones said.
“Once these natural resources are damaged, the residents of these two provinces will be defenseless against typhoons and floods and their life, health and properties will be at the constant risk of being lost.”
Paje, who was seen partying with the President in Malacañang on Tuesday, has yet to take action on the Supreme Court writ.
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haskang paita gyud sa atong mga naa sa pamunuan lagi, rampant na kaayo ning atong panamastamas sa surroundings, ultimo bukid, gi level, its all about greed gyud naa ra sa hunahuna aning mga tawhana or whoever is behind this.