By:
Edwin O. Fernandez - / 05:00 AM August 18, 2018
KORONADAL CITY—Local
officials and leaders of indigenous peoples (IPs) in Lake Sebu, South Cotabato,
have asked South Cotabato Gov. Daisy Avance Fuentes to reconsider the decision
of the provincial board rejecting the Department of Energy’s (DOE) coal mining
project in the province.
Lake Sebu Mayor Antonio
Fungan, in a letter to Fuentes, said the project was important for his town
because it would bring jobs and livelihood to his people.
Tribal chieftain Art
Labi sent a separate appeal to Fuentes, saying the board decision would deprive
the IPs of income.
‘Last-minute’
Voting 6-4, the
provincial board on June 25 rejected a resolution endorsing the project of
Daguma Agro Minerals Inc. (Dami) to extract coal deposits in the village of Ned.
Dami, in a statement,
said the board’s “unscheduled, last-minute” voting “did not seem to take into
account the social and economic significance of the project” for IPs of Ned and
Lake Sebu.
“The IPs were very
excited to be employed only to be told the provincial board did not allow it
for no valid reason,” Fungan told a local radio station here.
“They have no permanent
livelihood,” Fungan added. “They pinned their hopes on the mining project,” he
added.
Local sources
The project is part of
the DOE program to develop and utilize local sources of energy to counter high
power costs due to fluctuations in world coal prices and supply.
Fungan described claims
made by opponents of the project that IPs were opposed to coal mining as
“baseless.”
Fungan said Dami
already had Free Prior and Informed Consent of the T’Boli tribe from the
communities of Kibang, El Dulog, Pulusubong and Abboy.
Labi, the tribal chief,
said his group had already entered into an agreement with Dami as early as Oct.
13, 2011.
Protected areas
Fungan said only Mt.
Matutum and Sarangani Bay were considered protected areas.
Dami said the ban did
not apply to its project because it was not open pit mining.
“Rather, it is a
different, more environmentally sustainable method called contour, or strip
mining,” Dami said.
Fungan said Dami had
already built classrooms, courts, day care centers, birthing facility, water
supply system and farm-to-market roads in the village of Ned.
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