| Logging feeds communist insurgency more than gold mining |
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| by Carolyn O. Arguillas/MindaNews | |
| Saturday, 06 December 2008 05:52 | |
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TAGUM CITY (MindaNews/05 December) – A government policy lifting the total log ban in Caraga and Davao regions in March 2005 may have helped strengthen the communist insurgency in Compostela Valley and Davao Oriental, the “most problematic” and “most potent” among the NPA-influenced areas nationwide. Col. Allan Luga, commander of the Army’s 1001st Infantry Brigade said logging, more than the gold or banana, has been a major source of funds for the Southern Mindanao Regional (Party) Committee (of the Communist Party of the Philippines).Luga said there are seven guerilla fronts with about 450 armed regulars in these areas. Nationwide, the NPA (New People’s Army) in these areas is “the biggest” and “the strongest,” he said. “Not Bicol anymore. That was before,” Luga said, adding this is “why my brigade is also the biggest brigade Army-wide.” “They have the most number of people, most number of firearms. Here is where they get most of their resources…. they get a lot of resources here. They get a lot of money here,” he said citing gold mining in Diwalwal, logging and banana plantations. But it is not the gold rush that has been a major source of funds for the NPA, Luga said. Not even the banana plantations which are spread all over. “More from logging actually,” he said. Asked if the lifting of the moratorium on logging contributed to this, Luga replied, “most probably” although he added that “some of them,” referring to the NPA, “are doing illegal logging also.” Ricardo Calderon, regional executive director of the Department of Environment and Natural resources (DENR) said he does not want to argue with the military as it may have its basis for saying so and they are not privy to it. But Calderon said there’s more logging in Caraga. The Davao region, he said, has more plantation species. He said the wood industry’s utilization of natural forest is only 11.9% compared with 89.1% of plantation forest. This means that what are being harvested are plantation species like gmelina and falcatta, he explained. But he acknowledged that “illegal logging hotspots” usually have peace and order problems. President Arroyo declared a total log ban nationwide in mid-December 2004, following the killer floods in Aurora and Quezon provinces that left nearly 2,000 persons dead. But she lifted the total log ban in Caraga and Davao regions on March 7, 2005, during her visit to San Luis, Agusan del Sur, to “respond to the growing clamor of thousands of families who are totally dependent on the wood industry and where alternative means of livelihood are not available.” On March 8, 2005, President Arroyo repeated her announcement before the media in Davao City, adding "illegal logging breeds corruption, legal logging, good jobs." |





















