The
Casiguran Marchers for Life
Joaquin
G. Bernas, S.J.
120 residents of Casiguran— representing at least 2,983 families
coming from different sectors such as the farmers, indigenous peoples and
fisherfolks— are marching 370-kilometers from Casiguran, Aurora to Malacañang Palace, in order
to highlight their opposition, long voiced by the local communities of
Casiguran, to the Aurora ecozone.
They will arrive in Manila today, December 10, 2012, and will be
welcomed by students from UP, Ateneo and Miriam. Fr. Jett Villarin, SJ,
President of the Ateneo, will celebrate mass for them at 7pm at the Church of
the Gesu, Ateneo de Manila University, Quezon City.
After their arrival ceremonies they hope to bring their cause to the champion of Daang Matuwid in the Advent hope that he
will hear their cry. They are
coming to Manila during the season when the liturgical readings of Advent
recall the cries of the Isrealites for their liberation from their Babylonian
exile.
What has precipitated the march of the Casiguran poor to trek
through kilometers of rough roads from Aurora to Manila? They are coming to protest APECO, or
the Aurora Pacific Economic Zone and
Freeport Authority. APECO is
the 12,923-hectare special economic zone now being built in the town of
Casiguran, Aurora, by authority of R.A. 9490 as amended by R.A. 10083 in 2010
(which lapsed into law because the President neither approved nor vetoed it.) Needless to say, these laws were
sponsored by Senator Edgardo Angara and his son Congressman Juan Edgardo Angara,
with the endorsement of his sister Governor Bellaflor Angara-Castillo.
For the authors of the law, APECO means economic development and
progress not just for themselves but also for the entire population of Casiguran
including the marchers. But how do
the poor folk of Casiguran see it?
They see a grim future for themselves.. Their grim outlook is dark enough to drive them to a
pilgrimage on foot to Malacañang?
As the poor folks see it, APECO is now seizing large tracts of
prime agricultural lands, irrigated and very productive, from them. They see it as a clear violation of the
Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law (RA 6657 as amended by R.A. 9700). They see APECO
as further dispossessing them of a
110-hectare irrigated rice lands in Casiguran, Aurora for a planned extension
of the campus of the Aurora State College of Science and Technology
(ASCOT). The main campus of ASCOT is in Barangay
Zabali, Baler, Aurora, which comprises a total of 196.06 hectares. Not all the areas in the Baler campus
have been fully developed yet.
Aside from the Baler and Casiguran campuses, ASCOT also has another
extension campus in Barangay Bazal, Maria Aurora which covers an area of 110.8
hectares. Just like the Casiguran
campus, most of the area is still undeveloped by ASCOT. To sum it up, ASCOT already possesses a
total of 416.86 hectares of land, mostly agricultural lands, allegedly for its
school purposes.
The marchers also see APECO as intruding into ancestral lands,
around 11,900 hectares of the Agta-Dumagats, allegedly without their Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) as
required by RA 8371 (the IPRA law). APECO is accused of having falsely claimed
in 2010 that most of the occupants of these lands were merely ‘informal settlers’; 28 fisherfolk
families are displaced due to the construction of its soon-to-be 1.5 km
airstrip; hundreds more will eventually be crowded out of their fishing grounds
in the Casiguran bay should APECO’s international seaport be constructed. And
Apeco has allegedly been cutting 10 hectares of centuries old mangroves to give
way to its port thereby violating RA 8550 (Fisheries Code).
It is claimed that APECO law was passed without any consultation
whatsoever with the people of Casiguran and without the approval of the local
government units as required by
the Local Government Code (RA 7160). APECO’s subprojects— such as its airstrip
and corporate campus— have all failed to secure the necessary feasibility
studies, environmental impact assessments, environmental compliance
certificates and engineering and geological surveys, building permit and LGU
permits prior to their construction.
It it is also said that APECO paid more than P650,000 per hectare
for the coconut land of former Provincial and Environmental Natural Resource
Officer, while paying only P45,000 per hectare for
the rice lands of those who have already lost their homes thus violating the
Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act (RA 3019).
There are other accusations of violation of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt
Practices Act (RA 3019) as well as of human rights against anti-APECO
campaigners— involving drop-in interrogations, harassment and black propaganda.
Mention is also made of Father Jose Francisco Talaban, one of the foremost
local leaders in the struggle against the ecozone, who on June 26, 2010, narrowly
survived a midnight assassination attempt involving the use of explosives (M203
grenade launchers) and assault guns (M14 rifles). Allegedly this was perpetrated by an anti-communist group supportive
of APECO .
All these seem to add up to a threatening disaster of such a
magnitude that it should command the attention of the President. We will await developments during and
after this week.
10 December 2012
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