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Kamayan para sa Kalikasan |
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FORUM OVERVIEW (click here) MAIN NEWS SECTION (right below) OTHER SECTIONS (click here)
FORUM ECHOES Batangas WED organizers feted at Kamayan Forum LOCAL organizers of the recent World Environment Day comme- moration in Batangas City were enthusiastically applauded after they narrated the preparations and actual facilitation work they did which resulted in unprecedented breakthroughs in nine years of annual WED commemorations in the Philippines. Acknowledging the congratulations, the Batangas delegation spoke as one to give credit to Mayor Eduardo Dimacuha, whose leadership and firm decisions for WED, they said, were crucial in the success of WED in their city this year.
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FORUM
FOCUS Banana Planters Ignore DoH on Hazards of Aerial Spraying
A Now, aside from the Davao City LGU and the Davao Regional Trial Court, an executive department has also taken the side of the victimized communities. But the plantation owners have displayed their arrogance by ignoring it, involving even mediapersons in their propaganda war to enjoy their "business as usual" mode. |
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Poison(ed) Bananas? AERIAL SPRAYING of hazardous chemicals over banana plantations in Davao continues despite scientific evidence of their harmful effect on human health and the environment. The plantation owners are not to be be bothered nor deterred. Not by public clamor, nor by law (which they can, after all, buy). What
we see is the insensitivity and arrogance of capitalist corporations. So
they produce poisoned bananas, uncaring about consumers, workers and
affected communities. And under modern forms of enslavement with
neo-colonial indifference and unmoderated greed. Since protest, pleading and law don’t work in this case, our best and only recourse will have to be: to produce and export clean and nutrilicious bananas ourselves. There is clean technology for growing organic banana that is preferred by the Japanese market and presumably other green markets abroad. The bananas are grown with conscious regard and campassion for the consumers, and under healthy conditions for workers who co-own the enterprise. This is being done by Negros farmers under the guidance of the organization AlterTrade. In the receiving countries to which the poisoned Davao bananas are exported, we should network with civil society organizations and consumer networks to mount an all-out campaign to shift to clean, organic bananas. While here we should expand the organic banana production and be ready to fill the demand. In expanding production of organic banana we shall be creating jobs and business for agrarian reform beneficiaries and landless rural workers. The emphasis on clean and healthy production methods (chemical–free) will cause a recovery of the caring attitude for people that communities should nurture. And because production will be through worker cooperation and the enterprise will be worker-owned, dignity of work will be restored, and labor amply rewarded. Moreover, the enterprise can be opened for investment by small entrepreneurs such as vegetable and fruit vendors so that a wider population can benefit from the enterprise and shore up their household economy. In this manner, immediate neighborhoods in the plantation areas are connected to other communities in municipal and urban markets, propelling the banana export industry for the benefit of many. And the beneficiary entrepreneurs can serve as change agents for more caring, self-sufficient communities. As this pattern of production and fair trade is multiplied across many other products and localities, we shall have a nationwide rebuilding of the life chances of household and flourishing of local economies. As to the arrogant aerial-spraying corporations, they will either go organic or close shop. Let Philippine bananas be green-organic. Let Filipino enterprise be compassionate. Let our communities be richly productive through communal modes of production and the restoration and nurture of the sense of community |
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FORUM FOCUS 'Business as Usual' Stance Lucrative but Immoral? Banana Planters Ignore DoH on Hazards of Aerial Spraying
A Now, aside from the Davao City LGU and the Davao Regional Trial Court, an executive department has also taken the side of the victimized communities. But the plantation owners have displayed their arrogance by ignoring it, involving even mediapersons in their propaganda war to enjoy their "business as usual" mode. The banana planters are apparently undisturbed by the scientific Department of Health findings of health hazards caused by their continued aerial spraying of pesticides. DoH findings on the effects of pesticides in Camocaan village, Davao del Sur were even scored by a columnist who was apparently misinformed by the banana plantation owners. An item in Conrado Banal’s column in the Philippine Daily Inquirer last May, assailed the DoH report recommended the banning of aerial spraying of these pesticides.
Banal
said the study found "statistically negligible" levels
of fungicide in Camocaan. But nowhere in the report could the
words “statis-tically negligible” be found. In fact, the
report says the opposite: in one of the soil samples in Camocaan,
the levels of ethylene thiourea, a potential carcinogenic fungicide
byproduct, exceeded the levels allowed by the US Environmental
Protection Agency. DoH also found that among the randomly selected
patients living outside the plantation, the levels of this
potential carcinogenic chemical in their blood were dangerously
high. But Banal did not mention any of
these findings. The
quote and arguments Banal used in his
column were exactly the same quote and arguments that several
other columnists had used, verbatim, in their own columns. Bukidnon
province banned aerial spraying way back in 2001. North Cotabato
also did in 2004, and in 2007 Davao City followed suit. Despite
the ban, banana plantations in Bukidnon and North Cotabato
continue to thrive, belying the claim that banning aerial
spraying would kill the banana industry. The
Pilipino Banana Growers and Exporters Association (PBGEA),
apparent source of the misleading information on the DoH study,
continues to defy public and government clamor to abandon aerial
spraying and to adopt instead viable and less dangerous
alternatives. It is a pity that columnists like Banal
allow themselves to be used by corporations focusing only on
their own
endless quest for profit.
In this context, the organizers of the Kamayan para sa Kalikasan decided to bring back this issue to the discussion table. Led by SALIKA President George Dadivas, they have invited Akbayan Rep. Ana Theresia Hontiveros-Baraquel; Sen. Jose Miguel Zubiri; Dr. Lynn Panganiban of DoH; Lia Jasmine Esquillo, executive director of the Davao-based Interphase Development Initiatives (IDIS); National Task Force Against Aerial Spraying (NTFAAS) chair Rene Pineda; and a representative of PBGEA to attend as resource persons in the forum’s session this coming 3rd Friday, July 17, 10:30 a.m. - 2 p.m. at the Kamayan Restaurant along EDSA in Mandaluyong City. SALIKA Chair Emeritus and Mother Earth Foundation President Marie R. Marciano will moderate.
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FORUM ECHOES Batangas WED organizers feted at Kamayan Forum LOCAL organizers of the recent World Environment Day commemoration in Batangas City were enthusiastically applauded after they narrated the preparations and actual facilitation work they did which resulted in unprecented breakthroughs in nine years of annual WED commemorations in the Philippines. Acknowledging the congratulations, the Batangas delegation spoke as one to give credit to Mayor Eduardo Dimacuha, whose leadership and firm decisions for WED, they said, were crucial in the success of the UN-mandated WED’s commemoration in their city this year. The
Batangas delegation led by Councilor Marvey Mariño, included city
environment and natural resources officer Oliver Gonzales who was
also appointed acting chairman of the Green Families and Communities
Network-Batangas City Chapter; and Technical Working Group chairman
Dr. Angelito Bagui, earlier named WED-Phils. Special Deputy
Secretary-General. The WED-Phils. Network’s 7th Annual Assembly held at the week-long celebration passed to Mayor Dimacuha the helm of the network from 2008 national host Puerto Princesa City Mayor Edward S. Hagedorn. The network was itself renamed Green Families and Green Communities Network (GFCN). During the session, WED-Phils. Co-Chair Emeritus and Sec.-Gen. Ed Aurelio Reyes presented signed certificates of recognition and appreciation and Sanib-Sining members German Caniete and Marz Zafe (SALIKA Sec.-Gen.) presented some of the group’s gifts for the awardees of the “Mandirigma ng Kapaligiran” citations in Batangas City. (to read more about WED-Philippines and WED'09 in Batangas, click here.) The unusually festive Kamayan Forum session was moderated by GFCN national spokesperson Rene Pineda. |
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