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Mining mayhem triggers eco-disaster in Zambales
By JAILEEN F. JIMENO, PCIJ
Jobs, mines, power, violence Zambales is not new to mining. Acoje Mining dug for chromite in Sta Cruz for 75 years beginning in the 1930s. In 1934, Benguet Corporation began to extract chromite from the mountains of nearby Masinloc town, and continued doing so for half a century. In San Marcelino town, the Benguet-Dizon firm leveled mountains for gold, easing up only when Mt. Pinatubo erupted in 1991. These days, there are at least eight mining firms with permits to conduct large-scale mining in Zambales. But they are no longer the only players on the block, and are in fact sometimes even being forced to share mining space with small-scale miners, courtesy of the capitolâs rather haphazard way of issuing its infamous 30-day mining permits. Then again, itâs not only small-scale miners who have been caught in areas already committed to major mining operations. A3UNA Mining Corporation, a large-scale mining permit holder, has also been accused of straying into the sites of its fellow big companies â and far too many times at that. More...
STA. CRUZ, ZAMBALES â Nickel is not doing too well in the world market these days, but residents here do not seem to mind, even though nickel has become one of this townâs major revenue earners. Thatâs because whenever nickel commands top dollar, red dust smothers the town's main highway and the pier, and red mud cakes the roads. Residents also have to share their small barangay roads with huge, lumbering trucks, and when rains come, flood waters the color of blood fill their ricefields. Meanwhile, up in the mountains, armed guards hired by mining firms menace real and imagined foes and sometimes engage each other in deadly shootouts. No wonder Zambales Governor Amor Deloso has taken to describing Sta. Cruz â some 170 kilometers north of Manila -- as âparang Iraq (like Iraq)." Deloso seems to confine such a description to what he and others say is the increased militarization in this town because of mining. But he may well also be describing the helter-skelter way mining is being conducted in the entire province, recalling the mayhem and lawlessness in Iraq. Ironically, according to local officials and ordinary Zambaleños, the situation can be traced largely to no less than Delosoâs mining policies. The governor himself says that Zambales has become a âbattleground between big and small interests, national against local officials, with some intramurals between me and the mayor (of Sta. Cruz)." Yet he is unapologetic about the policies on mining he has crafted, even though lawyers and some local officials say the legality of these are, at the very least, suspect, especially those pertaining to small-scale mining. These are also why unearthing Zambalesâs minerals (which include chromite and gold and are estimated to be worth billions of dollars) has turned the province into a virtual powder keg waiting to explode. Environment and Natural Resources Secretary Joselito âLitoâ Atienza has called Zambales âthe most problematic province in terms of mining." 
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