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the Philippines illegal Logging has
finally reached the point where extreme and drastic measures need to be
taken...and taken immediately. By some estimates, only two-percent of the
forest cover of the Sierra Madre Range is still left standing! This is an
absolute disaster. It is also the kind of preventable disaster that seems to
occur quite frequently in the Philippines, where lackadaisical and haphazard
implementation of environmental laws are commonplace.
Illegal logging syndicates such as those in
the town of Mauban, Quezon have flaunted their disregard for the country's
logging laws for decades. And many of these illegal loggers have become
millionaires many times over using the villagers and tribesmen in the area
to do the "dirty work" for them.
The recent typhoons that raved the country
and the resulting flooding and loss of life as a result of denuded forests
brought home the point that the country has reached the point of where only
the most drastic measures must be taken.
Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo was correct in forming a task force
and giving them "one month to identify, investigate and prosecute the
big-time illegal loggers. Philippine NewsLink hopes that actual prosecutions
will result from this endeavor and not the "whitewash zarzuela" that often
occurs in the Philippines.
In fact we even go a step further and
support Manila Archbishop Gaudencio Rosales,
call for a total log ban of 30-50 years. This seems to be the only way to
halt the destruction of the forests and mountain ranges. As members of this
generation, we cannot escape blame or the anger of our children should we
hand over to them a country denuded of its forests and aquifers, and prone
to flooding and landslides with every typhoon.
Filipino-Americans as well as other
Filipino communities overseas need to take a vigilant stand and see to it
that the country's precious natural resources are cared for and well protected.
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