Regional
Mining Conference 2005 The Cordillera Peoples Alliance website Posted: March 17, 2005 |
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Declaration
on the Cordillera Regional Mining Conference Baguio City, 4 March 2005 |
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We stand ready to defend our land and our patrimony against imperialist mining! We, the 245 participants in the Cordillera Regional Conference on Mining, representatives of people’s organizations in Benguet, Mountain Province, Abra, Kalinga, Apayao, and Ifugao, joined by a number of our counterparts from other regions, as well as representatives of regional, national, and international NGOs, declare: 1. We denounce the Supreme Court’s reversal of its own decision
on the constitutionality of provisions in the Mining Act of 1995 regarding
Financial or Technical Assistance Agreements (FTAA) between foreign mining
corporations and the state: in January 2004, the Court had declared that
these violated the Constitution’s provisions on the protection of
the Filipino people’s patrimony; but in December 2004, the Court
retracted this declaration, saying that the Filipino people needed foreign
assistance to optimize the country’s mineral wealth. We denounce the members of the Supreme Court for caving in to pressure to liberalize the mining industry as a supposed solution to the country’s financial crisis. We assert that the natural resources of the country should be used for the wellbeing of the people, not for the profit of foreign capitalists and their local partners within and outside the government. 2. We denounce the aggressive implementation of President Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo’s Executive Order 270 and Mineral Action Plan for the liberalization
of the Philippine mining industry. We affirm our stand that capitalist
mining will not solve the country’s financial crisis and will not
result in improved human development among the people. The experience
of the province of Benguet attests to this. Big capitalist corporations
have violated the rights of Benguet’s mine workers and deprived
thousands of Benguet’s peasants of their livelihoods. The communities
living around the province’s mining areas are now suffering the
long-term effects of severe environmental degradation. Internationally, countries that have relied too heavily on foreign capitalist mining are among the poorest and most heavily indebted. This shows that there is no truth to the claim that widespread capitalist mining brings development to a country and its people. 3. We affirm our traditions of small-scale artisanal mining as systems
which feature just relations and sustainable methods of production that
inflict little harm on the environment. It is in these living traditions
that we see how people can partake of the resources of the earth in a
rational manner, to meet basic needs. 4. We have learned that many of the 23 areas identified as priority mining locations in the Mineral Action Plan and the President’s Executive Order 270, Revitalizing the Philippine Mining Industry, are within the Cordillera provinces. These include the areas covered by the Teresa Gold and Far Southeast Gold Projects of the Lepanto Consolidated Mining Company, the Padcal Expansion Project of the Philex Mining Corporation, and the Itogon Gold Project of the Itogon-Suyoc Mines in the province of Benguet; the Batong Buhay Gold Project in the province of Kalinga; the Bucay Magnetite River Iron Sand Project, Sanvig Iron Sand and Alluvial Gold Project, and Capcapo Copper-Gold Project of the Abra Mining and Industrial Corporation in the province of Abra. In addition to these are more than 100 applications filed by various corporations for permits to mine the Cordillera – for example, Newmont’s applications for FTAAs that will cover large portions of Apayao, Kalinga, Mountain Province, Abra, the Ilocos Sur uplands, Benguet, Ifugao, and the Nueva Vizcaya uplands. All the applications combined cover 1.4 million hectares. If mining at the scale this indicates is allowed, the Cordillera will be devastated. We will not allow it. We will not allow our communities to be subjected to further oppression. We will not allow our rights as indigenous peoples to be trampled. We hereby warn all corporations who are planning to mine our lands that we will fight their entry into our peoples’ territories. We will likewise fight the entry of military and paramilitary forces sent by government to secure the projects of these capitalists. We will fight the militarization of the Cordillera! We hereby commit: That we shall consolidate and build greater unity among our communities
in an uncompromising struggle to prevent large mining operations from
being undertaken; That we shall assert our individual and collective human rights; That we shall remain vigilant in guarding and defending our lands, and that we will employ all possible means to prevent the destruction of our territories by large capitalist mining; That we will expose and oppose the bad practices of capitalist mining companies; That we will empower our communities, through education and organizing, for the defense of ancestral land and livelihood; That we will participate in a process of developing alternative mining programs and policies in the context of the Filipino people’s struggle for national industrialization and genuine agrarian reform; That we shall forge partnerships and solidarity relations with other progressive groups and individuals who are involved in anti-mining, human rights, and environmental defense struggles in our region, throughout the nation, and abroad. Junk the mining applications and revoke the mining permits of Defend the land and patrimony of the people against imperialist mining! Nullify EO270 and the Mineral Action Plan. Stop the liberalization of the Philippine mining industry! Scrap the Philippine Mining Act of 1995! Assert the genuine recognition of the indigenous peoples collective rights over their land and resources, and to self determination! Stop militarization and the violation of human rioghts! |