TEN POINT HUMAN
RIGHTS AGENDA ON MINING
Mining has been in the national agenda for more than a
decade. The assumption into office of PNoy gave hope for a policy change in
mining. Unfortunately, government continues to aggressively promote mining as revenue-generating
industry despite continued and widespread protests by mining-affected
communities as well as civil society.
The State has the fundamental obligation to respect, protect
and fulfill human rights not only for the current generation but for future
generations. These trinitarian obligations govern the conduct of the State in
relation to its peoples and it is by these that States are weighed and judged
for their sins of commission and omission.
As the electoral campaign period provides an opportunity to
propagate the peoples issues and concerns on Mining; human rights,
environmental, indigenous peoples and women’s’ groups have come together and developed a 10 Point
Human Rights Agenda on Mining. It is a platform to unite all anti-mining groups
and individuals during the electoral period. It is an agenda to challenge all
candidates to take up and respond to the call for an end to large-scale mining.
10 POINT HR
AGENDA ON MINING
- SCRAP Mining Act of 1995! Enact Alternative Minerals Management
Bill. The implementation of RA 7942
(Philippine Mining Act of 1995) continues the mismanagement of our mineral
resources. This law is flawed in as
much as it fails to recognize the rights of communities, local governments
and indigenous peoples to effectively participate in deciding to accept
mining or not. We need a new mining
law that will promote not only the economic rights of Filipinos through a
more just sharing of benefits from minerals, but also a rational way of
valuing and managing our minerals towards national industrialization.
- Stop large scale mining. Large-scale mining permanently disturbs the ecological
and natural characteristics of an area.
It is the most economical and efficient method for a mining company
to earn the most profits, but also introduces a wide array of potential
human rights abuses and human rights violations. Large-scale mining are owned and
operated by local and transnational corporations who will use deception,
bribery, harassment, violence, para-military forces and even
extra-judicial killings to silence and impede resistance against their
mining projects. Large-scale mining operations also entail large-scale
negative impacts to lives and livelihoods of mining-affected communities,
including physical dislocation, unstable jobs, cultural displacement,
social disintegration and environmental degradation.
- Respect, protect and fulfill Indigenous Peoples (IP) Rights
to self determination (FPIC). One
of the most serious issues against mining is the failure to secure genuine
free, prior and informed consent from indigenous peoples (IPs). Almost two-thirds of titled and claimed
ancestral domains are directly impacted by mining applications and
operations here in the Philippines.
Several cases of violations of FPIC are documented in Cordillera,
Zambales, Aurora-Quezon, Palawan, Mindoro, Romblon, Zamboanga, and South
Cotabato, all involving mining projects.
There are numerous cases in CARAGA, where overlaps of mining
tenements and ancestral domains are recorded in almost all of the
remaining forests in the region.
The traditional customary laws and indigenous governance systems of
indigenous communities are threatened as mining companies employ their
divide and rule tactics, to falsely secure the FPIC requirement prescribed
by the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA).
- Protect women human rights defenders and IP women in
mining areas. Rural and indigenous
women are at the forefront in the struggle against mining. They recognize
and actually feel the adverse impacts of mining on the lives of their
families and communities – food security, economic activities, social
values, peace and order among others. Prostitution in the communities is
one of the worsening impacts of mining. They see the fight against mining
as a task that rural and indigenous women have to take on for the survival
of their communities, and of themselves. This is why they have been
targets of threats, harassments and killings. With Juvy Capion, B’laan leader, who was
murdered in October 2012, a long list of women human rights defenders from
rural and indigenous communities affected by mining has experiences of
cases filed against them, receives threats against them and their
families, bodily harmed, subjects of malicious gossips to discredit their
leadership.
- Stop exploitation of workers in Mining Sites. The mining industry has not only
exploited our natural resources but has continually exploited our workers.
Filipino workers are exposed to extreme working conditions in mining areas
where there is poor ventilation, dust, fumes and other chemical and
biological danger. Aside from these, some mining companies are even using
outdated procedures that further aggravate risks to its workers. Unfair
labor practice is also common in mining industries. Contrary to the promise
that mining in the Philippines will bring in most needed jobs, mining
operations hardly translated with employment. And even when it does, jobs
it generates are mostly contractual in nature. Workers in mining companies
also suffer from low wages. According to the International Solidarity
Mission on Mining (ISMM), large scale mining companies earn as much as P36
million for a two day work of a skilled Filipino miner who receives as low
as P233 daily wage, sometimes even less than the prescribed minimum wage.
Labor unions are also suppressed and prevented to organize, mining
companies even organize their own “company union” to compete with the
legitimate union.
- Protect our environment and right to safe, sound and
balanced ecology. Numerous mining
applications and projects are situated in the remaining forests of the
Philippines. This is problematic as
we only have less than 18% forest cover remaining, when an ideal
percentage should be at least 50% for a good climatic regulatory
function. Mining contracts currently
contain provisions that give mining companies auxiliary rights to timber,
water, easement within their mining areas.
The massive cutting of trees and forests, diversion of water
resources and intrusive construction of infrastructures imperils the sound
ecology of the Philippines, including access to water for irrigation and
domestic consumption. Philippine
biodiversity is directly threatened as habitats are destroyed by mining.
With decreasing forest cover, the Philippines is made more ill-equipped to
face the climate crisis, and the poor are faced with increased risks and
vulnerabilities brought by disasters such as typhoons, landslides, floods
and erosions.
- Stop the killings!
Protect Human Rights Defenders! The proliferation of mining operations in the country
also heralded the killings of Human Rights Defenders (HRDs) in the
course of their stand against large-scale mining, advocacy on environment
protection and human rights of people affected by the mining operations.
Some of the most prominent HRDs who died were Fr. Fausto
Tentorio of North Cotabato and Dr. Gerry Ortega of Palawan but
there are less known HRDs who were equally courageous and
suffered the same fate, such as Genesis Ambason of Agusan del
Sur; Francisco Canayong of Leyte; Armin
Marin of Romblon; Gensun Agustin of Cagayan; Datu Roy Bagtikan
Gallego of Surigao Sur and many others. The companies’ private
security agencies, the military and para-military groups are directly
responsible for the killings but the owners of companies and the
government are equally liable and responsible.
- Stop displacement of
rural folks. Protect the right to food, water, housing and access to means
of subsistence. Due to lack of consultations and non-disclosure of
relevant information, large-scale mining have often led to forced eviction of indigenous
peoples and other community residents within the permit area. Documented cases also showed that mining
companies’ clearing operations have caused confusion, instilled fear, and
stirred conflict in affected areas. Once the operation starts, mining poses risks
to water sources not only of the impact area but also of downstream
communities. Mining consumes large
quantity of water and pollutes water sources which could jeopardize food
production and the health of residents. Displacement
of rural women renders them vulnerable to sex trafficking.
- Stop militarization and deployment of investment defense
forces. The entry of mining in
the communities has militarized the areas. Often the military is deployed
and utilized to defend the interests of mining companies and to pacify
peoples’ resistance. Mining companies have formed their own paramilitary
forces to wreak terror and divide the communities. Militarization has
brought numerous deaths and destruction, countless violations of human and
peoples’ rights.
- Justice for all victims
of mining related Human Rights Violations. Stop development aggression!
Development is
development aggression when the people become the victims, not the beneficiaries; when the people are set aside in
development planning, not partners in development; and when people
are considered mere resources for profit-oriented development, not the
center of development . . . . Development aggression violates the human
rights of our people in all their dimensions—economic, social, cultural,
civil and political.
Endorsed
by:
AKBAYAN Partylist
Aniban ng Mangagawa sa
Agrikultura (AMA)
Alyansa Tigil Mina (ATM)
Association of Major
Religious Superiors in the Philippines (AMRSP)
BAWGBUG
Coalition Against
Trafficking In Women – Asia Pacific (CATW-AP)
FIAN Philippines
FIND
Freedom from Debt Coalition
(FDC)
Human Rights
Defenders-Pilipinas (HRDP)
Human Rights Online
Philippines (HRonlinePH.com)
KPML
Legal Rights and Natural
Resources Center-KSK-FOE
LILAK (Purple Action for
Indigenous Women’s Rights)
Medical Action Group (MAG)
Partido ng Mangagawa (PM)
Peoples
Development Institute (PDI)
Philippine Alliance of Human
Rights Advocates (PAHRA)
Philippine Human Rights
Information Center (PhilRights)
Philippine Misereor
Partnership, Inc. (PMPI)
Philippine Movement for
Climate Justice (PMCJ)
Pambansang
Koalisyon ng Kababaihan sa Kanayunan (PKKK)
Pambansang Kalipunan ng mga
Samahan sa Kanayunan (PKSK)
SOS Yamang Bayan Network
Task Force Detainees of the
Philippines (TFDP)
SALAKNIB
SANLAKAS Partylist
UMALAB KA Partylist
World
March of Women - Pilipinas
Anak Mindanao (AMIN)
Partylist
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