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YINGLONG operations, which are passed off as road construction, heavily scarify the mountainside in Uacon.
CAUSA VERDE
Residents of Uacon village in Candelaria, Zambales, resist a mining operation that threatens their homes, farms
U
Text & Photos by Henry Empeño
ACON, Candelaria, Zambales— Even from afar, the scars on the mountain are visible: heavy brown cuts that slashed through the green. These were created by machines that clawed at the earth, ripping apart vegetation in the process, and tearing down whole slopes just to get the nickelbearing dirt. But only residents of this lakeside village now seem to mind the growing danger this operation poses to their livelihood and home.
Uacon Barangay Captain Daniel Esteron said residents first brought the mining operation to the attention of local officials in February when they saw backhoes digging on the mountainside at Duplac, an area east of the Uacon Lake, which is an important water resource in the community. Esteron said local officials organized an inspection of the work site with Mayor Napoleon Edquid on February 23, and in confronting the workers there learned that Ying long Steel Corp., a company based in the neighboring town of Santa Cruz, was constructing roads in the area. The problem was Yinglong had not applied for permits, and Uacon officials did not know about the project being undertaken in their barangay. “So, Mayor Edquid told Yinglong to stop their operation and to explain before the town council,” Esteron related. When company officials did explain to the council on March 1, Esteron said they found the explanation hard to believe. “Yinglong reasoned out that they did not know they were already operating in Candelaria,” Esteron said.
No permit to show
AS Esteron and other Uacon residents would learn later, Yinglong has apparently taken over where Westchinamin Corp., a company which had proposed to mine for nickel and build a
ferro-nickel processing plant in Candelaria, had left off. Earlier, Westchinamin presented its project to President Duterte in Malacañang on April 4, 2018, committing itself to be a responsible miner, and assuring Duterte that it will ensure the simultaneous rehabilitation of mined out areas. Its project, however, was rejected by Candelaria residents in 2019 and, thus, did not prosper. On the other hand, Yinglong entered the local picture after its proposed steel production plant project at Barangay Pangascasan in Sual, Pangasinan, did not push through in 2017. Flores Ednave-Mistica, president of the environment group Save Candelaria, Zambales Movement Inc. (SCZMI), said Yinglong could be using Westchinamin’s Mineral Production Sharing Agreement (MPSA) and Environmental Compliance Certificate (ECC), as it is now digging at Parcel VII, a part of Westchinamin’s MPSA. Mistica said Westchinamin’s mining claim originally covered only 286 hectares in Guinabon, Santa Cruz, but this was later expanded in 2016 to cover 3,336 hectares, including various areas in Candelaria. Mistica recalled that in a consultation for the passage in April of a town ordinance regulating mining operations in Candelaria, representatives of the Mines and
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THE Yinglong mine site sits atop the Duplac River, which flows into the Uacon Lake and irrigates farmlands.
Geosciences Bureau (MGB) of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources in Region 3 said that Yinglong was just building access roads, as it was still in exploration stage, and that MGB’s regulatory power did not cover such activity. “But it’s not only access roads they’re working on,” Mistica said. “They have been making nickel stockpiles onsite and these are later brought down to a depot in Lucapon South [a barangay in Santa Cruz].” Esteron said Yinglong officials cannot show any mining permit nor tree-cutting permit for all its ongoing activities at Duplac. “I’ve also asked them if they have any document to prove that Westchinamin has assigned its area to Yinglong, but what they sent me in return was a box of tikoy,” Esteron added, referring to the sticky Chinese delicacy.
Battle for the mind
IN the absence of legal documents, Yinglong has apparently conduct-
ed an aggressive campaign to win over the residents of Candelaria, most especially local officials. On its social-media page, Yinglong has posted photos of outreach projects all over Candelaria, Santa Cruz and other neighboring communities that it described as “part of our social development effort”. Under this program, its community relations team distributed “bundles of joy” (bags of bread and other foodstuff) to the barangay halls of Lucapon North and Lucapon South in Santa Cruz, Uacon in Candelaria, the Santa Cruz Police Station, and the Masinloc Coast Guard office on December 23, 2020; alcohol and facemasks to checkpoints at barangays Lucapon South, Gama, and Maya in Santa Cruz and Infanta, Pangasinan, on January 19 and 26; and boxes of special tikoy on Chinese New Year to barangay offices in Taposo, Pamibian, Malabon, Malimanga, Sinabacan and Uacon. Yinglong also announced giving financial aid to barangay Sinabacan on January 26 this year for
the celebration of the Feast of Saint Lourdes; trash cans to barangay Malimanga on March 18 for waste management; food items, facemasks and alcohol at the villages of Taposo, Pamibian, Malimanga on April 9; burial assistance to two families in Lucapon South and Lucapon North on April 10; and 25 reams of bond paper and eight bottles of printer ink to the Sinabacan Elementary School on April 13 for printing modules. The company donated to local churches—five sacks of rice, four boxes of facemasks, and two gallons of alcohol each to the Saint Michael the Archangel Parish in Santa Cruz and the Saint Vincent Parish in Candelaria on April 16. On the same day, Yinglong gave medical help to a family and burial assistance to another family in Lucapon South. On April 21, Yinglong turned over a 32-inch android TV and satellite dish, as well as 11 sets of barangay uniform to Barangay Malimanga, and on the following day, which was “Earth Day”, it con-
ducted a tree-planting event at Lucapon South, a clean-up along the highway in the same barangay, as well as along the coast at Lucapon South. Last month saw Yinglong donating “assorted goods” to tricycle operators and drivers in the villages of Catol, Babancal and Taposo, and the Malabon community pantry on May 11; financial assistance and assorted raffle items on May 14 to barangay Malimanga for the upcoming feast of the local patron saint; and burial assistance to a family in Lucapon North and three families in Lucapon South, as well as medical help to three other families in Santa Cruz town on May 14. On May 25, the mining firm gave away water jugs to six tricycle operators and drivers’ groups, and turned over 20 reams of bond paper and 16 bottles of printer ink to the Lucapon South Elementary School. Yinglong’s latest post on June 15 showed that it turned over a Continued on A2
n JAPAN 0.4406 n UK 67.9971 n HK 6.2909 n CHINA 7.5458 n SINGAPORE 36.3703 n AUSTRALIA 37.0290 n EU 58.2686 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.0231
Source: BSP (June 25, 2021)