Businessmirror March 23, 2019

Page 1

DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY

2018 BANTOG DATA MEDIA AWARDS CHAMPION

BusinessMirror

www.businessmirror.com.ph

A broader look at today’s business n

Saturday, March 23, 2019 Vol. 14 No. 164

2018 EJAP JOURNALISM AWARDS

BUSINESS NEWS SOURCE OF THE YEAR

P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 24 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

Duterte admin showcases political will anew in Diwalwal massive cleanup drive

MERCURY STOPS RISING IN DIWALWAL

THE relocation area in Sitio Mabatas, Barangay Upper Ulip, Monkayo. MANUEL CAYON

D

By Manuel T. Cayon

IWALWAL, MONKAYO, Compostela Valley—The Duterte administration’s cleanup drive covering massive areas—with Boracay and Manila Bay as the prime examples—has reached Mindanao, after the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) served the final cease-and-desist order (CDO) to small miners in the Diwalwal gold rush site.

SOLDIERS were tapped to secure the residential and mining site and to provide security to the enforcement teams headed by environment and natural resources officers. MANUEL CAYON

This is another testament to the government’s political will, as like in the other ambitious cleanups, to be affected are thousands of miners and their families, plus their “influential” backers. The DENR and its concerned units are saving the waterways around the area from further mercury contamination due to the decades of small-scale mining in Diwalwal that was often marred with violence. This, to date, is the biggest clean-up drive in Mindanao by Environment Secretary Roy Cimatu, DENR Assistant Secretary Ruth M. Tawantawan said. The move has been set in motion last week after both DENR field officers and local government officials served with finality the CDO that bans any further pro-

cessing of gold ores near canals and rivers, and inside residential areas in Diwalwal.

Going, going, gone

AS soon as the last of the 1,797 ball mills, which are used to crush rocks and stones, and the 31 carbon in-pulp (CIP) machines, used to separate the gold from the ore dusts by applying cyanide, has been removed from the active mining and residential areas of Diwalwal, the dredging of the Naboc River would begin, Tawantawan said. The river is the main dumping waterway of these processing plants, which throw the mercuryand cyanide-laden water through the several tributary streams at the western slope of Mount Diwata Continued on A2

Long Thai crisis morphed coup leader’s career into politics

B

By Grant Peck | The Associated Press

ANGKOK—Prayuth Chan-ocha became prime minister in a very Thai way: He led a military coup.

Now after five years of running Thailand with absolute power, he’s seeking to hold on to the top job through the ballot box. The military’s thinly veiled proxy party has put forward Prayuth as its nominee for prime minister after Sunday’s election. “He knows he can’t be a dictator like this forever,” said Prajak Kongkirati, a political science lecturer at Bangkok’s Thammasat University. “He wants to gain more legitimacy and that’s why he’s holding the elections. He wants to return as a prime minister under normal politics.” After toppling the elected government in May 2014 with a pledge

to “return happiness to the people,” Prayuth outlawed criticism of his regime and vowed the country would not have elections as long as there was dissent. He promised elections and then delayed them every year he was in power. That’s given Prayuth time to smooth out some rough edges. He’s shed some awkward military stiffness, while still keeping a general’s swagger. He’s worn increasingly well-tailored suits—for which his wife takes credit—and, as pressure for an election mounted, largely transformed himself into the Thai equivalent of your typical babykissing politician. He can boast some accomplish-

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 52.8010

IN this Thursday, August 21, 2014, file photo, Thailand’s Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha arrives for an anniversary ceremony for the 21st infantry regiment, Queen’s Guard, in Chonburi Province, Thailand. AP

ments during his time at the helm, most notably some cleanup of the aviation, fishing and wildlife industries—which had put Thailand at peril of foreign economic sanctions—along with stepping up the fight against human trafficking, which also risked trade retaliation. Running the show has been fairly smooth though thanks to his government’s clampdown on opponents, the rubberstamp legislature he hand-picked and the law he enacted making all of his actions legal. Should he remain prime minister after the election, he will be without what he refers to as his “special powers” and his patience could be tested as he has to deal with actual elected lawmakers who may be unwilling to dance to his tune. “He has a strong personality— vigorous and direct. If he tries to become a politician, he could try to change but he would never really be able to change 100 percent,” See “Thai Crisis,” A2

n JAPAN 0.4765 n UK 69.2274 n HK 6.7286 n CHINA 7.8810 n SINGAPORE 39.1438 n AUSTRALIA 37.5468 n EU 60.0717 n SAUDI ARABIA 14.0807

Source: BSP (March 22, 2019 )


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.