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Surigao mining attacks likened to Pearl Harbor

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MINING’S PEARL HARBOR? Smoke billows from dozens of heavy equipment set ablaze by communist guerrillas in Monday’s raid on the compound of Taganito Mining Corp. in Claver, Surigao del Norte. ROEL N. CATOTO/CONTRIBUTOR

Attacks by the communist New People’s Army on three mining firms in Claver, Surigao del Norte province, are causing jitters in the mining industry and sending the message that investments might not be safe without tight security, the Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB) said Tuesday.

“Any assault on a mine is a serious thing. There are investments there. A mining project is capital intensive. If you hear such news of an attack, it’s a cause for worry for the industry,” MGB Director Leo Jasareno said in an interview by phone.

“It’s like the Pearl Harbor of the mining industry,” said the source who conducted an on site inspection of the compounds of Taganito Mining Corp. (TMC) and Platinum Group Metals Corp. (PGMC) in Claver a day after the attacks.

Pearl Harbor refers to the surprise Japanese attack on the US Pacific naval fleet in Hawaii on Dec. 7, 1941, that forced the United States to join the war against the Axis Powers that included Japan and Germany.

An industry source, who asked not to be named, said the coordinated raids damaged about P3-billion worth of property. Interior Secretary Jesse Robredo, however, estimated the damage at $1.5 billion.

Jasareno said the burning of equipment, vehicles and facilities of Taganito Mining Corp., Taganito HPAL Nickel Corp. and Platinum Group Metals Corp. would take its toll on the investment climate in general.

Besides, such attacks threatened the livelihood of thousands of Filipinos employed by the mines, and the revenue of the government, Jasareno added.

“It will definitely have an adverse impact. Investments are placed at risk by such attacks,” said the official, who received a flurry of text messages from stakeholders expressing concern.

“Imagine now an investment without security. While this is an isolated incident, it poses risks to investments,” he added.

Responsible mining

In a statement, the Chamber of Mines said the insurgents “may not want to see the kind of development that large-scale responsible mining has to offer since they thrive on poverty as it swells their numbers.”

Rocky Dimaculangan, vice president for communications at the Chamber of Mines, said the communist rebels’ threats to launch attacks on other mining sites were a cause for concern. But he said mining companies would continue to invest in the Philippines given government support.

“Chamber of Mines members are determined to pursue their projects as long as we have the support of the government and our host communities,” Dimaculangan said.

The military claimed that the three mining firms’ refusal to pay “revolutionary taxes” prompted the attacks. But a rebel leader said that the mines violated the group’s policies on the environment by destroying the environment and maltreating their employees.

There are 30 metallic mines across the country including 10 in Surigao.

The Philippines is the world’s fifth most mineralized country, with large reserves of minerals, including gold, copper and nickel. But extraction and production has been slow, hampered by bureaucracy and red tape and a concerted campaign by environment activists against mining.

Last year, investments reached $956 million. Environment Secretary Ramon Paje said last month that mining was forecast to grow 17 percent this year, with investments reaching $18 billion by 2016.

132 dump trucks, 9 barges

Among those razed were HPAL’s smelting plant, TMC’s guest house, 132 dump trucks, 22 backhoes, nine barges, two cranes, two bulldozers, a compactor and a grader, Surigao del Norte Governor Sol Matugas told reporters at a briefing in Claver town.

The Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) said the MV Con Carrier-7, a cargo ship of Aleson Shipping docked at Taganito Mining Port, was also bombed by the rebels at around 11:40 a.m. on Monday after they ordered the crew to disembark.

The ship was loaded with 9,000 liters of fuel oil, 368 liters of lube oil and 138 liters of hydraulic oil. All the 19 crew of Con Carrier-7 were safe, according to PCG spokesperson Lieutenant Commander Algier Ricafrente.

Ricafrente said five foreign vessels anchored about five kilometers north of Taganito had been advised to proceed to a safer area near Hikdop Island north of Surigao City or near the city port.

Single largest investment

The smelting plant, a joint venture of TMC and Sumitomo Metal Mining Co. Ltd., was expected to be completed next year at a cost of $1.4 billion and would have been fully operational in August 2013. Taganito’s nickel-processing plant is the single largest investment in the country’s minerals sector to date, according to the Chamber of Mines.

Matugas said the attack crippled at least 70 percent of the facilities of TMC, HPAL and PGMC in Claver, which lies 60 kilometers southeast of this city.

Emmanuel Samson, chief finance officer of Nickel Asia Corp., TMC’s mother company, said TMC’s mining operations and the loading of mined nickel ore at the company’s Taganito wharf would be suspended indefinitely.

“The damage wrought by the attack and the fear among foreign consultants and local workers that followed made it impossible for the company to immediately restart operations despite the presence of additional military troops in Barangay (village) Taganito-the mine area,” Samson said.

The Philippine Daily Inquirer learned that PGMC, which is based in nearby Barangay Cagdianao, was also temporarily suspending operations.

Diverting output

Nickel Asia Corp., the Philippines’ top nickel producer, will divert output from two mines to cover ore shipments from its Taganito mine.

The company also plans to hire equipment from other firms to replace machinery destroyed in the raid, allowing it to ship stockpiled ore from the Taganito nickel mine.

Shares of Nickel Asia on Tuesday dropped by 13 percent in early trading on the Philippine Stock Exchange after the mine operator suspended activities because of the attack. The stock ended the day down 2.55 percent.

5,000 workers displaced

Matugas said some 5,000 workers directly hired by the three mining firms would be displaced by the suspension of their operations.

TMC alone, which has announced it was suspending operation, employs more than 1,000 workers.

Matugas said the attacks would surely discourage investments in the province and would stunt the province’s aggressive tourism programs.

The attacks occurred at a time when the International Surfing Cup—participated in by a dozen American, Australian and Japanese surfers—was wrapping up in Siargao Island, she said.

Isolated

But Robredo, who went to Claver yesterday, said the attacks were “isolated” and were meant as a “show of force” by the New People’s Army.

He said he was hoping that the mining firms would realize this and resume operations.

The government plans to “further fortify” security in the mining sites by adding more troops, according to Robredo.

Jasareno said that it was the call of the Armed Forces of the Philippines to secure the mines.

“I agree that it’s an isolated case. They were able to attack the mines with the military not being able to respond immediately. That’s not always the case. The military has been given directives to protect investments and it is strategically located to respond immediately,” he said.

‘Antipeople’

The Philippine Mine Safety and Environment Association condemned the attacks.

“We appeal to the government for protection of mine operations and sound investments which contribute the needed taxes to improve our economy as well as provide livelihood and jobs for poor Filipinos, among others,” Louie Sarmiento, president of the association, said in a statement.

A group of Filipino miners, Ang Minero, also branded the NPA raids on Surigao mines as “terrorist acts which are blatantly antipeople.” With reports from Doris C. Dumlao, Riza T. Olchondra and Jerome Aning in Manila; Dennis Jay Santos, Inquirer Mindanao; and AP and Reuters


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Tags: Business , CPP , Crime , Government , Insurgency , Investments , MGB , Mines and Geosciences Bureau , Mining , Nickel Asia Corp. , NPA , Quarrying , Security , Surigao Mine Attacks , Violence

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_PPUPSBWP2WEBCCPGHRY54UCTOM Anne Torre

    Robredo considered the violent attack on the mining company isolated simply because he wants to run away from his job. He shirk in the thick of the atrocities done by the NPA, maybe sensing that this might bring pressure to his idol Noynoy.

  • Anonymous

    Where is the statement of the President? His reaction, please?

  • Anonymous

    If you want to stop something like this from happening without having to deploy large numbers of troops or policemen, hire PMC’s (private military contractors). They’re tried, battle-hardened, and proven; not to mention, ready to kill for the money you give them. Mining companies can definitely afford to hire them and having them around will make the NPA think twice about messing with them.

  • Anonymous

    You have taken my comment completely wrong. However, that’s your privilege. For one, violence of this manner is always deplorable and destructive for everyone,especially the economies of the host nation. The Tarlac incident is a clear reminder “they” can inflict maximum damage closer to the nation’s Capital and, is imperative for Malacanang to shore-up confidence to multi-nationals and security : by bringing “them”  to justice. I have not set foot that far to obtain a first-hand view of the Town and review its progress.
     
    My comment was generalized to cover the workings of large foreign corporations throughout this nation and in addition, over the proposition of equity change, which may narrow the gap of fairness for the naïve and the landless. If you are an employee for a Japanese Corp., and an executive in the field of your talent, you are lucky. I know the Japanese and Korean mindsets, when it comes to commerce: in the US, Europe and Australia their approach is clinical. This is why, Asean’s Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia (even Indonesia) have set certain standards for fair-play, when it involves multi-nationals, especially those coming from Asia.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ELNNDRIW3CUVL2BRTRHF43WAXU badz

    These incident is a good example on how the current administration can handle this internal issues within sa bansa natin, Filipinos vs. Filipinos interest.  Napakabigat na problema eto and this would lead to economic crisis sa bansa natin pag hindi magawan ng solution.  Eto na ang pagkakataon na bawat panig ng malacanang, respective government bureau and agencies, local government unit and local residents should seriously sit down and talk, seriously address the conflicts for the benefit and prosperity of Filipinos and development sa bansa natin.  Lets move ahead!!!  Lets not be a BROKEN CULTURE.  We are lag behind 2 decades in our developed neighboring countries.     

  • Anonymous

    DENR-Destruction Environmental Natural Resources look what have done,Taganito environmental terrorist in the name of corporate greed you Rape mother nature.Poison the river,I dont like NPA ,but they are correct to stop the environmental damage,luckyly no one die……

  • Anonymous

    NPA’s are hypocrites. Destruction for not paying “revolutionary tax”? Really? It’s extortion trying to pass as a noble cause.

    • Hexel Dagooc

      are you really sure that it was all for extortion only or are you just parroting what the shamed military and police forces and the government said in the media?

      • Anonymous

        No, i just need a dictionary. Extortion by definition is obtaining money/asset from an organization/institution through coercion. Kahit saan mong angulo tignan that’s how NPA’s Revolutionary Tax works – pay up or else. No cause can be considered noble when you attach destruction and coercion to it.

  • Anonymous

    how will invite more investors like this? if we have a corrupt public official and npa both trying to extort u at the same time….trsut me i experienced both…… pareho cla pabigat….dont tell me ur environmentalist thats bs coz…so r the npa paying the bills for the 5000 displaced workers.. if they r uspporting  a family of four that’s 20000….. not only that  how about the local sari sari store wala na bibili sa knila dahil walang pera  tao…..im  sure they have a family to support din this number could raise to easy 40000 people without source of income….NPA u better think….kayo nasa bundok  yung mga leader nyo who knows where eating what they want doin what they want…

  • Anonymous

    Total war is the answer.
    Tutal, sinasabi ng mga bulok na NPA na tanging rebolusyon lang ang sagot sa pagbabago ng Pilipinas, puwes, total war ang isagot sa kanila hanggang maubos sila. Malaysia and Indonesia did it and they succeed.

    • Hexel Dagooc

      ang daling sabihin nyan parekoy pero mabigat na desisyon yan. naisip mo bang magkano gagastusin ng gobyerno mula sa kaban ng bayan para sa giyera na yan imbes na ipatayo na lang ng mga paaralan at ospital at kalsada. bukod pa ito sa collateral damage doon sa lugar kung saan magaganap ang giyera. the real world is not like Call of Duty or Counter Strike PC games my friend. in the first place, wala naman sanang mga organisasyong ganyan kung hindi lang pabaya ang gobyerno sa pagkilala at pag-alaga sa mga karapatan at pangangailangan ng kanyang mga mamamayan at kung kanya lamang talagang tinupad ang mga tungkulin nito sa bayan. isa rin tayo sa dahilan ng problema kaibigan sapagkat hinayaan natin na pamunuan tayo ng mga sakim at walang hiyang opisyal ng pamahalaan.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_SE67KFOJUESAU6ZKXWOTXUZYC4 Derrick

    The mining attack was not an act of terrorism; it was carried out to save the environment from further damages, and to stop the mass dislocation of the indigenous people in the province who have been affected by these large-scale mining operations.   While the Philippine government has shown disregard for the indigenous people’s fight to protect their sources of livelihood and ancestral domain, the rebel group showed its concern for the indigenous people by carrying out the mining attack.  Now who between the elected government officials and the rebels genuinely serve their “bosses”?  Many of us may not agree with the political ideology adhered to by the communist rebels but it is downright unfair to brand this group as terrorist.  If there are terrorists in this incident, it’s indubitably the greedy owners of the mining companies and the government officials.

    • Anonymous

      Wake up. You are still in ideology period. You are being used by foreign interest. They take advantage of your dinosaur ideology. Am not surprised if you become terrorist some day. I hope your family will not be victims of terrorism if the people who likes mining will also get even by killing those against mining including you and your family

    • jhun jhun valdez

      are you one of them? so pity on you… if that was the case you are one of the terrorist, because you are the one who use the product from mining… i dare you!! before i believe you, be sure you did not use anything from mining!!!



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