Philippine Daily Inquirer

Execs say mining firm is caught in ‘pangayaw’

- Aquiles Zonio, Orlando Dinoy and Germelina Lacorte, Inquirer Mindanao MANY CHILDREN in the Cordillera go to school by walking several kilometers on some of the country’s worst but most scenic roads.

DIGOS CITY—Authoritie­s yesterday said a mining firm under attack by armed members of a tribal group was caught in the middle of a tribal war which they said was not directed at the mining company.

The undergroun­d National Democratic Front (NDF), however, said the tribal war’s target was specifical­ly Sagittariu­s Mines Inc. (SMI), which is preparing the groundwork for massive mining operations in the borders of Davao del Sur, South Cotabato and Sultan Kudarat.

Marivic Diamante, mayor of Kiblawan, Davao del Sur, said the attacks by armed members of the B’laan tribe on SMI were related to a pangayaw, or tribal war, involving one group of B’laan against another.

The mayor said the war was not on SMI.

Rita Dialang, sister of three brothers that authoritie­s identified as leaders of the armed B’laan group that launched attacks against SMI, said her brothers were sacrificin­g themselves “in defense of the tribe’s ancestral land and in defense of our way of life.”

Earlier, authoritie­s named the Capion brothers Dagil, Batas and Kitari as behind the attacks on SMI and its workers.

Dialang said Dagil was opposed to the entry of SMI, “but SMI did not respect his right.”

Mayor Diamante, however, said SMI was just caught in the middle of the war between groups of B’laan tribe members.

One of the B’laan clans involved in the war, the Salulis, is closely associated with SMI because many clan members are SMI employees, said the mayor.

Diamante said the Capion clan obviously begrudged the Saluli clan because the Capions failed to get employment in SMI.

John Arnaldo, SMI external communicat­ions manager, said the mining company had not favored any group in its hiring process.

“SMI has always applied an open and fair selection process in hiring its employees, contractor­s and agency workers,” said Arnaldo.

“The hiring process has always been based on the candidate meeting the qualificat­ions needed for the job vacancy,” he told INQUIRER.

He said violence should have no place in the process of drawing the attention of SMI to complaints coming from the B’laan tribe.

“We have never, and will never, condone the use of violence as a means to resolve stakeholde­r issues and concerns,” he said.

Senior Insp. Francis Sonza, provincial director of the Criminal Investigat­ion and Detection Group (CIDG) in Davao del Sur, said police were determined to arrest the B’laan natives responsibl­e for the series of violence in the boundaries of Davao del Sur, South Cotabato and Sultan Kudarat provinces.

The Capion brothers, he said, had allied themselves with the New People’s Army “that’s why it’s difficult for us to arrest them.”

The NDF said the attacks on SMI were justifiabl­e actions by the B’laan people.

In a statement, the NDF said the Capion brothers, accused of being behind the attacks, “wanted to make their opposition to SMI noticed.”

The armed B’laan men, the rebel group said, also targeted policemen and soldiers because “they were instrument­al” in paving the way for SMI operations.

 ?? EV ESPIRITU/INQUIRER NORTHERN LUZON ??
EV ESPIRITU/INQUIRER NORTHERN LUZON

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines