PMCJ to ADB: Out of Asia!

The Philippine Movement for Climate Justice calls on the Asian Development Bank to push for an energy policy that truly liberates the countries from dirty, destructive, coal and fossil fuels and uphold the commitments enshrined in Sustainable Development Goals Agenda, Strategy 2030, and the Paris Climate Deal.

After almost 10 years of the adoption of the Energy Policy, several agreements and binding documents were drafted to give weight on the ADB’s goal to lessen the impacts of climate change and provide frameworks for global collective action to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. However, despite the existence of these, ADB’s Energy Policy still continues to allow for the financing of infrastructures that supports new coal plants and other coal-related industries.

Proof of the matter is, in the Philippines, ADB has also extended loans of $120 million for the construction of the Korea Electric Power Corporation’s 200-MW coal-fired power plant in Cebu province and $200 million for the rehabilitation of the Masinloc Power Partners Ltd.’s 600-MW coal-fired thermal power plant in the Zambales province. It has an approved project for Philippine Investment Alliance for Infrastructure (PINAI) wherein equity investment worth $1,054,850 million was approved. This involves a 552 MW coal-fired power plant in Kauswagan, Lanao del Norte – a joint venture of GNPower Kauswagan and PINAI.

Clearly, ADB failed to stay true to its goals and failed to go beyond ceremonial meetings. ADB has failed to fulfill its mandate.

It is not enough to recognize that millions have been left behind and remain desperately poor. Long term and sustainable solutions should have been the benchmark of assessing its performance above all else

It is about time that we hold ADB accountable for supporting the coal industry and for failing to see the bigger picture of how poor remains to be the most vulnerable sector affected by the impacts of climate change exacerbated with the continuous emissions of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

The existence of some coal industries here in the country has been fueled and empowered by ADB’s misguided support to the coaligarchs which causes miseries and suffering to the people.

We demand ADB out of Asia Now!

Stop funding climate disasters!

ADB, breakfree from fossil fuels!

Church Leaders Condemn Killing of Young Priest

Fr. Shay Cullen

4 May 2018 

Catholic church leaders have spoken out to condemn the brutal killing of a young priest, Father Mark Anthony Ventura, 37, from Gattaran town in the province of Cagayan last  Sunday, 29 April 2018. Father Mark was shot by an assassin at Barangay Piña Weste gymnasium on the outskirts of Gattaran town after celebrating the Eucharistic mass. He was blessing children and chatting to the members of the parish choir when he was shot dead. The gunman ran away and escaped on a motorcycle driven by another man.

Archbishop Romulo G. Valles, president of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines, said in a statement: “We are totally shocked and in utter disbelief to hear about the brutal killing of Fr. Mark Ventura, Catholic priest of the Archdiocese of Tuguegarao. Right after celebrating the Sunday Eucharist at 8 o’clock in the morning today, he was shot to death by murderers riding in tandem. We offer our prayers for Fr Ventura, for his bereaved family and the lay faithful of Tuguegarao. . . We condemn this evil act! We make our appeal to the authorities to act swiftly in going after the perpetrators of this crime and to bring them to justice.”

Father Mark was outspoken in support of the rights of the indigenous people and was against the mining activities that are intruding into their ancestral lands. Father Mark is newly appointed director of the San Isidro Labrador Mission Station in Mabuno village, also in the town of Gattaran.

The indigenous people in the region are under great pressure from the local and international mining interests who are striving to get access to the rich mineral deposits in the ancestral lands of the indigenous people. Father Mark was said to have supported them in their struggle for justice. Some tribal leaders have been vilified as terrorists thus justifying military action against them. Liberal Party president Senator Francis Pangilinan also said his party “condemns the senseless killing” of Father Mark Ventura.

Hit men are also targeting supporters of human rights and political prisoners. Father Marcelito Paez, 72, was assassinated by unknown riding-in-tandem hit men on a motorcycle in Jaen, Nueva Ecija last December 2017. He was helping a jailed political prisoner at the time of his brutal murder. The Italian priest, Father Fausto Tentorio, 59, was murdered in North Cotabato in October  2011 when he was leaving his rectory by a motorbike-riding hit man. Father “ Pops,” as he was called, was the third missionary priest of the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions (PIME) who was murdered in the Philippines. He died inside the compound of the Mother of Perpetual Help Parish church in Arakan, North Cotobato, Mindanao. When local mining firms backed by multinational mining corporations encroached into the ancestral lands of the indigenous people, Father “Pops” was there to help them fight for their The fellow missionaries of Father “Pops” were murdered also.

Father Tulio Favali was brutally killed on April 11, 1985 in Tulunan, North Cotabato and Father Salvatore Carzedda was killed in 1992 in Zamboanga City. Recently, Sister Patricia Fox from Australia has been ordered to leave the Philippines for allegedly “engaging in activities that are not in keeping with the terms of her missionary visa.” She attended a rally for political prisoners and helped indigenous peoples also.

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