Home Headlines Global group tags PH most dangerous for land, environment defenders

Global group tags PH most dangerous for land, environment defenders

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CLARK FREEPORT — The international environmental watchdog Global Witness has declared the Philippines as the deadliest country in the world for land and environmental defenders.

In its latest annual report released yesterday, Global Witness noted that the land and environment- related death toll in the country already reached 30 in 2018, including the massacre of farm workers in the island of Negros.

Global Witness noted that worldwide, 164 land and environmental defenders were reported killed in 2018, which averages to more than three a week. Many more were attacked or jailed, it said.

It identified the countries with the highest overall number of recorded deaths as the Philippines with 30 deaths, Colombia with 24, India with 23, and Brazil with 20.

Global Witness said the “sharpest increase in murders came in Guatemala, with a fivefold rise in killings, making it one of the bloodiest countries per capita, with 16 deaths.”

“Mining was the deadliest sector, with 43 defenders killed protesting against the destructive effects of mineral extraction on people’s land, livelihoods and the environment,” its report said.

Global Witness also noted “an escalation of killings of defenders struggling for the protection of water sources, rising from 4 in 2017 to 17 in 2018.”

More than half of 2018 murders took place in Latin America, which has consistently ranked as the worst-affected continent since Global Witness began publishing data on killings in 2012, it added in its report.

Global Witness also linked “state security forces to 40 of the killings. Private actors like hitmen, criminal gangs and landowners were also the suspected aggressors in 40 deaths.”

“Criminalisation and aggressive civil cases are being used to stifle environmental activism and land rights defence right across the world, including in ‘developed’ countries like the US and the UK,” the report also said.

Leon Dulce, national coordinator of Kalikasan People’s Network for the Environment (Kalikasan PNE), one of the local partners of Global Witness in the Philippines, said “the ecological agriculture that landless farm workers have painstakingly carved out of the vast monoculture plantations of Negros sugar barons have been irrigated with blood and bullets. Since 2017 to date, at least 87 land and environment defenders have been murdered by military, paramilitary troops, and other state forces for carrying out land occupation and cultivation campaigns across the island.”

Killing fields

Dulce noted that “the killing fields of Negros is the single biggest driver of environmental defenders in 2018. Scores more are being killed by the military rampage as we speak.”

The Global Witness report raised alarm over the “criminalisation of aggressive civil cases are being used to stifle environmental activism land rights defence.”

Alice Harrison, Senior Campaigner at Global Witness, said “it is a brutal irony that while judicial systems routinely allow the killers of defenders to walk free, they are also being used to brand the activists themselves as terrorists, spies or dangerous criminals. Both tactics send a clear message to other activists: the stakes for defending their rights are punishingly high for them, their families and their communities.”

This as Dulce also noted that “actions against land and natural resource monopolies are increasingly becoming targets of this systematic pattern of violence which the government condones. The unabated killings and the involvement of police, military and even judicial courts in cases of violations is an evidence that these attacks on human rights are state-sponsored. ”

“We fear that as environmental defenses such as the ongoing people’s barricade against Australian-Canadian miner Oceanagold become more and more the necessary option, so will the reprisals be for corporations and government who refuse to address the roots of the land and resource conflicts,” she added.

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