'Relocate, compensate natives': Duterte pushes for Kaliwa Dam project

People who have lived beside the river for generations use fishing rods to catch fish to eat.
Philstar.com/Efigenio Christopher Toledo, File

MANILA, Philippines — President Rodrigo Duterte has once again pushed for the

contruction of the China-funded

Kaliwa Dam project as a "last resort" to stabilize the water supply in Metro Manila.

The dam project in Rizal and Quezon will

affect at least 56 indigenous people households and will place around 284 tribal households at risk of flooding, according to a summary from the DENR's Environment Management Bureau.

The president, however, said he would order concerned agencies to

relocate and compensate the indigenous communities

that will directly be impacted by the project.

NEWSX: In the abundance of water

"I will order them to go ahead and we will pay the natives and we will

relocate them," Duterte said in a speech in Digos City Monday.

Duterte blamed the indigenous communities for supposedly "delaying" the project that would be another water source for Metro Manila.

"

Itong

mga

nakatira

dito are

, of course, they are all natives. They're trying to delay the project and we need water (for) Manila," the president said.

The president also played down the orders of the judiciary, a co-equal branch of government, against the construction of the dam.

"But for the court to issue

itong

mga [temporary restraining order]

sabi

ko

nga do not make it to the point na

sabihin

ko ignore them. 'Wag kayo

maniwala

d'yan

sa

korte

kasi after all

pera-

pera

lang 'yan," he said.

In May, the

Makabayan bloc of the House of Representatives asked the Supreme Court to issue a temporary restraining order to stop the implementation of the

Kaliwa Dam project.

The lawmakers led by former Bayan Muna party-list Rep. Neri Colmenares claimed that the government's $211.21-million loan agreement with China for the dam project should

be declared

null and void.

The petitioners said the government should submit all documents pertaining to the project.

In October, the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System

obtained an Environment Compliance Certificate from the EMB that would allow the project to proceed to the next stage of planning.

“With

the issuance of this ECC, you

are expecte

d to implement the measures presented in the environmental impact statements intended to protect and mitigate the project’s adverse impacts on community health, welfare and the environment,” EMB Director

Metodio

Turbella said in the document issued October 11. — Patricia Lourdes Viray

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