NDF-EV in solidarity
with the Catholic Church against large-scale foreign mining in Region
8
Press Release
By NDF-EV
August 26, 2010
The National
Democratic Front-Eastern Visayas today said it is one with the
Catholic Church in fighting large-scale foreign mining in Region 8.
"We agree with the stand of the Palo Archdiocese that large-scale
mining today will not benefit the people but only foreign capitalists,
as well as seriously damage the environment," said Fr. Santiago Salas,
NDF-EV spokesperson. "Indeed, foreign mining seeks the quickest way to
make profits from simple raw materials extraction and export, without
contributing to our industrial development and without regard for
safeguarding the environment. Thus, the Aquino government's
fast-tracking of foreign mining projects in
Samar and Leyte
is immoral and unjust for betraying the people and the national
patrimony, as well as being anti-development and anti-environment."
Fr. Salas added that
the foreign mining issue also opens up other related issues of the
people regarding genuine economic development. "An economic issue like
foreign mining brings up the dire socio-economic conditions of the
masses of the people who suffer from landlessness and joblessness.
Meanwhile, the minority made up of the landlords, big business and big
bureaucrats control and plunder the economy together with foreign
monopoly capital. The Aquino government's push for large-scale foreign
mining is therefore plain highway robbery in the interests of the few.
On the other hand, any plan for national development should have
agrarian reform and national industrialization to benefit the majority
who are the peasants and workers. Genuine land reform will liberate
the peasantry from poverty and contribute to the production of raw
materials for industrial production. National industrialization will
create jobs and manufacture the country's needs."
The NDF-EV
spokesperson called for broad unity against large-scale foreign mining
in the region. "The various sectors can unite and carry out mass
actions and other activities in demanding a stop to foreign mining in
the region and for the scrapping of the Mining Act which makes it
possible. They must furthermore continue the struggle against the the
Aquino regime's economic policies that are anti-people, anti-national
and subordinate to imperialist globalization. They must assert genuine
agrarian reform and national industrialization as essential for
economic development. In the future, the struggle for economic
emancipation and sovereignty will find fruition when the people's
democratic government has been built to serve the interests of the
majority."