"The spreading oil palm plantations are a tragedy for us. They are destroying our ancestral lands and forests and are leaving us destitute," explained Artiso Mandawa of the ALDAW indigenous network on Palawan. In a few years, palm plantations encroached an area of 50,000 hectares in Philippine. And they are rapidly expanding. Another 40,000 hectares of land have been targeted and are now being cleared in Mindanao and Palawan, allegedly for the purpose of eradicating poverty while reducing edible oil imports. In the eyes of policy makers, the earmarked land is "unused" or "underdeveloped". However, the government plans neglect to mention that the "unused" land belongs to small farmers and indigenous peoples who live there, grow rice and vegetables, and gather fruits, medicinal plants and building materials in the neighboring forests. The rivers provide them with clean water. They need their ancestral land to live.

 "When they take our land, leave our families to starve and violate our rights, we have no choice but to fight," explained Rubenson Batuto, a member of the Higaonon tribe of Mindanao. “As an indigenous people, we have a right to our land, even if we have been denied it to this very day." Thanks to their sustainable way of life, the indigenous tribes have preserved the unique biodiversity of their ancestral lands. The rainforests and mangroves are home to 49 animal and 56 plant species threatened with extinction. These include the Philippine crocodile (Crocodylus mindorensis), the Palawan peacock-pheasant (Polyplectron Napoleonis) and swallowtail butterfly (Graphium megaera). In 1990, the UNESCO declared the entire island of Palawan to be a Man and Biosphere Reserve.

Rainforest Rescue support a petition of the ALDAW indigenous network to tell the authorities of the Philippines to urgently stop oil palm expansion and safeguard indigenous peoples’ rights. 

 

 To: The President of the Philippines, the Governor of Palawan; Governors of the provinces Misamis Oriental and Bukidnon (Mindanao); CC: UNESCO Director-General Irina Bukova

Dear Mr. President, dear Governors, dear Ms. Bokova,

I am very concerned about the planned expansion of oil palm plantations in the Philippines, especially in Mindanao and Palawan.

The industrial monocultures do not contribute to the prosperity of the people. On the contrary – they destroy the livelihoods of the indigenous population and the unique biodiversity of the Palawan UNESCO Man and Biosphere Reserve and the valuable environments in Mindanao.

I therefore support the demands of the ALDAW network of indigenous peoples:

  • Please ensure the observance of human rights and land rights of farmers and indigenous peoples: stop inmediatly the extrajudicial killings of indigenous leaders and identify urgently the executors and mandates of the murders of anti-oil palm activist Gilbert Paborada and of others members of the Kalumbay indigenous people's alliance in Northern Mindanao.
  • Return the land that was taken from small farmers and indigenous people for oil palm plantations.
  • Freeze all land clearing and conversion permits (e.g. Environmental Clear Certificates) that have been issued for oil palm projects by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources.
  • Remove oil palms planted into illegally cleared forests and reforest the depleted areas with endemic species.
  • Finally, I urge the provincial government to promote the food security and sustainable development of the local population and impose a moratorium on biofuels programs and oil palm development.

Sincerely,

Send!

 

 

 

 

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