Sunday, January 31, 2010

Loren: Smuggling, imports will kill local agriculture

SENATOR LOREN LEGARDA CALLED TODAY FOR DECISIVE GOVERNMENT MOVES TO STOP UNABATED SMUGGLING AND UNCONTROLLED IMPORTATION OF FRUITS, VEGETABLES AND OTHER FARM PRODUCTS THAT COULD EVENTUALLY KILL LOCAL AGRICULTURE AND EXACERBATE POVERTY IN THE COUNTRY.

Loren cited the sad experience of vegetable growers, such as those producing onion and garlic, who have been deprived of their source of livelihood because of unfair competition posed by cheap onions and garlic from other countries, mainly from neighboring countries.

Loren lamented that growers of local fruits, such as lanzones, are feeling the pinch brought about by the unrestricted entry of imported fruits.

In coconut-producing provinces as Laguna and Quezon, the senator pointed out, farmers are also facing economic difficulties because of dwindling demand for coconut and coconut-based products, such as macapuno, because of stiff competition from cheaper imported products.

Loren said that corruption in the bureaucracy is responsible for large-scale smuggling that deprives the government of much-needed revenues that in turn keeps poverty in the country at very high levels.

Apart from corruption, the other problem that stunts the growth of local agriculture and industry is the government’s “unthinking commitment to globalization, or borderless trade, which at first glance is beneficial to the economy but on closer inspection may actually work at cross-purposes to our economic advance.”

Loren pointed out that while farmers in the developed countries are subsidized, Filipinos farmers are simply left to their own devices and face unfair competition from cheap products abroad dumped into the country from abroad.

Loren said that while the Philippines should respect and uphold its international commitments, such as to the World Trade Organization, it also has the responsibility to protect its own citizenry from unfair competition from abroad.

In the end, Loren said, “it’s all a matter of protecting the national interest.”

Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_095_Loren_Smuggling_imports.php

We must revive economy - Loren

SEN. LOREN LEGARDA, NP-NPC VICE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, SAID YESTERDAY “IT IS THE JOB OF THE NEXT GOVERNMENT TO REVIVE THE ECONOMY WHICH HAS BEEN DESCRIBED AS “ASIA’S LAGGARD”.

Loren was referring to the article in the February 1 issue of the international US magazine, Newsweek, titled “Asia’s Laggard,” which said, “The world has been passing the Philippines by, literally.”

According to the article by Ruchir Sharma, “After growing at an average pace of 6 percent in the 1950s and 1960s, the Philippines missed out on successive waves of investment-led booms in the region due to constant political instability and failure to liberalize the economy.”

Newsweek cited the failure of the government to operate the new Ninoy Aquino International Airport terminal III as an example of government incompetence due to in-fighting.

Loren said that the next administration must finally open and operate the new international airport in order to attract more tourists and investments to the country.

Loren lamented that whenever there is talk of impressive economic growth in Asia, the Philippines is not included because it has stagnated economically, making the Filipino poorer per capita as economic growth failed to keep pace with population growth.

Loren said that the opposition party headed by NP presidential candidate Manny Villar and herself is committed to “reviving our long-stagnant economy by increasing agricultural and industrial productivity, making the economy more competitive, providing more jobs for the people, enhancing the environment, improving education and health.”

Loren said that “ending corruption, which is considered a primary factor in our economic failure, is at the top of the priority list of our platform. We shall ensure the rule of law to assure local and foreign investors of security and success in their investments and provide more incentives to hard work and productivity for both the local and export markets.”

Loren that the billions of dollars in remittances by Overseas Filipino Workers “should not be wasted in luxury consumption by the rich, or derailed to the private pockets of the corrupt, but should be invested in productive enterprises that would provide employment and more food for the poor.”

According to Loren, “the talent, industry and productiveness of our people have been wasted in corruption, unrealistic economic policies and squandered natural and physical resources, like the newly-constructed international airport that lies unused because of legal squabbles and lack of political will on the part of the present administration.”

“We will supply that political will to keep our country moving again,” stressed Loren.

Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_094_We_must_revive_economy.php

Subject women in parricide cases to psychiatric treatment - Loren

WOMEN INVOLVED IN PARRICIDE CASES SHOULD BE FIRST TURNED OVER BY THE COURTS TO SOCIAL WELFARE AUTHORITIES AND SUBJECTED TO PSYCHIATRIC OR MENTAL HEALTH EXAMINATION BEFORE BEING THROWN TO JAIL. THIS WAS THE RECOMMENDATION OF SEN. LOREN LEGARDA WHEN ASKED TO REACT ON THE REPORT OF A MOTHER JUMPING INTO THE PASIG RIVER WITH HER TWO SMALL CHILDREN, WHO DROWNED.

Senator Legarda, who is running for vice president under the Nationalist Party and National People’s Coalition Party, blamed increasing hunger and poverty for the increasing cases of suicides and parricides involving parents and children in the Philippines.

Loren said that these women “may be suffering from temporary insanity because of extreme poverty and hunger, and unbearable concern for her children, whom she could not endure to see suffering continuously.”

“While we condemn their acts, we should also try to understand why they were driven to such acts, for it is unnatural for a woman to perform such acts,” said Loren.

Loren was reacting to the news item that a 40-year-old woman threw herself with her two young daughters, aged 5 and 8, respectively, off the Del Pan bridge in Manila last week. The mother was rescued by a scavenger, while the five-year-old daughter was later found drown, and her sister missing.

Last September, a 34-year-old woman killed her four children, including a nine-month-old baby, by drowning them in a river in sitio Manganese, Barangay Cambayobo, Calatrava, Negros Occidental. Afterwards, she tried to drowned herself in the same river.

Police said the woman, who was rescued by neighbors, suffered from depression due to poverty. They said the woman must have lapsed into temporary insanity because she “talked nonsense.”

“Hunger and intolerable hardships may have driven these women to such acts of desperation that are contrary to their natural instincts to care for their children,” said Loren. “Anyway they are entitled to psychiatric or mental health examination before being charged with any crime. Being poor, unable to pay for legal help, they deserve some consideration.”

“That is why,” she said, “the next administration should exert utmost efforts to eliminate if not reduce poverty and hunger, and end this desperation that is afflicting many of our families and parents. That should be our priority.”

Loren pointed out that in the last quarter of 2009 the number of families experiencing hunger had increased to a new record high of 24 percent of the entire population or 4.4 million households as found by a survey of the Social Weather Stations.

The survey also found that 46% (an estimated 8.5 million) families considered themselves as poor and 39% (estimated 7.1 million) considered She added that there have been many more incidents reported throughout the country of mothers and fathers abandoning their children or killing them because of the deterioration of the economy in the past many years. She deplored that women and children are the most vulnerable to the effects of poverty.

“That is why it should be our mission and top priority to eliminate, if not reduce, hunger and push back poverty drastically. It is intolerable that a country such as ours which is rich natural resources should have so much hunger among the people.”

Loren advocated adoption of a “crash program” to produce more food by improving agriculture, supported by more activities in the industrial sector, and improving the environment. “This should be the top priority of the next administration,” she emphasized.

Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_093_Women_in_parricide_cases_to_psychiatrict_treatment.php







Friday, January 29, 2010

Bicam approves senior citizens bill

THE HOUSE AND SENATE BICAMERAL CONFERENCE COMMITTEE YESTERDAY RECOMMENDED APPROVAL BY CONGRESS OF AN ACT INCREASING THE BENEFITS OF SENIOR CITIZENS.

The committee decided to recommend approval by both houses of Congress of Senate Bill No. 3581, in consolidation with House Bill No. 6390. Senate Bill No. 3581, granting additional benefits and privileges to senior citizens, was principally authored by Sen. Loren Legarda, chair of the Senate committee on health and demography.

Under the proposed Act, the senior citizen shall be entitled to a 20 percent discount and exemption from value added tax on the following:

(a) On the purchase of medicines, including the purchase of influenza and pneumococcal vaccines, and such other essential medical supplies, accessories and equipment to be determined by the Department of Health (DOH).

(b) On the professional fees of attending physicians in all private hospitals, medical facilities, outpatient clinics and home health care services.

(c) On the professional fees of licensed professional workers providing home health care services as endorsed by private hospitals or employed through home health care employment agencies.

(d) On medical and dental services, diagnostic and laboratory fees in all private hospitals, medical facilities, outpatient clinic and home health care services,

(e) Death benefit assistance of a minimum of P2,000 to be given to the nearest surviving relative.

Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_088_Bicam_approves_senior_citizens_bill.php

Senate inquiry sought on government tack to combat El Niño

MANILA, PHILIPPINES - TO AVERT FOOD PRODUCTION CRISIS RESULTING FROM THE EL NIÑO WEATHER PHENOMENON, SEN. LOREN LEGARDA HAS FILED A SENATE RESOLUTION FOR AN URGENT INQUIRY INTO THE POLICIES OF THE GOVERNMENT TO COUNTER EL NIÑO AND ENSURE FOOD SECURITY.

Legarda, chairperson of the Senate committee on food and agriculture, filed the resolution as the weather bureau has announced that the El Niño phenomenon or prolonged drought has already hit the Philippines and may last for six months until May.

The Department of Agriculture has also warned that the prolonged drought would drastically cut down the production of local crops, like rice, corn, sugar cane, vegetables and other agricultural products.

Officials say three provinces in the central region have started to feel the effects of El Nino by having below normal rainfall. The provinces of Capiz, Aklan and Guimaras in central Philippines have had below normal rainfall since August and have already started experiencing drought.

1540, Legarda asked the In her Resolution Senate to direct the Senate Committee on Agriculture and Food and the Committee on Climate Change to conduct an inquiry, in aid of legislation, into the government’s policies and programs to address the effects of El Niño.

The purpose of the inquiry is to recommend policies and programs to institute “robust adaptation strategies to enhance food security and alleviate rural poverty,” Legarda said.

She said climate change, which includes the El Niño phenomenon, presents severe problems for a country that is highly reliant on agriculture for livelihood and sustenance.

Disastrous
“Changes in temperature, rainfall and sea level would be disastrous to the agricultural sector. Crop yield potential is estimated to decline by 19 percent in Asia toward the end of the century and rice yield in the Philippines would decline by 75 percent,” Legarda said in the resolution.

Legarda noted that the Philippines is periodically affected by the El Niño phenomenon that induces prolong wet and dry seasons, leading to a dramatic drop in agricultural production. From 1990 to 2003, the damage due to El Niño-related drought was estimated to be more than $370 million. This included a decrease in fisheries yield.

She said that the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) has warned of a long drought in 2010 due to El Niño. Hence, policies on climate adaptation “are crucial and urgent.”


Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_089_Senate_inquiry_sought_on_government_tack_to_combat_El_Nino.php

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Loren urges flexibility in ‘no permit, no exam’ policy for students

SEN. LOREN LEGARDA TODAY HAILED THE RECENT ISSUANCE BY THE COMMISSION ON HIGHER EDUCATION (CHED) OF A MEMORANDUM URGING BOTH PRIVATE AND LOCAL INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER LEARNING TO BE MORE FLEXIBLE IN IMPLEMENTING THE ‘NO PERMIT, NO EXAM’ POLICY FOR STUDENTS WHO HAVE NOT FULLY PAID THEIR TUITION FEES.

Loren said that given the country’s economic difficulties brought about by the global recession and the adverse effects of typhoons Ondoy and Pepeng last year, “it is only proper and fitting that students from poor families who could barely make ends meet be given enough leeway in meeting their financial obligations and allowed to take their mid-term exams.”

CHED Memorandum Order (CMO) 02 series of 2010 directed all colleges and universities to be flexible in the implementation of the “no permit, no exam” policy which was earlier criticized by various student groups. The memo said this is “in accordance with the pertinent provision of the 1987 Constitution and RA 7722 and for the purpose of ensuring the accessibility and affordability of quality higher education, and also in view of the unabated economic crisis brought about by circumstances worldwide as well as the recent calamities that the country has faced in the last year.”

Loren said the CHED memorandum is highly commendable as students, particularly those from urban poor, peasant and fisherfolk families who are already reeling from abject poverty, must not become “double victims” of their current economic straits and the schools’ strict requirements on payment of matriculation fees.

Loren said she is considering filing a bill that would make it a standard rule for schools and universities to allow students with unpaid school fees to take the required exams subject to certain conditions.

Loren also proposed that teachers who would be asked to perform election duties this May be given their allowances on time and provided additional benefits, such as health and life insurance, in recognition of their important contribution to the honest, orderly and peaceful conduct of elections in the country.

Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_087_Loren_urges_flexibility_in_no_permit_no_exam_policy.php

Respect one another, Loren tells sports officials

SEN. LOREN LEGARDA YESTERDAY CALLED ON LEADERS OF BOTH THE PHILIPPINE OLYMPIC COMMITTEE AND THE PHILIPPINE SPORTS COMMISSION TO STOP SQUABLING TO AVOID BEING SUSPENDED AGAIN BY THE INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE FROM PARTICIPATING IN WORLD OLYMPIC GAMES.

Loren was reacting to the statements attributed to Francisco Elizalde, the IOC representative to the Philippines, who said that the world’s highest governing body in sports has already heard about the fear of PSC intervention on POC affairs.

Loren, who is running for vice president in the May elections, said it’s about time that the leaders should start respecting one another in the interest of the athletes, in particular, and Philippine sports in general.

During last Friday’s Scoop Sa Kamayan weekly session, Elizalde made the remarks and pointed to the leaders’ lack of respect for one another as the main problem that contributed to the prevailing sad state of Philippine sports.

Elizalde pointed out that the problem confronting the RP sports involves personalities and political affiliations of the sports leaders. “This is the reason why our leaders don’t respect each other. The president of the POC (Jose “Peping” Cojuangco) belongs to the political opposition, while the chairman of the PSC (Harry Angping) is an administration man.”

Loren agreed, saying that the PSC may have the tendency to intervene in running the affairs of the POC and the national sports associations, and this may endanger the relation between the POC and the IOC.

The IOC has always been critical about government intervention its affairs and a violation of its charter could give enough reason to sanction the erring country by meting penalties like suspension or outright ban from participation in all IOC activities such as the Olympics and Asian Games.

“It’s good that Mr. Elizalde admitted that there had been no attempt yet on the part of the PSC to intervene for the IOC to impose sanction on the country. But shall we wait for that to happen? Paano kung masuspende tayo muli? Kawawa ay ang atleta natin at bayan na rin,” Loren said.

Like Elizalde, Loren lamented what happened in last year’s 25th Southeast Asian Games in Laos where the Philippines was virtually represented by two delegations – one authorized by the PSC and the other by the POC – causing so much embarrassment for the country in the international sporting community.

The IOC has already suspended Kuwait because of government intervention.

Elizalde warned that the current situation here has already reached the IOC headquarters in Laussane, Switzerland based the reactions he has been getting from fellow IOC members who warned him about the situation turning into worse that may force the IOC to intervene and sanction RP.

“I believe Mr. Elizalde, THAT the IOC, indeed, has been watching us so we have to be careful and we can only do that if our leaders will stop quarreling, put their acts together and, most importantly, respect one another,” Loren stressed.

Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_085_Respect_one_another,_Loren_tells_sports_officials.php

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Climate change threatens asian RP economies - Loren

Sen. Loren Legarda today warned that unless the Philippines takes action, climate change would severely affect the Philippine economy, creating more poverty and drastically lowering its productivity.

In an address at the Asian Institute of Management here, Loren said that “If the Philippines will do nothing, climate related risks will create a 6 percent decline of our GDP (Gross Domestic Product) annually by 2010.”

Loren, the NP vice presidential candidate, cited a report of the Asian Development Bank, stating that climate change impacts could cost Southeast Asian nations 6.7 percent of their total GDP each year. GDP is the total amount of goods and services produced in a year.

However, the same study found that if the Philippines would invest 0.5% of its GDP by 2020 in climate change adaptation, “we can avert losses of up to 4% of our GDP by 2100 -- clearly a short term investment with a long term eight-fold gain,” said Loren, who is the chair of the Senate Committee on Climate Change and Risk Reduction.

In the face of greater disasters from climate change, Loren stressed that the Climate Change Act recently passed by Congress should be fully and successfully implemented as a “moral imperative and a social responsibility.” Loren was the principal sponsor of the bill in the Senate.

Speaking on the theme, “Capacity Building for Future Southeast Asian Leaders”, Loren pointed out that the Philippines is visited by typhoons about 20 times a year. Also, its location right within the Pacific Ring of Fire where most of the world’s earthquakes and volcanic eruption occur constantly exposes the country to these natural hazards.

She said that in 2008 the world suffered from 321 disasters which killed about a quarter of a million people and affected more than 200 million lives. The total economic cost was a stunning 180 billion US dollars, which is twice the average annual economic losses of the past seven years. The Asia and the Pacific bore the brunt, accounting for more than 80 percent of the global loss of life, said Loren, who is also the UN champion climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction in the Asia-Pacific region.

“As leaders, we need to rethink our approach to pursuing and protecting our development from the regressive impacts of disasters and climate risks. We need to revisit our current frameworks and strategies for socio-economic development (to fully address) the disaster risks which prevail today,” said Loren.

Based on the Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction of the United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction, Loren said that there are three main reasons for the aggravation of disaster risks caused by climate change -- poor urban governance, vulnerable rural livelihood and ecosystems decline.

Loren said that this “calls for improving urban governance – which involves stopping corruption and enforcing building codes; enhancing rural livelihoods – which involves enhancing agricultural productivity and supporting farmers better; and protecting ecosystems – which involves protecting our forests, cleaning our rivers, and stopping pollution.”

Because of good urban governance, Japan, with approximately 22.5 million people exposed annually to typhoons, compared to 16 million people in the Philippines, suffers much less casualties than the Philippines. The estimated annual death toll in the Philippines is almost 17 times greater than that of Japan. Overall, tropical cyclone mortality risk in low-income countries is approximately 200 times higher than in countries of the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

People living in rural areas are more vulnerable to climate change, said Loren. The Philippines is periodically affected by the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon that induces prolonged wet and dry seasons. Climate change, and resulting extreme events will further upset our agriculture production schedules and exacerbate the problem of food security.

Concerning ecosystems, the Millennium Ecosystem Report, released in 2005, found that 60% of ecosystem services – services that nature provides to sustain human life, are declining with some services like fisheries beyond repair, rued Loren. In the Philippines, forests and mangroves are fast disappearing, posing risks of greater floods and landslides.

“Over the last century, the proportion of land area covered by forest in the Philippines has fallen from 22 percent in 1990 to just 19.4 percent in 2000,” said Loren.

To help solve the problem, she cited the work of the Luntiang Pilipinas, an organization that she helped organize several years back and is the Philippine partner of the United Nations Environment Programme in its Billion Tree Campaign Today, it has planted and grown almost two million trees nationwide.

“Now is the time for all of us to unite on all these issues, and to transcend territorial boundaries, political persuasions and institutional affiliations. There is no more appropriate time to show political will, good governance, and exemplary leadership than now,” Loren told the young parliamentarians and policy-makers of Southeast Asia.

Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_084_Climate_change_threatens_asian_RP_economies.php

Loren blames hunger, poverty for many suicides, parricides

Moved by the report of a mother jumping into the Pasig river with her two small children, Sen. Loren Legarda yesterday blamed increasing hunger and poverty for the increasing cases of suicides and parricides involving parents and children in the Philippines.

“Hunger and intolerable hardships drove these women to such acts of desperation that are contrary to their natural instincts to care for their children in the hope of saving their children from suffering more pain and hunger,” said Loren.

“That is why,” she said, “the next administration should exert utmost efforts to eliminate if not reduce poverty and hunger, and end this desperation that is afflicting many of our families and parents. That should be our priority.”

Loren deplored that in the last quarter of 2009 the number of families experiencing hunger had increased to a new record high of 24 percent of the entire population or 4.4 million households as found by a survey of the Social Weather Stations.

The survey also found that 46% (an estimated 8.5 million) families considered themselves as poor and 39% (estimated 7.1 million) considered themselves as “food poor” (chronically hungry or undernourished).

Loren was reacting to the news item that a 40-year-old woman threw herself with her two young daughters, aged 5 and 8, respectively, off the Del Pan bridge in Manila last week. The mother was rescued by a scavenger, while the five-year-old daughter was later found drown, and her sister missing.

When questioned by police, the mother, Mimi Velarde Abila, said, “Hindi ko na kaya ang mga problema namin sa buhay at ang problema sa bansa. Sobrang hirap na natin (I could no longer bear the problems of our family and that of the country. We are so poor).”

Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_083_Loren_blames_hunger_poverty_for_many_suicides_parricides.php

Loren lauds Dinagyang festival

Iloilo City - Sen. Loren Legarda today hailed organizers of the Dinagyang festival in Iloilo for making the annual celebration “a celebration of the Filipino spirit and a showcase of Filipino pride in our own culture.”

“Dinagyang is a major religious and cultural festival in the Visayas and has become a major tourism attraction, generating more visitors to Iloilo every year,” Loren said.

“With more tourist arrivals from this event, the province can generate more resources that it can use for social and economic development,” Loren said.

“But the significance of the Dinagyang festival lies beyond its capability to boost tourism and development,” according to the senator.

“We must restore pride in our culture. We need to instill a better appreciation, particularly by young people, of our rich history, arts and culture. This, to me, should be a priority thrust of our leaders. And the Dinagyang offers a unique opportunity for us to showcase the exceptional creativity and artistry of Filipinos,” Loren said.

The Dinagyang, one of the country’s more popular festivals, is held in honor of the Santo Niño and to commemorate the arrival in Panay of Malay settlers and the subsequent sale of the island to them by the Atis.

The Dinagyang is divided into three major events: Ati-Ati Street Dancing, Kasadyahan Street Dancing and Miss Dinagyang. Performers paint their skin brown and use only indigenous materials for their costumes, with all dances performed to drum music.

The Dinagyang was voted as the Best Tourism Event for 2006, 2007 and 2008 by the Association of Tourism Officers in the Philippines. It is also the first festival in the world to get the support of the United Nations for the promotion of its Millennium Development Goals. It has been cited by the Asian Development Bank as a Best Practice in government, private sector and NGO cooperation.

Loren said that aside from joining Ilonggos in this much-anticipated festival, she would also take the opportunity provided by the event to reach out to more people and urge them to play a more active role in protecting the environment.

Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_076_Loren_lauds_Dinagyang_festival.php

Legarda seeks review of government's El Niño policy

Manila, Philippines - Sen. Loren Legarda has filed a Senate resolution calling for an urgent inquiry into the policies of the government to counter El Niño and ensure food security.

Legarda, chairperson of the Senate committee on food and agriculture, filed the resolution as the weather bureau has announced that the El Niño phenomenon or prolonged drought has already hit the Philippines and may last for six months until May.

The Department of Agriculture has also warned that the prolonged drought would drastically cut down the production of local crops, like rice, corn, sugar cane, vegetables and other agricultural products.

Officials say three provinces in the central region have started to feel the effects of the El Nino phenomenon by having below normal rainfall. The provinces of Capiz, Aklan and Guimaras in the central Philippines have had below normal rainfall since August and have already started experiencing drought.

In her resolution, Legarda asked the Senate to direct the Senate committee on agriculture and food and the committee on climate change to conduct an inquiry, in aid of legislation, into the government’s policies and programs to address the effects of El Niño.



Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_081_Legarda_seeks_review_of_governments_El_Nino_policy.php

Senate probe into gov’t response to dry spell sought

MANILA, Philippines -- Vice presidential candidate and Senator Loren Legarda has filed a resolution for the Senate to conduct an urgent inquiry into government policies that would counter the El Niño phenomenon this year and ensure food security.

The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration has announced a six-month long dry spell that could last until May.

"It is incumbent upon Congress to institute policy solutions to enable the agriculture sector to adapt rapidly to the impact of climate change and to safeguard poverty reduction gains in the rural areas," Legarda, running mate of Nacionalista Party standard bearer Sen. Manny Villar, said in a statement.

She has made the environment one of her top advocacies.

Her latest political advertisement on television features the senator, hair windblown, walking in a vast field as her fingers brush the tall, green grass.

In Resolution Number 1540, Legarda asked the Senate to direct the Senate Committee on Agriculture and Food, which she chairs, and the Committee on Climate Change to conduct an inquiry, in aid of legislation, into the government's policies and programs to address the effects of El Niño.

The purpose of the inquiry is to recommend policies and programs to institute "robust adaptation strategies to enhance food security and alleviate rural poverty," Legarda said.

She underscored the need for these policies, pointing out how the drought could adversely affect a country like the Philippines "that is highly reliant on agriculture for livelihood and sustenance".

Legarda said the El Niño phenomenon, which has periodically affected the country, has led to a "dramatic drop" in agricultural production.

Legarda's statement pointed out that from 1990 to 2003, the damage due to El Niño-related drought was estimated to be more than $370 million, not to mention a decrease in fisheries yield.

It added that the provinces of Capiz, Aklan, and Guimaras have begun experiencing the drought after they have recorded below normal rainfall since August.

"The agricultural adaptation program must ensure more investments in agricultural research and infrastructure, improved water governance and land use policies, better forecasting tools and early warning systems and a strengthened extension system that will assist farmers to achieve economic diversification and access to credit to make significant improvements in our food security goals," Legarda said.

Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_082_Senate_probe_into_govt_response_to_dry_spell_sought.php

Loren seeks inquiry into RP policies on El Niño phenomenon

To avert a food production crisis resulting from the El Niño weather phenomenon, Sen. Loren Legarda Sunday filed a Senate resolution for an urgent inquiry into the policies of the government to counter El Niño and ensure food security.

Legarda, chair of the Senate committee on food and agriculture, filed the resolution as the weather bureau has announced that the El Niño phenomenon or prolonged drought has already hit the Philippines and may last for six months until May.

The Department of Agriculture (DA) has also warned that the prolonged drought would drastically cut down the production of local crops, like rice, corn, sugar cane, vegetables and other agricultural products.

The provinces of Capiz, Aklan and Guimaras in the central Philippines have had below normal rainfall since August and have already started experiencing drought.

In her resolution (P.S. Res. No. 1540), Legarda asked the Senate to direct the Senate committee on agriculture and food and the committee on climate change to conduct an inquiry, in aid of legislation, into the government’s policies and programs to address the effects of El Niño.

The purpose of the inquiry is to recommend policies and programs to institute “robust adaptation strategies to enhance food security and alleviate rural poverty,” Legarda said.

Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_080_Loren_seeks_inquiry_into_RP_policies_on_El_Nino_phenomenon.php

Loren seeks intensified watersheds protection

MANILA, Philippines - Sen. Loren Legarda defended herself yesterday over criticisms that she is a political turncoat for shifting loyalties from one political party to another.

“Government must pursue urgent measures, including comprehensive watershed management, enhancement of irrigation efficiency, introduction of low water use crops and efficient farming practices, recycling of water and improvement of monitoring and forecasting systems for floods and droughts,” she said.

The country has 412 principal river basins in 119 proclaimed watersheds, a total of 99 lakes, 16 of which have an area more than 400 hectares, and groundwater reservoirs that cover 50,000 square kilometers and have a storage capacity of 251,100 million cubic meters.

But this abundance of water resources masks a potential water crisis. Legarda said. Today, the Philippines ranks among the lowest in terms of freshwater availability per capita at 1,907 cubic meters, compared with the average of 7,045 cubic meters worldwide and 3,668 cubic meters in Asia. Four regions— Metro Manila, Central Luzon, Southern Luzon and Central Visayas - face the dire prospect of decreasing water quality and quantity. Angat Dam is the sole source of Metro Manila's water supply.

Via: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_079_Loren_seeks_intensified_watersheds_protection.php

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Loren files resolution on El Niño

TO AVERT A FOOD PRODUCTION CRISIS RESULTING FROM THE EL NIÑO WEATHER PHENOMENON, SEN. LOREN LEGARDA TODAY FILED A SENATE RESOLUTION FOR AN URGENT INQUIRY INTO THE POLICIES OF THE GOVERNMENT TO COUNTER EL NIÑO AND ENSURE FOOD SECURITY.

Loren, chair of the Senate committee on food and agriculture, filed the resolution as the weather bureau has announced that the El Niño phenomenon or prolonged drought has already hit the Philippines and may last for six months until May.

The Department of Agriculture has also warned that the prolonged drought would drastically cut down the production of local crops, like rice, corn, sugar cane, vegetables and other agricultural products.

Officials say three provinces in the central region have started to feel the effects of the El Nino phenomenon by having below normal rainfall. The provinces of Capiz, Aklan and Guimaras in the central Philippines have had below normal rainfall since August and have already started experiencing drought.

In her resolution (P.S. Res. No. 1540), Loren asked the Senate to direct the Senate Committee on Agriculture and Food and the Committee on Climate Change to conduct an inquiry, in aid of legislation, into the government’s policies and programs to address the effects of El Niño.

The purpose of the inquiry is to recommend policies and programs to institute “robust adaptation strategies to enhance food security and alleviate rural poverty,” Loren said.

She stressed* *that* *climate change, which includes the El Niño phenomenon, presents severe problems for a country that is highly reliant on agriculture for livelihood and sustenance;

“Changes in temperature, rainfall and sea level would be disastrous to the agricultural sector. Crop yield potential is estimated to decline by 19% in Asia toward the end of the century and rice yield in the Philippines would decline by 75%,” Loren stated in the resolution.

Loren said the Philippines is periodically affected by the El Niño phenomenon that induces prolonged wet and dry seasons, leading to a dramatic drop in agricultural production. From 1990 to 2003, the damage due to El Niño-related drought was estimated to be more than $370 million.This included a decrease in fisheries yield;

Loren noted that the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pag-asa) has warned of a long drought in 2010 due to the El Niño phenomenon. Hence, policies on climate adaptation “are crucial and urgent”.

“The agricultural adaptation program must ensure more investments in agricultural research and infrastructure, improved water governance and land use policies, better forecasting tools and early warning systems and a strengthened extension system that will assist farmers to achieve economic diversification and access to credit to make significant improvements in our food security goals,” Loren explained.

Therefore “it is incumbent upon Congress to institute policy solutions to enable the agriculture sector to adapt rapidly to the impact of climate change and to safeguard poverty reduction gains in the rural areas,” she declared.

Source: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_066_Loren_files_resolution_on_el_nino.php

Loren to probe ‘sex tourism’

SEN. LOREN LEGARDA HAS FILED A RESOLUTION ASKING THE SENATE TO INVESTIGATE THE REPORTED GROWING BUSINESS OF ‘SEX TOURISM’ IN CERTAIN AREAS OF THE COUNTRY.

Loren, chair of the Senate Committee on Youth, Women and Family Relations, wants to know whether government is doing enough to address the issue of exploitation and prostitution of minors.
Loren observed that sex tourism has been thriving because of the lax implementation of laws against child trafficking and prostitution.
Sex tourism, the senator said, is an “illegal and immoral business that should be banned by the government before it further corrupts the youth and erodes the nation’s moral fabric.”
The probe comes on the heels of a documentary of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) News entitled “Confronting Evil” that reported the growing number of teenage prostitutes aged 15-18 years old in the country and the spread of sex tourism.
The documentary revealed that more tourists nowadays choose to visit the Philippines not because of the tourist spots but because of the flesh trade, with more and more Filipinos offering minors and teenagers for prostitution, especially to foreigners.
Sex tourism, while a lucrative trade for its purveyors, is believed to have adverse emotional and psychological effects on the lives of the teenagers who have become victims of prostitution.
The documentary pointed out that most of the cases of prostitution and rape in the country go through a long process which may take a year or more for justice to be served.

Source: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_069_Loren_to_probe_sex%20tourism.php

Loren urges COMELEC to extend registration of overseas voters

SEN. LOREN LEGARDA YESTERDAY URGED THE COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS TO EXTEND THE REGISTRATION OF FILIPINO VOTERS IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES “SO AS TO EXTEND TO THEM THE PRIMARY RIGHT OF SUFFRAGE.”

There are an estimated eight to ten million overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) and emigrants, including dual citizens, abroad. Under Philippine election laws, they are all entitled to vote.
“The right to vote is the primary right of every Filipino citizen or dual citizen,” Loren said. “It is the duty of the Comelec to provide them with the means to exercise that right as much as possible.”
Furthermore, according to Loren, the OFWs and Filipino emigrants are sending to the Philippines billions of dollars annually, keeping the Philippines afloat economically amidst a trouble sea of the global economic crisis.
“It is the least we can do to show our gratitude for their sacrifices and their continuing concern for our country despite their absence from our country,” declared Loren. “The government must not be seen to be abandoning them by failure to protect their rights as citizens and saviors of our country.”
Loren urged the Comelec to coordinate closely with the Department of Foreign Affairs in activating Philippine embassies, consulates and other offices in foreign countries to register Filipino citizens and dual citizens so that they can exercise their right of suffrage in the coming May 10 elections.
“The Comelec cannot just give excuses that it does not have enough time. It can undertake the registration in coordination with our foreign offices even while making preparations for the automated voting,” Loren declared.
Earlier, Comelec said it would pilot automated polls in Hong Kong and Singapore. These two places registered the highest turnout of overseas voters’ enlistment at 95,355 and 31,853, respectively.

Source: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_070_Loren_urges_comelec_to_extend_registration_of_overseas_voters.php

Friday, January 22, 2010

Loren warns against midnight fire sales

SEN. LOREN LEGARDA YESTERDAY WARNED AGAINST “MIDNIGHT FIRE SALES” BY THE ADMINISTRATION OF GOVERNMENT PROPERTIES AMOUNTING TO BILLIONS OF PESOS.

Loren said that the Arroyo administration should stop efforts to sell prime government assets, such as the Food Terminal Inc., “to avoid suspicions that these transactions could be midnight fire sales at giveaway prices and made to support dubious political purposes.”

Loren issued the warning after Finance Secretary Margarito Teves announced that the government was targeting to sell three “big ticket” items before March 31, less than two months before elections on May 10 are held.

These properties are 103 hectares of prime real estate in Taguig City owned by the FTI, Philippine National Oil Co. Exploration Corporation shares, and the lease of the Fujimi property in Japan. The government had earlier expected to raise P30 billion from the sale of the three properties.

Loren said that the sale of the three properties could be considered a “midnight fire sale because the term of the present administration expires within a few months on June 30. There might be a rush to sell these properties to favor certain parties and possibly raise money for political campaign purposes, resulting in a scam that could cost the people billions of pesos.”

Loren said that the administration is “now winding up its business and should refrain from entering into transactions or appointments that may be considered midnight deals or midnight appointments, and which are therefore either immoral or illegal.”

According to Loren, “the administration should observe delicadeza in all its transactions and dealings in order to offset the perception of the public that its term for the past nine years have been marked by graft-ridden and scandalous transactions, like the P800-million fertilizer scam in 2004.”

During the Senate hearing on the fertilizer scam, it was alleged that the money raised from the anomalous transaction was used to obtain political favors that enabled the administration candidates to win in the 2004 election, which was considered fraudulent. Even highly urbanized cities were given allocations for “fertilizers” even though they had no agricultural areas, while the fertilizer products were reported to be highly overpriced.

Senator Legarda was a candidate for vice president with Fernando Poe Jr. as her running mate for president in the opposition party in the 2004 elections. The election was marred with widespread cheating and overspending reportedly by the administration.

Source: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_068_Loren_warns_against_midnight_fire_sales.php

Loren lauds Cebu tourism

SEN. LOREN LEGARDA TODAY LAUDED CEBU’S TOURISM PROGRAM AS ONE THAT SHOULD BE EMULATED BY OTHER REGIONS AND PROVINCES IN THE COUNTRY TO STIMULATE TOURISM AS A MEANS FOR RAISING LOCAL INCOMES AND ATTRACTING INVESTMENTS.

Loren made the observation while participating in the Suroy Suroy Sugbu, consisting of a tour of Cebu’s historical, cultural and natural attraction sites of interest to domestic and foreign tourists.

Loren said that the tour, led by Cebu Governor Gwen Garcia, was “very educational, culturally and spiritually enriching and boosted my pride in the history, culture and traditions of Cebu and our beautiful Philippines.”

Loren said she would promote the idea of the Suroy Suroy to other provinces and regions of the countries which have similarly beautiful, cultural and historical sites that would attract tourists, both domestic and foreign.

“Tourism is not only a means of attracting foreign capital to boost our economic development, it is also a means of boosting the pride of the Filipino in his country, and of arousing local interest in improving the environment by caring for and enhancing beautiful surroundings like beaches, mountains, forests and rivers,” Loren said.

Loren lauded the provincial government led by Governor Garcia and the Cebu Chamber of Commerce and Industry for initiating the program that would strengthen the pride of the Cebuanos as well as all Filipinos in their rich history and cultural heritage.

Loren said that the Suroy Suroy or tour enabled local people, Filipinos from other regions and foreign tourists to acquaint themselves with the rich heritage of the province in the form of culture, history and natural endowments, and to make new discoveries of places of interest.

http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_066_Loren_lauds_cebu_tourism.php

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Loren hails passage of expanded senior citizens act

SEN. LOREN LEGARDA TODAY WELCOMED THE PASSAGE OF SENATE BILL 3561 EXPANDING THE BENEFITS AND PRIVILEGES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS IN THE COUNTRY.

“As a co-author of this bill, I am justifiably happy that my colleagues have seen it fit to pass this important piece of legislation,” said Loren.

“Our senior citizens deserve more than what they are getting under the existing Senior Citizens Act. The Expanded Senior Citizens Act of 2009 gives them a wider range of benefits and privileges. This is consistent with the constitutional provision that the State values the dignity of every human person and shall endeavor to make essential goods, health and other social services available to all the people, including the elderly,” Loren said.

“Senior citizens are an integral part of Philippine society and therefore we must lend full support to the improvement of their total well-being. We must let them take their proper place in society and encourage them to contribute to nation-building,” Loren explained.

At the same time, the senator said, the government should encourage their families and communities to reaffirm the valued Filipino tradition of caring for senior citizens.

Among the salient provisions of the Expanded Senior Citizens Act of 2009 are the following:

• Senior citizens shall be granted exemption from the value-added tax (VAT) provided under the National Internal Revenue Code on the sale of goods and services from all establishments. They shall also be given a twenty percent (20%) discount on the purchase of medicines; on the professional fees of attending physicians in all private hospitals, medical facilities, and outpatient clinics; on medical and dental services, diagnostic and laboratory fees in all private hospitals and medical facilities, and outpatient clinics; in actual fare for land transportation, domestic air transport services and sea shipping; on the utilization of services in hotels and similar lodging establishments, restaurants and recreation centers; and on admission fees charged by theaters, cinema houses and concert halls, circuses, carnivals and other similar places of culture, leisure and amusement.

• Senior citizens who are considered minimum wage earners shall be given exemption from the payment of individual income taxes.

• The DOH shall administer free vaccination against the influenza virus and pneumococcal disease for indigent senior citizen patients.

• Throughout the country, there shall be established a “senior citizens ward” in every government hospital. This geriatric ward shall be for the exclusive use of senior citizens who are in need of hospital confinement by reason of their health conditions.

• Indigent senior citizens identified by the DSWD shall be entitled to a monthly stipend amounting to one thousand five hundred pesos (P1,500) to augment their daily subsistence and other medical needs.

Source: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_065_Loren_hails_passage_of_expanded_senior_citizens_act.php

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Improve agriculture to curb hunger - Loren

THE GOVERNMENT MUST ACCELERATE THE DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE IN ORDER TO STOP AND REVERSE THE SPREAD OF HUNGER AMONG FILIPINOS, SAID SEN. LOREN LEGARDA, CHAIR OF THE SENATE COMMITTEE ON FOOD AND AGRICULTURE.

She blamed graft and corruption and inefficiency for the failure of the government to properly implement laws promoting agriculture, such as the Agriculture and Fisheries Modernization Act (AFMA).

Loren cited reports of the Commission on Audit that indicate “that a lot of graft happens during the implementation of various programs such as the rice, corn and irrigation programs. We have spent years investigating the fertilizer scam. Clearly, the COA reports show that government resources have not been spent properly.”

Loren made the statement in commenting on the recent survey of the Social Weather Stations showing that the number of Filipinos who have experienced hunger in the past year had increased to 24 percent of the population.

“That means that 4.4 million households or approximately 20 million Filipinos have experienced hunger for lack of anything to eat in the past year,” Loren said.

“What we see is a failure of the implementation of the Agriculture and Fisheries Modernization Act (AFMA). AFMA whose goal is food security clearly did not deliver and never in the years after it was signed into law in 1997,” declared Loren who is also the chair of the Congressional Oversight Committee on Agriculture and Fisheries.”

“Food insecurity has gotten worse. But then how can we expect it (AFMA) to deliver when it has not been properly implemented?” she asked.

“True, we have increased our support for farmers and fisherfolk judging from the budgets we have approved in support of the Department of Agriculture, particularly the GMA commodity programs. In the past few years that the budget for the DA has steadily been increasing, we have heard reports of increased productivity. Yet, these statistics have not effectively reduced food insecurity,” said Loren.

“We are also informed that we have been increasing our rice imports by the NFA (National Food Authority) to ensure sufficient supply. Yet again, apparently, this is not a solution to hunger. After all, according to a World Bank report, most of the NFA rice is sold to the non-poor rather than to the poor.

“Hence, it is important for the Congressional Oversight Committee on Agriculture and Fisheries Modernization (COCAFM) to establish an efficient and timely monitoring system that scrutinizes the program,” she declared.

“We need to give more credence to the Commission on Audit (COA) reports and proceed from there. We need to identify the weak points and to put in place the appropriate policies to attain the goals of AFMA, particularly food security.

Loren said that the next administration should set a monitoring system that will be used by oversight agencies in both the executive and legislative branches of government in checking the performance of the DA and related agencies.

“I offer the monitoring system that my team in COCAFM is developing this time for use in the evaluation of current and future agriculture and fisheries program implementation. Whoever becomes President in 2010 should make use of it to fulfil AFMA goal of rationally allocating resources for the sector. ”, Loren said.

Source: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_064_Improve_agriculture_to_curb_hunger.php

I’ll help achieve peace in Mindanao - Loren

AMID OPTIMISM BY MALACAÑANG THAT A PEACE AGREEMENT WITH THE MORO ISLAMIC LIBERATION FRONT CAN STILL BE SIGNED BEFORE PRESIDENT ARROYO’S TERM EXPIRES IN JUNE, SENATOR LOREN LEGARDA HAS EXPRESSED STRONG RESERVATIONS OVER THE PROSPECT OF AN EARLY RESOLUTION OF THE MINDANAO CONFLICT AND WANTS THE NEXT ADMINISTRATIONS TO SPEED UP THE PEACE PROCESS.

“While I welcome the resumption of formal peace talks in Kuala Lumpur between the government and the two sides, I seriously doubt whether they can come up with comprehensive peace agreement soon enough,” Loren said.

“Let us not raise false hopes. A realistic assessment of the current situation in Mindanao precludes an early political settlement. It is likely that a negotiated political settlement of the conflict would come only under the next administration. And I am willing to help in whatever way I can to achieve peace in Mindanao,” Loren said.

“At the heart of the political negotiation is the issue of ancestral domain, or the coverage of the areas where the MILF can exercise effective control. Let us not forget that the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral Domain that was junked by the Supreme Court as unconstitutional and an affront to the country’s territorial integrity took years of negotiation,” Loren said.

Loren explained that the peace process requires consultation with all stakeholders in Mindanao—the Muslims, Christians, lumads or indigenous peoples.

“Can the government and the MILF be able to get the sentiments of all these stakeholders within five months? And even if they do, will they be able to come up with a mutually acceptable agreement that is consistent with the Constitution,” Loren asked.

The senator explained that the entire country will be gripped with election fever until May and there simply won’t be enough time for the government to conduct an honest-to-goodness consultation process with Mindanao stakeholders before June.

Loren said that many of the private armed groups maintained by political warlords are in Mindanao, and this would complicate the attainment of an early peace in the region.

Source: http://lorenlegarda.com.ph/news_063_Ill_help_achieve_peace_in_Mindanao.php

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Let’s mobilize more aid for Haiti - Loren

IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE MAGNITUDE 7 EARTHQUAKE THAT HIT HAITI RECENTLY AND MAY HAVE CAUSED AS MANY AS 200,000 FATALITIES, SEN. LOREN LEGARDA TODAY APPEALED FOR MORE AID TO THE DISASTER-STRICKEN CENTRAL AMERICAN COUNTRY.

Loren, who is United Nations Champion for Disaster Risk Reduction and Climate Change Adaptation in Asia-Pacific, said that Haiti “needs all the help it can get to rebuild lives and restore normalcy.”

Loren made the appeal as the Philippine government prepared to dispatch a 21-member medical team to help in rescue and relief operations in Haiti. The Philippines already has a peacekeeping contingent in the country as part of its obligations to the United Nations.

Haiti is among the poorest countries in the Western Hemisphere and nearly a third of structures in the capital, Port-au-Prince, has been reported leveled to the ground, displacing hundreds of thousands of people.

“We must extend more humanitarian assistance to Haiti in the same way that the international community immediately sent aid to us when we were adversely affected by widespread flooding from typhoons Ondoy and Pepeng last year,” Loren said.

“This is more than compassion for other people in need. This is our obligation to the international community that has been very generous and unstinting in helping us whenever we face death and destruction from various natural disasters. The people of Haiti need help at this time and we should express our generosity in whatever way we can,” Loren said.

At the same time, Loren said, with the Philippines also vulnerable to destructive earthquakes as it lies along a major faultline, “now is the opportune time for government to review the structural soundness of all public and private infrastructure, particularly schools and hospitals, so that we can avoid the massive destruction that has taken place in Haiti.”

Slashed PDAF may find way into admin’s election kitty – Loren

SENATOR LOREN LEGARDA QUESTIONED TODAY PRESIDENT ARROYO AS TO WHERE THE CUTS IN THE PRIORITY DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE FUND (PDAF) OF THE PROPOSED P1.51 TRILLION 2010 NATIONAL BUDGET WILL GO.

“I am hoping that the cuts will not find themselves into the campaign kitty or the war chest of the administration candidates in the May elections,” said Loren.

“We must be vigilant against any juggling of funds. We cannot allow hard-earned taxpayers’ money to be used to get administration bets elected,” she stressed.

Loren said that the so-called fertilizer fund scam, involving the apparent use of public funds to prop the candidacy of administration candidates in the past, does not “invite confidence” in the outgoing administration.

“As much as I would want to give this administration the benefit of the doubt, I cannot because of its ‘track record’ when it comes to elections,” she said.

“People can read between the lines of what I’m saying,” Loren added.

At the same time, Loren challenged Malacañang to cut its version of the PDAF to show sincerity in whittling down the national budget.

“Budgetary cuts are not bad per se, as long as they are justified and the cuts do not result to our people being deprived of services, like healthcare, livelihood assistance and access to education.”

Loren said that the cuts in the PDAF is not the only issue, but also the practice of the administration to withhold or hijack the PDAF of districts whose representatives were critical of the President.

She pointed out that while the bicameral committee that reconciled the 2010 General Appropriations Act (GAA) put a provision that would make it difficult for the President to bar the release of the PDAF, she said that the President can always resort to the use of her line-item veto power.

“The power to impound the PDAF of districts seen critical of the administration had been done before and I do not see this administration stopping now. We must look into the law, Presidential Decree 1177, on which the impounding of PDAF had been based,” said Loren.

At the heart of the issue on the slashing of the PDAF was the P9.6 billion in PDAF which congressmen included in the 2010 GAA.

Source: http://63.247.82.66/~lorenleg/news_061_Slashed_PDAF_may_find_way_into.php

We must be prepared for a big quake

IN THE WAKE OF THE WIDESPREAD DEVASTATION CAUSED BY A MAGNITUDE 7 EARTHQUAKE IN THE CENTRAL AMERICAN NATION OF HAITI, I AM RENEWING MY CALL FOR THE PHILIPPINE GOVERNMENT TO TAKE FIRM MEASURES TO COPE WITH AN EQUALLY POWERFUL EARTHQUAKE THAT COULD PROVE CATASTROPHIC AND CAUSE LOSS OF MANY LIVES AND EXTENSIVE DAMAGE TO PROPERTY.

As United Nation's Asia Pacific champion for disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation, I extend my deepest sympathies to the people of Haiti for their sufferings from the present tragedy.

The grim reality is that the Philippines is among the countries most vulnerable to earthquakes and other natural disasters.

It is not a question of whether a big earthquake will hit the Philippines sooner or later. That much is clear from our geographic location. Rather, it is a question of when the big one will hit the country. So it is crucial for us to be adequately prepared. We certainly can avoid the devastation experienced by Haiti, for as long as we are prepared.

I don’t want to sound too alarmist. But I have long issued a warning that we must be prepared for a big earthquake. Haiti’s devastation underscores the need for us to take this very seriously. We have no time to lose.

A major study back in 2003 indicated that in the event of a magnitude 7.2 or stronger temblor in Metro Manila, many structures, including high-rise buildings, could be destroyed, and 16 million people displaced.

We must therefore prepare for the worst, Metro Manila in particular. What happened in Haiti can happen too in Metro Manila—with far worse consequences.

I have repeatedly issued this warning a number of times. At the World Debate on Disaster Risk Reduction conducted by the British Broadcasting Company last year, I argued that since the Philippines is vulnerable to a host of natural disasters—earthquakes, typhoons, flooding, landslides, volcanic eruptions—the government must create awareness among the people on how to cope with them, so that the risks can be reduced.

In my keynote speech at the Second Session of the Global Platform on Disaster Risk Reduction Conference in Geneva in June last year, I likewise challenged world leaders to initiate a new brand of politics and governance to address disaster risks. I told the forum that we must shepherd proactive laws and policies and their implementation, and translate political commitments to real actions. I highlighted the importance of developing new policies that would strengthen people’s resilience to disasters and set aside investments for disaster risk reduction.

Today, with the Haiti earthquake, disaster risk reduction is once again in everyone’s consciousness. But it should not be a seasonal thing. We must move now to substantially reduce losses from natural disasters. We cannot prevent earthquakes and destructive typhoons from happening, but it is within our power to control the human elements, such as how we manage our lands, where we develop our cities, and how we build our houses and buildings.

The Philippines has a very bright future ahead in economic growth. But we need to find a way to reduce our exposure to the risks from disasters. Exposure is the number of people and economic assets prone to the effects of possible disasters because of their location and their vulnerability.

To reduce death and destruction from earthquake disasters, the government must immediately conduct a nationwide structural evaluation of all schools and hospitals. If necessary, these structures should be retrofitted to make them withstand destructive earthquakes.

Let me emphasize that earthquakes don’t kill. Unsafe structures do. Disaster vulnerability is essentially caused by humans. Not all structures collapse in a strong earthquake, only the poorly built ones. We can save lives if we ensure that our home and offices, our schools and hospitals, and our malls and public buildings could withstand strong earthquakes. This is possible if we invest in proper and safe construction.

This is possible if we stop corruption and cheating in the construction of our public infrastructure. It is downright criminal to compromise on public safety.

The key to public safety is good urban governance. While the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) has been trying to raise public awareness on earthquake risk in Metro Manila, public attention is fleeting, and concrete preventive action remains lacking. Local governments must relentlessly assess and rectify the vulnerability of public structures in their respective areas. Administrators of office buildings and malls must also ensure earthquake safety in their premises and have contingency plans well in place and tested for preventing panic and stampede and handling the injured in the event of an earthquake. There must be strict enforcement and monitoring of building code compliance.

Prevention is better than cure, and more cost-effective. Building disaster-safe hospitals or protecting existing hospitals is surprisingly cheap. The small investments required are nothing compared to the risk of partial or complete destruction during a disaster, the death of patients and staff, and the equally high health, economic and development impacts in the aftermath. The cost of a disaster-safe hospital or health facility is negligible when included in early design considerations.

The government and the private sector should also start looking into the feasibility of disaster insurance or risk transfer to ensure resources for quick response, minimal socio-economic disruption and early recovery from earthquake impacts.

The government should likewise look at the problem in a broader context. Contemporary development practices have been irresponsible since they have allowed disaster risks to grow. Poor urban governance, ecosystems decline, vulnerable rural livelihoods, turbo-charged by climate change, have altogether created enormous risks in our cities and communities. We must therefore adopt a more integrated, holistic, and proactive approach to reduce vulnerabilities and strengthen our resilience to disasters.

Source: http://63.247.82.66/~lorenleg/news_060_We_must_be_prepared_for_a_big_quake.php