Sunday, December 15, 2024

Tawo gipatay sa pinyahan sa Sumilao

Isa ka tawo ang napalgang patay sa Pineapple Plantation sa Field 70, Section Charlie 2, Zone 4, Sitio Kilabong, Vista Villa, Sumilao, Bukidnon niadtong Disyembre 15, 2023

Sumala sa report ni Police Major Larry Enciso, acting chief of police sa Sumilao Municipal
Police Station (MPS), ang biktima isa ka 59 anyos nga lalaki.

Ang biktima nakaangkon sa daghang samad dinunggaban sa dughan, tiyan, bukton, ug mga
samad tinigbasan sa tiil ug liog.

Sa inisyal nga imbestigasyon, nasayran nga sa wala pa ang insidente, nakig-inom ang biktima
uban sa mga higala sa maong adlaw.

Ang Sumilao MPS nagpahigayon og imbestigasyon aron matigom ang mga pamahayag sa saksi
ug mangolekta og dugang ebidensiya nga mahimong mahinungdanon sa pagpasaka og kaso
batok sa (mga) suspek. (Omar Rashid Z. Abdullah)

Tawo gipatay sa pinyahan sa Sumilao

Isa ka tawo ang napalgang patay sa Pineapple Plantation sa Field 70, Section Charlie 2, Zone 4, Sitio Kilabong, Vista Villa, Sumilao, Bukidnon niadtong Disyembre 15, 2023

Sumala sa report ni Police Major Larry Enciso, acting chief of police sa Sumilao Municipal Police Station (MPS), ang biktima isa ka 59 anyos nga lalaki.

Ang biktima nakaangkon sa daghang samad dinunggaban sa dughan, tiyan, bukton, ug mga samad tinigbasan sa tiil ug liog.

Sa inisyal nga imbestigasyon, nasayran nga sa wala pa ang insidente, nakig-inom ang biktima uban sa mga higala sa maong adlaw.

Ang Sumilao MPS nagpahigayon og imbestigasyon aron matigom ang mga pamahayag sa saksi ug mangolekta og dugang ebidensiya nga mahimong mahinungdanon sa pagpasaka og kaso batok sa (mga) suspek. (Omar Rashid Z. Abdullah)

Lalaki patay sa heat stroke sa Sumilao

Isa ka lalaki ang giingon nga nakasinati og heat stroke ug nakitang patay sa Munisipyo sa Sumilao

Napalgan ang patay’ng lawas sa biktima sa canal sa Lapayan Pineapple Plantation, Purok 1, Brgy. San Vicente.

Si Police Major Larry Enciso, acting chief of police sa Sumilao Municipal Police Station miingon sa iyang report nga napalgan ang patay’ng lawas sa biktima pasado alas 6:30pm sa Disyembre 10,2023.

Nasuta nga ang biktima isa ka 60 anyos nga residente ra sab sa maong dapit.

Giingon nga ang biktima nagbaklay pauli sa iyang panimalay gikan sa iyang uma sa dihang na heat stroke ug natumba sa kanal hinungdan sa iyang hinanaling kamatayon.

Mismong ang pag-umangkon sa biktima ang nakadiskubri sa gidangatan sa biktima.

Dugang pa nga walay nakitang timailhan sa foul play. (Diego M. Hidalgo)

Mindanao coffee farmers sweep PCQC 2023

ILIGAN CITY — Farmers from Mindanao garnered all 12 winning entries in the Arabica category during Sunday’s awarding ceremonies of the Philippine Coffee Quality Competition 2023 held at the World Trade Center in Pasay City, according to announcements from the Department of Trade and Industry offices in the Northern Mindanao and Davao regions

Garnering the top prize with a cupping score of 86 was Manolito Garces’ natural-processed coffee, with cupping notes of pineapple, mango, black currant, and honey. Garces is from New Eden, Pangantucan in Bukidnon.

Second was Jhon Lawrence dela Cerna, of the Balutakay Coffee Farmers’ Association (BACOFA) in Bansalan, Davao del Sur, with a score of 85.75; third was Dione F. Ellaga, also of Bansalan, 85.41.

Fourth place was Junmar Gunayan, of the MILALITTRA Farmers Agricultural Cooperative (MILFACO), of Bukidnon, 85.03; fifth was Rogelio Gonzales, also of BACOFA in Bansalan, 85; and sixth was Arnold Pina, of the Bayanihan Millennium Multipurpose Cooperative (BMMPC) in Pangantucan, Bukidnon, 84.97.

Completing the top 12 were Rogelio R. Balacuit, of Amai Manabilang in Lanao del Sur; Cecilia G. Cavalida, Davao del Sur; Rosebele Sulatan, MILFACO; Cherry Gil Cabanday, Davao del Sur; Roquita dela Cerna, Davao del Sur; and Lendilou F. Loon, Davao del Sur.

Arabica coffee is considered the superior coffee and fetches higher prices for the farmers.

In the Robusta category, Ilocos Sur farmers dominated the competition, winning 10 of the top 12, according to the DTI-Ilocos Region.

First place was Vilma Lapasan, of the Tirad Pass Growers Association, Gregorio del Pilar, Ilocos Sur, with a cupping score of 85.22. Her coffee had notes of vanilla, pineapple, berries, and raisin.

Two farmers from Sultan Kudarat province also made it to the winning entries—Reyjohn A. Basco, 8th place; and Robert James Gacayan, 10th.

Second was Mabini Ubuan, of San Elias Coffee Growers Association in Sigay, with a score of 85; third was Juana Bitongan, also of Gregorio del Pilar, 84.38; fourth was Marietta Lidem, of Sigay, 83.94; and fifth was Jean Apalet, also of Sigay, Ilocos Sur, 83.5.

The rest of the winners from Ilocos Sur were Byron Daplayan, 6th; Silvestra Villegas, 7th; Erlinda Dao-ayan, 9th; Jordan Dalida, 11th; and Marielle Gannad, 12th. (MindaNews)

DMPI mipasalig nga motuman sa mga lagda sa lokal nga kagamhanan

Mipasalig ang Del Monte Philippines, Incorporated (DMPI) nga motuman sa mga lagda sa lokal nga kagamhanan, human gidapit sa 27th Sangguniang Panlalawigan (SP), atol sa Committee

Hearing sa Committee of the Whole, niadtong Marso 7, 2023 sa SP Session Hall, Capitol Compound, Malaybalay City, Bukidnon.
Nasayran pinaagi sa sunod-sunod nga monitoring sa City Environment and Natural Resources Office (ENRO), nga pipila ka mga gi-alegar nga kalapasan ang nahimo sa DMPI, lakip na ang dili awtorisadong pagpalapad niini sa ilang pineapple plantations sa pipila ka mga barangay sa syudad sa Malaybalay, sukwahi sa nakalatid sa ilang Environmental Compliance Certificate (ECC).
Nahibaloan usab nga pipila sa ilang operasyon ang wala makakuha ug clearances o endorsement gikan sa mga hingtungdang barangays ug sa LGU-Malaybalay, ingon man napakyas kini ug kuha sa mga clearances gikan sa City Planning alang sa zoning certification ug sa City Agriculture’s Office alang sa food security purposes and sufficiency, hinungdan nga wala sila mahatagan ug business permit.
Gani, sunod-sunod nga mga resolusyon ang gipalabang ni 2nd District Board Member Nemesio B. Beltran, Jr., aron hangyoon ang Multi-partite Monitoring Team (MMT) ug Provincial Agriculture Office (PAgrO), nga imbestigahan ang maong kalapasan sa mga resolusyon ug ordinasa sa SP ug sa Sangguniang Panlungsod sa Malaybalay City, aron matuki kini sa
hawanan sa SP. Sa moang pagdungog, gibutyag ni Atty. Marco Parpan, Legal Counsel sa DMPI, nga kasamtanangan na silang naglihok sa pag-comply sa gikinahanglang mga rekisitos ug nagpasalig nga makigkooperar sa City ENRO, aron hingpit masunod ang mga lagda sa lokal nga kagamhanan, diin andam usab ang City ENRO nga tabangan sila niini nga lakang, sanglit nahimo usab silang kaabag sa kalambuan, ilabi na sa job opportunities niini sa probinsya. Giklaro usab ni Ms. Maria Anita L. Fernandez, City ENR Officer nga dili lamang DMPI ang ilang gitutokan, apan ang tanang plantasyon nga naglihok sa syudad, aron masiguro nga nagsunod kini sa mga ang environmental mitigations ug malikayan ang posibling pagbaha sa umaabot. (PR)

Aborted Bukidnon pineapple deal ignites farmers’ feud

CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY — A deal to grow pineapples for a multinational company in Bukidnon has opened a pandora’s box of accusations from one group of farmers against another and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR).

Leonardo Montemayor, national chair of the Federation of Free Farmers (FFF), in a statement accused environment officials in the province of brokering a deal to allow the multinational Del Monte to lease farmers’ land covered by community-based forestry management agreements (CBFMA) issued by the DENR for lands classified as forests.

In his statement, Montemayor, also former agriculture secretary accused DENR officials in Bukidnon—Vergilino Alima, Bukidnon provincial environment officer (Penro), and Virgilio Batocail, community environment officer (Cenro) of Don Carlos town and Valencia City—of “pressuring holders” of CBFMA papers to “illegally sublease their landholdings” to Del Monte.

Cash for taxes

But the head of the farmers’ group involved in the deal said the local environment officials had no role to play in his group’s deal with Del Monte for a pineapple growers’ contract in the group’s CBFMA area.

Victoriano Cuizon Jr., president of the farmers’ group Merangerang Farmers’ Association (Merfasi), said his group initiated the deal to raise enough cash to pay taxes to the provincial government.

Cuizon told the Inquirer that the agreement to grow pineapples with Del Monte did not push through because of the feud between his group and another allied with Montemayor’s FFF.

“We really wanted to make that deal because we needed to pay our taxes but because of the tension, it was put on hold,” he said in a phone interview.

He said the decision to enter into a deal with Del Monte was made by his group and not Alima nor Batocail. The two DENR officials, said Cuizon, “were not part of our agreement with Del Monte.”

In his statement, Montemayor accused Alima and Batocail of encouraging Merfasi to register as a group separate from FFF but with the same. name and address and claiming the same CBFMA area.

Alima and Batocail told the Inquirer in separate phone interviews that they merely wanted to unify the feuding farmers’ groups but had nothing to do with Merfasi’s deal with Del Monte.

Alima said it was perfectly legit for Merfasi to enter into a deal with any company for its CBFMA as long as the contract was lawful.

Alima said he assumed his post only in 2017 while the feud between the two Merfasi factions had been going on long before that.

Cuizon said Merfasi had originally been a group of 70 farmers who, on June 23, 2009, was awarded CBFMA No. 55150, covering 164.57 hectares of public forest land in the town of Quezon, Bukidnon.

But the group, which used to be an FFF affiliate, had been divided between those who remained with the FFF and those who opted to leave the national organization.

Separate ways
He said most of his members had decided to bolt the FFF in 2009 when the group registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) under the name Merfasi.

“We were the original group,” Cuizon said.

He said his group registered as Merfasi (Merangerang Farmers Association). However, 26 of its members, also bolted and registered with the SEC as a separate group called Merangeran Free Farmers’ Association (Merfasi), “claiming the same CBFMA.”

He said the two factions distinguished themselves from each other by referring to the FFF-affiliated group as the Merangeran Free Farmers and Cuizon’s group as Merangeran Farmers, without the word “free.”

“But because we have the same CBFMA, we pay our tax as a whole, and our group usually ends up paying the tax of the entire tract of land, including that of the other faction,” Cuizon added.

Batocail, who assumed his post just last year, said he only wanted the feuding factions to unite when he called for a meeting of the two opposing parties last May 25. Only five of the FFF-affiliated Merfasi members attended while most of Cuizon’s 52 members showed up.

According to Cuizon, his group, and not the FFF-affiliated Merfasi, first registered with SEC in 2009.

But Montemayor referred to Cuizon’s group as the “rogue” group which approved a resolution to “lease illegally” the CBFMA area to Del Monte.

Cuizon said the deal was for his group to grow pineapples for Del Monte and subleasing the CBFMA area was not part of it.

“We don’t want to sublease it because the rate would be very cheap, we would not be earning enough,” Cuizon said.

He said the farmers owed the provincial government a tax of close to P1 million for the CBFMA. He said for years, his group had been paying the tax of the entire CBFMA, including the part held by the other faction, but no deal with Del Monte was possible because of the feud.

“We don’t want to be penalized, that’s why we decided to enter into an agreement with Del Monte so that we could raise enough money to pay the taxes,” Cuizon said. The taxes, he said, were not for the land but for the crops, like corn and sugarcane, that his group planted within their CBFMA area.

In another statement, Montemayor said DENR inaction on the issue was “contributing to escalating tension” and possible violence over the CBFMA area.

The deal with Del Monte, according to Montemayor, was worth at least P25 million, citing reports.

In his statement, Montemayor quoted FFF Bukidnon president Glicerio J. Tan as blaming the conflict on the failure of Alima and Batocail to enforce a DENR directive in 2015 that corrected the name of the CBFMA holder from Merangeran Farmers Association Inc. to Merangeran Free Farmers Association Inc.

Montemayor’s statement said Merfasi and its members have been with FFF for the last 30 to 40 years. During application for CBFMA, a “bureaucratic mistake” led to Merfasi’s incomplete name being listed on the CBFMA document.

Tan was further quoted as saying there was an “inexplicable delay” by the local DENR office in correcting the Merfasi name which “emboldened a breakaway group.”

SEC order

But last May 17, the Securities and Exchange Commission ordered the group of Cuizon to change its name or face revocation of its registration with the SEC.

The Cuizon faction entered into the deal with Del Monte a week before its SEC registration, Montemayor’s statement said.

This, despite opposition to the deal relayed to the local DENR office by the FFF faction of Merfasi, said Montemayor in the statement.

It quoted Tan as accusing Batocail and Alima of ordering Merfasi-FFF to submit itself to a DENR-supervised election of leaders along with the breakaway group which the two DENR officials said was their way of trying to unify the group.

The two DENR officials allegedly threatened Merfasi members, who would not submit themselves to the elections, with loss of landholding, according to Montemayor’s statement, citing Tan.

The elections, however, were cancelled at the last minute, according to Montemayor’s statement.

Tan was quoted as saying that last May 26, “outsiders” recruited by Cuizon’s group “forced their way” into the Merfasi CBFMA “waving bladed weapons against Merfasi members.”

The Merfasi FFF faction, the statement of Montemayor said, had already filed a complaint against Alima and Batocail for violating the Anti-Red Tape Act of 2007 for failure to correct the group’s corporate name.

By: Germelina Lacorte, Jigger J. Jerusalem – @inquirerdotnetINQUIRER.net, Philippine Daily Inquirer / 06:27 PM June 09, 2021