Bu-lat-lat (boo-lat-lat) verb: to search, probe, investigate, inquire; to unearth facts Volume 2, Number 30 September 1 - 7, 2002 Quezon City, Philippines |
Bulatlat.com Special Report Diwalwal
Folk Caught in the Grip of Violence, Greed (First
of a series) Mt.
Diwalwal is said to hold the Philippines' largest gold deposit, perhaps one of
the largest in the world, according to the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources. Years were when a miner can earn a few thousand bucks in a day. With
the new-found wealth, however, has come the problem of peace and order. By
Daisy C. Gonzales and Carlos H. Conde Bulatlat.com
Home
to Solita and Aloma was Mount Diwata, the infamous gold-rush mountain more
popularly known as Diwalwal, which means, literally, a tongue sticking out due
to exhaustion, which is what happens when one goes there on foot. In Diwalwal,
dreams become a reality -- or they die with the thousands who have perished in
numerous cave-ins, landslides and murders. Solita's
and Aloma's paths crossed on July 25, when Solita's husband, along with other
workers from the JB Management and Mining Corp. (JBMMC), was allegedly ordered
by their superiors to literally smoke out the miners working in tunnels above
the one owned by JBMMC in Diwalwal. The JBMMC workers allegedly burned rubber
tires and emptied acetylene tanks into a tunnel called Australia; the smoke also
affected the Bulbscor and R-3 tunnels - all rival tunnels of JBMMC. Forty-three
miners and workers fell ill. One miner, Roberto Zamora, Aloma's husband, died;
he had actually survived the smoking but died when he went back to the Australia
tunnel a few days later. The
July 25 smoking was the latest of several similar poisoning incidents since
1999. These smokings have injured more than a hundred miners and workers, mainly
in the tunnels of Australia and Helica. Last
month, a distraught Solita arrived in a government office with her six-year-old
daughter, an eight-year-old son and a nephew. Judging by the belongings with
them - two plastic bags and a traveling bag filled with clothes - it was clear
that Solita and her children had no intention of going back to Diwalwal. Solita
told a government official that days after the July 25 smoking, her husband
disappeared. But she just got a call from him; he told her that he was all right
and that he was in a safe place. "My conscience is bothering me,"
Solita quoted him as saying. She says her husband had admitted participation in
the smoking. Since
then, policemen had paid Solita's neighborhood "visits"; the men would
ask Solita's neighbors about her whereabouts and they would stay in an eatery in
front of Solita's house, watching. It was too much for Solita to bear, so they
started moving from one place to another, until they decided to seek help from
the government official, who is now taking care of Solita and her children. Aloma
faces the same danger as Solita. On at least two occasions during her husband's
wake in a Nabunturan funeral home, armed men visited her. One of them told her
that she didn't need to have her husband's body autopsied "because they
(the coroner) will chop him to pieces." Aloma replied that that is not true
and that she would definitely have her husband's corpse examined. The man
retorted: "It's up to you then. But be careful tonight." Nothing
happened that night but Aloma said a white Mazda pick-up and a motorcycle would
later park near the funeral home, as if staking out the place. Later,
Aloma joined 5,000 miners from Diwalwal in blocking the Tagmanok Bridge in Mawab
town, in this province. They were demanding justice for the victims of the
smoking and other killings in Diwalwal that, according to the miners, are meant
to drive them out of Diwalwal. Roberto's coffin was also brought to the
barricade. Even
though it is not the military's job to deal with demonstrations, the Army --
complete with armored personnel carriers and high-powered firearms - sent
soldiers to Tagmanok Bridge to disperse the miners. The APC broke through the
miners' barricades, running over at least one miner (he survived) as well as
Zamora's corpse. Goons called the Black Ninjas who are said to be the JBMCC's
men destroyed what the APC didn't; they even tossed pieces of wood on Zamora's
body. Footage of the Tagmanok Bridge dispersal, including the one that shows the corpse being run over by the APC, was shown on national television and showed to the rest of the country the dire situation of the Diwalwal miners and their families, many of them dead, some of them - like Solita and Aloma - living in fear, caught in the web of violence that resulted from the power struggle over this mountain of gold. The discovery It
is hard to imagine that the 6 feet by 4 feet tunnel, which narrows as it snakes
down in the belly of a portion of Diwalwal called Balite, leads to a maze of
tunnels that can accommodate 200 people. "But these tunnels do," says
Franco Tito, the barangay chairman of Diwalwal. The sulfur-like smell, he points
out, indicates that people are working in the shafts down below, burrowing at
the earth, for a shot at what Tito calls "the good life." "People
in the outside world oftentimes take what we do here for granted. But as you can
see and smell, this is not at all easy," Tito says. But gold in Diwalwal has always been easy. Since Lumads headed by Datu Camilio Banad discovered gold there in 1982, people from all over Southern Mindanao had come in droves, initially using crude tools and equipment as they burrow into the mountain, creating tunnels that, according to some miners, now resemble a plate of noodles. The area is said to hold the Philippines' largest gold deposit, perhaps one of the largest in the world. According to figures from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, some P2 billion worth of gold is produced in Diwalwal annually and that Diwalwal gold account for 20 percent of the country's production. In the early days, according to Tito and several miners interviewed for this report, some guy from nowhere would just pop in Diwalwal, start digging and, at the end of the day, easily make thousands of pesos. Indeed,
the gold was so abundant and the people so few (there were no big miners then,
unlike today) that Diwalwal soon became a replica of the gold-rush site in San
Francisco, California in the last century. Bars and brothels sprouted. Trade and
commerce became so brisk that an enterprising businessman could make thousands
in a week just by selling Medicol; the businessman wouldn't even have to think
about becoming a miner himself. Along with the easy money came the law-and-order problem. Because the area was largely unregulated by government, anybody -- among them criminals from all over the country -- could just come and blend in with the population. Soon, miners were beginning to guard their respective turfs and since they could only do this by having arms, they turned to the military and the police. Miners would rent their firearms (the rent was called an SOP, for "standard operating procedure"); an M16 rifle could be rented for P30,000 a month while a .45-caliber automatic pistol could be had for P15,000 a month. The cops and the soldiers needn't have to mine gold themselves. Soon, Diwalwal became the murder capital of the Philippines, with bodies turning up dead practically every day. People also would go missing -- and nobody seemed to care. (Criminals and strangers would come to Diwalwal and use aliases.) But Tito puts a positive spin to it by saying that the opportunities Diwalwal presented to people, particularly those with shady pasts and those who are too illiterate to even dream about having a "normal" job, was real. "If an ex-convict wanted to turn a new leaf," says Tito in Visayan, "Diwalwal was the place." In
spite of the violence, which sometimes bordered on the insane (the story goes
that a drunk man went home one night; when he found the street much too dark, he
lit it up by firing his M-16 rifle into the ground), the people of Diwalwal
stuck it out and shrugged the violence off, as though it was part of their daily
life that nobody should be worried about. Bulatlat.com (Part Two: Entry of huge mining firm turns Diwalwal into powder keg)
(Next week: Will the DENR's formula for Diwalwal work?) We want to know what you think of this article.
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