Malaya (06.10.06)
“While there is a lot of mining going on in the Province of Palawan, this is a forbidden activity in environment-friendly Puerto Princesa City.”
Impressions of Puerto Princesa
by Ducky Paredes
I had not been to Puerto Princesa for some time. I visited this week and found it even better than my last visit. The first time I visited, in 1992, a new mayor had just been sworn in. He was the stuff of legend.
He would run after cars where passengers litter on the streets of the city. A donor of motorcycles was caught at the airport, as he was about to leave. He had thrown a cigarette butt out the window. The man, impressed, was smiling as he paid his fine.
Squatters, about to build a house would find themselves facing demolition even before they could install the first post.
It looked then to be a vibrant, new way of running a city. Now, 14 years later, the discipline, concern for the environment and caring for the common man are still all there and the infrastructure building continues.
There is a ten-kilometer bay walk being built along the shore in the busiest part of the city right by the main pier.
The main roads have been, surprisingly, widened, a seemingly impossible task considering how crowded they were. Some houses have been torn down. Buildings have been shorn of portions abutting the roadway.
City roads are concrete. Some national roads are still in disrepair.
The mayor is unrelenting in his anti-logging drive. Even as I visited, a truck carrying logs was stopped by the mayor’s environment workers and was parked in city property for all to see.
The Bantay Dagat patrols continue to protect Honda Bay against dynamite fishing, over fishing, coral harvesting and cyanide fishers looking for aquarium fish to stun and capture. Sadly, in the province, outside Puerto Princesa territory, all these activities continue.
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The City Coliseum in Puerto Princesa City where the PBA plays its games is among the best I have seen. It will sit 10,000 who all have an untrammeled view of the hard-court.
Anyone thinking of doing a show in Palawan ought to think about doing it in this air-conditioned gym that is as good as the Araneta Center but only smaller. It was designed by an award-winning Dumaguete architect.
Another venue for budding impresarios would be the Convention Center, which can, likewise, accommodate 10,000 bodies.
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While there is a lot of mining going on in the Province of Palawan, this is a forbidden activity in environment-friendly Puerto Princesa City. The main reason for this is the city’s unfortunate experience with the Palawan Quick Silver Mining, Inc., which was a mining operation for mercury. Palawan Quick Silver that dumped its tailings into Honda Bay, polluting it badly and killing the fish.
The company, a subsidiary of Marsman, closed the mine in 1975. Still, an unusually large number of residents of Barangay Sta. Lourdes in Puerto Princesa, the mine site, continue to this day to have an alarmingly high level of mercury in their bodies.
The mine is now the site of the modern landfill project. The City Council of Puerto Princesa has passed a resolution that forbids any mining activity within the city.
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When I asked a Puerto Princesa resident why Mayor Edward Hagedorn does not seem to have too much support from the NGOs -- Non-Governmental Organizations, I was treated to a long spiel about how these NGOS operate. Basically, the point that my friend made was that these NGOs were making money off their foreign sponsors and would continue to do so as long as they could convince these foreigners that they were badly needed by the specific sector they were supposedly serving.
How could they support someone like Hagedorn when he is, in effect, showing the world that it is people like himself who can actively protect the environment, without the help or participation of these money-hungry, mostly inutile NGOs.
08.30.05
Malaya (08.30.05)
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Mayor Edward Hagedorn or Puerto Princesa City is the right man for stopping jueteng. What he needs as back-up is for the police and the political leadership to have the same commitment as he has for stopping jueteng.
Edward has been given a deadline of September 15 to stop jueteng. There is no doubt that Hagedorn can do it. What we do not know yet is whether the support that he will get from the police and the administration will allow Hagedorn to finish the job. The only way that Edward can fail is if he does not receive full support from them.
Hagedorn explains that he “has absolutely nothing to do with legalized, local-based games being run by Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. and the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office.
"That is their business; ours is to stop jueteng.”
Edward Hagedorn was the jueteng operator in Puerto Princesa City before he was elected mayor in 1992. As mayor, he stopped jueteng altogether. Jueteng has not come back to Puerto Princesa.
Hagedorn says that those looking for a legal replacement for jueteng “are totally ignorant or misinformed about the evils, mechanism and operations of this illegal numbers game racket.
“There are no two ways at it. Either we totally eradicate it or tolerate it. Since my mandate is to stop it, then jueteng must be eradicated totally.”
Edward says of jueteng that it “makes suckers out of every bettor.”
He revealed that the odds are so badly stacked against the poor who bet their last peso for a chance to win the jueteng jackpot.
According to Hagedorn: “This explains the shadowy Mafia-style nature of jueteng and the evils it continues to breed including the corruption of local and police officials.
“Jueteng can be stopped and it will be stopped by Sept. 15. There is no turning back.”
Brave words, Mayor Hagedorn. But, this can happen only if the national political leadership and the Philippine National Police will back you a hundred percent. Let us hope that they give you the support that you need.
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Readers who missed a column can go to http://ducky.paredes-ohana.org. Your reactions are welcome at duckyparedes@gmail.com.
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Ducky Paredes' Columns :
in Malaya and Abante began in 1993 and will go on until I stop writing or when the newspapers quit on me. Enjoy them. I know I enjoy writing what you are reading and I enjoy your letters, too -- even those that do not agree with my viewpoint. This blog also has some family pictures. Do browse them!




