

CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY — The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) enters its last leg of nationwide consultations with more than 300 industry and sector leaders in a two-day forum here to refine and craft adaptive, inclusive and sustainable development pathways on environmental governance.

Salvador, however, lamented that there are only 392 pairs of Philippine Eagle left. A record of 94 eagles were rescued, the highest rescue rate in the history of Philippine Eagle conservation. Hunting remains rampant where wild pig and deer meat is still illegally sold in the areas of Mt. Apo. Worse, hunters bring with them African Swine Flu (ASF)-contaminated meat into the wild. In 2021 a mass death of 141 wild pigs were reported in a 325 hectare preservation area in Tagum City and across the country believed infected with ASF.
The Cagayan de Oro leg completes the agency’s nationwide consultations for a whole-of-society approach to environmental resilience. The Mindanao leg follows the Luzon and Visayas legs of the forum which commenced in Manila on October 2022. On February 2, 2023, the forum gathered insights on environmental governance as well as other pertinent issues such as ecotourism, agriculture and food security, forest and land management, climate and disaster resilience, and mining.

The IPs feared that unless a ritual ceremony is done to appease the Gods, it will endanger the low-lying Cagayan de Oro City of flooding. This prompted then 403rd Battalion Brigade Commander Colonel Romeo Gapuz and his officers to submit into the “sorry ritual” called “Pangluntay.”
DENR Secretary Antonia Loyzaga stressed that the Mindanao region “requires a localized and contextualized approach” and assured stakeholders that the DENR will continue its extensive consultations across all local communities.

(Text and photos by Giovanni A. Flaviano)