FEATURE
NORZAGARAY,
Philippines —
Father-of-five Alex Lesber patrols one of the Philippines’ most
important forests carrying a cheap pistol and memories of a pastor
being shot dead in front of him.
Lesber is one of just 2,000
poorly paid rangers trying to stop what the government admits is
“rampant” illegal logging across the country, and their time
roaming amid the vanishing forests is becoming increasingly
dangerous.
Twenty of his colleagues have been murdered since the
government imposed a nationwide logging ban in 2010, according to the
environment ministry, a move that prompted already shady timber
merchants to adopt more aggressive tactics.
“There is always
that possibility that one of us could get hurt where we work. We
arrest people, so naturally they hate us,” Lesber, 49, told AFP
while patrolling Angat forest, one of the main watersheds for
Manila’s dams.
The stakes are high for the Philippines, a
tropical Southeast Asian nation of more than 7,000 islands that has
lost more than half its forest cover over the past century.
There
are only 7.6 million hectares (18.78 million acres) left to be
guarded by men like Lesber.
But the Philippines’ forest rangers
are under-funded, out-numbered and extremely vulnerable, according to
Environment Secretary Ramon Paje.
“Fighting illegal logging
should be a considered a military operation, rather than a regulatory
one. We want the army at the forefront, rather than our rangers,”
he told reporters recently.
One of the problems for the rangers is
that corrupt government officials are often involved in the timber
industry, according to environment activists.
This is part of a
broader scourge across the Philippines of underpaid local officials
or security forces being enticed into lucrative but illegal
businesses.
President Benigno Aquino has said repeatedly that
corruption within government and society in general is the country’s
biggest problem.
Paje said at least eight city mayors around the
Philippines were under investigation for allegedly protecting illegal
loggers.
From a tiny and sparse concrete building base in
Norzagaray town, three hours’ drive north of Manila, Lesber and the
other Angat rangers drive a beat-up pickup truck into the forests for
patrols that last up to a week.
There are just eight rangers
trying to protect 21,000 hectares of forests that serve as the
watershed for nearly all of the tap water of the Philippine capital
and nearby areas, home to 15 million people.
Aside from logging,
the rangers have to contend with what they say are the even more
ominous forces of slash-and-burn farmers.
Lesber said the rangers
regularly received death threats as well as bribe offers, although he
insisted they did not take any despite each earning just P11,000
($260) a month.
Lesber said the rangers carefully picked their
battles to avoid the most dangerous situations, typically avoiding
slash-and-burn farmers because they were desperate people known to
fight to protect their livelihoods.
“Unless they cause extensive
damage, we let them be. I know they will not hesitate to kill me if I
apply the law to the letter,” he said.
But with these tactics,
Lesber said the rangers had watched helplessly as thousands of
migrants settled in the watershed, clearing swathes of valuable
forest for farms, in recent years.
Arrests of illegal loggers are
also rare, with the rangers instead preferring to confiscate timber
left on the ground and perform monitoring duties.
Lesber, who
wears a military-style jacket, jeans and rubber shoes to work, said
he carried his own pistol while on patrol but that it was not
enough.
“I wish the government would give us guns. That would
lessen the odds stacked against us,” Lesber said.
The most
terrifying moment for Lesber came in 2003 when he and other rangers
watched three gunmen suspected to be working for illegal loggers drag
a preacher out of his chapel, then stabbed and shot him dead on the
street.
He said the preacher had just tipped off the rangers about
illegal logging in the area.
No-one was arrested for the murder
even though a group of soldiers also witnessed the killing, according
to Lesber and the environment ministry.
But that is not unusual in
the Philippines.
Rights groups say the country has a brutal
“culture of impunity,” in which politicians, business figures and
other powerful interests feel free to murder anyone standing in their
way, comfortable knowing they will not get caught. AFP
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