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Sunday, November 4, 2012

European leaders seek Asian support on debt crisis - ASEM 2012

Dozens of European and Asian leaders gathered in impoverished Laos on Monday for a major summit dominated by the eurozone debt crisis and growing territorial tensions in the region.

Top European officials including French President Francois Hollande and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti were due to spearhead efforts to reassure Asia that the long-running eurozone crisis is finally coming under control.

The diplomatic offensive is seen as a sign of the growing importance that debt-laden Europe places on Asia's fast-growing economies, and its desire to counter increased US engagement in the region.

"There is a doubt in Asia about Europe's capacity to be a zone of stability and growth," Hollande told reporters aboard his flight to Laos.

He said the main aim of his first trip to Asia since taking office in May was to convince Asian leaders that "Europe is still an economic power".

European Union president Herman Van Rompuy is also among those converging on Laos, a landlocked country of just six million people on the verge of joining the World Trade Organization as it opens up its fast-growing economy.

But German Chancellor Angela Merkel -- who warned over the weekend that it would take more than five years to overcome the euro debt crisis -- will not attend, sending her foreign minister instead.

The Asia-Europe Meeting, held every two years, provides an opportunity to boost trade links between two regions that together account for about half of the global GDP.

Europe "should be looking to Asia for greater economic activity", Philippine Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario told AFP in the Laos capital Vientiane ahead of the two days of talks.

"We are able to offer many areas of investment and trade for them. I think the opportunity is there for both sides," he added.

Europe's leaders may also lobby Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao to deploy some of Beijing's trove of about $3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves -- the largest in the world -- to invest in EU bailout funds.

Asian officials for their part are expected to press Europe to take swift action to calm a crisis that has battered the world economy and set back efforts to reduce global poverty.

Some Asian participants, including the Philippines, also want to put Asia's maritime sovereignty disputes on the table, but China is likely to resist.

China claims sovereignty over nearly all of the South China Sea, home to vital shipping lanes and believed to be rich in oil and gas deposits. The Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam and Taiwan also claim parts of the sea.

Separately, China, Japan and South Korea are embroiled in various territorial disputes that have stoked tensions in the region.

About 50 leaders or their representatives -- including Myanmar President Thein Sein -- are due to attend the gathering.

Outrage in the West over the former junta's human rights abuses -- including the longtime detention of Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi and other political prisoners -- soured the atmosphere of past ASEM meetings.

But since a new reformist government took power last year, overseeing the release of political detainees and Suu Kyi's election to parliament, the West has begun rolling back sanctions and foreign firms are lining up to invest.

In recent months, deadly Buddhist-Muslim clashes in western Rakhine state have cast a shadow over the reform process.

The violence is also "an issue of concern" for Southeast Asia, Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa told AFP.

"But the fact that we can meet here in the heart of Southeast Asia almost without having Myanmar as an issue centre-stage as it has been in the past is a reflection of how far Myanmar has travelled in terms of its democratic transition," he added.

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations has been accused by the West in the past of turning a blind eye to human rights abuses by the generals who ran Myanmar for decades.

Security concerns including Iran, North Korea and Syria are also on the summit agenda, along with global terrorism, climate change and piracy.

Yahoo!

Philippine government places 158 more caves under protection from treasure looters

Sagada Cave

Hidden wonders may yet lurk in these caves.

More than 150 natural caves across the Philippines have been placed under varying degrees of protection from treasure hunters, polluters and vandals, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) said.

The agency has released a new list of 158 caves it has classified for conservation, bringing to 234 the number of caves whose natural wealth and resources have been placed under the protection and management of the government.

"Caves are natural, nonrenewable resources that are of tremendous value to man, whether scientific, economic, cultural, historical or aesthetic," Environment Secretary Ramon Paje said in a statement.

"Yet they are also in constant threat from destructive human activities like vandalism, treasure hunting, pollution and illegal extraction of resources," he said.

Paje said the classification of caves would serve as a guide in identifying strategies to protect, conserve and manage the resources within and around them.

The DENR categorizes caves in three classes.

Class I caves are those with "delicate and fragile geological formations, threatened species, archaeological and paleontological values and extremely hazardous conditions."

Only activities for mapping, photography, educational and scientific purposes are allowed in these caves. Included in the list of Class I caves are two segments of the Capisaan Cave System in Kasibu, Nueva Vizcaya, and the Kwebang Puti in Cavinti, Laguna.

Sumaguing  Sagada Cave

On the other hand, Class II caves have "hazardous conditions and contain sensitive geological, archaeological, cultural, historical and biological values or high-quality ecosystems."

Such caves are open to experienced spelunkers or caving enthusiasts and guided visits, although some portions may be closed seasonally or permanently for conservation purposes. Callao Cave in Peñablanca, Cagayan, and Bat Cave on Boracay Island are examples.

Class III caves are "generally safe" for inexperienced visitors, with no known threatened species living in them, nor any archaeological, geological, historical or cultural values.

Economic activities, such as the collection of guano and edible birds' nest, are allowed in these caves. Examples of these are the Bat Cave in Peñablanca, Cagayan, Crystal Cave on Boracay Island and  Bandera Caves in on the Island Garden City of Samal, Davao del Norte.

The 158 caves classified by the DENR are spread out across all regions in the country, except Metro Manila and the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.

Western Visayas has the highest number of total assessed caves at 41, followed by the Ilocos Region, with 25. Pangasinan province has 18 caves, the biggest number in the country, followed by Iloilo with 17.

Cave classification is a process undertaken by the DENR's Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau (PAWB).

Once classified, a management plan is prepared for each cave to consider all ecotourism, scientific, educational and economic activities, as well as monitoring and reclassification, in those areas.

Palawan Subterranean Underground River Cave 

The PAWB has recorded at least 1,756 caves since the implementation of the DENR's Caves Management and Conservation Program in 1994.

Under the National Caves and Cave Resources Management and Protection Act, people are prohibited from "knowingly destroying, disturbing, defacing, marring, altering, removing, or harming" rock and mineral formations in caves, or disturbing the animal and plant life in them.

They are also prohibited from "gathering, collecting, possessing, consuming, selling, bartering or exchanging or offering for sale without authority any, cave resources."

Violators face imprisonment of up to six years or a fine of up to 500,000, or both. A tougher penalty—up to eight years in prison or a fine of up to 1 million pesos, or both—will be meted out to "the person furnishing the capital to accomplish the acts."

12 caves in Davao placed under protection

Twelve caves in various parts of Davao Region have been placed by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) under its list of protected caves to spare from further exploitation.

Sagada Cave

Across the country, DENR listed a total of 158 caves classified as protected areas with varying levels of protection classifications.

The order was by virtue of DENR Memorandum Circular no. 2012-03 dated October 30 in pursuant to Republic Act No. 9072 otherwise known as the National Caves and Cave Resources Management and Protection Act.

Of the 12 caves that have been considered as protected areas, seven of which are located in the Island Garden City of Samal (Igacos).

The caves that are declared protected areas with their location and respective levels of classification includes:

  • Okbot Cave - class II - located in Barangay Suaon, Kapalong
  • Alena Cave - Class II - located in Barangay Suaon, Kapalong
  • Kapunit Cave - Class I - located in Barangay Suaon, Kapalong
  • Kambat Cav - Class III - located in Barangay Suaon, Kapalong
  • Mangitngit Cave - Class I, in Barangay Igangon, San Isidro;
  • Tamburong Cave -- Class II
  • Bandera I and II Caves -- Class III located in Barangay Bandera, Igacos;
  • Manan-ao Cave -- Class II located in Barangay Bandera, Igacos;  
  • Sion Bat Cave -- Class Class II - located in Barangay Sion in Igacos
  • Langgasakan Cave -- Class III - located in Barangay Sion in Igacos
  • Baga Cave -- Class II in barangay Sta. Cruz, Talikud Island in Igacos.

Any activities including for economical purposes such as extraction of guano and edible birds' nest are allowed in these caves.

Palawan Subterranean Underground River Cave 

"A cave management plan will be prepared for each classified cave, provided that all eco tourism, scientific, educational and economic activities, whenever allowed, must be guided by concerned DENR personnel. The said management plan shall also include monitoring and reclassification of the classified caws," DENR Secretary Ramon Paje said in the same circular.

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