Marcopper photo attributed to Catherine Coumans |
A year after the accident, Placer Dome sold all shares and
by 1999 the large cleanup project on their hands brought about by the disaster would
cost about $60-million (Coumans 1999). That does not include estimates for the
repair of the abandoned earth dams that continue to pose threats to lives and
property, estimates for damages caused the ecosystems of Mogpog River, Calancan
Bay and affected coastal areas. Neither does it include estimates for just
compensation for Marinduquenos in general, nor for those filed by various claimants in Marinduque and Manila courts for damages caused by the pollution of Mogpog River and Calancan Bay.
There was that $12-million in escrow that was supposed to
have been deposited by Placer Dome in a bank in Hongkong “known only to select
government and Marcopper officials”. Read. The said money was supposed to
“expire” by 2007, and nothing has been disclosed about the fate of those funds
since then.
But really, Marcopper’s operation has been characterized by
a long history of keeping secret from
the people of Marinduque, matters of critical importance to them. Previous
attempts to sit down to pinpoint responsibilities through Congressional
inquiries in those years merely confirmed the lingering suspicion in people’s
minds that nothing, nothing positive could come out of a case that has been
characterized by extreme confidentiality. If at all, only more shock and
disbelief could possibly ensue.
So, this non-disclosure game and treachery that haunt us
till now that, absolutely have kept us, Marinduquenos, in the dark on issues
pertaining to this 17-year old problem.