Monday, July 26, 2010

BFAR Very FAR from the truth; Sperm whale died of old age?!

In a report coursed through the media in Legazpi City on July 23, the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) Region V attributed to old age the death of the sperm whale found in Rapu-Rapu, Albay on July 19, 2010.
(
http://bomboradyo.com/index.php/news/regional-news/bicolano-news/11575-update-kagurangan-causa-kan-pagkagadan-kan-sperm-whale-sa-carogcog-rapu-rapu-albay)


This conclusion was made by the government agency despite its own prior information on July 20 that:

Ariel Tioquinto, BFAR Fisheries Emergency Response Stranding (FERS) team assistant leader, said the team confirmed that it was indeed a sperm whale measuring 15 meters long, 7.5 meters in diameter and 3 wide. (
http://balita.ph/2010/07/20/dead-sperm-whale-fished-out-in-rapu-rapu-albay/)

At 15 meters long, the whale cannot be a female because the maximum length of a female sperm whale is 11 meters; its maximum weight 15 tons. The following data from different references support the hypothesis that it was not a female:

A bull can grow up to 20.5
metres (67 ft) long.
(
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sperm_whale)


The sperm whale is an animal of extremes in size (up to 18 m), sexual dimorphism (mature males have three times the mass of mature females).
(
http://www.iucnredlist.org/apps/redlist/details/41755/0)


Adult females may grow to lengths of 36 feet (11 m) and weigh 15 tons (13607 kg). Adult males, however, reach about 52 feet (16 m) and may weigh as much as 45 tons (40823 kg). Adult females may grow to lengths of 36 feet (11 m) and weigh 15 tons (13607 kg). Adult males, however, reach about 52 feet (16 m) and may weigh as much as 45 tons (40823 kg).
(
http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/S/sperm_whale.html)


Sperm whales are the largest toothed whales. Adult males grow to be about 50-60 feet (17-20 meters) long, weighing about 40-50 tons (36-45 tonnes). Females are smaller, about 33-40 feet (11-13 meters) long, weighing about 14-18 tons.
(
http://balita.ph/2010/07/20/dead-sperm-whale-fished-out-in-rapu-rapu-albay/)

At 12 meters (according to local residents) or 15 meters (according to BFAR V), the sperm whale that died in Rapu-Rapu could not have been a female but a young male. If so, then it could not have died of old age.

Another objection we raise to the BFAR conclusion is the total silence of the agency as to whether or not a sampling and sharing of the samples was done with third-party laboratories. Issuing the old-age cause of the whale’s death, BFAR V clearly shows that it never did any laboratory analysis or waited for any result. It takes 15 days to do the lab test. (On the dead sperm whale in 2006, the Philippine Institute of Pure and Applied Chemistry (PIPAC) of Ateneo de Manila University received the samples on April 5 and issued the results on April 20, 2006.) The 15-day requisite is confirmed by the Chemistry Department of Aquinas University of Legazpi as a period for the “incubation” of the sample. Releasing its conclusion on July 22, 2010 after visiting the site on July 20 clearly leaves the agency only two (2) days to make any laboratory test, if ever one was done. Also, BFAR V does not cite any basis for its conclusion that old age was the cause of the whale’s death. Hence, it is downright preposterous!


We reiterate our call for a third-party laboratory analysis of the flesh and internal organs of the whale. That is the transparent and objective process that will ascertain the cause of the sperm whale’s death. Anything less than that is another attempt at cover-up.

We plead to all government agencies to stop protecting the interest of aliens and big business. When the miners shall have done their damage and left the island, we the local residents of Bicol will be the ones to work together to clean up their mess. It is time, under the Aquino government, they made amends and performed their sworn duties to the people.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Sperm whale dies in Rapu-Rapu

This time the “mine sweepers” of Lafayette could not hide the body of evidence. It is too large for their nets – 12 meters long and 20 tons heavy!

On July 19, 2010, we received a report that a dead whale was floating off the shores of Barangay Carogcog, Rapu-Rapu, Albay. Verification revealed that the casualty is a sperm whale. It was already decomposing, its black skin mostly peeled off revealing a white carcass.

We recall that on January 25, 2006, a smaller sperm whale, some 2 meters long, was also found dead in almost the same spot. Apologists of Lafayette (we still refer to it as such despite the change in name to Korea Malaysia Philippines Resources, Inc.) attributed its death to hacking by the island residents. Queerly, however, it was not consumed by the “hackers.” Laboratory tests by the Philippine Institute of Pure and Applied Chemistry of Ateneo de Manila University revealed that its blood, flesh, liver and intestines were contaminated with mercury, cadmium and copper.

Usually Lafayette would send out its boats to gather dead fish floating in the waters near the mine site specially on rainy days. This was testified to by Mr. Antonio Casitas, head servant of Sagip-Isla, Sagip-Kapwa, during a dialogue called by Bishop Lucilo B. Quiambao of the Diocese of Legazpi on September 30, 2008. Mr. Casitas daringly spoke in front of the media, government representatives, and executives of LG, Kores and MSC, the new owners of Lafayette. The company would also buy dead fish from residents who find them. The reason for this is obvious: to hide any evidence of the daily death of fish that happens around the island.

The sperm whale found on July 19, 2010 was a mammoth. Residents of Rapu-Rapu testify that Lafayette personnel went to the site and tried to haul away the whale. Members of the Philippine National Police and employees of the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources also came. On July 20, 2010, BFAR Regional Director Dennis del Socorro was interviewed by the television network ABS-CBN and he said that his office would look for bullet wounds and bury or burn the whale that same day.

This statement arouses our suspicion that BFAR will not conduct a thorough investigation but focus only on its “bullet wound” theory as the cause of the sperm whale’s death. We call on that agency and the DENR not to repeat their action in October 2007 when they hastily concluded that the mining operation in Rapu-Rapu was not the cause.

Lafayette itself has a record of evasions in the wake of implicating incidents. In 2005, they deflected culpability by claiming that the fishkills harmed only “two kilograms of thumb-sized fish” despite the testimony by Binosawan residents that they gathered two sacks of palm-sized dead fish near the shores and not yet counting the dead fish far out into the sea.


On July 19-21 2006, during the “tutorial runs,” 9 kilograms of dead marine organisms were found in the shorelines after the pipes leaked. The company just claimed that only water leaked and, therefore, the death of the marine organisms could not be blamed on them.

On October 26-29, 2007, another fishkill occurred. The company defended itself by claiming that the site of the fishkill was seven (7) kilometers away from the mine site which they said did not operate at the time. (See rebuttals of the claims in a previous article)

When Jessie Ecleo was murdered by a CAFGU serving as company guard, they attributed the crime to “love triangle.” When children suffered from skin diseases after swimming in the beach, the company and the Municipal Health Officer claimed that the cause was not heavy metal contamination but bacteria.

Now this dead sperm whale adds to the growing preponderance of evidences. We will not take sitting down any knee-jerk response by BFAR, DENR or any agency the way they did in the past. There should be a sampling of the whale’s flesh and internal organs and a third-party laboratory analysis should be done. Looking for bullet wounds and speedily disposing of the carcass is not the responsible action to take. These government employees are beneficiaries of our taxes and they owe us the truth. They are mandated by the civil service code to exert all effort in the performance of their duties. Anything less than that will smack of flagrant cover-up. Prove to us that under the new administration of President Benigno C. Aquino III, there is no corruption. Otherwise, they should start packing up for we will petition the new President for their removal from office.