Difference between revisions of "Quezon Province, Philippines"

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==[[Quezon News]]==
==[[Quezon News]]==
<!--- Note: KEEP ONLY THE CURRENT NEWS HERE --->
<!--- Note: KEEP ONLY THE CURRENT NEWS HERE --->
'''Binay joins Banahaw pilgrims'''
'''‘Sierra Madre cross’ goes on pilgrimage'''
*Source: http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/172839/binay-joins-banahaw-pilgrims
*Source: http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/173147/%E2%80%98sierra-madre-cross%E2%80%99-goes-on-pilgrimage
*By: Delfin T. Mallari Jr.
*By: Delfin T. Mallari Jr.
*''April 06, 2012''
*''April 07, 2012''


LUCENA CITY, Philippines—Vice President Jejomar Binay joined the trek of Lenten pilgrims to the mystical Mount Banahaw, a Quezon police official said Friday.
LUCENA CITY—To dramatize the government’s failure to stop the destruction of the Sierra Madre mountain ranges, environmentalists, religious and nongovernment organizations started on Good Friday a pilgrimage of a 7-foot cross across 10 Luzon provinces and Metro Manila.


Senior Superintendent Valeriano de Leon, Quezon police chief, said Binay arrived in Dolores town on Maundy Thursday morning and went straight to the Our Lady of Sorrows parish where he prayed.
Fr. Pete Montallana, chair of the Save Sierra Madre Network, said over the phone that through the pilgrimage of the Sierra Madre cross, they “want government officials and the public to see and feel that the continuous destruction of the mountain is no different from the crucifixion of Jesus  Christ.


Shortly before noon, the Vice President accompanied by Dolores Mayor Renato Alillio Jr. motored to the compound of the religious cult “Suprema Dela Iglesia Del Ciudad Mystica De Dios” in the village of
The fragile mountain ranges are considered one of the last bastions of lush forests in the country.
Sta. Lucia and paid homage to its founder Suprema Isabel Suarez, said De Leon who also accompanied Binay.


Binay, who on Tuesday began preparing for his presidential run in 2016, also ate lunch at the religious compound.
Montallana said the Sierra Madre cross was unveiled in Tuguegarao, Cagayan on Good Friday. After several days of vigil, the cross will travel to the Diocese of San Jose in Nueva Ecija as its next stop.


After lunch, Binay proceeded to the nearby village of Kinabuhayan and offered prayers in different sacred place at the base of the mountain, De Leon said.
He said Ifugao natives fashioned the cross from ”mulawin” drift woods gathered from the Ingrid-Angelo parts of the vast mountain of Pantabangan, also in Nueva Ecija.


“The Vice President is very religious person,” De Leon told the Inquirer.
Montallana, a Franciscan priest from the Prelature of Infanta and staunch defender of the Sierra Madre, said the cross symbolized the devastation of the mountain from unabated illegal logging and mining activities.


After his prayers, Binay went back in Sta Lucia and conferred with De Leon on the security measures for the protection and safety of mountain pilgrims, said De Leon.
“It also symbolizes hope and our eventual victory as we face the challenge to save what is left of the Sierra Madre,” he said.


The Vice President also visited Banahaw during Holy Week last year.
After its stops in Cagayan and Nueva Ecija, the Sierra Madre cross would visit Isabela, Quirino, Nueva Vizcaya, Aurora, Bulacan, Quezon, Rizal and  Laguna provinces and Metro Manila. A Mass and special religious rite will be performed in every stopover.


Many religious believers would climb Banahaw, particularly during the Lenten season, believing it is inhabited by heavenly spirits.
The priest said the pilgrimage would end in the Diocese of Antipolo on Sept. 26 to coincide with the commemoration of Typhoon “Ondoy” that hit Metro Manila and nearby provinces in 2009 and left behind hundreds of people killed and millions of pesos of properties destroyed.


Mount Banahaw, a traditional pilgrimage site for religious devotees and mountaineers, straddles the municipalities of Lucban, Tayabas, Sariaya, Candelaria and Dolores in Quezon and parts of the towns of
Meanwhile, a tribal leader and vocal critic of continuous logging in the Sierra Madre, decried harassment from suspected illegal loggers.
Rizal, Nagcarlan, Liliw and Majayjay and San Pablo City in Laguna.


Most of the 2,177-meter mountain, which spans an area of 11,133.30 hectares, remains restricted to the public until 2015.
Ramcy Astoveza, executive director of the Tribal Center for Development Foundation Inc. based in Infanta, said over the phone that illegal loggers  have been spreading rumors in Real-Infanta-General Nakar (Reina) towns that he was the one responsible for the recent series of seizures of hot logs and timber.


Banahaw, which used to be visited by about half a million people during the Holy Week, was closed to the public since 2004 to allow areas damaged by slash-and-burn farming and littering to recover.
“I’m now a sitting duck should the forest criminals retaliate,” said Astoveza.
 
The tribal leader was referring to the seizure last month by Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) operatives in Quezon of at least P642,441 worth of hot logs and flitches along the shores of Mauban town, a known transshipment point of illegally cut forest products from the Sierra Madre.
 
Astoveza said he had been taking measures to ensure his safety after unidentified illegal loggers kept on sending him threatening messages through phone calls and spreading malicious rumors in tribal communities.
 
He assailed the DENR in Quezon for crowing on their “so-called accomplishments” every time they were able to intercept hot logs and timber that came from Sierra Madre.
 
“It only shows their failure to protect the forest because illegal logging still continues,” Astoveza said.
 
Montallana added that the seizures of unlawful forest products should not be “trumpeted” as an “accomplishment” by the DENR as these mirror the DENR’s inability and lack of political will of the country’s leadership to stop the “rape of the Sierra Madre.


==Quezon Zip Codes==
==Quezon Zip Codes==
43,102

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