A US ARMY Chinook helicopter transports a 155-mm howitzer during Balikatan live fire exercises at Crow Valley in Capas, Tarlac province. WILLIE LOMIBAO/INQUIRER NORTHERN LUZON
CAPAS, Tarlac—The mayor of this town is asking Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago to help the local government collect compensation from the
Tour guides, drivers and operators of off-road vehicles, and
auxiliary workers, most of them Aeta, have lost P900,000 daily since April 20
when the Balikatan war games began in Barangay Sta. Juliana, the
village
closest to the volcano, according to Mayor Antonio Rodriguez. April and May are
the peak of hiking events to Mt.
Pinatubo .
“During this period, all the usual social and economic
activities in the area are brought to a standstill because of the prohibition
on the entry of civilians,” Rodriguez said in a letter to Santiago , chair of the Legislative Oversight
Committee on the Visiting Forces Agreement.
But Vice Admiral Alexander Lopez, Balikatan exercise director,
said what Rodriguez had raised was an “old issue.”
“I don’t have an answer right now about the supposed
[P900,000 daily losses] or the need to make any compensation. But Crow Valley ,
even in the past, is a traditional military
reservation. It’s really a traditional target area,” he said.
Lopez said tourists are not allowed to go to the Mt. Pinatubo
crater lake during live fire exercises at Crow Valley .
“But this is being done through proper coordination with the local
government
concerned,” he added.
Rodriguez said 53 percent (19,972 ha) of the land area of
Capas remained part of former military reservation areas attached to the Clark
Freeport and Clark Special Economic Zone.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/688848/town-claims-losses-from-balikatan
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