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Environmentalists urge policy reform as toxic waste rises in Philippines

Special Environmentalists urge policy reform as toxic waste rises in Philippines
Residents walk past trash including plastic waste strewn along Baseco Beach in Manila on September 21, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 17 July 2025

Environmentalists urge policy reform as toxic waste rises in Philippines

Environmentalists urge policy reform as toxic waste rises in Philippines
  • Country’s waste management system ‘cannot cope’ with rising production, consumption, Greenpeace warns
  • Number of illegal dumps surged by 84% in 2024, posing health risks to local communities

MANILA: Philippine environmental groups are calling for immediate policy reform after official data showed that the country’s annual hazardous waste levels increased to more than 269,000 metric tonnes annually, fueling concern over public health threats.

The Philippines’ toxic waste generation increased by 13 percent last year from about 238,000 metric tonnes in 2023, with oil comprising about one-third of the total, according to data published by the Philippine Statistics Authority last week.

Though it is one of the lowest volumes recorded based on figures compiled since 2015, the latest data set showed that the Philippines is producing hazardous waste at a faster rate compared to the development of waste management infrastructure.

Despite the number of trash processing facilities and sanitary landfills increasing in 2024 by about 8.7 percent and 14.7 percent, respectively, the number of reported illegal dumps rose by 84 percent in the same year.

“It’s still alarming because the infrastructure can’t catch up,” Jashaf Shamir Lorenzo, head of policy development and research at BAN Toxics, told Arab News on Thursday.

The rising number of illegal dumps concerns observers as the sites usually involve open burning or the burying of hazardous waste underground.

“There is a big health and environmental impact here for everyone … all of these harmful chemicals that could lead to various health issues like neurodevelopmental issues, cancer … (they) increase the risk of communities around them getting these diseases,” Lorenzo said.

“I think (the sites are) also a reflection of the number of wastes that we are really generating that other cities can’t handle. But also, it calls for the need for the government to pay attention to the protection of these communities.”

While the Philippine government has made efforts over the years to improve waste management in the country, environmentalists like Lorenzo say there is still room for improvement.

This includes preventing the illegal waste trade, as the Philippines has been a major destination for such exports over the years, including shipments of toxic chemical waste intended for dumping.  

“A lot of the waste coming into the country, historically, has been hazardous waste traded by other countries into us. I think the government should really push for policies that limit hazardous waste coming in,” Lorenzo said.

He is also urging the government to “look at other solutions on waste reduction,” including by installing reuse and refill systems across the country.

The increasing volume of waste in the Philippines is “not surprising,” said Greenpeace Philippines campaigner Marian Ledesma, who is also pushing for policies focused on reducing waste.

“Downstream approaches like waste management simply cannot cope with increasing patterns of production and consumption … the government must enact policies that reduce or prevent waste from the start,” she said.

This includes banning the commercial use of harmful chemical groups in products, phasing out single-use products and packaging like plastics, and regulating hazardous chemicals.

“While the country is taking steps toward better and sustainable waste management, it can improve on upstream measures that prevent or reduce waste generation,” Ledesma said.

“Upstream approaches like cutting production and phase-outs or bans are necessary, have clear benefits for communities and are more cost-effective in the long term.”


British charities funded illegal Israeli settlement in West Bank

British charities funded illegal Israeli settlement in West Bank
Updated 8 sec ago

British charities funded illegal Israeli settlement in West Bank

British charities funded illegal Israeli settlement in West Bank
  • Kasner Charitable Trust sent around £5.7m over 4 years to school in Susya via UK Toremet
  • Expert: ‘The school constitutes one of the main elements of the entire settlement’s existence’

LONDON: Two charities in the UK sent millions of pounds to a school in an illegal Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank, .

Kasner Charitable Trust sent around £5.7 million ($7.66 million) to Bnei Akiva Yeshiva high school in Susya via another charity, UK Toremet.

The Susya settlement was established around 1983 south of the city of Hebron. It was founded next to the Palestinian village of Khirbet Susiya, which was declared an archaeological site by Israel three years later and had all its residents evicted.

Settlement expert Dror Etkes told The Guardian: “The school is likely the largest single source of employment in the settlement, and constitutes one of the main elements of the entire settlement’s existence.”

Baroness Warsi, the former Conservative chair, told The Guardian: “It’s appalling that any British national should be engaged in funding illegal settlements on occupied land — and it’s even more disturbing that this is being subsidised by all of us taxpayers.”

She added: “Serious action must be taken so that settlements which are illegal under international law, and at the heart of a regime of discrimination and displacement, cannot benefit from charitable donations.”

Labour MP Andy McDonald said: “The government must urgently take the steps necessary to ban the use of funds originating from the UK being used to support any aspect of the illegal occupation.”

He added: “Donations to illegal settlements should invalidate charitable status and result in individual prosecutions. If legislation is needed, we must do it.”


Man arrested in UK for displaying ‘Palestine Action’ poster

Man arrested in UK for displaying ‘Palestine Action’ poster
Updated 14 min 55 sec ago

Man arrested in UK for displaying ‘Palestine Action’ poster

Man arrested in UK for displaying ‘Palestine Action’ poster
  • Protester is latest person arrested after British authorities criminalized the pro-Palestinian direct action group under anti-terrorism laws
  • The ban came into force after activists sprayed paint on military aircraft at a Royal Air Force base in protest against the war in Gaza

LONDON: An anti-war protester was arrested in the Scottish city of Glasgow on Friday for showing support for a pro-Palestinian group that was recently banned in the UK.

The 64-year-old man was accused of holding a poster during a demonstration that allegedly displayed support for Palestine Action, local media reported.

The group was proscribed this month under the UK’s Terrorism Act 2000, after Palestine Action activists sprayed paint on two military aircraft after breaking into a Royal Air Force base on June 20. It means that membership or support for the group is now a criminal offense.

The ban came into force on July 5 and since then dozens of people have been arrested across the UK for showing support for the group.

Police Scotland said the man in Glasgow was arrested “in connection with an offense under the Terrorism Act for displaying a sign expressing support for a proscribed organization.”

Protesters chanted “let him go” as he was led away to a police van, The Herald newspaper reported. His arrest follows two others in the city in recent days involving people accused of showing support for the group.

More than 70 people were arrested in cities across the UK last weekend during protests against the banning of Palestine Action.

After MPs voted in favor of proscribing the group, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said it had a “long history” of criminal damage.

“The UK’s defense enterprise is vital to the nation’s national security and this government will not tolerate those that put that security at risk,” she added.

However, the ban was widely criticized by UN experts and human rights groups as draconian and for conflating protest with acts of terrorism.

Hundreds of politicians and campaigners signed a letter this week condemning the decision as “a major assault on our freedoms.”


Argentines commemorate Jewish center bombing, demand justice

Argentines commemorate Jewish center bombing, demand justice
Updated 19 min 57 sec ago

Argentines commemorate Jewish center bombing, demand justice

Argentines commemorate Jewish center bombing, demand justice
  • “Impunity persists, terrorism too” was the slogan for Friday’s 31st commemoration of the AMIA attack
  • In June, a judge authorized a trial in absentia against ten Iranian and Lebanese defendants — former ministers and diplomats

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina: Hundreds of Argentines gathered Friday to commemorate the 1994 bombing of a Jewish cultural center that killed dozens, demanding justice for a crime for which there has not yet been a trial.

In the worst such attack in Argentina’s history, a car bomb on July 18, 1994, killed 85 people and injured more than 300 at the seven-story Argentine Israelite Mutual Association (AMIA) building in Buenos Aires.

Two years earlier, an explosion at the Israeli embassy killed 29 and wounded 200.

“Impunity persists, terrorism too” was the slogan for Friday’s 31st commemoration of the AMIA attack — the second such event attended by President Javier Milei, a staunch defender of Israel.

Survivors and victims’ relatives hope there will be movement under Catholic-born Milei, who has already visited Israel twice since taking office in December 2023, and has professed a deep interest in Judaism.

In April 2024, an Argentine court found Iran and Hezbollah were responsible for what it called a crime against humanity.

It ruled the likely motive for the attacks was the cancelation by the Argentine government under then-president Carlos Menem of three contracts with Iran for the supply of nuclear equipment and technology.

In June, a judge authorized a trial in absentia against ten Iranian and Lebanese defendants — former ministers and diplomats.

No date has been set.

Iran has always denied any involvement and has refused to hand over any suspects.

The Memoria Activa organization, which represents victims’ families, rejects a trial in absentia as it believes it “essential for the accused to participate” for the whole truth to come out.

The AMIA itself is in favor, but has cautioned that “holding a trial only for it to end... in some sort of nullity or a declaration of unconstitutionality would once again be very painful for everyone.”

Both organizations have been highly critical of the Argentine state’s handling of the case.

Last year, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in San Jose, Costa Rica, found the state responsible for not preventing, or properly investigating, the AMIA attack.

It also blamed the state for efforts to “cover up and obstruct the investigation.”

Prosecutor Alberto Nisman, investigating accusations of a cover-up against former president Cristina Kirchner, was later found murdered.

No one was ever charged over his death.

Argentina is host to the largest Jewish community in Latin America, with nearly 300,000 people living mostly in Buenos Aires.


Philippine government brings one-stop service for overseas Filipinos to Riyadh 

Philippine government brings one-stop service for overseas Filipinos to Riyadh 
Updated 18 July 2025

Philippine government brings one-stop service for overseas Filipinos to Riyadh 

Philippine government brings one-stop service for overseas Filipinos to Riyadh 
  • Around 898,000 overseas Filipino workers live and work in the Kingdom 
  • Philippine officials plan to take ‘service caravan’ to Jeddah, Alkhobar, as well as Qatar, UAE

MANILA: The Philippine Department of Migrant Workers launched on Friday the Middle East leg of its “service caravan” in Riyadh, as officials seek to provide an all-in-one stop of essential government services for overseas Filipinos in the region. 

Ƶ is the leading destination for overseas Filipino workers, with about 898,000 of them currently living and working in the Kingdom. 

The DMW collaborated with other government agencies to bring them the Serbisyo Caravan, or service caravan, an outreach program that offers various state services. 

“The Serbisyo Caravan here in the Middle East is part of the government’s ongoing program to bring vital services directly to our OFWs,” Rommel Romato, the Philippine consul-general in Jeddah, told Arab News. 

“By gathering multiple agencies in one place, the caravan makes it easier and faster for OFWs to access assistance without needing to make special trips to the Philippines.” 

The services include welfare counseling, free legal consultations, business support assistance, as well as registration and processing of official documents, among other things that are usually only available within the Philippines. 

Many Filipino nationals in the Saudi capital flocked to take advantage of the service caravan, with large numbers queuing since Friday morning, as seen in a video posted by the DMW on Facebook. 

“We want to regularize this program as we expand our diplomatic and consular services to millions of OFWs abroad,” Romato said. 

Philippine First Lady Louise Marcos arrived in Riyadh on Friday to oversee the launch of the outreach program. As part of the working visit, she will also meet with Filipino migrant workers in the Kingdom, according to Presidential Communications Undersecretary and Palace Press Officer Claire Castro. 

Though Philippine officials first launched the service caravan in Hong Kong last month, Friday’s service marks the first time it was brought to the Middle East.

After Riyadh, the DMW is set to take the caravan program to the Saudi cities of Jeddah and Alkhobar, as well as Qatar and the UAE in July and August. 

Around 20 percent of Filipino migrant workers are in Ƶ, while about 13.6 percent live and work in the UAE, and another 6.2 percent are in Qatar.


UK police hunt suspects after anti-migrant protests turn violent

UK police hunt suspects after anti-migrant protests turn violent
Updated 18 July 2025

UK police hunt suspects after anti-migrant protests turn violent

UK police hunt suspects after anti-migrant protests turn violent
  • Eight police officers were injured and three vehicles were damaged, Essex police said
  • Essex police on Friday insisted officers would “continue to support those communities that want to peacefully protest“

EPPING, UK: Police promised Friday to track down suspects behind violence at a protest outside a southeast England hotel believed to house asylum seekers, after officers and vehicles were attacked.

The violence followed several demonstrations in recent days in the town of Epping which flared after police charged an asylum seeker with sex offenses.

Eight police officers were injured and three vehicles were damaged, Essex police said.

The unrest, which police blamed on people from “outside of our community,” comes a year after anti-immigration riots rocked the UK in the wake of the fatal stabbings of three young girls in the northern town of Southport.

Then, rioters targeted hotels housing asylum seekers in several different English cities, infamously attempting to set fire to one in Rotherham, northeast England.

Essex police on Friday insisted officers would “continue to support those communities that want to peacefully protest” but would not tolerate “acts of violence and vandalism.”

“After last night I’ve got a team of specialist detectives today that are combing through the body-worn video CCTV to identify those who are responsible,” Assistant Chief Constable Stuart Hooper told AFP.

“And what I can say is if you’re one of those individuals you can expect a knock on the door.”

Hooper said the “selfish individuals” behind the violence were mostly “from outside of the area” and had traveled to Epping “intent on causing criminality.”

Right-wing agitators, including far-right activist Tommy Robinson, have been sharing posts and videos about the situation on social media.

Footage of Thursday’s protests showed masked people pelting police vans and jumping on them, as well as clashing with officers.

The disturbances came after police charged 38-year-old asylum seeker Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu with three counts of sexual assault, one count of inciting a girl to engage in sexual activity and one count of harassment without violence.

The charges stem from allegations he tried to kiss a 14-year-old girl as she ate pizza at a restaurant in Epping, just northeast of London, on July 7 and again the following day.

He has pleaded not guilty, and appeared in court for a hearing on Thursday.

An asylum seeker from Ethiopia, he arrived in the UK irregularly after crossing the Channel on a small boat at the end of last month.

In the wake of the incident, local officials have called for the Bell Hotel to no longer house asylum seekers.