French firm stops P1.1-B power project after NPA attacks
By Daxim Lucas
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 03:20:00 06/20/2008
MANILA, Philippines—A Filipino-French company involved in a P1.1-billion rural electrification program has stopped work in the province of Masbate after suspected New People’s Army (NPA) rebels torched its equipment and demanded “revolutionary taxes.”
The company, Paris-Manila Technology Corp. (Pamatec), is in charge of transporting and installing French government-funded solar panels as part of the Philippine Rural Electrification Services (PRES) project.
In a telephone interview, Pamatec chief Hubert d’Aboville said his company received several letters demanding money from parties claiming to represent the communist NPA.
Soon after, and without provocation, he said that some of the company’s assets in Masbate, south of Manila, were destroyed in two separate incidents.
“The first incident took place in Osmeña, Cataingan, Masbate, on June 15, where wires and other equipment used for Solar Home Systems were burned,” Pamatec chief operating officer Philippe Saubier said in an emailed report to d’Aboville.
“Our installation team there was harassed and told not to install any equipment and not be seen in the area or neighboring ‘barangay’ [villages] of Cataingan,” he added.
A day later, more Solar Home Systems units were burned in the village cockpit in Guadalupe, Esperanza, Masbate, he said.
“Following this ritual, a life was taken in an unrelated execution,” the Pamatec official reported. “The barangay captain reported this incident and repeated the threat of the NPA who will make an example if they capture [Pamatec] staff in the area.”
All told, some P10 million worth of the company’s equipment had been destroyed by the NPA, the company said.
D’Aboville said the operations of Pamatec, which is doing a P200-million segment of the project, have ceased completely until authorities are able to “restore peace and order in the area.”
Pamatec is part of the PRES consortium, which aims to provide electricity to 18,000 households in 128 remote villages in Masbate, one of the poorest provinces in the country and a hotbed of communist insurgency. The program is financed by the Filipino-French protocol to deliver social services to the area.
D’Aboville expressed his disappointment over the recent NPA attacks, saying that progress has been halted with only 4,000 households in the area receiving electricity from solar panels.
“I don’t understand why they are doing this,” he said. “The NPA is supposed to be on the side of the people. This is a shame and a disappointment.”
The Pamatec chief said he spoke on Wednesday with Energy Secretary Angelo Reyes, who he said promised to help resolve the company’s concerns so it could resume operations at the soonest possible time. With editing by INQUIRER.net