Philippines' Boracay island empties for six-month makeover project

World Thursday 26/April/2018 13:17 PM
By: Times News Service
Philippines' Boracay island empties for six-month makeover project

Boracay, Philippines: Volunteers combed near-empty beaches and workers boarded up shops on the island of Boracay on Thursday, as the Philippines' top tourist hotspot closed for a six-month makeover aimed at rescuing it from ruin.
For the first time in years, Boracay's most famous beach was almost deserted. Gone were the lines of umbrellas and sun loungers, as well as hordes of tourists and vendors, that characterised the explosive, unchecked growth of what was once a quiet paradise island.
Boracay was officially closed to visitors as of midnight Wednesday to undergo rehabilitation ordered three weeks ago by President Rodrigo Duterte, angered by a video he had seen of black sewage pouring out to sea at a Boracay beach.
The move is likely to affect the livelihoods of an estimated 30,000 people reliant on Boracay's 2 million annual visitors, but many residents feel Duterte's intervention was necessary.
"Local government officials have been so negligent. They don't know how to manage and protect this island," said a tour boat owner, Varril Santa, 51. "It would be better if the national government can run this island. It's better for Boracay, it's better for our tomorrow."
A few remaining tourists posed for rare, crowd-free selfies in front of blue waters that have been for years cluttered with an armada of neon-sailed boats.
On Thursday, the boats were moved elsewhere, replaced by a coastguard ship lingering on the horizon and small navy boats policing a 3-kilometre no-go zone. A day earlier, army helicopters ran regular sorties just metres above people playing in the sea.
Catalogue of violations
A sewage system on the brink of collapse put Boracay on the government's radar two months ago. Further inspection revealed a catalogue of environmental breaches across an island just 10-square-kilometres (4-square-miles) in size.
The interior ministry this week said it would seek charges against 10 unidentified local officials for negligence.
The Philippine tourism minister, Wanda Teo, urged the local authorities to put aside their grievances and work with the government.
"This is for the good of Boracay," she told the news channel ANC. "They have to help us because Boracay will be back to the way it was years ago."
Despite facing some challenges questioning the legality of the closure, Duterte has yet to issue an executive order or declare a state of calamity to empower the central government to take charge of the rehabilitation and compensate those who have lost jobs.
However, the government wasted no time getting started on the closure this week.
On Thursday, volunteers cleared up seaweed, while diggers, trucks and heavy-duty machinery were moved in across the island, slowing the departure of the last trickle of tourists.
Workers in orange vests and hard hats dug up pipes and smashed down walls with sledge hammers, part of efforts to widen a slender spine road and demolish illegal buildings that capitalised on decades of lax regulation.
Teddy Macabeo, a Filipino-American who runs a small hotel and spends six months a year in Boracay, said he was shocked how quiet the beach was during his morning stroll.
"It's the first time I've seen Boracay like this," said Macabeo, 76, from Seattle. But, he said, "if we don't take care of this now it will be totally destroyed."
"The ocean, the over-development, the waste - Boracay just can't handle it."