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CULT VIOLATES BANAHAW RULES; 14
MEMBERS HELD
Posted: 7:37 PM (Manila Time) | Jul. 12, 2004
By Delfin Mallari Jr., Inquirer Southern Luzon Bureau
Inquirer News Service
LUCENA CITY-Police arrested 14 cult members
for illegally building structures on Mt. Banahaw, a protected area.
The arrested cult members were identified as Bienvenido Nombres,
Pedro Precilla, Anacleto Pia, Crisanto Mina, Cresencio Pantoja, Noli
Andal, Aniano Comia, Cesar Andal, Eugenio Pades, Josephine Tolosa,
Consolocion Pades, Enriqua Ponsal, Rommel de la Torre, and Erick
Dimaano. They are members of the Banahaw-based cult Suprema de la
Iglesia de la Ciudad Mistica de Dios (Mistica) based in Barangay
Sta. Lucia in Dolores, Quezon.
Sally Pangan, park area supervisor of the Mt. Banahaw-San Cristobal
Protected Landscape Area, filed a complaint at the municipal trial
court of Dolores accusing the 14 of violating the National
Integrated Protected Areas Systems Act of 1992 or Nipas. Based on a
video made by Jay Lim, community coordinator of Tanggol
Kalikasan-Southern Luzon, an environmental legal defense center,
government authorities caught the suspects in the act of putting up
the additional portion of a concrete structure at the entrance of
Kuweba ng Diyos Ama (Cave of God the Father), one of the cult's
spots on the mountain.
"It seemed that they still acted as the owners of the structures
because they never stopped working on it despite the fact that it
was no longer under their concern," Lim said. Sacks of sand,
aggregates, bags of cement, steel bars and piles of tegula roofing
materials were scattered around the construction site. Lim said the
construction materials were hauled atop the mountain site with the
use of ropes and pulleys. At the police station, Isabel Suarez, the
recognized leader of Mistica and referred to by its members as "Suprema,"
admitted responsibility for the construction work.
She appealed to Insp. Fernando Reyes III, Dolores police station
chief, to release the suspects under her custody but the police
denied the request. It was learned that several hours later, all the
cult members were released after posting P6,000 bail each.
In 1998, Mistica constructed the concrete building, which according
to the religious sect, would serve as a common resting place and
restroom for all mountain pilgrims. But the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources ordered the religious cult to stop
the construction.
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