Few considered it an important issue. For the first time in
the history of the 100 year-old university, a scientific experiment,
the symbol of UP’s academic tradition, was destroyed upon
the order of the honorable mayor of Davao City.
The order is unjustifiable. It was based on half-truths and
exaggerations manufactured by the City Agriculturist. UP Mindanao
took pains to clarify all of these directly and indirectly to
the City Mayor, in newspapers and in various public fora. But
the explanations fell on deaf ears. UP Mindanao pleaded for
more time to explain; this was summarily denied.
Even if the City Agriculturist’s claims were true, it
could be argued that the local government could not justify
the destruction of the experiment. There was no imminent danger
to life or the environment that might justify a drastic local
government action on an activity that is officially permitted
by the national government. The basis of the order, in the final
analysis, was that UP Mindanao failed to post a notice in 1
out of 4 places in Davao City where it is supposed to, as a
condition for granting a national government permit to do the
experiment. The punishment, if warranted, would have been to
revoke the permit. This could only be decided by the Bureau
of Plant Industry, the organization that issued the permit.
But the permit had not been revoked; BPI had not been asked
by anyone to revoke the permit.
The order was carried out, in full view of the leadership of
UP Mindanao, and by the same people who worked hard to set up
the experiment, all of whom knew that the order was at best
questionable, if not outright illegal.
Who gave the command to destroy on site? It was not even the
City Agriculturist, the man who was sent to carry out the order.
She was an associate professor, a member of the Institutional
Biosafety Committee (IBC) of UP Mindanao -- the same IBC, by
the way, that was remiss in posting the controversial notice.
The role of the IBC at that stage of the experiment was to
monitor the procedures to ensure that they comply with BPI’s
(the regulatory body’s) conditions for granting the permit
to do the experiment. If the experiment was compliant, it was
IBC’s duty to make sure that no one illegally interfered
with it. If it was not compliant, it was IBC’s duty to
report this to BPI. But the experiment was compliant; BPI, the
official body to whom the IBC reports, said so in an official
certification that everyone knew exists.
But one member of IBC decided that it is her role to carry
out the order of the City Mayor, even without consulting the
rest of the committee. In a fit of sadism, she asked the young
researcher who worked so hard for the experiment, to destroy
her own work while a noisy mob of anti-GMO advocates cheered.
It is a spectacle that I will never forget.
While the rape of the university tradition’s symbol was
taking place, most of the university’s constituents were
in downtown Davao City, 20 kilometers away, participating in
the annual parade of Christmas lanterns, even as they were alerted
earlier in the day that the order was about to be carried out,
and that their presence could help prevent the virtual invasion
of UP Mindanao. Few cared. Those who do and were present in
the experimental site, did little to stop the invasion. The
project leader of the experiment, the UP Mindanao faculty who
should be most concerned, was hundreds of kilometers away, enjoying
an early Christmas break…
December 17, 2010 permanently tarnished the University of the
Philippine’ self-image as a family of fearless, principled
advocates of social change and a bastion of righteousness in
the academic world. This image, recently enhanced by the standoff
with the Supreme Court over a plagiarism issue, was lost in
UP Mindanao.
On December 17, 2010, the name UP Mindanao has assumed a derogatory
meaning. It is too embarrassing to print what this meaning may
be. We will forever carry this badge of shame.
A former UP President once rhetorically asked: Does UP Mindanao
deserve to be called UP? Many of us questioned this skepticism.
But he may be right, after all.