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Robert Chan risks his life to stop poachers and powerful developers destroying precious marine life in the Philippines. The Palawan NGO Network Incorporated risk their lives to protect reefs and coastal forests in the Coral Triangle, a global hotspot for marine biodiversity and violent environmental crime. Operating in the biggest province in the Philippines , the small group of 16 activists enforce conservation laws that usually go ignored by local police and coastguards. Chan β a long-haired, music-loving bundle of energy, ideas and enthusiasm β initiated this campaign in Illegal fishing vessels have been towed into the yard, which is ringed by a fence of rusting chainsaws, some of which are also stacked into a metre high tower.
There are bundles too of barbed wire, pulled from the boundaries of unlicensed development projects linked to powerful businessmen and politicians. Inside, the walls and cabinets are filled with homemade guns seized from poachers, and explosives and poisons illicitly used to flush fish from the corals so they can be sold to home aquarium owners in China. On the sofas, Chan is singing karaoke and drinking beer with his colleagues at a late-night goodbye party for a departing member of the team.
It is an important moment of light relief for activists engaged in an extraordinarily dangerous job. Unlike many of their adversaries, they do not use guns. He has been repeatedly warned to stop his activities, which also include legal challenges and media campaigns.
If he wants, we can square off, the two of us. Yet Chan β an environmental lawyer β continues to coordinate monitoring work and challenge tourism, plantation and mining projects that are likely to lead to forest clearance or pollution run-off into the turquoise waters around the island, which are increasingly suffering from coral bleaching and wildlife loss.
Asked what keeps him going, he refers to his Catholic faith. Donors are reluctant to provide funds for such dangerous interventions, but Chan calls for laws to strengthen the powers of communities to take direct action and confiscate and compound vehicles and tools used illegally. If left to the government or international organisations, he believes nothing gets done.