With Christmas and New Year festivities just around the corner, toxic watchdog group BAN Toxics raised the alarm on the early selling of prohibited firecrackers as a part of their toxics-free and waste-free holiday celebration campaign.
In the recent market monitoring conducted in M. de Santos, Divisoria in Manila City, the group purchased 4 different firecrackers worth 120 PHP each, namely: Five STAR, Whistle Bomb, Giant Bawang, and Happy Ball.
Executive Order (EO) 28, signed by then President Rodrigo Roa Duterte, authorizes the Philippine National Police (PNP) through its Director-General to determine what constitutes prohibited firecrackers and other pyrotechnic devices. EO 28 also allows PNP to promulgate rules and regulations necessary to regulate and control their use.
Section 3 of EO 28, or the Prohibited Types of Firecrackers and Pyrotechnic Devices, states that “the manufacture, sale, distribution and use of other types of firecrackers and pyrotechnic devices not mentioned in the foregoing section, of such explosive content that could endanger life and limb, such as Atomic Big Triangulo and Super Lolo and their equivalent are hereby prohibited.”
Last year, the Philippine National Police has released the list of prohibited firecrackers, which are as follows: Watusi, Piccolo, Poppop, Five Star, Pla-pla, Lolo Thunder, Giant Bawang, Giant Whistle Bomb, Atomic Bomb, Super Lolo, Atomic Triangle, Goodbye Bading, Large-size Judas Belt, Goodbye Philippines, Goodbye Delima, Bin Laden, Hello Columbia, Mother Rockets, Goodbye Napoles, Coke-in-Can, Super Yolanda, Pillbox, Mother Rockets, Boga, Kwiton, Kabasi, all overweight and oversized firecrackers and pyrotechnic devices (FCPD), all imported finished products, other unlabelled locally made FCPD products and other types of firecrackers with other brands/names equivalent to those that are prohibited.
“We call the attention of Police General Rodolfo S. Azurin Jr., Chief of the Philippine National Police, to initiate on-site inspection and confiscation of prohibited firecrackers in public markets,” said Thony Dizon, Toxics Campaigner of BAN Toxics.
“It is high time for the PNP to issue at the earliest the list of prohibited firecrackers to stop its manufacture, sale, and distribution, and prevent firecracker-related injury and toxic exposure among children,” he added.
According to the Department of Health (DOH), the chemicals and substances present in firecrackers are cadmium, lead, chromium, aluminum, magnesium, nitrates, nitrite, phosphates and sulfates, carbon monoxide, copper, manganese dioxide, potassium, sodium, zinc, oxides of nitrogen and sulfur. Exposure to these toxic chemicals can potentially damage the nervous and respiratory systems.
“We support the Iwas Paputok campaign of DOH since it is aligned with our toxics-free and wastes-free celebration advocacy. The strict implementation of EO 28 and RA 7183 is essential to prevent and reduce firecracker-related injury during the holiday season,” the group added.
Resources:
https://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/downloads/2017/06jun/20170620-EO-28-RRD.pdf
https://www.scribd.com/document/368712573/2012-Revised-IRR-of-RA-7183