BARANGAY PASONANCA has proposed the establishment of night market intended to help small entrepreneurs while ensuring the safety and order of the public this time of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Government photo shows City Administrator Mike Saavedra inspecting the food stalls in Barangay Pasonanca. |
Saavedra together with Acting Assistant City Administrator Raymond Padayhag and Police Station 7 commander, Maj. Alvin Lepiten inspected the proposed area for the night market and other facilities in the premises.
The construction of the Pasonanca Park was started in 1912
by General John J. Pershing, then Governor of the Moro Province, and completed
during the administration of Frank W. Carpenter, Governor of the Department of
Mindanao and Sulu (1914-1920).
Thomas Hanley, a parksman, arrived in 1912 from the United
States at the request of Pershing to serve the same post at Pasonanca, and was
responsible for the original lay-out of the park.
The park also has a separate campsites for males and
females, an amphitheater, and a convention center, Butterfly Park, flower
garden, museum, a tree house, pools and waterfalls, among others.
Mayor Beng Climaco said the Pasonanca Park has been
nominated as an ASEAN Heritage Park and she has met with representatives from
the ASEAN Centre for Biodiversity who were in Zamboanga in December for an
evaluation on the park’s nomination.
“We are excited and hoping that our Pasonanca Park makes it
to the list of the ASEAN Heritage Parks. We have maintained and protected the
park as it was in the past and ensured the sustainability of flora and fauna in
the area and we are happy that the ASEAN Heritage Parks took interest in the
Pasonanca Park,” she told the Zamboanga Post by phone.
Currently, the Philippines has nine ASEAN Heritage Parks
sites and two of which are designated as UNESCO World Heritage Sites and they
are the Tubbataha Reefs Natural Park in and the Mount Hamiguitan Range Natural
Park in Davao Oriental which were both designated in 2014.
The Agusan Marsh Wildlife Sanctuary was the latest site to
be officially recognized in 2019 during the 6th ASEAN Heritage Parks Conference
in Laos. The other heritage parks are Mount Apo Natural Park in North Cotabato,
Mount Iglit Baco National Park in
Mindoro, Mount Kitanglad Range Natural Park in Bukidnon, Mount Malindang
Natural Park in Misamis Occidental, Mount Makiling Forest Reserve in Laguna,
and Mount Timpoong-Hibok-Hibok Natural Monument in Camiguin.
First envisioned in 1978 as a group of national parks and
nature reserves with outstanding wilderness and biodiversity values, the AHP
Programme was established to highlight the importance of a select group of
protected areas in regional and global efforts in biodiversity conservation.
AHPs were then created through the ASEAN Declaration on
Heritage Parks and Reserves on November 29, 1984, which named the first 11
protected areas listed under the AHP Programme. They are protected areas of
high conservation importance, preserving in total a complete spectrum of
representative ecosystems of the ASEAN region.
These areas are established to generate greater awareness,
pride, appreciation, enjoyment and conservation of ASEAN’s rich natural heritage,
through a regional network of representative protected areas, and to generate
greater collaboration among AMS in preserving their shared natural heritage. (Zamboanga
Post)
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