Government agencies in the Philippines, including the Bureau of Customs, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources–Environmental Management Bureau, and the Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority, conducted a joint inspection of nine recycling companies in the Subic Bay Freeport following allegations by environmental groups that hundreds of containers of electronic waste (e-waste) from the United States had entered the country. The inspection followed revelations by the Task Force Against Illegal E-Waste Imports to the Philippines, which reported that at least 234 containers of suspected e-waste and one container of plastic waste from the U.S. had arrived at the freeport since March. The task force, supported by the Basel Action Network, used tracking methods to trace these shipments, raising concerns about potential violations of the Basel Convention and Philippine environmental laws. The inspection was the first public government response to the allegations, with further discussions planned at an interagency meeting.
Lectura del sesgo (Centro): The article presents a balanced account of the government's actions and the claims made by environmental groups and the Task Force. It does not take a clear ideological stance but rather reports on the regulatory process and the legal implications of the alleged e-waste shipments. The framing is non






