Int’l Igorot meet dwells on Cordillera’s progress

>> Monday, April 30, 2012



By Ramon Dacawi

BAGUIO CITY -- Speakers and delegates of the 9th Igorot International Consultation here took turns calling for greater control by the Cordillera of its natural resources for its own development and the preservation and promotion of the eroding cultural heritage of this highland region.

                Local Government Secretary Jesse Robredo set the patrimonial tone of the three-day biennial forum by admitting that he himself had embraced the issue of enhancing cultural heritage and promoting trust among communities and the government when he was still mayor of Naga City.

                “It’s not something on my checklist,” he said of such facets of governance. “It’s something in my heart and constantly on my mind.” The way towards good governance and development of the Cordillera , Baguio mayor Mauricio Domogan later stressed, is for the region to embrace autonomy as offered and provided for in the Philippine Constitution.

                Domogan pointed out that an autonomous set-up  would allow the region to have a greater say on the exploitation and use of its natural resources, not only for national progress but also to speed up the Cordillera’s own development.

                He noted that while the region’s mineral wealth such as gold and water resources substantially contribute to national progress, it continues to lag behind  economically compared to the other regions because it has no power, under an administrative set-up, to plow back these benefits for its own development.

                Domogan dispelled doubts on the third push for self-rule by enumerating five principles which, he said, guided the committee he headed in drafting the third autonomy charter now pending in Congress.

                These principles, he said, are: 1) establishment of regional identity but full retention of the autonomy of the provinces, towns, cities and barangays under an autonomy-within-autonomy policy; non-diminution of existing benefits and powers of the region and its local government units  being enjoyed under an administrative region; continuous national budgetary allocation for all national line agencies in the region; additional annual subsidy from the national government, and; sustained national budgetary allocation for the region.

                Domogan explained that the region’s rejection of the first autonomy charter was partly due to mangling by Congress of the organic act drafted by the Cordillera Regional Consultative Commission.

                The second, he said, was also rejected partly due to lack of time to pursue a grassroots information campaign that was overtaken and overshadowed by the election campaign in 1998.
Autonomy, he also stressed, would be difficult to achieve if “we can not unite and fight for it as a people and as a region.”

                Domogan earlier said that the national government may not be as keen on autonomy as it would mean its losing grip on the allocation of the region’s resources for other regions such as Metro-Manila which benefits from energy being generated  and taxes from the gold being mined in the Cordillera.

                Robredo also touched on this point in his speech, saying that the adoption of laws does not guarantee the enjoyment of benefits unless the people assert their rights.

                The topical presentations and outputs from the workshops likewise focused  on strengthening public-private partnership  in governance and development, preservation of the integrity of  culture and the environment against the onslaught of commercialization.

                Former Energy Undersecretary RufinoBumas-ang urged Cordillerans to establish their own cooperatives
and corporations for the development of the region’s natural resources, in tandem with investors, saying “many of us (from the region) are professionals”.
                Texas-based Prof. Andrew Bacdayan advocated government-private partnership he termed “commuvatization” in the development of and management of the region’s water resources.

                From the sidelines, Cordilleran David Tauli, now serving the power industry in Mindanao, noted that outside 

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