Baguio mayor opposes ruling, protests held: NCIP issues status quo order on Casa Vallejo
>> Monday, January 20, 2014
BAGUIO CITY –
Residents here held protest rallies against the issuance of a writ of
possession here over historical Casa Vallejo property by the regional
Cordillera office of the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples even as the
NCIP en banc issued Tuesday a status quo order nullifying the order
NCIP-Cordillera issued during the Christmas holiday.
Signed by Chairperson
Leonor T. Oralde-Quintayo, the NCIP issued the “stand still” order addressed to
Roebling Hotels Inc. represented by lawyer Rodolfo Valmoria Jr.; the heirs of
Cosen Piraso and the Register of Deeds in Baguio City.
The order stated: “So
as not to complicate the issues in the instant case, Supreme Court cases and
the congressional inquiry, the parties herein, and all those acting under term,
are hereby enjoined to maintain the status quo prior to the issuance of the
aforementioned writ of possession in Regional Hearing Office Case No. 041-CAR-013,
and to refrain from taking actions that would further exacerbate the present
situation.”
The writ of possession
of the property where Casa Vallejo stands was issued by lawyer Richard Cawas,
NCIP – Cordillera hearing officer.
However, the NCIP en
banc deemed it “prudent to refrain from taking further action that would be
preemptive to these cases and or inquiry, particularly when it pertains to the
Certificate of Ancestral Land Titles (CALTs) subject matter of these cases and
or inquiry.”
National Resource
Development Corporation (NRDC) president Felix Marinas delivered the en banc
order to Casa Vallejo, where tenants of the facility were holding a sit down
rally in anticipation of claimants’ serving of the eviction notice any time
yesterday.
Marinas expressed
gladness over the NCIP’s move in heeding the call of the people of Baguio who
value the historical significance of Casa Vallejo.
The NRDC, which is
under the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), is authorized
to manage the land where the facility has stood since the 1950s.
This, as Mayor
Mauricio Domogan said the city government will not tolerate “questionable
ancestral land claims” and not issue any permit for business applied for by the
claimants of the property where Casa Vallejo now stands.
Domogan bared this
following growing controversy between NCIP and other agencies of government,
including the city government.
Like the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources, Domogan said the city government was also
surprised at NCIP’s giving away of Casa Vallejo to CosenPiraso without the
knowledge of the DENR’s National Resources Development Corp.
NRDC has direct
management of the land where heritage area Casa Vallejo is located.
Domogan said he has
ordered the city legal office to scrutinize the legality and validity of all
ancestral land titles issued by the NCIP, especially those covering forest
reservations and heritage areas – including The Mansion reservation – the
Philippine President’s official residence in this summer capital.
The National Resources
Development Corp. (NRDC), under the DENR, was taken by surprise when the
regional NCIP issued writ of possession. In a press conference last week,
DENR-NRDC Lawyer Felix Mariñas said they were surprised when NCIP issued the
order in favor of Cosen Piraso.
The DENR had been
managing the land and the building of Casa Vallejo since its turn over to the
government prior to the 1950s. It is located on Upper Session Road, a prime
property within the central business district, just beside a big mall, here.
Mariñas said the NCIP
issued in December, 2010 an ancestral land title to the claimant which the DENR
Central office through the Solicitor General’s (SolGen) Office contested. It,
and other related land titles NCIP issued are subjects of a court case handled
by the SolGen, and they are in constant coordination with the government’s law
office.
Engineer Paquito
Moreno, newly appointed DENR-Cordillera regional executive director, relayed that
even DENR Secretary Ramon Paje was surprised at NCIP’s action.
Moreno said there are
pending cases in court related to the numerous questionable issuances of NCIP
covering Busol watershed, South Drive-John Hay reservation, Forbes Park,
Botanical Garden, Wright Park, Mansion House, Baguio Dairy Farm, Casa Vallejo
and others.
He said, “DENR, NCIP
and the Department of Agrarian Reform have an agreement to first settle issues
regarding land titles while the court settles the legal controversy.”
Lawyer Isagani Liporada
of the City Legal Office said they continue to object to NCIP’s non-stop
issuance of land titles over contentious areas including forest reservations
and areas occupied by national line agencies.
He said the city will
file a declaratory relief over the contentious areas which are questionable
ancestral land claims.
Liporada said, the
city government has already informed the Baguio-Boracay Task Force (BBTF) about
the writ of possession. BBTF is a technical working group (TWG) created
by President Benigno Aquino III to look into NCIP’s titling of public lands and
pine stands in favor of private persons – an effort to preserve Baguio and
Boracay island.
It can be remembered
that prior to the 100th anniversary of Baguio in 2009, Baguio asked DENR to
preserve Casa Vallejo, being the only standing original structure within the
government center. Casa Vallejo served as dormitory that housed employees of
the Public Works Bureau after it was built in 1907. It underwent restoration as
part of Baguio’s centennial celebration.
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