Legal pluralism in the Cordillera
>> Sunday, March 30, 2014
BENCHWARMER
by Ramon Dacawi
Legal pluralism, although often shoved under
the rug, is emerging as a major issue y in natural resource ownership, access
and management in the Cordillera. Conflicts between traditional or tribal
customs and government policy issuances, processes and laws are becoming more
pronounced, be it between siblings, kin, neighbors, traditional occupants
against land title holders, sitios, villages, barangays, towns and
provinces. Reason enough for this update of a piece we composed after the
Regional Development Council meeting in Aprjl, 2011 that coincided with the
Lang-ay Festival in Bontoc, Mt. Province.
At the Regional
Development Council meeting in April a few years back, we asked the Cordillera
policy-making body to factor in the issue of legal pluralism in its efforts to
help local government units settle their political and traditional boundary
conflicts, some of which remain unresolved for decades now.
Legal pluralism, in
the case of the Cordillera, refers mainly to the application of either the
legal system of the state or indigenous or traditional law, whichever is deemed
agreeable to both parties settling their differences. Conflicts arise when one
party invokes the system he finds more to his advantage while the other party
demands application of the other system.
The two-legal-system
dimension surfaced during the RDC’s discussions on whether boundaries
delineation should be based on political or state maps and guidelines or
indigenous community mapping of ancestral domains. Under the Local Government
Code, boundary tiffs between barangays are to b resolved by the municipal
council while those involving two towns in the same province are decided on by
the provincial sanggunian. However, as pointed out then by then Mt. Province
governor and now congressional Rep. MaximoDalog, then host of the RDC meeting,
municipal councils and provincial boards are reluctant to decide on
boundary conflicts lodged before them lest they lose the votes of residents of
the local government units that would be adversely affected by their
legislative judgment.
A representative of
the Department of Budget and Management then also noted the practice of some
barangays, towns, cities and provinces to bloat the areas of their political
jurisdictions, if not their population figures. She said that a summary of the
figures would reflect an expanded land area of this archipelago way beyond what
is actually on the ground. Expanding the area is understandable as the share of
the government units from the International Revenue Allotment is based on their
respective population and geographical area figures.
More critical is the
overlapping of boundaries triggered by the rivalry in the ownership, possession
and use of resources such as water, mineral, and other natural resources which
the Cordillera used to have in abundance. As these resources dwindle and as
population rises, the demand for them becomes more pronounced, with parties
invoking rights over them based on state or traditional law, whichever gives
them the edge.
(On national and
global scales, state laws and international treaties being forged tend to allow
developed and powerful regions and nations access to the remaining natural
resources of developing and undeveloped regions and nations. Most of what
remains of the world’s resources lie on still-unexploited domains of indigenous
people. While previous laws were tailored by colonizers to allow them access to
these resources, rich regions and nations today are pressured more than ever to
apply these laws cloaked by euphemism like “responsible mining” and
“sustainable development”. In the process of resource exploitation, indigenous
peoples are pushed out, some towards extinction, in favour of corporate greed.
It’s ironic that while some conservation efforts are aggressively focused on
the protection of endangered animal species such as frogs, the onslaught
against the survival of the indigenous peoples is sometimes overlooked. The
colonizer’s doctrine of terra nullius which justified the occupation of
Aboriginal lands by Europeans who settled in Australia, on the pretext that
these were un-tilled, un-cultivated by the Aborigines, remains a norm, although
in other, more subtle forms.)
Over a decade ago,
residents of Gonogon, a barangay of Bontoc, Mt. Province availed of the process
provided by state law, particularly the Local Government Code, to protest what
they claim was the sudden, unilateral act of neighboring barangays to expand
their boundaries to dispossess Gonogon of its traditional water and mineral
resources. Gonogon, through then village chief Jackson Paclayan, filed two
petitions, one before the Sangguniang Bayan of Bontoc, against a neighboring
barangay within the jurisdiction of the capital town, and another before the
provincial sanggunian against a barangay of neighboring Sabangan town.
To pre-empt legal
pluralism while awaiting (I guess until now) the decisions of the town and
provincial councils, Gonogon, chief Paclayan, filed for and obtained from the
National Water Resources Board a “water right” covering one of the village’s
traditional water sources.
Similar conflicts over
access to and ownership of resources are emerging all over the Cordillera.
These may be between or among family members and relatives, between neighbours,
between sitios, barangays, towns and provinces.
In Sagada, a resident
admitted a breakdown in the cultural fabric when he found that the “mohon” or
lot boundary monument between his property and that of a relative had been
moved inward to his side and disadvantage. In Hungduan, Ifugao, a rice terrace
owner found that the adjoining hill serving as buffer and “muyong” or “pinugo”
(watershed) to her rice terrace and traditionally recognized as part of her
property was recently declared for taxation towards eventual possession by a
neighbor. The terraces were originally remote, in an area villagers believed
then was haunted by ghosts. The perception changed to lot speculation and
actual occupation without regard to traditional values and customary property
law when a highway to the town was built beside the rice fields.
Would it be the tribal
council or the barangay council, or the courts, which would resolve these
conflicts? Whichever, would the decision be anchored on tribal or state
law? Reports have it that even forests traditionally deemed “bilid” or
common, communal and community property over the generations are being declared
as “muyong” or “tayan” by Johnny-come-latelies on pretense of inheritance
according to tribal law. Eventually, however, those with tax declarations and
other documents issued by the state will prevail, as the old folks, the
so-called keepers of village memory who can testify traditional ownership
according to customary law pass on from this mortal plane.
I am aware of two
cases wherein traditional keepers of community water resources were sued in
court for removing hoses recently tapped, without their knowledge and consent,
by other villages, thereby suddenly depriving the original owners of
their lifeblood for centuries. As Cordillerans, we are aware of recent
armed conflicts between and among villages in their fight over dwindling water
and other natural resources. More conflicts are developing, giving
grounded evidence to that prediction decades back that the next war would be over
water.
Before more shooting
wars occur, it would do well for our leaders in the region, the provinces,
towns, and barangays to take a closer look and factor in legal pluralism in the
settlement of boundaries. The issue seems to have been over looked or simply
ignored for some time now. It’s getting more critical with each passing day,
with the case of traditional owners getting weaker as their witnesses, the
village elders who are the keepers of tribal memory needed to validate
traditional ownership of resources, are dying.
Time was when tribal
practice dictated that water is a shared resource, but never at the expense of
traditional developer of the resource. It’s a tall order to restore this wisdom
of our ancestors, given the dwindling of water and other natural resources that
heightens material acquisitiveness, together with the greed of some of those
who are supposed to lead us.
One thing is clear:
The rate of erosion of the world-famous but endangered Cordillera rice terraces
is directly proportional to the fraying of the culture that built and sustained
them – together with the water and forest resources - for generations.
That’s one reason why
I agree with those pushing for an autonomous region. They argue that cultural
erosion and issues covering traditional ownership of, access to and sharing of
resources can be better addressed and resolved through self-rule in these
highlands.
Meanwhile, it would be
well for local government units to take on the policy adopted years back by the
town Mankayan, Benguet. With support from the Department of Environment
and Natural Resources, through then community environment officer Godfrey
Cawis, the town council came up with an ordinance with identified
traditional community land, water, forest and other common property resources
and declaring them inalienable, exempt from being declared for taxation or
titling purposes by individuals.
(e-mail:mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments.)
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