Resource Centers for Indigenous Peoples
>> Friday, October 2, 2015
EDITORIAL
The Senate approval on third and final reading
a bill establishing resource centers across the country that would enhance the
delivery of essential services to indigenous cultural communities and
indigenous peoples is welcome development for ICCs and IPs.
Sen. Loren
Legarda, chair of the Senate Committee on Cultural Communities and sponsor of
Senate Bill 2209, said the bill addresses the need to improve the delivery and
accessibility of basic, social, technical and legal services to 12 to 15
million IPs present in 48 provinces and 13 cities nationwide.
Senate
President Franklin M. Drilon said the measure was “a necessary upgrade to
existing government measures and policies aimed at uplifting the lives of our
indigenous people, who remain among the nation’s poorest and most
marginalized.”
According to
Legarda, SBN 2209 will pave the way for Resource Centers to be established in
all ICCs/IP domains which are “ethnographically located, gender and rights
based, as determined by the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP).”
The centers
shall be within State Universities and Colleges (SUCs) in strategic places in
Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao. Legarda said that the centers shall have three
main areas of operation, namely Statistical Service Area, Human Development
Index Service Area and Domains Management Service Area, to be managed by a
coordinator designated by the SUC.
“These
centers shall help address problems of IPs and provide essential services such
as employment, livelihood, enterprises, health services, scholarship and
trainings,” Legarda explained.
Apart from
bringing IPs closer to services offered by the government, Legarda said that
the Resource Centers are also tasked to ensure the protection of
the IP’s rights on their customs, traditions, values and beliefs.
The IP
Resource Center shall serve as a venue to promote participatory programs and
projects for IPS, to effectively deliver their responsibilities under the
Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA), and to ensure the implementation of their
respective Ancestral Domain Sustainable Development and Protection plans,”
Legarda said.
Legarda had
expressed in her sponsorship speech that ICCs continue to face long-standing
challenges including availability of basic services, human rights violations,
displacement from ancestral domain and destruction of natural environment and
cultural values.
She also
noted that basic services for IPs remain wanting in most geographically
isolated and disadvantaged areas (GIDAs). “It is for these reasons that we
continue to fight for policies and programs that would further give our IPs the
respect, recognition and opportunities due them,” Legarda said. Senators
Cynthia Villar, Pia Cayetano and Sonny Angara were co-sponsors of the
bill.
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