Who needs an Ivadoy council?
>> Sunday, October 30, 2016
LETTERS
FROM THE AGNO
March
Fianza
Suddenly, people are asking about who may sit as IP representative in the city
council. Suddenly, for obvious reasons, for hidden motivations and for good
intentions; a handful of Ibaloys are up to the challenge.
But first, why an
IPMR? Who needs an Indigenous Peoples Mandatory Representative for Baguio?
These are just few questions that are demanding answers. Baguio’s history that
dates back before its colonial past can come up with answers.
In the last assembly
of Baguio Ibaloys at the Onjon ni Ivadoy Heritage Garden at Burnham Park last
week, we were again reminded of the struggles that Ibaloys had to go through
even prior to the appointment of outspoken leader Mateo Cariño as Ibaloy headman
of Kafagway.
Mateo Cariño was the
Ibaloy chieftain who sued the American government in the early 1900s for
occupying his land illegally and deceptively. He won his case in court that led
to the recognition of the “native title”. The court ruling is popularly known
as the Cariño doctrine.
The landmark ruling
by American Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes acknowledged the Native
Title which ruled that “lands that were originally occupied in private capacity
since time immemorial never became public lands.” The Baguio area has never
been “public” as there were Ibaloy occupants even prior to the arrival of the
Spaniards, later the Americans.
With this, the city
council through the IPMR can now identify which areas are ancestral lands and
which areas in the city may be disposed of through the TSA process (Townsite
Sales Application) and other processes under the DENR.
One IPMR applicant
during the Ibaloy assembly last week mentioned about looking after matters
concerning the other IPs in the city. True, there are other IPs in the city,
however, their concerns may not be matters that need the attention of the IPMR.
These concerns may be responded to by the other 10 councilors whom they elected
at large, since the IPMR’s special appointment may focus on issues linked to
Ibaloy IPs.
The spirit of the law
in allowing the special participation of an IPMR in the legislative council was
derived from the crafting of the IPRA which basically discusses extensively IP
land problems, vanishing or changing culture and identity.
To concentrate on the
promotion of culture and sustaining identity may not be correct after all if
the land where an IP group is anchored ceases to exist. A concrete example is
the absence of the IP ancestral land claimants over lands within the Camp 8-San
Vicente-Puliwes area.
Today, what we hear
in that area are sounds of gongs of a northern tribe. We do not hear gongs of
the Ibaloy anymore because they were displaced or have sold their lands to
their brother IPs from the north or to land buyers from the lowlands.
Ironically, I look at
the annual celebration of Ibaloy Day. Without that part of Burnham Park that
was identified and allowed by the city and the Dept. of Tourism to be used by
the Onjon ni Ivadoy, there could not be any occasion of promoting the Ibaloy
culture or sustaining the “IP” (Inom and Pulutan).
But what I fear now
is the hidden motivation of an IPMR applicant who is mainly after the decent
salary of a city councilor. As expected, I heard his friend say that the IPMR
should donate at least P5,000 to the Onjon ni Ivadoy kitchen so that they will
a nonstop source of fund for their inom and pulutan.
Obviously, I noticed
that one IPMR applicant is not keen on resolving Ibaloy issues by “holding the
bull by its horns” so to speak. Instead, he is bound to ally with the executive
department which is exactly in contrast to the spirit of the IPMR’s presence in
the council. In such case, the IPMR merely becomes a “stamp pad” in the
council.
If these are the
people who will sit as Ibaloy representative in the council, what do we need a
Baguio IPMR for?
0 comments:
Post a Comment