Court declares BIBAK demolition order valid
>> Wednesday, November 16, 2016
By
Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO CITY – The Regional Trial Court (RTC)
Branch V here declared as valid the demolition order issued by the city
government for the dismantling of structures at the government-owned
Benguet-Ifugao-Bontoc-Apayao-Kalinga (BIBAK) lot along Harrison Road.
In a seven-page
decision issued October 28, 2016, Presiding Judge Maria Ligaya Itliong-Rivera
dismissed the two cases filed by BIBAK lot occupants aimed at stopping the city
government from implementing Demolition Order No. 24 series of 2015 directing
the clearing of some illegal structures in the area.
The court said the
petitioners failed to show that respondents Mayor Mauricio Domogan, city
administrator Carlos Canilao, city buildings and architecture office and the
anti-squatting and anti-illegal structures committee “committed grave
abuse of discretion” in issuing said order.
“’An inalienable
public land cannot be appropriated and thus may not be the proper object of
possession.’ This pronouncement of the Highest Court of the land must,
hence, put an end to this issue. No right, is therefore, violated by the
implementation of the DO 24,” the court stressed.
The court said the
petitioners were “duly notified of the (order) and were directed to obtain or
present the necessary permits over their structures. Nonetheless, they
failed to adduce any or prove that they exemption from the operation of the
law.”
The cases were
docketed as Civil Case No. 8285-R filed by the Miranda family led by Manuel
Miranda Jr. and Civil Case No. 8285-R filed by 46 occupants led by Eleanor San
Pedro.
The Mirandas, according to the decision,
tried to prove their long-time possession of the area they are occupying
through a letter from a Dept. of Environment and Natural Resources employee but
it was not enough, according to the court.
“Sadly, long-time
possession, without more, cannot vest any right of ownership especially in this
case where the property involved is not alienable and disposable,” the court
said.
On the other case, the court said, “The
petitioners in Civil Case No. 8286-R have miserably failed to show that the
public respondents committed grave abuse of discretion in issuing (DO) No.l 24
and the Demolition Advice.”
The same court last
Oct. 22 denied for the second time the petitioners’ motions for the issuance of
a temporary restraining order to hold the demolition.
On Sept. 9, the court first denied the motion
citing earlier rulings that the claimants have no right over the lot and thus
over the structures they built on the area because they do not own the lot and
their buildings were not authorized by the owner of the lot.
Acting assistant city
legal officer Hannah Calitong said the order “again confirmed the legality and
propriety of the implementation of Demolition Order No. 24 series of 2015
directing the clearing of the so-called BIBAK lot.”
City legal officer
Melchor Carlos Rabanes earlier told city department head that there is no more
legal impediment for the city to pursue the demolition of structures on said
lots despite questions from the Philippine Commission on Urban Poor (PCUP).
City administrator
and city anti-squatting committee chair Carlos Canilao informed the mayor that
the PCUP asked the city to verify if there were occupants belonging to the
urban poor. The mayor said that based on the city’s investigation and as
verified from the city’s master list based on the census conducted earlier,
none of the affected parties can qualify as members of the urban poor.
Canilao earlier said
they will prepare for the implementation of the demolition order and will call
the stakeholders for a meeting to prepare the requirements on budget, manpower
and equipment.
Canilao said no less than the National
Commission on Indigenous People (NCIP) offered to help the city by volunteering
their personnel and committing fund augmentation to undertake the demolition.
The city will also enlist the help of the
BCPO and the military reservists for the task.
The demolition
scheduled last September was put on hold after the new administration of the
NCIP intervened anew informing of the Duterte administration’s policies on
demolition.
Domogan immediately apprised PCUP
officer-in-charge Dr. Melissa Aradanas on the status of the lot and the
circumstances that led to the city government’s action.
He said the move is
backed by ample investigations that proved that the occupants of the structures
do not have building permits and that they are not members of the urban poor
and are using their structures for business purposes without care for
sanitation and order.
The clearing of the
area is also sanctioned by the Regional Development Council-Cordillera
Administrative Region (RDC-CAR) and the Dept. of Environment and Natural
Resources-Cordillera that said the “petitioners occupation has no legal basis
and neither can they qualify as beneficiaries under (Republic Act) No. 10023
(Act Authorizing the Issuance of Free Patents to Residential Lands) because the
lot is not alienable and disposable.
Last year, the PCUP
under the old administration asked the city to defer the dismantling operation
pointing out the need to observe proper procedures and to ensure that the
rights of the owners will not be violated. The body, after conducting
their own investigation, withdrew their objection after proving the city’s
cause.
0 comments:
Post a Comment