When laws conflict; the case of ‘desecrated’ Bugnay monuments
>> Saturday, January 23, 2021
EDITORIAL
Cause-oriented
groups and concerned individuals have condemned the “desecration” of a monument
of Cordillera heroes in Bugnay, Tinglayan, Kalinga province recently.
The militant Cordillera People’s Alliance said last Jan. 7, three pick-up
trucks ferried policemen to Bugnay at the site of the heroes monument and took
down the monument panels bearing the profiles of Macliing Dulag, Lumbaya
Gayudan and Pedro Dungoc who led the anti-Chico Dam struggle during the Marcos
regime.
Groups like
the CPA said this was an affront to the heroism that Dulag, Gayudan, Dungoc and
other Chico Dam veterans who led the struggle against construction of the dam
which could have submerged hectares of lands
in Kalinga.
“While
statues of fascists are being torn down in other parts of the world, here in
the Cordillera, state forces are tearing down monuments of peoples’ heroes,”
the CPA said in a statement.
“This fact is inked in a barangay resolution which we learned was submitted by
the residents of Bugnay to the office of the Upper Kalinga District Engineering
Office (UKDEO) of the Dept. of Public Works and Highways, which points to the
police as the culprits.” the statement said.
The National
Historical Commission earlier came out with a statement on the matter saying it
was illegal to destroy historical memorabilia like monuments bearing historical
significance.
The Dept. of
Public Works and Highways however said the monument was located on a
road-right-of way.
The National
Commission on Indigenous Peoples said indigenous lands and things therein
should be respected. Local folks said the area where the monument was located was
part of their ancestral lands, cannot be considered government land and
therefore authorities had no right tearing down the monuments.
If the
monuments were indeed illegal in being placed there, then these could be
relocated to a less controversial and “legal” place with the public as
witnesses.
But if it is
proven that the “desecrated” monuments were legally there in the first place,
then those who did the desecration should at least issue a public apology.
Meanwhile,
the Kalinga Police Advisory Council members who reportedly pushed removal of
the monuments were reportedly in favor of putting monuments of Chinese
contractors now building the Chico River Dam.
The
desecration of the Kalinga heroes’ monument has opened a Pandora’s Box and the
stench is seeping out. It involves a bigger issue which is once again a repeat
of the fight against the building of the Chico River Dam during the Marcos
regime – defending ancestral lands.
A probe on
the matter is wanting to settle the issue. But it should be done by a neutral
party.
The results
could be used for making rational and just policies in addressing such issues.
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