By Charlie Lagasca
LAGAWE,
Ifugao --Rep. Teddy Brawner Baguilat asked the government Thursday to continue
providing funds for the restoration of the Ifugao Rice Terraces.
Baguilat
said the government and the Ifugao people must not let their guard down even
with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) decision to remove the rice terraces from the list of endangered World
Heritage sites.
“We
still face problems like poverty, which leads to the abandonment of the
terraces by Ifugaos who feel they need to go elsewhere to have a better life,”
he said.
However,
he said his people have taken great steps to restore their small rice farms in
the mountains.
Baguilat
said such efforts, along with funds from the national government and the
private sector, and voluntary restoration work by local tourists, helped
convince the World Heritage Commission to remove the Ifugao Rice Terraces from
the list of endangered sites.
“But
we must continue efforts to preserve the terraces because the work should never
end,” he said.
He
noted the UNESCO’s assessment that only 50 percent of the rice terraces have so
far been restored.
Baguilat
also appealed to foreign and local tourists visiting Ifugao to take extra care
in protecting and preserving the unique cascading rice farms.
Meanwhile,
a study to determine the age of the rice terraces is being conducted in
partnership with a foreign university.
Funded
by the National Geographic Society, the project is a joint undertaking of the
University of Guam, Save the Ifugao Terrace Movement, National Museum, Ifugao
State University, University of the Philippines and the Ifugao provincial
government.
Initial
findings from excavations at the so-called Old Kiyyangan Village, some four
kilometers from Kiangan town’s poblacion, will be released today.
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