Execs hit CA decision:Baguio watersheds’ sale on
>> Sunday, April 7, 2013
By Paul
Rillorta and Dexter A. See
BAGUIO CITY – Vital government
properties titled by the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples particularly
those within watersheds in the city are now being sold openly.
“Unscrupulous
individuals are now selling these properties to prospective buyers and in fact
have entered and introduced improvements on them to the detriment of the city,”
said vice mayor Daniel Farinas. “It is
alarming.We have to do something legally.”
Farinas bared these during an
executive-legislative meeting recently at city hall.
Earlier, the Court of Appeals in a decision
denied the petition of the Office of the Solicitor General for the
nullification of Original Certificates of ancestral Land titles (CALT’s) issued
by the NCIP over prime lots within Forbes Park and Wright Park.
Mayor Mauricio Domogan said the cases are not
yet over and motions for reconsideration on the CA’s decision have been filed.
“We have to warn prospective buyers about the
real situation here,” Domogan said.
The city government has brought to the
attention of the Task Force for Baguio and Boracay composed of top officials,
concerns regarding issuances of Certificates of Ancestral Land Titles (CALT’s)
over parks and watersheds of the city.
The move is for the task force to understand
the alarming environmental impact it poses to Baguio if forest reserves within
the city continue to be titled to private individuals.
Officials said these recent developments will
cause problems for the city and will surely have great impact on remaining
forest and watershed cover.
Mayor Domogan said sale of lands within
Forbes Park reservation and Wright Park remain invalid and illegal even as the
CA dismissed the petition for nullification of titles over the said public
properties filed by the Office of the Solicitor-general.
The local chief executive said the CA
decision did not attain finality because the Solicitor-General already filed a
motion for reconsideration questioning dismissal of the petition on
technicality.
“The
public must be warned not to be enticed to buy lands within the Forbes Park
reservation and the Wright Park area since the sale of the lands remain illegal
considering that the areas are the city’s only remaining forested areas that
must be preserved and protected,” Domogan
said.
He cited the decision of the NCIP favoring
the ancestral claim of the heirs of Lauro Carantes over a 23-hectare portion of
Forbes Park and the claim of Josephin Abanag over Wright Park that includes the
site of the Philippine Information Agency in the Cordillera and some golf holes
of the Baguio Country Club are highly irregular.
According to him, the city government has
still a chance to question the merit of the case before the Supreme Court if
the CA decides to uphold its earlier decision dismissing the petition to
nullify the aforesaid ancestral titles considering that there are numerous SC
rulings that cited that merits of cases must not be compromised by mere technicalities.
While it is true that Republic Act 8371 or
the Indigenous Peoples rights Act recognizes the charter of the city, Domogan
said IPRA also recognizes ancestral land claims that were previously recognized
by administrative bodies and the courts pursuant to Section 78 of the said law
which took effect in November of 1997.
However, Domogan raised the question whether
or not the ancestral claims of the heirs of Carantes over a portion of Forbes
Park and the ancestral claims of Abanag over Wright Park were previously
recognized by the courts or administrative bodies prior to effectivity of IPRA.
“We
had been receiving inquiries from numerous individuals from different parts of
the country and even overseas who are doubting the sale of prime lots within
the two reservations, thus, the public must be informed that the sale of the
lands within the watersheds are illegal and invalid,” Domogan said.
He added the city government will not
surrender the remaining watershed reservations to the alleged purported
ancestral land claimants.
Domogan also questioned the procedure adopted
by the NCIP in granting the ancestral claims of the heirs of Luaro Carantes
over a portion of Forbes Park and Abanag over Wright Park considering that the
recognition of the ancestral land claims grossly violated the outlined
procedures, particularly the delisting of the parks and reservations.
“If
the city government will lose the case in the future, it will also be the end
of the remaining pine stands in the city considering that the Forbes Park
reservation and Wright Park play host to thousands of old pine trees that
serves as the city’s buffer zone to combat the serious negative effects of
climate change,” Domogan said.
He added the public must also be vigilant on
the moves of the claimants to willfully sell their ancestral claims to innocent
buyers who might end up losing their hard earned money.
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