By Dexter A. See
BAGUIO CITY
– Mayor Mauricio G. Domogan appealed to the Baguio and Boracay Re-Development
Committee to investigate reported unabated issuance of land titles by the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources and the National Commission on
Indigenous Peoples which he said, will grossly affect the density of the places
being preserved.
“We
are alarmed over the issuance of titles over road-rights-of-way, river
easements, parks, forests and watershed reservations by the DENR and NCIP
because it runs counter to the efforts of the Aquino administration to protect
and preserve Baguio and Boracay as prime ecotourism destinations in the
country,” Domogan told technical working group of the BBRDC.
“While it is
true that the city is overcrowded, the continuous issuance of titles by the
DENR and NCIP over parcels of lands in protected areas will complicate the
city’s land problems in the future.”
According
to him, circumventions being done by DENR to the free patent law, particularly
allowing the subdivision of lands that are more than 200 square meters in order
to meet the prescribed limit, is not in accordance to the spirit of the law
because it will increase the density of areas in the city which will complicate
the city’s problems on solid waste, traffic, peace and order management and
environmental issues.
Domogan
cited the titling of large portions of the Forbes Park, Wright Park, Botanical
Garden, Busol watershed among others will result to the massive cutting of
trees that will affect the city’s sources of water and its cool and romantic
weather which foreign and domestic tourists love to enjoy when in the city.
American
architect Daniel Burnham designed Baguio City to accommodate at least 25,000
inhabitants but the city’s nighttime population is around 318,000 while its
daytime population is approximately 900,000.
Domogan
said the technical working group must already issue the appropriate guidelines
on how to deal with the present problem on the titling of lands in the city
because it will prevent the invasion of the declared forest and watershed
reservations and the possible problems of loss of lives and damage to
properties during the onslaught of the rainy season considering that the river
easements were already constricted by the houses that were built as a result of
the issued titles.
He
said most victims of previous calamities in the city are those whose houses
were constructed along waterways and near areas that were already declared as
danger zones in accordance to the geological hazard map released by the Mines
and Geosciences Bureau in the Cordillera.
Domogan
also questioned certificates of ancestral land titles issued by the NCIP to
purported indigenous peoples if they were able to comply with the provisions of
the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA) considering that Section 78 of the
said law clearly defines legitimate ancestral claims in the city.
IPRA
provides that legitimate ancestral claims in the city are those that were
already recognized by the courts and quasi-judicial bodies prior to the
effectivity of the law in November 1997, thus, it is questionable whether or
not the recently issued CALTs have complied with the said provision of the law.
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