By Gina
Dizon
SAGADA, Mountain Province -- A necrological
service for former Sagada mayor Ignacio Daoas was held at the grounds municipal
hall here attended by the family of the departed and hundreds of
townspeople before the body was carried to church for the burial ceremony
afternoon of March 3.
The occasion
reiterated the good deeds and example the former mayor has done for the
community when he served then as mayor of the town 16 years ago. Commitment to
public service was a major remark by a number of persons who attended the four
day vigil since February 26 when he died after a prolonged illness. He died
at 88.
“That’s my dad,” David
Daoas, lawyer and former National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP)
chief referred to his father, a much appreciated leader who led the town
like a good father of a family and good father of the town when he was
the mayor 1988-1992.
Speaking during the
necrological service, Daoas urged consultation as one value that guided
his father’s leadership especially at the time when the town was at the
height of a bloody conflict between New Peoples Army insurgents and
government soldiers in the late 1980s eventually leading to the town people
unilaterally declaring the town as a peace zone in 1988, and eventually Sagada
declared as one of six special development areas of the country in 1993.
The call for
demilitarization of the town did not just come from the mind of one person.
Daoas stressed that his father consulted officials, church and community
leaders, elders and the community on what to do. A municipal peace council was
created to this effect. The call to demilitarize the town from both the
hesitant New Peoples Army and the Armed Forces of the Philippines was the
consensus of the people, he said.
Sagada as a peace zone
came in the midst of the death of three children-one caught in the
crossfire and two died from the bullets of drunken government military
soldiers who were then playing with their guns at the market compound.
Key peace zone leaders
who supported Daoas then included former St Theodore’s Hospital medical
doctor Dr Andrew Tauli, St Mary the Virgin then priest in-charge Fr
Alexander Wandag, St Mary’s School faculty Ms Soledad Belingon and former
Sangguniang Bayan chairman and Vice Mayor Thomas Killip.
The call for
consultation comes in the midst of current problems experienced by
the tourist town of Sagada as noted during the necrological service
including issues on traffic jams, illegal parking, and waste management. This
to add to and infrastructure projects that does not go through consultations.
Traffic jam is a
yearly problem for quite some time with no visible solution on how the
current leadership addresses the crisis. Cars are parked wherever and even on
areas where there are No Parking signs. Cars especially during the
tourist peak seasons on Christmas, fiesta, Lent, and special holidays clog the
already narrow streets of Sagada leading to major traffic jams, a perennial
issue especially in the previous years when tourist arrivals have
increased. To date, three children suffered injuries due to vehicular and
traffic issues last year.
The church also
has opened its grounds for a materials recovery facility but nothing has
progressed since a space was opened three years ago and a structure
was built by the LGU to house the MRF while the Calvary hill
protested by church leaders then, still is the site where the LGU
dump truck dumps its garbage.
Projects are
programmed and implemented without consultation. The Office of the Presidential
Assistant on Peace Process (OPAPP) monitoring team noted the lack if not
absence of consultations, a major finding with PAMANA projects not having been
informed or discussed with people before these were programmed and
implemented.The people of Tanulong barangay in their resolution called
for the pay back of their P10 million farm to market road fund as they were not informed nor consulted
where the money has gone. The amount of P10 million from a P15
million PAMANA-OPAPP fund granted for the Tanulong-Madongo farm to
market road implemented by the Department of Agriculture and the Local
Government Unit has been realigned to three other road
projects namely Engan, Kanip-aw, and Angtin located within the town.
In said realignment, the Sangguniang Bayan was ignored leading the legislative
body to question said transfer.
“Mamapke tako,”
(let us be united) is a rallying cry of Daoas for a community to
progress as one with consultation making this happen. Daoas noted the cultural
practice of ‘inayan’ akin to the Golden Rule and ‘lawa’ (moral
prohibition) to be applied in local governance.
He also called
on the need for protected areas of the town as tax declarations even as
communal areas have already been registered by individuals.
Former Sagada
mayor Ignacio Daoas retired as a district schools supervisor of the Department
of Education –Mountain Province in 1986. In Sept. 21,1998 his family was
awarded the Centennial HuwarangPamilyang Pilipino at the Provincial and
Regional level; and one of the four finalists at the Gawad Gina Lopez Bayaning
Pilipino Awards – Pamilya category in 1999. He is married to Veronica
Agpad Daoas and are blessed with seven children and many
grandchildren.
Great article Gina! I hope the Sagadians will come together and protect the town from greed and destruction of their natural way of living.
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