Cordillera roads
>> Sunday, June 1, 2014
LETTERS
FROM THE AGNO
March L.
Fianza
The scandalous news about the Priority
Development Assistance Fund or “pork barrel” fund has reached far and wide,
even as in truth it has been hidden in private pockets of private individuals
and lawmakers. For me, I would have wanted to have it spent on roads – the
facility that is most needed by communities that crave for true development.
Just put the road in place and the rest will follow. Improving and constructing
new interior roads does not only increase the growth rate of communities, it
disperses populations from the center and opens up new settlements.
In the farthest
barangays of Benguet and Ifugao that I have gone to, the road is a priority
that the farmers want in their lives. Lusod and Tawangan after Barangay Ballay
is is dire need of a road line. It has an old road has been opened in the 80s
but this needs to be rehabilitated in order to make transport of farm products
move at a faster rate.
Then there is another
Lusod that leads to the neighboring sitio of Domolpos in Barangay Tinongdan,
Itogon. The area is also in need of a road as the Iwaks and Kalanguyas here
have only been satisfied in traversing an old foot trail since they settled in
these communities in the clouds. Between Tinoc and Buguias, there are
communities that need roads.
Above Bontoc in
Mountain Province, a road goes up to Maligcong. It is located 8.5-km north of
barangay Caluttit. It can be reached by motor vehicle through a 7-km. road that
stops at Fabuyan. At the dead end of the road, a footpath along rice paddies
leads to the village proper. The road did not reach the barangay proper because
of the presence of age-old rice fields. But it can be repaired or concreted to
increase tourist arrival to view beautiful ricefields.
Maligcong has six
scattered sitios that are craving for constant repair of their roads. If this
is extended further, it can connect to Sagada, particularly Barangay Madongo.
Although, government planners must have to be extra careful not to overdo
development as this may interrupt the preservation of cultures.
In Ifugao, Gov. Denis
Habawel said, tourism roads and other modern infrastructure projects should not
disturb culture. Certainly, there must be something wrong in the way tourism
executives make programs, disregarding other factors that are more important
than tourism itself.
***
There are several
reasons why environmental cases are dismissed by fiscals or lost in the courts.
The most common that we read about is that law enforcers are not equipped with
the proper tools in filing the cases against offenders of forestry laws. This
prompted the DENR in the Cordillera to hold a paralegal training for police
officers and other concerned personalities.
Aside from an over-all
review of environmental laws that was presented by DENR Legal Chief Renato C.
Bestre, the state of environment in Benguet was discussed, along with the topic
on Measurement and Assessment of Forest Products and Transport Documents by
Forester Manuel Magkachi.
Four relative topics
that were important for the police officers were discussed. These were the
Rules and Procedures for Environmental Cases; Basic Investigation and Evidence
Gathering; Preparing the Case for the Prosecution and Rules on Admissibility of
Testimonial Evidence; and Preparing the Affidavit in Lieu of Direct
Examination. These were presented by Atty. Cleo Andrada, Prosecutors Winston
Suaking and Arthur T. Bataclao, and Atty. Karen Joy C. Rulloda,
respectively. At least that was what appeared in the program.
I dropped by Brentwood
along M. Roxas St. where the para-legal training took place to see what I could
gather and saw that the topics were interesting to any ordinary forest
protector or “environmentalist”. Although what I most wanted to hear from the
discussants were the reasons why such cases failed to prosper in prosecution or
in the courts. There are reasons I know as divulged to me by friends in the
court. They say witnesses were begged by the defendants not to appear during
hearings while some were asked to back out from the case in exchange for
“favors”.
The para-legal
training’s aim is to make effective the procedures in the filing of the cases
and in prosecuting forest law offenders. And so, we expect to see an increase
in the percentage of convictions in the near future.
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