FPIC, impact areas and ancestral domains
>> Sunday, October 26, 2014
HAPPY
WEEKEND
By
Gina Dizon
NAPUA,
SABANGAN- It is frustrating to note that the coverage of an impact area of
Hedcor’s 14 megawatt hydro project in Sabangan refers only to the space-
barangays Napua and Namatec- where the company’s projects and plans are located
as identified by the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP).
This
observation came in the midst of the October 8 public hearing attended by
the congressional committee on national cultural communities in response to a
petition filed by the Napua Sabangan United Guides Association Inc (NSUGAI) and
the Volunteers against Corruption(VAC) questioning the National Commission
on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) violations securing the free prior and
informed consent of the representative indigenous peoples of Napua and Namatec
on Hedcor’s 14 megawatt project and reported violations in the environmental
compliance certificate (ECC) issued by the department of environment and
natural resources (DENR).
Petitioners
Juniper Dominguez of VAC and Richard Budod of NSUGAI posed the question – why
only the IPs of Napua and Namatec are included in the FPIC process and not the
whole 15 barangays of Sabangan- to the visiting members of the congressional
committee chairman and congresswoman Nancy Catamco of Cotabato, and member-
Representatives Carlos Padilla of Nueva Ecija, Noel Villanueva of Tarlac,
Maximo Dalog of Mountain Province and Nicasio Aliping of Baguio City.
A
basic question indeed to cover the basic framework of what an indigenous people
is in determining relations to his ancestral domain cover the land, the
waters and the air above, his livelihood sourced from these resources and interrelated
relations to peoples in adjacent villages.
The
Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA) is clear on what an ancestral domain says,
“All areas generally belonging to ICCs/IPs comprising lands, inland waters,
coastal areas, and natural resources therein to include ancestral lands,
forests, pasture, residential, agricultural, and other lands…”
As
it is, the ancestral domain of the indigenous peoples of Sabangan where the 14
megawatt hydro project is worked on show excavated slopes of Tinmakudo
Mountain in Napua to give way to access roads to the intake weir at the other
side of the Mt Kalawitan area. Construction saw the throwing of debris and
earth spoils including tree saplings down the Chico River threatening the river
of impending siltation which is one of the major complaints of NSUGAI and VAC.
Add
to these diverted waters of the Chico River from its natural course to add to
its murkiness due blasted rocks and siltation on the flowing of waters
downstream barangays Namatec, Gayang, Losad and Poblacion Sabangan.
An
elder even said there is no more wading (river fish) to catch since the
hydro started construction in 2013 obviously from the dynamite
blasting of Kalawitan mountain to give way to the building of the tunnel.
It is obvious that marine life has decreased in downstream waters.
The
tunnel lets the waters flow from the intake weir to the powerhouse near the
banks of the Chico River at Namatec.
And
of course it is an immediate conclusion that transmission lines shall cross
other barangays where the lines shall connect to the National Corporation
Grid (NGCP)- MOPRECO substation passing through lower barangays on to
Supang to the Baang-Bauko substation, urging barangay chairman Ireneo Pilakan
of Poblacion Sabangan to say that people at lower Sabangan should also be
consulted as transmission lines are projected to cross these areas.
Limiting
the consent secured from only Napua and Namatec definitely limited the area to
cover only the physical location of the intake weir and the power house and
disregarded barangays where projected transmission lines and electric posts
shall pass through. Why, when in fact transmission posts and electrical wirings
are part of the plan of an energy plant.
That
is, to base on the provisions of the 2006 FPIC guidelines of which NCIP quickly
claimed is the basis of the selection of Napua and Namatec as impact areas; and
as part of the documents required to process an application which
include among others location map indicating the name of sitios and
/or barangays covered by the project.
The
2006 implementing rules on FPIC states the field based investigation (FBI)
shall determine the area affected taking into consideration the following
criteria: “The impact area as defined by the concerned regulating
agency or the impact area applied to programs, plans,
projects, or activities that require environmental impact
assessment on the basis of the project documents and the
indicative map submitted by the applicant to find out the
extent of coverage of both the area affected and the members
of the community whose consent is to be obtained….”
“NCIP
interpreted the impact as simply physical sites o of the project and did not
consider the holistic impact”, Indigenous peoples rights advocate Florence
Umaming, member of the technical working group in the drafting of the
Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA) said in a separate interview.
Manang
Florence views where I also draw inspiration in writing this column
added, “Let the Igorot-Kankanaey of Sabangan determine the impact of the
proposed project on the cultural physical, political, and social system of the
indigenous cultural communities affected”.
The
2006 guidelines while it tried to accommodate the technical description
of the project proponent’s plans and programs have loaded provisions on
what an affected or impact area means to refer to an ancestral domain owned by
an indigenous cultural community.
And
when in doubt or ambiguity on the interpretation of laws, IPRA itself provides
that this shall be resolved in favor of the ICCs/IPs.
Obviously,
NCIP’s strict interpretation of the area based on the physical constructions of
the weir and the powerhouse at Napua and Namatec respectively left out the
other five barangays downstream where the Chico river flows and the
eight upper barangays who are part of a Sabangan ancestral domain.
An
interpretation which leaned in favor of the proponent company Hedcor to
apparently cut on costs and that of NCIP seemingly doing compliance work.
An
interpretation which drew comments from residents of other affected barangays
within a domain needing consultation as well.
Former
barangay official and community elder and leader Lakay Gegway said Capinitan
people should be consulted as the project also affects their river system.
The
domain referred to is Sabangan ancestral domain clearly noted in the Sabangan
peoples application to DENR in 1995. That is, there is already an identified
indigenous people’s community living in an ancestral domain in 1995 and before
those years ago.
It
is a startling revelation to note also that two other barangay-members Busa and
Capinitan were not consulted on the FPIC process much as they belong to the so
called Tinmakudo tribe which represented the indigenous peoples to enter into
an FPIC-MOA with NCIP in furtherance to Hedcor’s hydro project.
By
the way, the so called Tinmakudo tribe was coined as facilitated by NCIP
when the four barangays-Busa, Capinitan, Namatec and Napua- filed their
application for a Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT) in 2009
considering their non- presence of boundary conflicts made them recipient
of an NCIP- World Bank funded project to delineate applications for ancestral
land titles.
It
is interesting to note that Umaging Agustin in his elderly years who was born
and lived in Napua said Tinmakudo refers to the name of a mountain. He said
people are referred to as those from their places of origin such as people from
Napua and not people from Tinmakudo. People basically refer to themselves as
them coming from their place where they were born and raised in.
Anyways,
considering an ancestral domain covers the eco-system of indigenous peoples
then the two-barangays-Busa and Capinitan should not have been ignored in the
FPIC process.
Catamco
commented that an ancestral domain will customarily include all who are members
of an ancestral domain in the FPIC process.
And
when we talk of affected barangays, covers downstream barangays- Gayang,
Losad, Bun-ayan, Lagan, Poblacion along the Chico River definitely
affected with the debris and earth spoils having fallen down the slopes
of the mountain to the Chico river due to the discoloration of the waters
of the river nand its effect on the death of marine life and threatened
decrease of rice harvest due contaminated waters due
blasted mountain rocks using dynamites.
Wouldn’t
you consider this a vast stretch of what the coverage of an impact area shall
be? It practically covers the whole of the 15 barangays of Sabangan to
technically cover what company projects and plans would cover and culturally
and legally as a domain area shall cover the whole vast watersheds, woodlots
and residential areas where transmission lines shall pass through and Chico
River where the water passes through the downstream barangays of Sabangan aside
from the weir and the powerhouse at Napua and Namatec.
Now
NCIP representatives turns to the 2012 revised FPIC guidelines and said
that the revision now covers the ancestral domain area as the impact
area.
Yet
one thing is sure, the very interpretation of an impact or affected area has
always been there in the 2006 provisions supported in the basic IPRA law
and made pronounced in the 2012 guidelines for those who strictly look for
words to base their decisions. Yet to enliven and make the IPRA and its
implementing guidelines be relevant, living and consultative, it is
a basic framework to listen more closely to what the villager- IPs are
saying.
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