IP month for Happy Hallow and the Maeng
>> Tuesday, October 14, 2014
LETTERS
FROM THE AGNO
March L.
Fianza
Mixed feelings greet this month’s IP celebration. Reading
from news reports about experiences of indigenous communities worldwide, it has
been shown that most minority tribes fight against suppression and
discrimination oddly committed by the governments that are supposed to protect
them. Mind you, that is happening in our midst – in Baguio and in other
urbanized districts where there are IPs.
I am quite ready to give up talking about this in my
articles. However I am left with no choice but to keep on writing about it
because to this day, and as we celebrate the IP month of October, we see that
policies on self-determination, justice and equity have yet to be strengthened
and sustained.
Elected officials are accused of not respecting IP
values, and the IP right to freely pursue development in their ancestral
domains are being opposed or blocked by private interest groups in
collaboration with government officials and agencies. With government becoming
the opposition itself, there is the presumption that culture driven activities
will never be institutionalized.
In a meeting at Happy Hallow last month, city councilor
Poppo Cosalan challenged the barangay residents to nominate their IP
representative to the city council. This is guaranteed by the local government
code of 1991.
Happy Hallow is very much qualified to send an IP
representative to the city council, being the only barangay in Baguio that has
been identified as an Ancestral Domain after being issued a CADT (Certificate
of Ancestral Domain).
Happy Hallow ancestral domain is inhabited by a mix of
Ibaloys and Kankanaeys. The question is: will the city council that is
dominated by councilors who trace their roots from other provinces outside
Benguet allow this?
Aside from that forthcoming disapproval, Happy Hallow is
mired in a three-cornered fight – with BCDA and Baguio City on the other side
of the fence. At least Happy Hallow is safe for now because it holds a CADT.
The problem is, the BCDA and Baguio are moving heaven and earth to try to have
the CADT disregarded in any manner so that they can pursue their interests.
For BCDA, it has business interests over the area while
the city wants to dispose the lots inside the CADT through Townsite Sales
Applications (TSA), even while it is very clear that Happy Hallow has never
been part of the Baguio Townsite reservation.
The so-called Townsite Reservation that the city is
talking about has no approved technical metes and bounds so that it cannot be
pinpointed on the map. But there is a clearing committee called “AO 504” that
is co-chaired by the city mayor and the DENR secretary who have self-vested
powers to identify which lots can be sold through public bidding and which are
not disposable.
***
In a remote village in Abra that is hidden in a
scenic corner between the more developed municipalities of Mountain Province
and Ilocos Sur, a town councilor expresses thankfulness for the passage of the
Indigenous Peoples Rights Act or IPRA during the Bagawas, a thanksgiving ritual
of the Maeng tribe.
Domingo Lawagan, a former NPA (New People’s Army) rebel,
woos the crowd to be grateful because the government had at last recognized
their rights to manage their ancestral domain, including the natural resources
that are found within.
The Bagawas ritual and signing of manuscripts documenting
“Lapat” as the Sustainable Traditional Indigenous Forest Resources Management
Systems and Practices (STIFRMSP) of the Maeng tribe of Tubo was the offshoot of
Joint Administrative Order 2008-01 of the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources and the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples.
JAO 2008-01 guarantees the issuance of appropriate
government policies that would finally integrate age-old indigenous forest
management systems of tribal communities nationwide into the mainstream
policies of the DENR.
It seeks to document into a finished manuscript the culture,
values and traditions of the Maeng tribe of Tubo in relation to forest resource
protection and management. Tubo municipality has a population of barely 6,000
today, from the last population count of only 5,719 in 2010.
Documentation processes did not commence immediately
after the joint order was signed in 2008. It was only in 2011 that a small
technical working group composed of Foresters Rex Sapla and FlorPacio, Engr.
Simeon Micklay and Pat
Tayaban launched their first activity in Tadian, Mountain Province in
coordination with the NCIP in the area.
Two years later in 2013, the TWG finished 15 manuscripts
detailing in it at least seven indigenous forest management practices in the
Cordillera.
These are: Batangan system in Tadian, Besao and Sagada in
Mountain Province; the Pinuchu and Pinuju systems that are practiced by the
Majukayong tribe in Natonin, MP; the Lapat for Tubo and Bucloc in Abra that is
similarly observe in Pudtol and Calanasan, Apayao; Muyung for Kiangan, Hungduan
and Asipulo in Ifugao, and Bakun in Benguet; Imong in Pasil, Balbalan and
Tinglayan in Kalinga; and the Kijowan in Karao, Bokod and Ibaloi areas in
Benguet.
Upon the affirmation of the DENR Secretary and
Chairperson of the NCIP, the manuscripts will now be transformed into local
ordinances of the respective LGUs.
For centuries, tribal communities in the Cordillera have
been subjected to rigid government forest laws that were not equally responsive
to the traditional practices of IPs, reason why JAO 2008-01 was crafted. This
is extra justice to the IPs even while the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act was
enacted in 1997.
But even with these efforts, the Philippines still has a
long way to go in seeing to it that the policies that were written are executed
without reservation.
Happy IP month!
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