By
Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO CITY – The city government will pursue
the demolition of the illegal structures at the Benguet-Ifugao-Bontoc-Apayao-Kalinga
(BIBAK) lot along Harrison Road here as soon as the legal issues have been
settled.
Mayor Mauricio Domogan
said the city may have won the first round in the court battle after getting a
favorable decision from the Regional Trial Court over the cases filed by 50
owners of the illegal structures to stop the demolition but it does not mean
the end of the struggle as the petitioners filed for a motion for
reconsideration of the court’s decision.
“We will wait for the
right time to implement the demolition order. The law has to take its course,”
the mayor said.
The RTC Branch 5 under
presiding judge Maria Ligaya Itliong-Rivera recently junked the petition for the
issuance of a writ of preliminary injunction to prevent the demolition of their
structures at the government property.
The court cited the
position of Dept. of Environment and Natural Resources-Cordillera
officer-in-charge regional director Paquito Moreno that the “petitioners
occupation has no legal basis and neither can they qualify as beneficiaries
under (Republic Act) No. 10023 (Act Authorizing the Issuance of Free Patents to
Residential Lands) because the lot is not alienable and disposable. Thus
the possession of the petitioners, no matter how long, could never ripen into
ownership or possessory right.”
“Given the foregoing,
the Court finds that petitioners are not entitled to the issuance of an
injunctive writ because they have no right to the property on which their
structures stand,” the court said.
The city had set the
demolition of 58 illegal structures from August 11-14 after the occupants
refused to voluntarily vacate the area which the city said was segregated from
Original Certificate Title No. 01 in favor of the BIBAK Dormitories Inc. in
1961 and thus “was slated to cater to the housing needs of the students coming
from the BIBAK areas.”
The occupants claimed
that they are members of the marginalized sector and have been occupying the
BIBAK compound since 1982 and thus are qualified to stay in the area or be granted
relocation privileges under Republic Act 7279 or the Urban Development and
Housing Act of 1992.
The city maintained
that the present occupants are private individuals who entered the property
without permission and are now utilizing the area for profit. Their
structures were also not covered by building permits.
The city’s bid
to clear the lot measuring about 5,000 square meters was supported by the
former leaders of the BIBAK Student Dormitories Inc., the Regional Development
Council and the DENR-CAR.
In 2014, Moreno
supported the city’s demolition plan in the area as he turned down the petition
of the OCT No. 1 settlers to own the lots they are occupying.
Moreno said the DENR
being the administrator of the lots under OCT 1 has advocated of the “best use”
of the property and a demolition to be executed by the city mayor’s office will
help the department enforce its mandate.
“Sadly, the
occupation of the land by the petitioners is bereft of any legal basis and
thus, can never ripen into ownership or possessory right. They cannot be
qualified beneficiaries… since the subject lot is not alienable and disposable
land. We therefore reiterate that clearing of the area of informal
settlers is prioritized and we solicit the occupants’ cooperation in making it
a peaceful and orderly proceeding,” Moreno said.
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