‘Breakup’ of Cordillera under federal gov’t looms
>> Thursday, July 20, 2017
As CAR commemorates 30th founding anniversary
By
Dexter A. See
BAGUIO CITY– As the
Cordillera Administrative Region is celebrating its thirtieth founding
anniversary this July, Mayor Mauricio G. Domogan warned of a possible breakup
of the CAR once Congress, as a constituent assembly to amend the Constitution,
will decide to delete provisions that mandate establishment of autonomous
regions in the Cordillera and Muslim Mindanao to suit the administration’s bid
to shift from the present presidential form to federal government.
The mayor said
the potential breakup of the Cordillera is not a threat to those who are
against the renewed quest for regional autonomy but it is a reality that can
happen once a number of provinces will ratify the autonomy law once enacted by
Congress and signed into law by the President and once the constitutional
provisions mandating establishment of autonomous regions will be deleted during
the charter change.
“We do not
intend to threaten anyone regarding the possible disintegration of our region
in the future once the situation warrants it that is why it is high time for us
to unite to achieve autonomy as this might be our last chance to do so amidst
the administration’s planned shift to federal form of government within the
term of President Rodrigo R. Duterte.
He added
that Cordillerans are lucky because President Duterte, through Presidential
Peace Adviser Jesus Dureza, is supportive of the region’s renewed quest for
regional autonomy unlike during the previous administration and Cordillerans
must reciprocate the support by showing their interest in establishing the
autonomous region in the Cordillera.
Domogan
said Cordillerans were actually treated as second-class citizens when some
parts of the CAR were parts of Region I and II during the martial law regime
and people do not want the problem to be repeated once the region will
disintegrate if the autonomy law is rejected or once the renewed quest for regional
autonomy will be overtaken by the planned shift to federal form in the future.
Republic
Act 4695 or the Division Law divided the previous Mountain Province into four
independent provinces namely, Bontoc that retained the old name of Mountain
province, Ifugao, Kalinga-Apayao and Benguet. However, when former President
Ferdinand Marcos issued Batas Pambansa No. 1 or the decree that divided the
country into regions, the Cordillera was again disintegrated wherein Benguet,
Baguio city and Mountain Province went to Region I while Ifugao and
Kalinga-Apayao joined Region II.
After the
signing of the September 13, 1986 historic Mount Data peace agreement, former
President Corazon C. Aquino issued Executive Order No. 220 that reconfigured
the Cordillera Administrative Region which brought back Abra, Benguet, Baguio
city and Mountain Province from Region I and Ifugao and Kalinga-Apayao from
Region II to comprise the CAR. Later, the former Kalinga-Apayao area was
divided into two independent provinces by virtue of Republic Act 7878. Under
the provisions of House Bill 5343 or the bill that seeks to establish the
autonomous region in the Cordillera, cities and provinces that will not vote in
favour of the establishment of an autonomous region in the Cordillera will revert
back to their original regions allowing the cities and provinces that voted in
favor of the autonomy law to compose the autonomous region in the Cordillera.
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