Despite the enactment of the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA), or R.A. No. 8371, twenty-seven years ago, conflicting laws and policies have made the implementation of this law challenging.
This was the pronouncement of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP), through its Episcopal Commission on Indigenous Peoples (ECIP), on the 47th Indigenous People’s Sunday last 13 October 2024, with the theme: “Lakbay-Laya: Pilgrims of Hope in Ancestral Domain.”
“The celebration of IP Sunday aims to highlight the current situations of indigenous peoples, garner support from our non-indigenous brothers and sisters, and provide necessary assistance to alleviate the challenges faced by approximately 15 million indigenous people throughout the country,” said Ifugao and Mountain Province Bishop Valentin C. Dimoc, D.D., ECIP Chairperson, in his letter of appeal.
Bishop Dimoc stressed, “It is crucial to place greater emphasis on our Indigenous sisters and brothers, who have long been excluded from many decisions.”
In their July 1978 assembly, the CBCP designated every second Sunday of October as IP Sunday, wherein priests are expected to give homilies and commentaries on the plight of Indigenous Peoples (IPs), as well as encourage Christian lowlanders to express their solidarity with the IPs’ struggle for self-determination.
The IPRA was signed into law by President Fidel Ramos on October 29, 1997, to support the cultural integrity of IPs, the right to their lands, and the right to self-directed development of these lands.
Former Senator Juan Flavier, one of IPRA’s authors, noted that the “IPs are the offspring and heirs of the peoples who first inhabited and cared for the land long before any central government was established.”
The Legal Rights and Natural Resources Center (LRC) said in a paper that much of the legal controversy emanates from overlapping and unclarified jurisdiction among various government departments, particularly in the processing and awarding of tenurial instruments.
Despite the aspirations of IPRA, the LRC noted that it may not be interpreted to mean limiting the jurisdiction of courts, nor does it imply that the National Commission on Indigenous People (NCIP) has primary and sole jurisdiction over all Indigenous Cultural Communities (ICCs)/IP claims and disputes to the exclusion of the regular courts. This also applies to certain criminal cases.
On August 15, 2023, the Supreme Court issued a Writ of Kalikasan against Ipilan Nickel Corp. and Celestial Nickel Mining and Exploration Corp., in favor of the ICCs of Brooke’s Point, Palawan.
The Court found that the continued mining operations and excavation of nickel may cause irreparable environmental damage to the Mt. Mantalingahan protected area and the ICCs’ ancestral domain, as exhibited by extreme flooding and contamination of fishing areas.
“The indigenous peoples’ struggle for their rights has been long and enduring. Their struggle for the recognition of their rights to land and self-determination is rooted in their effort for cultural and human survival. We should honor the struggle of our people,” said my UP Law professor and now Supreme Court Associate Justice Marvic Leonen in the case of Sama vs People (G.R. No. 224469, January 5, 2021).
Leonen underscored that IPRA recognizes that IPs have a claim of ownership, not only over ancestral domains but also the resources found within them. It acknowledges that the ancestral domain and the resources therein constitute the IPs’ basis for their cultural integrity.
Justice Leonen emphasized in Ha Datu Tawahig vs. Lapinid (G.R. No. 221139, March 20, 2019) that the IPRA was adopted precisely to recognize that indigenous peoples have been “resistant to political, social, and cultural inroads of colonization, non-indigenous religions and cultures, and became historically differentiated from the majority of Filipinos.”
In Daco vs Cabajar (G.R. No. 222611, November 15, 2021), Justice Leonen noted that IPRA grants the ICCs ownership and possession of their ancestral domains and ancestral lands, and defines the extent of these lands and domains. The ownership granted is based on the indigenous concept of ownership under customary law, which traces its origin to native title.
“Tumandok” was the biggest winner at this year’s Cinemalaya Independent Film Festival. The film centered on the struggle of the Ati indigenous people to reclaim their ancestral domain in Iloilo.
It won Best Film “for its focus on a marginalized sector of Philippine society; for its nearly epic sweep of the life and landscape of a people disempowered by the wealthy and the powerful and victimized by government neglect and corruption; for its highly convincing characters and effective ensemble acting by a cast of non-professional actors; and for its highly effective filmmaking in defense of the rights of indigenous people to their ancestral domain.”
Atty. Dennis R. Gorecho heads the seafarers’ division of the Sapalo Velez Bundang Bulilan law offices. For comments, email [email protected], or call 09175025808 or 09088665786.