NCIP assures: Eskaya domain claims, to be granted anytime – ESKAYA LAND

SORRY TO BURST BUBBLES. NCIP Bohol Field Office Head Emmilou M. Gonzaga, herself from an IP family, said that the Certificates of Ancestral Domain Titles (CADT) for the Eskaya is set for release soon, and this contiguous area could contain the lots where CLOAS issue earlier than 1996 are respected. Those issued later however, should be cancelled, as these were issued after the NCIP has pushed the ancestral claims. (PIABohol)

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol (PIA) – Anytime soon, the ancestral domain claims of 3,193.88 hectares of the Eskaya indigenous people in the mountain tops of Duero, Sierra Bullones, Pilar and Guindulman would be granted, says the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP).

Not really bursting many people’s bubbles, NCIP Bohol Field Officer and head Emmylou Gonzaga, speaking at the Kapihan sa PIA commemorating the 27th anniversary of the Indigenous People’s Rights Act, Gonzaga said their team have been hearing from non-IP residents within the ancestral domains that the Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT) which the NCIP is promising would not materialize.

Well within the over 3,000 hectares of ancestral domains are double claims.

Already occupying portions of mountains of Barangays Taytay in Duero, Lundag in Pilar, Cantaub in Sierra Bullones and their main community in Biabas in Guindulman, the Eskaya hand the NCIP processing the CAD Claims for the Eskaya in 1996.

Earlier than that, and much later after the Certificate of Ancestral Domain Claim has been processed, government agencies also went into a flurry of granting Certificates of Land Ownership Awards (CLOA) to some tribe members and even outsiders.

These issued CLOAs are also within the tribal claims, making the ancestral domain areas shrink.

The contested areas with CLOAS and other tenurial instruments given by government agencies are now in a heated debates, that IPS of Taytay, Cantaub, Lundag and BIABAs are calling the government to suspend the release of such, especially that involving lots within their ancestral domain claims.

But then, Gonzaga assured that “within the next few months, the title of the claims (Certificates of Ancestral Domain Titles-CADT) of the four barangays would soon be released.”

CADT R-7-014, which contains the claims and the protested parts of it, would be presented by the NCIP en banc, she added.

To settle the double claims, the NCIP Bohol Field Office head said CLOAs issued before 1996, to tribe members would be respected, but CLOAs issue in 1997 until recently, can not be respected anymore in the CADT.

This means, according to Gonzaga that, after the NCIP got the official acknowledgement of the Eskaya claim in 1996, any more issued CLOAs within the claimed domain are deemed illegal.

With this, the NCIP is now coordinating with the Land Registration Authority, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, which also issued other tenurial instruments to tribe members and non-IPs, as well as the Department of Agrarian Reform, for the cancellation of the issued CLOAS within the ancestral domains.

Aside from DAR which issued CLOAs to farmers, the DENR has also unknowingly issued leases, permits, agreements, joint venture or production sharing agreements as well as licenses concerning the development, exploration and utilization of the portions of the ancestral claims. (RAHC/PIA-7/Bohol)