Saturday, March 17, 2012

Tribe formalizes support for hydro project


TABUK CITY, Kalinga – Through the signatures of their chosen representatives, the four indigenous cultural communities (ICCs) in the vicinity of the proposed Upper Tabuk Hydropower Project (UTHP) all of which belong to the Nanong tribe have formalized their endorsement of the project.

Thirty-two members of the 40-man Nanong Governing Council who were present during the organizational meeting of the council on March 6 have signed a manifesto expressing their support for the project.

The tribal group known as Nanong is composed of the ICCs of the Nanong, Malbong, Dallac and Minanga who inhabit the barangays of Naneng, Lucog, Dupag and Bagumbayan in Upper Tabuk.

The manifesto also named the Minanga ICC in whose ancestral domain in barangay Dupag the UTHP is located as the host ICC thereby formally ending a bitter dissension in the Nanong tribe on the question of who should be the host ICC.

For months, groups within and outside the Nanong tribe have questioned the status of the Minanga as the host ICC claiming among others that it only lately sought recognition as a sub-tribe under the Kalinga ethnic group to skirt the free and prior informed consent (FPIC) process of the Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Act (IPRA).

Using its recognition from the Tabuk City LGU and the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) obtained on January 9, 2009 and through the Kalinga Hydropower, Inc. which it formed as the entity to pursue the project, the Minangas obtained the hydro project requirements from government.

The oppositors in and ouside the Nanong tribe alleged that what the Minangas did was a circumvention of the IPRA insisting that under the law, it should be the whole Nanong tribe which will give the go signal to the project and also stand as host ICC.

The conflict within the tribe over the question of which ICC to host the project became so bitter it threatened the pursuit of the project but this was resolved during a tribal general assembly in Naneng on January 22 when the participants decided to name Minanga as the host ICC and for the formation of the 40-man council which will decide on the project in behalf of the tribe.

In the manifesto, the council also endorsed the KHI as partner and developer of the project.

The council members of which were formally chosen by the barangay councils of the four ICCs also declared that the manifesto was the result of the consensus of the Nanong tribe and had asked all parties to respect the decision.

The council includes the four barangay captains of the Nanong territory namely Samuel Suma-al of Dupag, Villamor Sannadan of Lucog, Edmund Daodaoen of Bagumbayan and Rommel Balunggay of Naneng.

Heriberto Barila, the council’s interim secretary general, told the media that the manifesto which will be sent to government agencies concerned with hydropower projects and prospective investors to prove that the people in the host community and not just a few members welcome the project.

“We also want to disprove the allegation of some parties that majority of the members of the four ICCs are not informed and do not support the project. With the manifesto, we want to assure prospective investors that the tribe supports the project,” Barila said.

Barila said that the council is the body that will enter into contract with the investor as well as answer questions that may be levelled against the project.

He said that they are presently formulating the by-laws of the governing council in preparation for registering with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The other interim officers of the council are the following: Balunggay – president; Suma-al – vice president for internal affairs; Sixto Obal – vice president for external affairs; Miguel Barila – treasurer; Edward Alimani – auditor; Jerome Tabanganay – PRO; Camilo Degay and Tina Batak – business managers. **By Estanislao Albano, Jr.