IPRA Through the Years

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    IPRA Through the Years

    Is the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act good enough?

    Long before the first Malay datus crossed over from Borneo into Philippine waters in the

    fourteenth century, the forests and islands of the Panay region, including the island ofBoracay, were already home to the Ati, an indigenous people considered by the NationalCommission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) as the best known among the SpanishNegritoes. For centuries, the waters of Boracay have served as fishing grounds for the Ati.

    This came to an end when the island was transformed into a jewel of Philippine tourism,and the Ati into another problem to be dealt with by those seeking to develop the island for

    commercial purposes.

    Its their ancestral domain, yet they are constantly being denied it, says Dr. Raymundo D. Rovillos,Dean of the UP Baguio College of Social Science. Its a clear case of marginalization. Over time, the

    Ati have been pushed further and further away from their fishing grounds and into the fringes of theislandsometimes at gunpointby the private armies of resort owners. Once caretakers of the forestand seashore, the Ati are mendicants now, taking on the most menial jobs on the island.

    This case is only one example of what happens when business interests, state policies, and the right

    of indigenous peoples to their ancestral domains collide. It is not an unusual situation. In response,indigenous peoples all over the world, for decades, have actively campaigned for the internationalrecognition of their rights. And on June 29, 2006, the UN Human Rights Council voted to adopt the

    Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and to recommend this to the General Assembly, alsoto be held this year.It puzzles Rovillos that the Philippines was among the 12 member-nations that chose to abstain

    rather than vote in favor of the Declaration. The explanation offered during the Council was that thePhilippine government was already committed to safeguarding and promoting the rights of itsindigenous peoples, as evidenced by the enactment of Republic Act No. 8731 or the IndigenousPeoples Rights Act (IPRA) and the presence of two autonomous regions in the country. As optimistic

    as this sounds, the question remains: Is it enough?

    Before the IPRA

    Before the enactment of the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act of 1997, there were no laws that dealtspecifically with the protection of the rights of indigenous peoples (IP). The laws governing the IPand the state were the general laws of the land, says Atty. Oliver N. Saniel, Legal Officer of UP inMindanao. These are, to name a few, the Civil Code, the Revised Penal Code, and other similar laws

    of general application.

    According to the NCIP, the first known organized government effort to help the indigenous people

    took place during the American regime with the creation of the Bureau of Non-Christian Tribes, whicheventually grew into the Commission on National Integration (CNI). In 1978, the CNI was abolished,

    and the Presidential Assistance on National Minorities took its place. In 1987, the Aquinoadministration issued Executive Orders creating the Office for Northern Cultural Communities (ONCC)

    and the Office for Southern Cultural Communities (OSCC) under the Office of the President.In reality, the state had not lost touch with the cultural communities before the passage of theIPRA, Saniel says. The basis for the laws before the IPRA were the social norms in Philippinesociety. Public consultations with tribal councils through the local government units were also

    undertaken.

    These previous efforts, however, fell short, as far as the indigenous peoples were concerned. Thebasis for these laws and executive orders was not the recognition of IP rights, Rovillos points out.The ONCC and OSCC considered the indigenous peoples cultural communities, implying that their

    worth was only tied up with their culture. Nothing was said about their right to ancestral land, theircultural heritage, and their right to self-determination.

    Recognizing IP rightsThe IPRA was signed into law in 1997 as the enforcement of the Constitutions mandate for the State

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    to recognize and promote the right of indigenous peoples/ICCs within the framework of nationalunity and development, and protect the right of indigenous cultural communities to their ancestrallands to ensure their economic, social and cultural well-being. In a paper titled Actors, Institutionsand State-Society Relations in the Policy Process: The Indigenous Peoples Rights Act, presented at

    the 6th Annual Association of Pacific Rim Universities Doctoral Students Conference held in Eugene,Oregon in August 2005, Prof. Ruth Lusterio Rico of the UP Diliman Department of Political Science

    cites the key features that distinguish the IPRA from previous efforts of the Philippine government torecognize IP rights. For example, the IPRA grants total recognition of the rights of indigenous peoples

    to own ancestral domains and ancestral lands; respects and recognizes indigenous political structuresand systems, culture, resource management practices, and conflict resolution mechanisms;recognizes socio-cultural differences among various IP groups; recognizes the right of indigenouspeoples to genuine self-determination and autonomy; and provides for the establishment of an office

    with clearly defined functions and adequate funding, and where IPs are adequately represented.

    The new law engendered a range of reactions from the indigenous peoples. The most radical view

    [among IPs] is that its a deceptive ploy on the part of the government, says Rovillos, that it willlead to the privatization of ancestral domain, which will then make it easier for corporations toappropriate the domain and the lands. The reason for this, he explains, is that the IPRA fails torecognize the concept of native titlestitles defined by the customs of the IPsand is still premised

    on the Regalian Doctrine, with the State ultimately retaining full ownership and control of all lands.

    According to this view, as long as the law works within this framework, its not a genuine piece oflegislation.

    The Regalian Doctrine is a mythical and historically fallacious principle that permeates the thinking

    ofthe Filipino legal profession, Atty. Marvic MVF Leonen, UP Vice President for Legal Affairs, writesin a paper entitled Weaving Worldviews: Implications of Constitutional Challenges to the Indigenous

    Peoples Rights Act of 1997. The Regalian Doctrine, embedded into the Constitutions of 1935, 1973,and 1987, [is] implicitly premised on the largely unquestioned belief that at some unspecifiedmoment during the Spanish colonial period, sovereign rights of the Philippine peoples forebears wereusurped by and simultaneously vested in the Crowns of Castille and Aragon. At that moment, every

    native in the politically undefined and still largely unexplored and unconquered archipelago became asquatterbereft of any legal rights to land or other natural resources.

    Ironically, it is on the premise that the IPRA violates the Regalian Doctrine that a petition was filed in

    1998 in the Supreme Court to declare the IPRA unconstitutional. The case was resolved three yearslater, with the Supreme Court ruling on the constitutionality of the IPRA. Unfortunately, those threeyears meant a delay in the full implementation of the IPRA. Also, the ruling is no guarantee againstsimilar petitions being filed in the future.

    OvergeneralizationsThere are other points where the IPRA may fail to accurately reflect the reality it serves. Rovillospoints out a possible weakness in the law when it tries to universalize the ideals of ancestral domain,

    [assuming] that these can be applied in all cases and situations. This is an overgeneralization,because there are in fact communities that by this time have no more ancestral domains. Throughtime, the indigenous peoples themselves have used other instruments, such as Torrens titles and theagrarian reform law, to establish entitlement to land. While there are still ancestral lands

    intercollectively owned by the community, there are also ancestral lands titled to one or a fewpersons only. If you assume that this territory has remained intact since the pre-colonial period, youare thinking ahistorically, Rovillos says. The IPRA has generalized the ideals to the point where the

    changing land tenurial situations in various communities all over the country cannot be mapped out.

    The law also fails to consider the fact that the IPs are not a monolithic block. These groups havehierarchies, Rovillos says. They have unequal power relations among and within the communities

    themselves, conflicts between the educated and uneducated, the rich and the poor. This can be asource of contention in cases such as when several IP groups have laid claim to a vast tract of land.There is a need to balance the idea of collective ownership of a resource and the reality that thereare, in fact, vertical differentiations among the IPs themselves. Rovillos relates how in some parts of

    Mindanao, indigenous leaders have gradually given way to indigenous dealersopportunists whohave signed Free and Prior Informed Consents with businesses on behalf of their people in order to

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    get something out of it. Not everybody will consider the common good. When you assume thatpeople will always make decisions on behalf of the greater good, you are romanticizing them.

    What is needed then, Rovillos says, is a longer exposure to the various cultures and societies thatmake up the indigenous peoples in order to better understand the dynamics of their culture and

    society. The IPRA can then be made to reflect this understanding. [As it is now], the IPRA is notperfect, since there is still a need to update the law, Saniel adds. There are still a lot of cultural

    practices that need to be incorporated into the law. Thus, lawmakers should still amend the law tomake it conform to the new and modern case-to-case state of cultural practices or heritage.

    Test of timeThe true test of the laws effectiveness will come with time, a full and thorough implementation of the

    law in order to thresh it out, and of course, a commitment on the part of the government to giveboth. The law is theoretically very helpful to the indigenous peoples, but what matters most is theimplementation and sustainability of the law as time goes by, Saniel says, citing the efforts of thelocal government officials in Davao City who have created a council for the tribal elders through which

    the indigenous people may channel their sentiments and proposals for amendments to the law. Therights enumerated in the IPRA are good enough but they still need implementing guidelines, becausethese may vary from tribe to tribe or from one indigenous cultural community to another. Thosedefinitions are accurate for the time being and in a general sense. Complications may arise where the

    law makes a constricting definition that may not be exactly what they have in mind or may not bepart of their cultural practices.

    Commitment on the part of the government also entails dedicating the resources for theimplementation of the law. The infusion of resources would enable the NCIP to finally fulfill itspotential as a powerful agency safeguarding the rights of IPs to their ancestral domains and helpingpreserve their culture. [The lack of resources] may be a manifestation of how serious the

    government believes this issue is, Rovillos observes. If the government really thinks this is worthpursuing, it has to put the resources in place. Considering the recent abstention of the Philippinesduring the UN Human Rights Council, its a little difficult to say how committed the government is tothe protection of the rights of indigenous peoples.

    Still, the situation is not completely bleak, and the fact that the IPRA existsa law borne of theefforts of IP groups, civil society organizations, legal advocates and non-government organizationsis

    a good sign. Add to this the progress made by the UN Declaration, and the increasing push from theinternational community, plus the continued vigilance of the IP groups, civil society organizations, and

    academe, and, perhaps, little changes could be made in the legal system that would allow for thebigger changes in the greater society.

    At the end of the day, the IP movements can look at the IPRA as an instrument to facilitate and tocomplement their other strategies for community empowerment, Rovillos says.Saniel agrees. The IPRA is good enough for the moment.