Binga stakeholders allow IP to manage communal site
MANILA,
March 18 (PNA)--Following the signing of a multi-party agreement,
indigenous people of Barangay Tinongdan in Itogon, Benguet were allowed
to manage certain areas near the Binga power plant.
The agreement allows the use and administration of the Binga
national and elementary schools, chapel, day care center, former market
building and recreation hall in Marian Village by the indigenous
peoples’ community.
The areas used to be part of the hydro power complex managed
by National Power Corp. (Napocor) for 60 years.
In 2008, SNAP-Benguet took over the 100 megawatt (MW) Binga
power plant after winning the bid held by PSALM.
Benguet Governor Nestor B. Fongwan, SN Aboitiz Power
(SNAP)-Benguet chief executive Emmanuel V. Rubio and director Amador P.
Batay-an of the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples-Cordillera
Region (NCIP) led the signing ceremonies on March 15, 2010 at the
Provincial Capitol.
Also present during the signing were Itogon Vice Mayor Noel
G. Ngolob, Tinongdan Barangay Captain and Tinongdan Indigenous Peoples’
Organization representative Norberto I. Pacio, Watershed Management
director Emmanuel A. Umali of Napocor, and Asset Valuation division
manager Rommel G. Regacho of the Power Sector Assets and Liabilities
Management Corp. (PSALM).
Rubio said SNAP-Benguet voluntarily participated in and
supported the stakeholders’ consultation process.
“We believe in balancing corporate investment with community
investment... and that entails making positive contributions to the
communities in which we operate,” he said.
Fongwan lauded the groups that participated in the process
but emphasized that the IPs were the most important group because of
their role in the agreement. He said that “even if the full work is yet
to be done, the process of solving problems from way back has begun.”
According to lawyer Batay-an, the agreement was the first of
its kind with stakeholders agreeing on a communal site through a
consultation process.
“This is a concrete example of how stakeholders can be
brought together and how the IPRA [Indigenous People’s Rights Act] can
be a tool for cooperation and development,” he said.
The implementing agreement completed the May 29, 2009
Memorandum of Agreement which aimed to establish, among others, an
Indigenous Peoples’ Cultural Heritage Site in Binga and Barangay
Ambuklao in Bokod, Benguet.
SNAP-Benguet is a joint venture between SN Power of Norway
and the Aboitiz Group. It also owns the 75 MW Ambuklao hydro power
plant. (PNA)
RMA/MSN/utb
|