Pangasinan WWII Veterans Honored Thru Infra, Medical Programs

Ipinakita ng DND ang kanilang pangako sa mga beterano ng WWII sa Pangasinan sa pamamagitan ng mga programang pangkalusugan at imprastruktura.

Ilocos Norte Seeks 226 More Village Rangers To Prevent Forest Fires

Ang Ilocos Norte ay naglalayon na mag-hire ng 226 barangay rangers upang pangalagaan ang kanilang mga kagubatan mula sa sunog.

Ilocos Economic Growth Gets Boost With New SEC Laoag Office

Kasama ng bagong tanggapan ng SEC sa Laoag, umaasa ang mga taga-Ilocos sa mas mabilis na pag-unlad at mas matibay na regulasyon.

6 PMA Cadets To Join Foreign Service Academy

Panimula ng anim na kadete sa Foreign Service Academy mula sa Philippine Military Academy. Sila ay magiging mga future leaders.

DAR Settles Land Row Involving North Cotabato Indigenous Peoples

Officials of the Department of Agrarian Reform in North Cotabato have settled long-drawn land disputes involving the indigenous peoples in one of its towns.
By The Luzon Daily

DAR Settles Land Row Involving North Cotabato Indigenous Peoples

6
6

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Officials of the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) in North Cotabato have settled long-drawn land disputes involving the indigenous peoples (IPs) in Carmen town.

In a statement Wednesday, DAR Provincial Agrarian Reform Program Officer Charish Paña said they facilitated the settlement of 109 contested pieces of land with the participation of the Carmen municipality and parties in the conflict.

“It was a successful mediation,” Paña said, adding that the parties in the decades-old land ownership dispute included some Christians, IPs, and Iranun-Maguindanaon settlers of Barangay Macabenban, Carmen.

Paña said the conflict stemmed from a situation where the certificates of land ownership award (CLOAs) are not the actual occupants, and the areas were developed by different tribes.

“In this instance, we want to settle everything in a diplomatic way to resolve the conflict and ensure that no one will be displaced,” Paña said.

Paña said the first group involved was the Iranun–Maguindanaon agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs) concerning 10 lots, but occupied and tilled by the IPs.

The second group concerned 35 lots titled to the Maguindanaons but were occupied and tilled by a group of Christians. The third involved 64 titles that were occupied and developed by the IPs but only two landholdings were named for the IPs and the rest were named for the Maguindanaons.

In a mediation conference facilitated by DAR and Carmen town on Sunday, the conflicting parties agreed to “win-win solutions.”

Paña said the Iranun ARBs have agreed to be transferred to another area within the Iranun cluster. Both ARBs and current occupants have also agreed to sign a waiver to effect the swapping of their landholdings.

The Christian group, meanwhile, has agreed on the result of the previously done a survey to identify their individual assigned lots.

“The agreements reached and the arrangements made will be subjected to Agrarian Law Implementation (ALI) case procedure which will be handled by our legal division,” Paña said.

In the case of the Maguindanaon and IP groups, Carmen Mayor Rogelio Taliño negotiated with the leaders of the claimants who all agreed to the mayor’s proposal that the landholdings involved would be divided into half.

DAR-Soccsksargen Director Mariannie Baunto was elated over the settlement of the old land dispute between the groups.

“We are very glad that these conflicts have finally been resolved. I hope that every party involved will comply with the documentary requirements to finalize the agreements,” he said. (PNA)