Tag Archives: Ancestral Domain

Peace and Development Work Among the Lumads in their Ancestral Domain

Introduction

This is paper documents my involvement with Tripeoples Concern for Peace, Progress, and Development of Mindanao, Inc. (TRICOM). TRICOM started in 1996 as a consortium of various nongovernment and people’s organizations (POs). It started when an assembly of peasant organizations questioned the inclusion of the Moro and Lumad peoples in the classification of peasants.

The question was valid considering that the two peoples have different cultures and practices and could hardly be classified as peasants. The Lumads are the most marginalized and disadvantaged in Philippine society. They are indigenous inhabitants of Mindanao but are being displaced from their ancestral lands because there is no sufficient instrument instrument to secure their land tenure (TRICOM 1998, 17). The only available instrument then was the Department of Environment and Natural Resources Administrative Order No. 2 (DAO 2), Series of 1993, providing for the identification, delineation, and recognition of ancestral domains.

A pilot project was conducted in 1996 to assist the Lumad communities in claiming their ancestral domains in South Upi, Maguindanao and Titay, Zamboanga del Sur (TRICOM ADC Research 1996). The project bore positive results and was replicated in fourteen Moro and Lumad communities in 1997. The project was called Mindanao Ancestral Domain Claim 1 (MADC 1). I was asked to coordinate the Moro and Lumad research teams and ensure that the claims were filed.

In 1998, TRICOM was transformed into a nongovernment organization (NT)) as the members of the consortium no longer agreed on the terms and strategies of the organization. The remaining council members agreed to change the name of TRICOM to Tripeoples Concern (instead of Consortium) for Peace, Progress and Development of Mindanao Incorporated. The council became the Board of Incorporators and registered the organization with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

The transformation was just timely as the continuity project called Mindanao Ancestral Domain Claim 2 (MADC 2) was on the way. The project aimed at piloting area development in ancestral domains. It was a step further from MADC 1 which merely sought to file ancestral domain claims.

MADC 2 is a study of the appropriate approach in assisting Lumad communities in filing their claims, as well as in formulating and implementing their ancestral domain sustainable development plan. Because the indigenous communities implemented MADC 2 according to what they deemed was appropriate, it did not have a “ready made” model nor a definite impact or result. It was allowed to evolve according to how the community responded.

TRICOM’s vision and mission as an NGO focus on the possession and control by indigenous peoples and communities of Mindanao of their own respective territories (ancestral domain), self-governing in the light of present realities, and determining and managing their own political, cultural, and economic development. It therefore tries to assist these indigenous peoples and communities through its various programs (Moncano-Somozo 2001, 13).

To achieve this, TRICOM drafted a ten-year plan aimed at facilitating and conducting the required activities, providing the necessary trainings, and creating the avenues that would enable indigenous peoples and communities to:

1. Increase productivity and income, specifically in the identified Lumad communities of Kulaman, Lake Sebu, Surallah, Bagumbayan, and Glan through their agriculture support program;
2. Initiate forest rehabilitation in the identified areas of Binlibol and Tudog — both of Kulaman, and other sites that might be identified by partner organizations;
3. Empower Lumad women through organizing and increased economic productivity;
4. Enhance Lumad children’s development through Early Child Care and Development Program in areas which may be identified by partner organizations;
5. Strengthen Lumad governance by reactivating existing indigenous structures or any other form of organization deemed appropriate;
6. Strengthen support structures through linkage with other Lumad communities and organizations, people’s organizations (POs), local government units (LGUs), government agencies (GAs), funding agencies (FAO, financing institutions, church, individuals, and NGOs; and
7. Promote cultural regeneration through advocacy for the setting up of a “Lumad school” or any other concept that advocates Lumad peoples development.

Programs and Services of TRICOM

TRICOM’s programs and services came out after the Lumad communities formulated their ancestral domain development plans. TRICOM prioritized the solution of these problems, and created the appropriate programs to support the efforts of the Lumads.

Ancestral Domain (AD) Governance and Linkage – is the base program of TRICOM. All the activities are geared towards achieving land tenure security for the Lumads. These activities include organizing the ancestral domain claimants, filing the claim, preparing an ancestral domain development plan, and building community capability linkage.

Agriculture and Environment Program – includes the formation and strengthening of agriculture and environment teams, trainings, and seminars for the committee leaders and communities, e.g., Sloping Agricultural Land Technology (SALT), farm planning, basic ecology, nursery and seed production, reforestation, and other services which the communities can avail of once they have identified agriculture and environment as priority programs.

Women and Children’s Program – strives to provide recognition of women’s significant role in the value formation of children and the community as a whole. This program aims to give women the opportunities to learn and expand their views and frameworks by enabling them to teach and manage children centers; run workshops and summer camps; develop curriculum and human resources; and establish community support systems.

The TRICOM Staff

TRICOM is, in many ways, a microcosm of Mindanao. The board and the staff are composed of Moro and settlers from!Luzon and Visayas, comprising government organizations (GOs), NGOs, POs, academic people, and individuals. Most of us are of Visayan and Luzonian origins, our families having moved to Mindanao to look fogy a better life in the “Land of Promise.” The vast tracts of lands” were there all right, but the promises were not. American and Japanese companies had already occupied the fertile plains, easing out the original inhabitants, the Lumad and Moro peoples. The Moro.people have been driven to fight the government as the Lumads retreated to the hills.

We share common experiences pertaining to the war that raged and still is raging between the Moro people and the settlers in Mindanao. Most of us saw the massive evacuations due Ito the war between and among the Ilaga, the Baracuda, and the Black shirts. Our parents then had to find other means of livelihood in the city and town centers where it was safer.

We grew up in different parts of Mindanao where the mountains used to be green and the forests were near the town or city centers. But these were not to retrain so. Logging companies did not stop operations while a tree remained standing. Consequently, we lost our playgrounds to floods, and our rivers to,siltation.

Most of my teammates (except the newly hired staffers) were born In the 1950s and were all teeners when Martial Law was declared. I was born in 1963, so I was six during the First Quarter Storm (FQS) and nine when Marcos declared Martial Law. Growing up in those turbulent years stirred, detained without warrants, tortured, salvaged, or who simply disappeared. The crimes were so heinous that they drove many young people, including some of us, to the hills to fight with the revolutionary movement while others became sectoral organizers.

The purge in the movement called “Kampanyang ahos” in Mindanao in 1984 made many of the active members waver in their stand. The eventual split in 1995 affected not only the members of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP),but also of the NGOs and POs, and even the funding agencies here and abroad. Alignment of service NGOs, federations, and alliances also changed, as personnel split between the RAs, or those who re-affirmed the principles upheld by the CPP under the leadership of Jose Maria Sison, and the RJs, or those who rejected them, with some opting for peaceful means of resolving conflicts.

Today, we at TRICOM continue with our work. We continue to work because the situation in our country has not changed. The gap between the rich and the poor continues to widen. We go on because we understand that war can be waged not only with guns but with awareness and community capability, self and women empowerment, internally-driven development, love and compassion. We aspire not to make the poor rich because that is almost impossible in the present Philippine setup, but to make life worth living- to help weave dreams of equitable and self-determined communities, and to hold on to these dreams until they come true.

Once There was  a Forest

Let me describe the situation of the ancestral lands that the Lumad communities claim.

Thirty years ago, the areas of Kulaman, Sultan Kudarat, and other assisted Lumad communities in Southern Mindanao were covered by forests teeming with wild life. Thousands of hectares of dipterocarp trees once crowned the land. The tree trunks were huge. They reached as high as a hundred feet, their leaves forming a canopy that obliterated the view of the skies. Indigenous species of woods such as lawaan, bakbakon, benwang, tipedos, lamod, tanguili, plenegi, guilo, tipulo, klani, unay, ulayan, and many others played hosts to hundreds of species of mountain and forest creepers, flyers, hangers, borers, hoppers, and other forms of life that can only exist in the natural environment of a forest.

The forest, known as the abode of the spirits, is where the b’liyans (more commonly know as baylans) get medicines of roots and twigs, barks and leaves, words and whispers, and many more that cured the sick (Schlegel 1999, 184). Caves and crevices in the forest served as the b’liyan’s altar where tribal rites and rituals are celebrated. Nooks sheltered the ancient burial jars where old ancestors lay at rest.

Game abounded, and the Dulangan Manobos, Blaans, and Tbolis hunted wild boars and deer. Where there were trees, there were the monkeys playingin the branches. In the forests flowed the sources of water- springs that turned into streams and rivers. There were fishes, reptiles, and crustaceans. Colonies of insects helped speed up the decay of organic materials, and transforming wood and leaves into humus that fertilized the soil.But most of all, under the earth were gold, copper, coal, and other minerals.

Then Logging Companies Came

Logging companies came with their huge and rumbling machines, scarring the mountains and carving the roads. One by one the trees fell, tumbling with the echo of destruction. With each felled tree, hundreds of life forms died or went away.

Soon bunkhouses started forming along the logging roads, their occupants eager to lay their hands on the newly opened and very fertile  lands. They picked and hoed, and the once forest lands produced rice and corn, coffee and cassava, fruits and vegetables.

As the settlers claimed more and more of the Lumad ancestral lands, the natives themselves learned the ways of the settlers. They learned to trade their lands for a bottle of Sio Hoc Tong, a pack of cigarette, or a can of sardines. They learned to cut the remaining trees, not to make a swidden farm, but to sell the timber. The Blaans of Glan sold illegal timber by floating the logs in the river and catching them at the delta before they drifted to the sea. Or they cut the timber into smaller pieces and hawked them to interested persons, especially those building a house. They learned to sell a lot of things, including leadership, culture, beliefs, wives, children, lands, corn, and others so they can have money to gamble. Unfortunately, they did not learn to plant more durable crops or use the technology of multi-cropping. They relied on planting rice or corn, the harvest of which could only sustain them for two months. They sold their land and looked for more fertile soil elsewhere, usually in the uplands.

Today, the forest is gone. Gone are the life forms that co-existed with it. Gone are the indigenous culture, knowledge, systems, and practices that developed from the ecosystem of the forest. The economic sources of the tribes are also gone. What remain are vast tracts of land that produce corn only with heavy input of chemical fertilizers. Where there is still relatively fertile soil, the land produces coffee and rice. Secondary products include bananas, peanuts, and root crops such as camote, cassava, and taro, which serve as the staple food of the tribe. Some of the Lumads grow vegetables such as tomatoes, eggplants, squahes, raddishes, and carrots as the bushes no longer yield wild yams and roots. They cultivate these vegetables in several areas in limited quantities. A few others plant fruits for local consumption, and as source of cash to buy other needs like sugar, edible oil, matches, and more.

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The Lumads associate biodiversity with the forest, although they do not know the term. They can identify various life forms and can trace their interdependence, but they cannot associate this with our responsibilities as humans. For example, they associate abundance of food with the presence of forest and they know that the destruction of the forest is caused by logging, kaingin (swidden farming), etc., but they do not plant trees and crops as a logical alternative. Somehow their framework ends with the destruction of the forest. The planting of trees for its rehabilitation is nor part of the chain. They say that the forest has been there ever since; they never planted a seed to create it. When they cut trees for their kaingin, the trees always grew back. What they do not realize is that the new trees need hundreds of years to grow big.

We do not need to teach the Lumads about respect for the environment. They have existed for centuries in harmony  with the earth. The Lumads may have limited understanding of the interrelatedness, but they are not ignorant of the importance of these resources for everybody’s survival. They have the capacity to learn that they need not wait for the forest to regenerate by itself, but that they themselves can  help restore the forest to its original state by prohibiting kaingin in forestes areas, and by planting more trees in denuded area.

The Lumad’s Ancestral Domain

Once upon a time, according to a Teduray legend (T’duray ADC 1996), the brothers Mamalu and Tabunaway lived on the shores of Cotabato. One day, the older brother Mamalu went to the mountains to hunt, leaving Tabunaway on the village. While Mamalu was away, Shariff Kabungsuan arrived to preach the teachings of Islam. Tabunaway heard the teachings of Shariff Kabungsuan and was converted to Islam. When Mamalu came home, he was angry to learn that his younger brother had converted to Islam without consulting him. So they decided to divide the land. The uplands went to the older brother Mamalu, while the lowlands went to the younger brother Tabunaway. Mamalu became the ancestor of the Lumads, while Tabunaway became the ancestor of the Muslims.

If we follow the legend of the Tedurays, then the ancestral domain of the Lumads would cover half of Mindanao. But the Lumads are not claiming one half of Mindanao. They only want a portion of the remaining lands where they used to roam.

I will mention some of these ancestral lands.

The ancestral lands of the Manobos include the lands of Lebak, Kalamansig, Kulaman, Palimbang, Esperanza, Bagumbayan, Tulunan, and Colombio in Sultan Kudarat; the uplands of North Cotabato, near the Davao and Bukidnon boundaries; the Davao del Norte and Agusan del Sur boundaries; Agusan del Norte and Surigao del Sur boundaries; and some towns of Surigao del Norte (Rodil 1992, 5). Almost all of these ancestral lands are in the uplands and ridges because, according to the Manobos, it is easier to locate a place or see things around you when you are at the top of the mountain. These lands served as the highways long before roads traversed these provinces. These Manobos are usually identified according to the specific area where they live. Some are named after their oldest known ancestors who represent several clans. Thus, we have the Dulangans of Kulaman, the Arumanens of Carmen, the Matigsalogs of Davao and Bukidnon, the Ata Manobos of Davao, the Higaonons of Bukidnon, and the Agusan Manobos.

TRICOM is at present helping four Lumad organizations that have been granted their Certificates of Ancestral Domain Claims. These organizations are the Kulaman Manbo Dulangan Organization (KMDO), the Tboli Ubo Claimants Organization (TUCO), the Dawing Kandang Claimants Organization (DAKCO), and the B’laan Manobo Kaganfon De Tana (BLAMAKADETA).

The KMDO ancestral domain claim covers more than 9,000 hectares located in Kulaman, Sultan Kudarat. The TUCO claim cover 16,000 hectares in Surallah, South Cotabato. The DAKCO claim covers 2,500 hectares, also in Surallah, South Cotabato, while the BLAMAKADETA claim covers 15,000-20,000 hectares in Glan, Sarangani. Incidentally, the members of DAKCO are also Tboli Ubos, but they belong to a different clan and have therefore made their own claims.

As the settlements are highly dispersed within the claimed territory, it had become necessary to form them into clusters around which ancestral domain plans are created. KMDO has seven clusters, TUCO has four clusters, DAKCO has one cluster, and BLAMAKADETA has one cluster.

Let me describe three clusters in the KMDO ancestral domain.

The Binlibol cluster. Binlibol is a sitio of Barangay Langubang. It is characterized by barren and rocky mountains where most people plant corn. A little forest exists not very far from where the source of water gushes forth. The size of the claim of Sitio Binlibol is 1,020 hectares which including Bagang-bagang, is populated by about 700 families. A portion of the domain is within the Integrated Forest Management Agreement (IFMA) 20 concessions of Consunji. Another 1,500 hectares in nearby Lagubang are a native reservation, but a large part of the reservation is already mortgaged to settlers despite the fact that it is communally titled under CARP.

The Midpanga cluster. Midpanga is a sitio of Barangay Kuden. It has a little remaining forest where native cane varieties are found. For the most part, it is barren mountains. The size of the claim is about 1,000 hectares, but some twenty hectares of this are within IFMA Plantation 20. About 400 hectares have been surveyed by DAR in 1995 for stewardship program. The collective title is in the possession of three people, among them the barangay captain. Another 800 hectares have been distrubuted by DAR to some 500 beneficiaries under CARP.

The Laguton cluster. The Laguton cluster has the biggest number of settlements as it covers Barangay Tinalon, Sitio Laguton, Sitio Minting, Sitio Bakbaken, and Sitio Badiangon of Barangay Sabanal, Kalamansig, and Sitio Isukong of Barangay Kuden. The AD claim approximately reaches 1,000 hectares. The community is located near the river of Tran where portion of the lands are planted to rice, a little corn, and coffee. Surrounding the center of Bakbaken are farms planted to several kinds of crops as in the farms of Sitio Badiangon. Part of the Laguton AD claim covers IFMA Plantation 20, and another portion is within DAR’s agrarian reform area. Ninety-four households occupied the four sitios of Laguton, Minting, Badiangon, and Isukong.

In Sitio Bakbaken, there are only twelve households and a chapel in the center. Surrounding the center are farms planted to corn, upland rice, camote, cassava, taro and others.

Sitio Badyangon is a part of Barangay Sabanal of the municipality of Kalamansig. It is settled along the road traversing IFMA 21. There are twenty households scattered near the center, a Catholic chapel, a salsalan (blacksmith shop) and a cemetery nearby. There are mountains and forested hills in Kedasud, Tebogkes, Segeleten, Takub Mamas, and Meketkitan. Bald mountains are in Satil, Banog, Meguwawa, and other parts of the area. Apart from these, there are caves such as Ilib Tabako and Neogdas.

In Sitio Laguton there is a small forest and a 3-hectare reforestation project planted with Narra. The rest of the lands are cogonal. There are caves, springs, streams, a waterfall, and a river. These water sources supply the irrigation for the ricefields located near the sitio center.

Sitio K’defang (in Palimbang) has no remaining forest, only denuded hills, rivers, and small streams. There is tertiary growth where some wild yams and herbs can be found. The AD claim covers 3,000 hectares, but the documents are not complete yet. Part of the area is claimed by KMDO. There is no organization, but there are about 600 claimants. DENR has already surveyed around 200 hectares for the Visayan and Muslim settlers, but the Sultan protested the survey and sent away the Muslims.

Sitio Sagabsab is surrounded with denuded mountains though there are small residual forest areas. There are ricefields, but these have not been planted for several cropping seasons because of the long drought. There are springs and sources of water, but these have been too small to support the irrigation of the ricefields. The ancestral domain claim is 500 hectares with thirty claimant families. There are Visayan settlers who possess about 200 hectares of land within the domain because earlier Manobos have sold these lands to them. There is also a portion of the claim that falls within the DAR’s Certificate of Land Ownership Award (CLOA) areas.

The entire area of Midtungok is already subdivided among the beneficiaries of the Agrarian Reform Land Distribution Program. The Manobos did not know who initiated the distribution and many of the lots were awarded to non-Manobo CARP beneficiaries, while majority of the Manobos moved uphill to find other lands to till. The ARC area reaches the communities of Sitio Bob and Kiasok.

Sitio B’langas, Barangay Midtungok has some irrigated lands planted to rice. There is a small residual forest in the mountain where cane can still be gathered for trading. There is also a school where some Subanens and Muslims have settled nearby. There is a 40-hectare land within the IFMA concession. The ancestral domain claim is estimated at 400 hectares for a population of about 2,000.

The ancestral lands of the Tbolis are next to the Manobos, on the sides of Bagumbayan and Palimbang going to Lake Sebu, T’boli, Polomolok and north to Surallah. Bu the Tboli-Ubo or Obo are a mized lot. Their ancestral lands are found between the Tboli and Manobo ancestral lands. This is perhaps because they are said to be a tribe that came out from the intermarriages of both tribes.

The ancestral domain of the Tboli-Ubo is scattered in several sitios within the triboundaries of Lake Sebu and Surallah of South Cotabato and Bagumbayan of Sultan Kudarat. It is bounded on the North by the hills of Tudok Salabanog, Spartan, Abaka, Bok, Kiyantay, Datal El, Datal Lawa, and Lawa River. On the East are the communities of Kolonyeku, Lusok, Taboto, Lamsuging, Malunes, and Sambayang, parts of Surallah. The boundaries in the South are the communities of Sambayang, Lambadak, Talasak, Tabila, Tatuli, Tudok K’Beton, and Tasufu, part of Lake Sebu; and on the West are the Lawa River, the communities of Afag and Kulosubong, and the mountain of Tudok Salabanog, aslo part of Lake Sebu. It has an estimated area of 20,000 hectares of rolling hills and is traversed by creeks of Afag, Tubak, Mahi, Kukob and Malunes or Malunis.

In TUCO, the claim consists of four main clusters of communities namely Tubak, Datal Lawa, (Kiantay and Lamsuging included), Malunes, and Lambadak. Tubak is the political center of the ancestral domain claim. Originally known as Tabyolong, it is named after a tree (byolong) which growns in the area. It was also known as Kasab, or put trap. Tubak is named after a creek of the same name that runs from Abaka Hills to Afag River.

Kandang is part of sitio Dawing of Barangay Bai Saripinang, Bagumbayan, Sultan Kudarat and is the ancestral lands of the Kandang and Gayaw clans of the Tboli-Ubo tribe. It is a 2,500-hectare span of rolling hills and mountains located about four kilometers away in the western side of barangay Bai Saripinang and sixteen kilometers from the municipality of Bagumbayan. It has twenty-five households with thirty registered voters and eighty-five percent of the inhabitants are Tboli-Ubos. The rest are Ilonggos, Manobos, and Moros.

Lanaw Banwang is a sitio of Barangay Datal Bukay, Glan, in Sarangani Province, located near the northwestern boundary of Malapatan and farther east of Davao del Sur, specifically the municipality of Jose Abad Santos or Kaburan. It is part of the Blaan and Manobo tribes’ claim comprising of thirteen sitios or communities and covering an estimated area of about 20,000 hectares. The terrain is no better than Tubak as it is characterized by high mountains and steep cliffs.

Sustainable Development in the IP Context

For the Lumads,the concept of development simply means the presence of a forest that provides food to eat, and a little farm to raise crops to sell and earn money to buy their other needs. But Western development strategists think differently. They extract resources which are mostly found on the ancestral lands of indigenous people in developing countries. They keep on expanding until one day the earth becomes too hot and melts the ice. Floods then wash away the crops, and people die of famine and diseases, wars, and calamities.

From simply being  “development” the term evolved into “sustainable development,” as people saw the environmental degradation that has resulted from the type of development practiced in most Western countries. Development paradigms also shifted from merely production-oriented development to people-centered development, influencing not only political actions but also economic policies of funding institutions and social and cultural organizations (Declaration on the Right to Development 1986,1).

Under DAO 2, several Certificated of Ancestral Domain Claims (CADCs) were awarded, and Ancestral Domain Management Plans (ADMPs) were formulated, supposedly following the sustainable development framework. The government supported this effort by establishing support structures, programs, and projects. But a closer look at the ADMPs formulated and approved by the DENR reveals many anomalies. Many CADCs were awarded to questionable claimants, not to the rightful claimants. The budget for the ADMPs was spent on other things. Most claimant communities did not find the plans relevant. They complained that they did not participate in their formulation, and that the DENR was not sincere in implementing them.

The Lumad communities were becoming poorer despite President Ramos’ Medium Term Philippine Development Plan, President Estrada’s development corridors and poverty eradication, and President Arroyo’s modernization of agriculture.

The enactment into law of the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA) of 1997 is thought to usher in peace for the Lumads and prevent their total assimilation. However, some critics say that most indigenous communities are already integrated into the Philippine body politic through the tribal barangays, courtesy of the Local Government Code of 1991. But this intervention serves only the political interests of the local officials. These tribal barangays do not receive economic, political, or social services due to a government political unit. Lumad governance is not capable of countering the damage done by government integrative and marginalization efforts through the years.

Poverty Among the Lumads

The Lumads comprise about thirty percent of the total population that dwells in the hinterlands of sixteen out of twenty-two provinces of Mindanao. They suffer from poverty, coupled with powerlessness and cultural degeneration. Their ancestral lands continue to dwindle in size and in utility. The loss of the land has resulted in the loss of their capability to become autonomous communities that could respond to their own problems and needs (Headland, www.sil.org, 1).

Various administrations have formulated policies and development plans, but without taking the Lumads into serious consideration. The Commission on National Integration wanted them integrated into the mainstream of Philippine society. Realizing that this was not an easy task, the government created the Philippine Assistance for National Minorities (PANAMIN). The government also created the Office of Muslim Affairs and Cultural Communities, which disregarded  the fact that Lumads and Muslims are two different beliefs. The government divided the agency into the Office of Muslim Affairs (OMA) and the Office of Northern and Southern Cultural Communities. But even though the offices were separated, the framework used was the same. The direction of the government program was vague and it was not clear whether the indigenous peoples knew of its existence.

The most evident problem of the Lumads is poverty brought about the environmental degradation. Decades ago,the forest sustained them. As the forest is gone, they have to rely on their farms. But now, their harvest is not enough to feed a family. They are not lazy, but are traditional hunters and gatherers who grew up in the forest, which provided them with various crops. They are not traditional farmers, thus, they resisted the settled way of farming (Abinales 2000, 79).

Another Lumad problem is the absence of strong, dignified, and autonomous indigenous peoples’ communities able to govern themselves. This is aggravated by the peace situation where there is persistent fighting among armed groups- New People’s Army (NPA), Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) and terrorists- that any effort to progress has very little chance of succeeding. The peace problem may be seen as both a cause and an effect. The cause of the absence of peace is the absence of development. If there is development, peace will reign.

Digging deeper into the problem, one learns that the problem is not merely abject poverty. In some cases the IP communities are found in areas with rich resources. Neither is development support a problem because government- or foreign-funded projects have been implemented in the uplands for decades now.

One major factor causing the poverty situation is the communities’ lack of awareness of the power they hold in their hands- that they are capable of developing despite little or no support from the government. Another factor is the absence of active participation of women in other aspects of community development.

Outside support came both as a curse and a blessing. It was a curse because it opened the gateway to various unprecedented interventions, hastening their integration into the dominant social system. It was a blessing because it paved the way for a deeper understanding and appreciation of their specific contribution as a people, and the need to preserve whatever is left of their culture.

Goal Oriented Project Planning (GOPP)

After filing the Ancestral Domain claim, we assisted the Lumad communities in formulating their Ancestral Domain Sustainable Development and Protection Plan (ADSDP) using Goal Oriented Project Planning (GOPP).

Prior to MADC 2 there were already efforts by different groups and agencies to assist the different tribes of Mindanao. DAO 2, issued in 1993, already included the formulation of an ancestral domain management plan as a requirement for claim applications. The Church has an Indigenous People’s Apostolate (IPA) working in sixteen out of twenty-two provinces of Mindanao to respond to IP needs. What we did with MADC 2 complemented what the NGOs have been doing, except that we used the GOPP method in formulating ancestral domain development plans, and adapting them to the Lumad context.

The GOPP tool or methodology was piloted in Kulaman. It was eventually used in all our areas. The process includes: environmental scanning or resource inventory, entity and timeframe definition, stakeholders identification and support matrix setup, problem identification and analysis, problem and objective trees building, objectives clustering and programs prioritizing, and logical framework formulation.

The environmental scanning allowed the Lumads to see their present situation compares to their situation ten or more years ago. This enabled them to identify their available human, cultural, social, economic, and political resources.

What surfaced in the scanning was the interplay  of roles among different groupings in the community such as the b’liyan, panday (blacksmith), dancers, warriors, hunters, farmers, leaders, women, children, and how they relate to the contemporary social groupings and institutions in various aspects of community living. It made possible the identification of those who would play important roles in the regeneration of their economy, governance, and culture in the light of the present context; and the definition of a culturally appropriate ancestral domain development plan. Some practices were identified as still beneficial for the regeneration of their governance, in establishing an economic base, and in linking with the other tribes.

We learned the manner in which they maintain the traditional form of organization and how they govern themselves including, but not limited to, selecting a leader; sharing responsibility; and knowing how laws are made, disputes resolved, and justice and related concepts implemented.

We started the scanning with the condition of the forest because it was where they began as hunters and food gatherers. The before and after comparisons were mostly in terms of the basic needs they get from the forest and their mode of farming. The Lumads saw the change in the state of the forest as significant in bringing about their present situation. In tracing the causes of the destruction of the forest, we listed logging (legal) and “laging-laging” (small-scale illegal logging), kaingin, and increase in population. We fleshed out how these environmental changes affected their systems, and how they coped with the changes.

They had just started farming a few years back and had not yet learned other ways of farming. The practice of kaingin in steep slopes was no longer productive, but because they knew no other way, they continued doing it. The change in the state of the forest resulted in hunger, discouragement of the leaders, scattering of the tribes, and turning away from tradition, among others.

They coped by slowly adapting to the settlers’ systems. They started sending their children to school. They learned to make pakisama and even encouraged inter-marriage in an attempt to be closer to the settlers. They participated in elections and practiced the local or barangay governance system. Despite these attempts discrimination was prevalent. Believing that they, too, would earn from companies or individuals,they sold their ancestral lands to loggers and settlers.

The GOPP expressed their dream to have a better future for the coming generations. We observed that they had very limited means of projecting what is “better” for them. They described their dreams simply as “maayo or pareha kaniadto (good or the same as before)” but what is “maayo” or “pareha” could not be defined easily. The facilitators could only break down their dream into more achievable goals based on what they said. The program “Development of Ancestral Domain of Dulangan Manobos of Kulaman” was very general. At any rate, as long  as they agreed on what “development” consisted of, we let it be. In their case, development was simply having enough food for the family all year long, and having a bit of additional income for other needs such as clothing, medicine, and schooling for the children.

The next step was identifying the keyplayers and stakeholders, and formulating the support matrix. This part was easier but also ironic. They easily identified the support groups such as the Church, LGUs, GAs, NGOs, and individuals. It took them sometime, however, to identify the lead players- themselves. Somehow they had the notion that they would just benefit from the plan but now work as primemovers in its realization. This was clarified later when the support matrix was done. It showed that they must act first and do things by themselves before outsiders can provide the support.

Now We Have the Plan, What’s Next?

A few weeks after the GOPPs, the AD Management Teams were formed. Each program was supposed to have a team or committee to take charge of its implementation and to monitor its progress. Our problem was that no such team or committee existed in Lumad traditional governance structure. These committees had to be created in the claimant organization to serve as channels for our assistance and supervision. The Lumads chose their own teams. The team members were chosen by their respective communities. The Lumads themselves defined their own tasks and functions.

As facilitators, our problem was that we were not familiar with the capability of the members. We ended up with teams whose members were not known for leadership qualities or for being active. Very few people could be relied upon to do the tasks. The outcome was a blend of people who could barely understand concepts and could hardly express themselves. Consequently, the teams did not function because the team leaders did not know how to call a meeting or facilitate one. It became evident to us how far they have been left behind as a result of their isolation.

Trainings were conducted in the hope that the teams would learn to implement the plan on their own. Unfortunately, this did not happen because most, if not all, claimant communities could not identify their plans. While there were structures and officers in place, these were not functioning.

As they could not offer any alternative, we had to go on and try as much as possible to make the process “user friendly” and minimize any adverse impact on their systems. We reasoned that since outside interventions and influences were already creeping in and the Lumads were changing anyway, we might as well have a hand in propelling these changes towards a people-oriented development framework- a framework that respects human dignity, promotes economic and political equality, and encourages participation in all aspects, especially in caring for the children and the environment.

Towards the end of July and the start of August 1999, we prepared the modules for the trainings, assessed our performance of the past six months, appraised the staff, and took a break. The modules that came out included biodiversity and ecology, watershed and sustainable development, diversified and integrated farming systems, organizing, facilitating and leadership, planning, monitoring and evaluation, simple bookkeeping, and finance management. Later we had a study-exposure at Mindanao Baptist Rural Life Center in Bansalan to learn how to teach and implement Sloping Agricultural Land Technology (SALT) 1-4.

The first training we conducted included organizational, leadership, and facilitation training. We compressed all the subjects because of their very limited attention span. The result was not good as Manobo leaders retained very little of the various tropics.

The Lumads associated planning with what time to wake up or what important things to do which were not part of the daily routine. They had no idea of community planning for improvement except when someone called for a dagyaw. They did nor ask any question regarding what to do to improve the community because they expected the leaders to know better. And they expected their leaders to just tell them what to do. Through the years, the leaders thought they were doing fine in leading their people, which perhaps was true, based on the customary concepts of leadership. They attributed their lack of development to the LGUs and other agencies but not to themselves. When they found their condition becoming more unbearable, they looked for outside help as they no longer found the datu and other traditional leaders able to help.

Assessments or evaluations were also not part of their daily life. If anything was done, they did not look back to whether it was done well or badly, or whether it helped them or not. There was no evidence of organizing, facilitating and leading. They also have no idea what monitoring and evaluating were. We failed to consider that they had no direct experience of such a political process, except in tribal governance which is very elementary.

After all the training, we somehow expected community implementation to improve. There were slight improvements on the level of organization. These were evident in the appearance of more crops in the fields and farms, the relative cleanliness of the children and the surroundings, and the participation of women in community discussions. Decision making, however, remained a weak aspect in most of the communities as coordination remained elusive.

In our evaluation, it came out that we conducted the trainings too soon. We should have observed that most of the communities had no clear idea what an organization was and how it operated. The Lumads did not even consider their traditional structure as an organization when in fact it was.

Only after a year did we realized that the training did not help much to improve their organization. We decided to put some of the training on hold until they comprehended the concepts of organization and management.

Work with the Lumads is exceedingly slow- as it is very difficult to mobilize them.

Their traditional system does not prepare them for participation because in the past only the datu made the decision and the members simply obeyed. They are nor used to giving their opinion, except in antang-antang. But antang-antang only covers marriage negotiations and resolving family or clan disputes. The Lumads are not able to cope with the demand for individual or community participation in discussions or meetings.

The Indigenous Peoples Apostolate

The Dulangan Manobos of Kulaman are blessed with a supportive church and government institutions and some friendly individuals. Since the 1980s, the Oblates of Mary Immaculate (OMI) has been working in Kulaman, promoting IP rights and providing services to the Manobos. The OMI runs the Notre Dame of Kulaman High School where over a hundred Dulangan Manobo children are enrolled as scholars. They also provide a dormitory for the boys, while the Religious of Notre Dame Missionaries runs the girls’ dormitory and administers a health program in some Manobo communities. The Missionaries of Christ Jesus based in Langgal operates the primary school in Binlibol and Bagsing where the majority of students are Manobos.

The Indigenous Peoples Apostolate supports the effort in claiming the ancestral lands of the Dulangan Manobos. Their programs familiarize the Manobos with the concepts of health, education, and livelihood. They conduct exposures, trainings, and conferences to expand the views of the Manobo leaders, although the communities’ responses to these efforts is another matter.

Kulaman was one of the piloted areas of the World Bank-funded Mindanao Rural Development Project implemented through the local government. The Manobos got a portion of the project, with the help of the formulated AD development. How the project was implemented is another matter.

Let’s Hear the Women…

In working with the Lumads we have to consider their worldview or how they lead life the way they deem proper (Schlegel 1999, 169). We are not anthropologists, so we are limited in the extent of our observations. We just assume that appropriate intervention and positive responses would help much in changing the situation of the Lumads. There are still claimants and ancestral domains to claim which are laden with both human and natural resources. There is a legal instrument for making the claim- the IPRA, which provides for support system in realizing development.

IPRA provides for and ensures participation of Lumad women in community and nation building (RA 8371, 1997 Chap. 5 Sec. 26). Five years have passed and yet Lumad women are still grappling with culturally and socially induced discrimination and male dominance. While IPRA provides for the establishment of support structures and appropriate programs to respond to community-initiated women activities, Lumad women’s rights in general remain virtually unknown in most indigenous communities.

Knowing that Lumad communities are generally male dominated, we made it a condition that thirty percent of the participants of the planning should be women. During the actual planning, however, the Service Team noticed that there were seldom Lumad women in the sessions, so there was not a plan that was made for or by Lumad women. In the actual activities, less than ten percent of the participants were women even though there were more women than men in Tudog and Mantil in Kulaman. The same was true with the Tboli-Ubo and Blaans in other areas. In Mantil, it was the Bisaya women who made the percentage of  women attendance higher , but even then less than ten percent of those in attendance actively participated. The results were presented to various agencies later (KMDO, TUCO, DAKCO and BLAMAKDETA ADSDPP, 1999 and 2002).

TRICOM insisted that since women have a bigger role in production, they should be involved not only in the planning. but also in the entire process of implementing and assessing the project. To exclude them from the decision-making process is to marginalize them further. The Service Team believes that women should share in the leadership for the development of the tribe, as their role has long been unrecognized. Unless justice is served to the Lumad women, there would be no qualitative development.

To remedy the situation, TRICOM conducted a series of focus group discussions with the Dulangan Manobo women of Kulaman from November 1999 to May 2000 so that we would know them better- their situation, problems, dreams, and aspirations. Without Lumad women in leadership, no Ancestral Domain Sustainable Development and Protection program would be for real. No peace would be possible.

From what we have observed and heard from casual conversations, women are viewed often as the cause of disputes. Most stories talk of women who run away with other men. The cases are resolved through “antang,” which results in the doubling of the bride price returned to the parents of the husband, or to the husband himself. In some cases, the incident results in violence and pangayaw (raiding party). This is one of the reasons why women are not allowed to go out and attend functions or other activities (especially with men). Keeping them in the house would keep them away from temptation. Though there have been changes in these perceptions, the attitude towards women generally remains the same today.

Lumad women are the unwilling victims of their own culture. Until recently they didn’t even have such concepts as love or respect. In a problem tree built up by the women who attended the FGDs, they described how their husbands and the community treat them and how they want very much to free themselves from bondage. They cited this as the main reason why they were grouchy. At first, they had difficulty opening up. They had to discuss among themselves if it was proper to divulge the abuses of their husbands, their parents, and the community. Realizing that by telling the truth they might be free, they decided to tell all and soon they were crying and laughing over the misfortunes and blessings of being Lumad and women.

The output of the women’s GOPP was integrated into the general plan. Later, they identified the representatives from the communities to constitute the various Ancestral Domain Management Teams. In their latest assessment, the women said there was already a seed among the women that was difficult to suppress, and this was their realization of their rights. They saw that the change helped ease the burdens of life. They are now able to express their heavy loads as women which they had kept to themselves for so many years.

ADSDPP Presentation

After drafting the Ancestral Domain Sustainable Development and Protection Plan (ADSDPP) was presented to the different LGUs, NGOs, and GAs for their reactions and comments. The aim was to get their commitment to support and to plan. We had a problem in the presentation, as we knew the capability of the Lumads to present the plan in their own way. While they might have understood the contents of the document and could present the data in their own way, the panel may not understand any Manobo, Tboli or Blaan. Neither could the Lumads understand each other. The Manobos, for example, presented the plan in Bisaya, a language that many could not understand. While we at TRICOM were a stakeholder, we were not the lead players. And though we could have presented it ourselves as facilitators, that would certainly defeat our efforts to have Lumad full participation in the project from start to finish.

When the actual presentation in Kulaman came, we were not really sure if what they presented were the contents of the documents because we ourselves did not understand a thing. At any rate, the presentation of the Kulaman Manobo Development Organization was conducted in September 1999 at the Manobo Tribal Center and was attended by about a hundred people. There were Manobos and some friends from the nearby Tboli and Teduray tribes, representatives from the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) National and Provincial Offices, Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) Regional and Municipal Offices, Department of Agriculture (DA) Municipal Office, National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) Provincial Office, RNDM Sisters, Fr. Jun Matas and the Indigenous Peoples’ Apostolate (IPA) Staff, MCJ Sisters, Sangguniang Bayan, AFRIM, TRICOM , Philnet and other friends .

The presentation gave us much realization. Foremost of this was the fact that the Lumads need much on-the-job training to be able to run the organization and implement the projects sustainability. At the rate they were running their communities, it would not take long for them to reach an impasse. If or when they reach this stage, no amount of training or exposure could regenerate their sense of dignity, economic sufficiency, and other aspects of their existence. By then, they would be futile. And no matter how we tried t protect them from the influences that we brought, they were changing with or without us. This change was inevitable and fast.

In the first quarter of the year 2000, we gathered all the Ancestral Domain teams to assess the previous year’s implementation. There was little progress cited since the formulation of the plan. We gathered that they did not make any action plan or know how to do it. Neither did they think that they (themselves) would implement it. They thought that we (TRICOM) would implement the plan and that they would benefit from it. It became evident at this point that the “dole out’ system had taken root in their mental framework. We had to reorient them about our approach, which is summed up in this statement.: “We cannot bring in development, you have to work for it.”

The composition of the management teams was already completed by then and some had undergone the necessary trainings for leaders. However, as said earlier, the composition was not well chosen, thus, KMDO needed ti reorganize and retain only those who had proven themselves capable of delivering their tasks. The rest just had to go, otherwise the management team would not function at all. After a 6 month delay the action planning was made. By then, the World Bank-funded Mindanao Rural Development Project through the local government unit was already implemented despite the weak organization.

The quarterly action planning was done by committees. The Kahagtayan Team (agriculture) included individual farm planning to enable each member to lay out the various crops to be planted according to varying slopes and soil conditions of each respective farm. The Fleku Katalunan (reforestation) team agreed to collect forest tree seeds for natural or assisted reforestation. They also agreed to ask the DENR for seedling support. The women planned to expand their home gardens, clean up the surroundings, and conduct a series of children’s workshops. The Kitab (governance) team agreed to conduct focus group discussions to evolve necessary laws regarding the use of ancestral lands and other pertinent rules that would help govern the operation of the entire ancestral domain and the tribal organization.

By June 2000, the teams had their mid-year assessment. It was attended by representatives of various teams for different areas. The number of participants was more than we could possibly handle. After two quarters, we decided to have the assessments only with volunteers, while the respective community teams did their own assessments at the community level.

Ancestral Domain: Tenurial Rights of Indigenous Peoples*

The Philippine legal system is a pervading culture. Its laws affect the people from all walks of life. It traverses the path where its power is claimed to prevail, even if its touch would disturb the rights of those who regard the land as their life and confound the People whose lives are inextricably linked with the land.

The historical documentation of the life and cultures of the indigenous peoples of the Philippines shows that they and their ancestors have been occupying and possessing various parts of the upland regions of the Archipelago for generations. Long before the first colonizers arrived, they had been inhabiting and continuously working on the land, thereby enjoying the fruits of their labor, unrestricted by any law other than their own customs and traditions.

The advent of the colonial era brought forth a national system  of land registration conceived by a people who had an entirely different cultural and social experience. Slowly but steadily, the efforts of the colonial power successfully penetrated the indigenous peoples’ way of life. The indigenous peoples soon found themselves no longer. the owners of the land they had been occupying and cultivating for generations. Suddenly, something as incomprehensible, as profound, and as alien as a national government or State claimed to be the sole owner of all the lands of the Philippine Archipelago.

As the authority from where all rights to land emanate, the State required the registration of lands and/or application for government grants as a precondition for the recognition of proprietary rights. Proof of title other than that mandated by the State was disregarded. By the time the consequences of this phenomenon on their rights finally dawned on them, the indigenous peoples found themselves having to defend what they truly believed to be their land and their life.

The bulk of existing materials concerning the indigenous peoples and the pertinent laws affecting them focus on a critique of national land legislation vis-a-vis the tenurial security of the indigenous peoples by identifying the inadequacies of – present legislation in recognizing their tenurial rights and by proposing reforms.

Such inadequacies of the present legislation have been made the subject matter of numerous legal opuses of Prof. Owen Lynch. In his article on the “Invisible Peoples and a Hidden Agenda: the Origins of Contemporary Philippine Land Laws (1900 – 1913) “, Lynch surveyed the historical premises which provide the popular and legal bases for ancestral land usurpation. He also discussed the- status of contemporary national laws concerning ancestral land.

In his article on “Agrarian Reform and the Philippine Public Domain: The Constitutional Imperative to Recognize Existing Private Rights”,  Lynch demonstrated his position that Philippine citizens within the so-called “public domain” are often, with State sanction, unconstitutionally divested of their private property rights.

In another article,  Prof. Lynch presented a critique of five fundamental legal issues concerning people and land resources within the public domain, namely, the colonial foundation of contemporary national laws; property rights which emanate from-national laws; the overlapping allocation of the Executive Branch bureaucracies’ legal jurisdiction over the public domain; the origins and expansion of the Executive Branch’s public domain classification powers; and the local laws and customs which pertain to natural resources allocation.

In yet another article, Lynch made an introductory survey of the native title, private right, and tribal land laws of the indigenous peoples. This survey dealt with the rights and laws of the indigenous peoples from the perspective of the indigenous communities. Similarly, in his paper on “Whither the People? Demographic, Tenurial and Agricultural Aspects of the Tropical Forestry Action Plan”, Lynch underscored the significance of demographic studies, land tenure, swidden agriculture, and common or communal property systems of resource management in the processes of managing our tropical forests.

Meanwhile, other articles analyzed the legal implications of the constitutionally espoused Regalian Doctrine and the laws which sprung from it on the “vested” rights of the indigenous peoples. These articles demonstrate how the State, as owner of our country’s vast natural resources, justifies its act of implementing laws and measures on the lands of the public domain to the detriment of the tenurial right of the indigenous peoples.

Finally, articles were written in an attempt to resolve the confusion regarding the ownership of “public lands” by tracing their origins and development in the context of the various executive and legislative enactments made in history. These articles likewise touch on the transition from a pro-agricultural to pro-forest presumption of classifying lands of the public domain. In effect, these articles show how the vested rights of the indigenous peoples in the “public lands” are historically undermined by such legal classification.

In sum, the above articles pose the argument that the indigenous peoples possessed vested ownership rights over lands occupied by them for generations but which lands are now classified as part of the public domain. It would seem that the present legal system operates to divest the indigenous peoples of such title through laws and doctrines which are either manifestly inadequate or are in utter disregard of such rights.

While we recognize the persuasiveness of the arguments raised by the foregoing authors regarding their respective analyses and critique of the pertinent legislations and doctrines affecting the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples in the upland region, we find it important, at this juncture, to inquire into the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples on the basis of the existing laws. Indeed, no attempt has yet been made° in looking for creative solutions to this problem on the basis of what our laws provide and in developing what is already within our hands in order to give the indigenous peoples more rights which they deserve.

While we admit a bias for recognizing the title of the indigenous peoples to their ancestral lands by lobbying for concrete reforms of the law , this paper simply endeavors to examine the relevant laws and jurisprudence pertaining to the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples in the uplands. It aims to inquire into the precise nature and character of tenurial rights afforded by our legal system to the indigenous peoples. Within this context, this paper endeavors to explore the possibility of formulating a fresh perspective on the existing laws and jurisprudence on the tenurial rights of indigenous peoples in the uplands with the end in view of giving them more rights.

The Inhabitants of the Uplands

The term “uplands” has not been concretely defined in Philippine statutes. However, in practice, the term “uplands” has been used to refer to the mountain and foothill portions of the country which are above the eighteen percent (18%) slope criterion set forth in the law as public and inalienable lands.

On the basis of the eighteen percent (18%) slope threshold, the uplands comprise about 15.5 to 16.8 million hectares or fifty four percent (54%) to fifty six percent (56%) of the national territory.” About 15.0 million hectares of the country have been classified as forest land, while about 0.9 million hectares have remained unclassified and inalienable. It has been reported that about 3.6 million hectares of the uplands have been classified as alienable and disposable. This is about twenty three percent (23%) of the total area of the uplands or about twenty seven percent (27%) of the total area of alienable and disposable lands.

With respect to the number of people living within the upland areas, there is a notable difference in the statistics available. The official estimate was 1.33 million people as of 1986.  In the DENR Masterplan, it discounted the estimate made by a researcher who pegged the upland population at around 17.88 million in 1988 by stating that researches made by the Department showed some discrepancy and resolved that actual upland population is only seventy percent (70%) to eighty percent (80%) of such estimate.15 An independent researcher using official census data concluded, by contrast, that the upland population was 14.4 million and that by 1990 it would have grown to about 18.6 million.

There are three major groups of people found in the uplands, namely: (1) timber lessees; (2) pasture lessees; and (3) upland farmers.

Timber lessees are those granted with access to upland areas for timber production on a sustained yield basis through a selective logging system. As of 1989, 82 timber licensees had access to 3.7 million hectares of forest lands. Pasture lessees, on the other hand, are those who were allowed to pasture in the uplands. The estimated 1,115 permit holders used 431,000 hectares of the uplands in 1989.

Upland farmers constitute the largest group of people found in the uplands. This group is estimated to number from 6 to 18 million in 1988. They are further classified into indigenous people long term migrants and peasant settlers.

The Indigenous Peoples

The term indigenous peoples is used interchangeably, though less appropriately, with the concepts of national cultural minorities, tribal communities, tribal Filipinos, ethnic groups, primitive people, and native tribes. The term emphasizes their length of habitation in a given area, distinct cultural and linguistic traditions passed on by ancestors for many generations, and a strong sense of ethnic self-identity.

In the Philippines, the indigenous peoples refer to the various groups of people found in the remote interiors of Luzon, Mindanao, and some islands of the Visayas.  They are described to have been least influenced by Christianity and Hispanization and have maintained the closest link to their ancestral past. Approximately 6.5 to 7.5 million in population, they form a diverse collection of over 40  ethnolinguistic groups, each with a distinct language and culture.

At present, the indigenous communities can be conveniently classified into the following groups:

Cordillera Peoples — occupy the Cordillera mountain range which covers five provinces in the middle of Northern Luzon. The major ethnolinguistic groups, numbering a total of 988,000, are the Ifugao, Bontoc, Kankanai, Yapayao, Kalinga, Ibaloi, Tingguian, and Isneg Tribes. Caraballo Tribes — these peoples inhabit the

Caraballo mountain range in Eastern Central Luzon. They are composed of five ethnolinguistic groups, namely, the Ibanag, Ilongot, Gaddang, Ikalahan, and Isinal tribes.

Agta and Aeta — they are the short; dark-skinned and kinky-haired peoples who live in the scattered hills of Central Luzon. Those who occupy the nearby hills of Mount Pinatubo in Zambales and Pampanga were recently displaced due to volcanic eruption in 1991.

Mangyan of Mindoro — this group represents six ethnolinguistic groupings, the Batangan, Iraya, Hanunuo, Alangan, Ratagnon, Buhid, and Tadyawan, who inhabit the mountains and foothills of Mindoro.

Palawan Hilltribes — the tribal people of Palawan island which roughly consists of the Tagbanua, Batak, Kalamianes, Cuyonin, and Ken-uy.

Mindanao Lumad — refers to the approximately 18 ethnic groups living in the hilly portions of the provinces of Davao, Bukidnon, Agusan, Surigao, Zamboanga, Misamis, Cotabato, and other provinces of Mindanao. These non-Muslim hilltribes of Mindanao include the Subanon, Manobo, B’laan, T’boli, andaya, Mansaka, Tiruray, Higaonon, Bagobo, Bukidnon, Tagakaulo, Banwaon, Dibabawon, Tala-andig, Mamanua, and Manguangan.

Whatever the statistics may be regarding the number of indigenous communities in the uplands, it is undeniable that the peculiar situation of these peoples will remain relevant in the drafting of legislations that pertain to tenurial rights in the uplands.

The Variance of Perspectives on the Concept of Land

The concept of land has been thoroughly examined by Paul Bohanan in one of his essays.  He made a distinction between the concept of Westerners and that of non-Westerners in this case, the African people. According to him the Westerners ‘…divide the earth’s surface by an imaginary grid whose coordinates are determined by the location of certain celestial bodies.” this grid and its coordinates are then plotted on a piece of paper, to as a “map”. In cases of disputes, precise instruments fare used to define the land astrally.

Because of this concept, land, for the Westerners, becomes a measurable entity, divisible into thing-like parcels. As such, these parcels become marketable commodities which can be bought and sold by individuals.

Land tenure, on the other hand, implies a relationship between a person or community and land. This Western concept of land and land tenure is embodied in our present legal system.

The Legal Perspective

Under the present Law on Property, ownership is described as something which is “exercised over things or rights”.  It gives the owners several rights, such as the right to enjoy and dispose of the thing, the right to exclude others from enjoying or disposing of it, and the right to receive its fruits, among others.

Ownership has been defined as the “independent and general power of a person over a thing for purposes recognized by law and within limits established thereby.”  It has also been understood as a “relationship in private law by virtue of which a thing pertaining to one person is completely subjected to his will in everything not prohibited by public law or the concurrence with the rights of another.”

The right to enjoy includes the following rights: the jus utendi or the right to use the thing; jus fruendi or the right to receive the fruits from the thing that it produces; the jus abutendi or the jus disponendi which is the power to alienate, encumber, transform, and even destroy the thing owned. Ownership also Includes the jus vindicandi or the right to exclude from the possession of the thing owned any other person to whom the owner has not transmitted such thing.

This concept of ownership with respect to the lands of the public domain is enshrined in our Constitution, thus:

All lands of the public domain xxx are owned by the State. With the exception of agricultural lands, all other natural resources shall not be alienated. The exploration, development and utilization of natural resources shall be under the full control and supervision of the State. The State may directly undertake such activities, or it may enter into co-production, joint venture, or production sharing agreements with Filipino citizens, or corporations or associations at least 60 percent of whose capital is owned by such citizens.

The first part of the provision embodies the doctrine of Jura Regalia, commonly known as the Regalian Doctrine.  Under this doctrine, the State, as owner of all the public lands, has the sole power to exercise all the rights of an owner with respect to such land. Hence, it has the option to choose which lands can be alienated to and explored, developed or utilized by individuals or groups. Concomitantly, private ownership or title to such lands must emanate from the State.

The Indigenous Perspective

On the other hand, land , as perceived by the indigenous peoples, is not a commodity which one can own. Their concept of land can be best described in the following passage:

How can you buy or sell the sky, the warmth of the land? The idea is strange to us. We do not own the freshness of the air or the sparkle of the water. How can you buy them from us? Every part of the earth is sacred to my people. Every shining pine needle, clearing and humming insect is holy in the memory and experience of my people… We are part of the earth, and it is part of us…This we know: all things are connected like the blood which unites one family. Man did not weave the web of life; he is merely a strand of it. Whatever he does to the web he does to himself.

While there may be variations among the ethnolinguistic groupings with respect to their notion of land and land ownership, it could be fairly synthesized in the following words:

‘Ownership’ more accurately applies to the tribal right to use the land or to territorial control. Ownership is tantamount to work. If one ceases to work, he loses his claim to ownership. At best, the people consider themselves as ‘secondary owners’ or stewards of the land, since the beings of the spirit world are considered as the true and primary or reciprocal owners of the land.

‘Property’ usually applies only to the things which involve labor, or the things produced from labor.

‘Communal’, as a description of man-land relationship, carries with it extra connotations that the land is used by anybody, but actually, is limited only to the recognized members of the tribe, and is a collective right to freely use the particular territory.

There is also the concept of ‘trusteeship’ since not only the present generation, but also the future ones, possess the right to the land. ”

Thus, while ordinary persons regard the land as property which one can own, as one owns a pair of shoes, with the corresponding rights over such land, the indigenous peoples view land as a part of themselves and appended to their very existence. Our perspective of tenurial rights over land is clearly beyond the culture and understanding of indigenous peoples. Yet, these differing concepts have something in common, that is, the idea that the various rights with respect to land may be held by different persons simultaneously. An inquiry into the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples requires a prior appreciation of the classification of land rights. According to Crocombe, land rights may be classified in the ; following six categories:

1. Rights of or Claims to Direct Use, which include the rights to plant, to harvest, to gather or to build. There may be various rights of direct use that may be held by various persons in respect of the same parcel of land. Apart from the above rights which govern production! from the land, subsidiary rights of users may also be recognized, which include rights of access and rights to the use of water.

2. Rights of Indirect Economic Gain, such as those pertaining to tribute or to rental income.

3. Rights of Control. Rights of use are said to be invariably limited by rights of control, which are held by persons other than the user. An example would be a person having an exclusive right to plant on land but is in turn required to plant a specific crop or to conform to certain technical requirements of husbandry or to erect a specific type of house. Control may also be taken negatively by restraining the user from allowing the land to be used for purposes other than what is agreed upon. Other rights of control include those held by land courts, chiefs, or others with authority over land.

4. Rights of Transfer, which the effective power to transmit rights, either those over the land itself or those over other property attached to the land, by will, sale, mortgage, gift or other conveyance.

5. Residual Rights include the reversionary interest acquired in the event of death of the former right -holders without descendants or collateral heirs; of non-compliance with specified conditions, as when persons are evicted for breaches of social norms; and of extreme need by the holder of the residual rights, such as the power of eminent domain which is held by the government.

6. Symbolic Rights or Rights of Identification. These rights stem from clearly recognized relationships between men and land which have no apparent economic or material function. These rights may be sources of prestige or personal satisfaction. Instances of these rights are: naming particular places after parts of their bodies; a church built on land which was informally given to the people a century ago; and the possession of colonial or dependent territories.

Significant in this approach to analyzing land tenure systems is the determination of the source of these rights and the machinery for their enforcement. Where land tenure rules are codified as laws, a distinction should be drawn between those that are quasi legal, and those that are outside statute law but still subject to customary constraints.

A Brief Historical Background of Philippine Tenurial Rights

To settle the issue of tenurial rights over lands held by the indigenous peoples, the first Philippine legislature, i.e. the Philippine Commission, enacted the first Public Land Act (Act No. 926) which took effect on October 8, 1903 to enable the indigenous peoples, among others, to apply for free patents after complying with or satisfying the requirements of the law. However, in 1909, the United States Supreme Court, in a case involving a parcel of land found to have been occupied and cultivated by an Igorot tribesman since time immemorial, had occasion to lay down the doctrine of aboriginal title whereby it ruled that lands which had been held under a claim of private ownership since time immemorial are presumed to have been held as such before the Spanish conquest and “never to have been public land”.

The second Public Land Act (Act No. 2874 of 1919) granted the indigenous peoples who, since July 4, 1907 or prior thereto, had continuously occupied and cultivated, either by himself or through his predecessors in interest, a tract of public agricultural land, the right to have his ownership to such land recognized.

The third Public Land Act (Com. Act No. 141) was subsequently enacted by the Commonwealth Government in 1936. At the time the law was passed the title of indigenous peoples that could be made the subject of confirmation proceedings was limited to alienable or disposable lands of the public domain.

It was only in 1964 that the benefits of the law were extended to “lands of the public domain, suitable to agriculture, whether disposable or not” in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession or occupation by national cultural communities under a bona fide claim of ownership for at least thirty (30) years.

This recognition was again restricted to disposable or alienable lands of the public domain by a subsequent amendment which took effect in 1977. ” Nonetheless, the 1977 amendment did not stop the Philippine Supreme Court from ruling in the case of the Director of Lands v. Intermediate Appellate Court and Acme Plywood and Veneer Corporation that upon completion of the thirty year requirement, the title recognizable by our legal system became vested on the indigenous peoples.

In 1989, the Supreme Court appears to have reversed itself in the case of the Director of Land Management v. Court of Appeals when it decided that no imperfect title could be confirmed over lands not yet classified as disposable or alienable.

Meanwhile, President Marcos, exercising his legislative powers under Amendment No. 6 to the 1973 Constitution, promulgated “The Ancestral Land Decree of 1974”  which declared, among others, that “all unappropriated agricultural lands of the public domain occupied and cultivated by members of the national cultural communities for at least ten (10) years prior to the effectivity of the Decree form part of the ‘ancestral lands’ of the national cultural community.” It defined “ancestral lands” as “lands of the public domain that have been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious occupation and possession by a national cultural community by themselves or through their ancestors, under a bona fide claim of acquisition of ownership according to their customs and traditions for a period of at least thirty (30) years before the date of approval of this Decree.”

When the Revised Forestry Code of the Philippines was promulgated on May 19, 1975, upland areas, i.e., those lands with slopes of 18 percent (18%) or steeper, were declared not susceptible for classification as alienable and disposable, and those which had earlier been declared alienable and disposable were to be reverted to the classification of forest lands. However, there are two exceptions: (1) those already covered by existing titles or approved public land application; and (2) those actually occupied openly, continuously, adversely and publicly for a period of not less than thirty (30) years as of the effectivity of the Code, where the occupant is qualified for a free patent under the Public Land Act.

The implementation of government programs with respect to lands classified as forest lands is currently being undertaken by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources.  Specifically, these programs are the Integrated Social Forestry Program and the Contract Reforestation Program, as modified by the Forest Land Management Agreement. In both programs, the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples are categorically recognized as vital to the development, management and utilization of public lands.

At the outset, the pertinent laws and jurisprudence on the matter seem to give the impression that the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples are amply secured and protected. Noted legal scholars who have closely examined the same would, however, controvert such a conclusion. They argue that these laws, on the contrary, operate to divest the indigenous peoples of their rights to their ancestral lands inasmuch as the very premise of these laws is that the lands occupied by these peoples form part of the public domain and are therefore owned by the State. They regard as a legal myth the argument that the State, as owner thereof, has the authority to impose conditions for its use and alienation by private parties. The objection set forth is based on the premise that the lands occupied by the indigenous peoples have never been public but had always been private in character. Thus, the State possesses no power whatsoever in respect to these lands and consequently, what it ought to undertake is the recognition of titles already held by the indigenous peoples.

Tenurial Rights Under the Philippine Legal System

Under the present legal system, there are four identifiable legal bases for the recognition of the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples in respect of the lands they have been occupying for generations: (1) the Cariño Doctrine; (2) grant of free patent and confirmation of title under Commonwealth Act No. 141; (3) the Agrarian Reform Law (Republic Act No. 6657); and (4) the Revised Forestry Code (Presidential Decree No. 705, as amended) Which include the various upland development programs of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR).

The above enumeration is a modified version of the six distinct tenurial rights, as well as a variety of correlative rights, identified by Lynch.  Most of these rights are predicated on occupancy for a specified period of time. Each right “… emanates from national laws recognized by the Philippine legal community as valid and in force as of February 1987.” None are contingent on documentation. Instead, they are presumed to exist where there is evidence of occupation and possession for the requisite number of years. These rights, identified by Prof. Lynch, are: (1) native title (Cariño Doctrine); (2) Sec. 48 (b) of Commonwealth Act No. 141 as amended; (3) the amendment introduced by Sec.l of Republic Act No. 3872 to Section 48 of Commonwealth Act No. 141; (4) the Migrants’ Amnesty of 1975 (Sec. 53 of Presidential Decree No. 705); 55 (5) the eligibility to participate in the various Integrated Social Forestry (ISF) programs of the Government; and (6) the constitutional guarantee of due process of law afforded to all property holders.

The Cariño Doctrine

During the early years of American occupation, the United States Supreme Court introduced into Philippine jurisprudence the common law concept of aboriginal title in the case of Cariño v. Insular Government. The decision gave rise to the time-honored Cariño doctrine which states that “when as far back as testimony or memory goes, the land has been held under a claim of private ownership it will be presumed to have been held in the same way before the Spanish conquest, and never to have been public land.”

Plaintiff Mateo Cariño, a member of the Igorot tribe, was applying for registration of a parcel of land in Benguet. He and his ancestors had held the land as owners for more than a hundred years. His grandfather had lived upon it and had maintained fences sufficient for the holding of cattle, according to the custom of his people. Some of the fences appeared to have been of much earlier date. His father had cultivated parts and had used other parts for pasturing cattle. Mateo himself had used the land in question for pasturing. As he had inherited the land from his father, in accordance with Igorot custom, he claimed title to the land. No document of title, however, had issued from the Spanish Crown, and although in 1893 -1894, and again in 1896 -1897 he applied for one under the Royal Decrees then in force, nothing came out of it. In 1901, plaintiff filed a petition, alleging ownership under the mortgage law, and the lands were registered in his name. That process, however, established only a possessory, not a proprietary, title.

Opposing Cariño’s application for registration, the Government argued that Spain assumed, asserted and had title to all the land in the Philippines except in so far as it saw fit to permit private titles to be acquired; that there was no prescription against the Crown and that, if there was, a decree of 25 June 1880 required registration within a limited time to make the title good; that Cariño’s land was not registered, and therefore became, if it was not always, public land; that the United States succeeded to the title of Spain so that the plaintiff had no rights that the Philippine Government was bound to respect. It submitted the question of whether plaintiff could have acquired title by prescription of land which belonged to the public domain.

Counsel for the plaintiff took exception to the definition of the legal issue for the reason that it erroneously assumed that the land formed part of the public domain and that the claimant and his ancestors were originally “squatters” thereon. He further stated that:

The real situation is essentially different. The land has never at any time belonged to the Crown, but had since, and of necessity before, the Spanish conquest been in the possession of natives who had settled customs and laws of their own, not the least of which was the ownership of lands in severalty. Cariño and his predecessors held the land not as “squatter” on Crown lands but according to the laws and customs of their people.

Furthermore, he argued that, contrary to the position taken by the government, aboriginal titles were afforded recognition by both the Spanish and American legal systems.

In disposing of the issue, the United States Supreme Court, through Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, held that:

Whatever the law upon these points may be, and we mean to go no further than the necessities of decision demand, every presumption is and ought to be against the government in a case like the present. It might, perhaps, be proper and sufficient to say that when as far back as testimony or memory goes, the land has been held by individuals under a claim of private ownership, it will be presumed to have been held in the same way from before the Spanish conquest, and never to have been public land.

Commenting on this decision, Prof. Lynch opines that the same has remained a landmark decision. By virtue of the said ruling, he concludes that “…Igorots, and by logical extension, other tribal Filipinos with complete customs and long associations, have constitutionally protected native titles to their ancestral lands.”

The Cariño ruling gives rise to a real right over land, a real right of the highest order—that of ownership, nothing less. It gave a member of the indigenous cultural community all classes of land tenurial rights pertaining to an absolute owner.

The rule that a legal presumption arises in favor of private ownership where the land has been in the possession of a tribal community since time immemorial admits of no exceptions. Upon a showing that possession of the land had been since time immemorial, the legal presumption begins to operate and cannot be defeated by any subsequent claim of the State nor by any subsequent classification of the land into public land. The doctrine, in effect, creates a significant exception to the Regalian Doctrine for, notwithstanding the absence of a certificate of title to evidence ownership, the land is presumed private upon a showing that the requisite period of possession has been satisfied.

However, the concept of aboriginal title in the Philippines has undergone modifications in subsequent legislations and judicial decisions. These subsequent modifications had one thing in common and that is, the presumption that lands occupied and cultivated by the tribal Filipinos by themselves or through their ancestors, where no certificate of title has been issued as to evidence ownership thereof, form part of the public domain and are converted into private lands only upon the award by the Government of such lands to them.

Presidential Decree No. 410, known as the Ancestral Land Decree of 1974, in particular, paragraph 2 of Section 1 thereof, defines ancestral lands as:

Section 1. Ancestral lands. x x x

For purposes of this Decree, ancestral lands are lands of the public domain that have been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious occupation and cultivation by members of the national cultural communities by themselves or through their ancestors, under a bona fide claim of acquisition of ownership according to their customs and traditions for a period of at least thirty (30) years before the date of approval of this Decree. The interruption of the period of their occupation and cultivation on account of civil disturbance or force majeur shall not militate against their right granted under this Decree.

The Decree was promulgated to give landless Muslims and members of other cultural minority groups the same opportunity to own the lands occupied and cultivated by them, which lands were likewise occupied and cultivated by their ancestors. It gave ethnic minority ancestral land owners in twenty-seven provinces 60 ten years to perfect their titles.

The same provision that speaks of the above right of members of cultural minority groups contained a proviso which states that:

Section 1. Ancestral Lands. x x x

Provided, however, that lands of the public domain heretofore reserved for settlement purposes under the administration of the Department of Agrarian Reform and other areas reserved for other public or quasi-public purposes shall not be subject to disposition in accordance with the provisions of this Decree. x x x x x

What is peculiar about this Decree is that, notwithstanding its avowed policy of assisting members of national cultural communities in acquiring full ownership of the lands occupied or cultivated by them, it merely authorizes the issuance of a Land Occupancy Certificate to the beneficiaries. Moreover, it requires that the recipient must first be a member of a “farmers cooperative” before a Certificate of Land Occupancy may be issued to him.

Departing from this interpretation of the concept of aboriginal title is a proposed bill in the House of Representatives (House Bi11 No. 33881) which seeks “to recognize and promote the rights of indigenous cultural communities within the framework of nation 1 unity and development, to protect the rights of indigenous cultural communities to their ancestral domains to ensure their economic, social and cultural well being; and to provide for the applicability of customary laws governing the ownership and extent of their ancestral domain.”  It defines “ancestral domain” in the following manner:

[It] refers to all lands and natural resources owned, occupied or possessed by indigenous cultural communities, by themselves or through their ancestors, communally or individually, in accordance with their customs and traditions since time immemorial, continuously to the present except where interrupted by war, force majeur, or displacement by force, deceit or stealth. It shall include ancestral lands, titled properties, forest, pasture, residential, agricultural and other lands individually owned whether alienable /disposable or otherwise, hunting grounds, worship areas, burial grounds, bodies of water, air space, mineral and other natural resources.

It defines “ancestral lands” as referring “to those real properties within the ancestral domain which are communally owned, either by the whole community or by a clan or group.”

Clearly, the object of the bill is not to grant any tenurial right to indigenous cultural communities in respect of the lands they and their ancestors have been occupying. Instead, its declared purpose is to give recognition to such tenurial rights already existing. It therefore admits the existence of such rights in favor of the indigenous peoples, regardless of whether the Government has declared the said lands as “alienable/disposable” or otherwise. It appears that its intention is to remove such lands from the class of public lands. In more concrete terms “formal certificates of recognition which officially and documentarily acknowledge the existence of ancestral domain rights over the area covered” shall be issued to the beneficiaries.” indigenous cultural communities to their ancestral domain. The bill likewise sought to create a Commission on Ancestral Domain which shall be primarily tasked to determine the location, extent and boundaries of the ancestral domain of each cultural community,. Another significant portion of the bill was its provision on the principle of communal ownership of land.

The Public Land Act (Commonwealth Act No. 141) provides for special modes of conveyance of public land to private citizens known as the grant of free patent and confirmation of imperfect title. These particular modes of conveyance are made expressly applicable to indigenous peoples.

The grant of free,patent is carried out through administrative legalization while confirmation of imperfect title is coursed through judicial legalization.

Free Patent or Administrative Legalization

Section 44 of the Act identifies who are qualified to avail of th benefits of a free patent. Its original text was amended in 1964 b Republic Act No. 3872 which added a second paragraph mentioning members of the national cultural communities. As amended, they provision reads:

Sec. 44. Any natural born citizen of the Philippines who is not the owner of more than twelve (12) hectares and who, for at least thirty (30) years prior to the effectivity of this amendatory Act, has continuously occupied and cultivated, either by himself or through his predecessors-in-interest a tract or tracts of agricultural public lands subject to disposition, who shall have paid the real estate tax thereon while the same has not been occupied by any person shall be entitled, under the provisions of this Chapter, to have a free patent issued to him for such tract or tracts of such land not to exceed twelve (12) hectares.

A member of the national cultural minorities who has continuously occupied and cultivated, either by himself or through his predecessors-in-interest, a tract or tracts of land, whether disposable or not since July 4, 1955, shall be entitled to the right granted in the preceding paragraph of this section: Provided, that at the time he files his free patent application he is not the owner of any real property secured or disposable under this provision of the Public Land Law. ”

The second paragraph of the same provision has not been expressly amended by subsequent legislation. However, in view of the provisions of Sections 2 and 3 of Article XII of the 1987 Constitution which took effect on 2 February 1987, it has apparently become the official stand of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources that the free patent to which any member of a national cultural community is entitled under Section 44 may be granted only if the land in question is classified or declared as alienable by the Government.

A free patent or administrative legalization may be obtained in accordance with the following procedure:

1. Filing of the application (with the required supporting papers) with the Community Environment and Natural Resources Office (CENRO) where the land applied for is located, after the land is surveyed and the application is duly accomplished. Supporting papers accompanying the application are the plans and technical descriptions of the land, affidavits of two (2) disinterested residents of the municipality where the land is located, and documentary evidence of possession or ownership.

2. Indexing and verification by the CENRO whether the land applied for is already covered by any previous application.

3. Final investigation to be conducted by land investigators or inspectors or duly deputized public land inspectors to determine whether the land applied for is disposable through free patent and the applicant is entitled to the same.

4. Posting of notice for two (2) consecutive weeks in the provincial capital, municipality and in the barrio where the land is located if the application is filed under Republic Act No. 782, Republic Act No. 3872, Presidential Decree No. 1073 or Republic Act No. 6940.

If no claim is presented and the area of the land applied for is up to five (5) hectares or five (5) up to ten (10) hectares, patent is prepared for the signature of the Provincial Environment and Natural Resources Officer (PENRO) and Regional Executive Director (RED) respectively, pursuant to the provisions of Administrative Order No. 38 dated April 19, 1990.

If the land applied for is more than ten (10) hectares the proposed patent, together with the records of the application, is submitted to the Secretary for approval and signature.

5. Once the patent is signed by the [PENRO/RED]/Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources, as the case may be, the same is transmitted to the Register of Deeds concerned for registration and issuance of the corresponding certificate of title, in accordance with Sec. 103 of the Property Registration Decree (P.D. 1529).

The privilege to apply for legalization must be availed of not later than December 31, 2000.

Judicial Confirmation of Imperfect Title

The provisions of Section 48 have undergone three (3) amendments to date. In its original text, it read as follows:

Sec. 48. The following described citizens of the Philippines, occupying lands of the public domain or claiming to own any such lands or an interest therein, but whose titles have not been perfected or completed, may apply to the Court of First Instance of the province where the land is located for confirmation of their claims and the issuance of a certificate of title therefor, under the Land Registration Act, to wit:

(a) Those who prior to the transfer of sovereignty from Spain to the United States have applied for the purchase, composition or other form of grant of lands of the public domain under the laws and royal decrees then in force and have instituted and prosecuted the proceedings in connection therewith, but have, with or without default upon their part, or for any other cause, not received title therefor, if such applicants or grantees and their heirs have occupied and cultivated said lands continuously since the filing of their applications.

(b) Those who by themselves or through their predecessors-in-interest [sic] have been in the open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession and occupation of agricultural lands of the public domain, under a bona fide claim of acquisition of ownership, except as against the Government since July twenty sixth, eighteen hundred and ninety four, except when prevented by war or force majeure. These shall be conclusively presumed to have performed all the conditions essential to a Government grant and shall be entitled to a certificate of title under the provisions of this chapter.

In 1957 the words in bold above were deleted by Rep. Act No. 1942. In addition, the period of occupation was reduced to a period of at least thirty (30) years prior to the filing of the application for confirmation of title.

Republic Act No. 3872 (approved on June 18, 1964) added a new subsection, referring to the members of national cultural communities as beneficiaries. As introduced by Republic Act No. 3872, said subsection reads as follows:

Sec. 48.  x      x      x      x      x

(c) Members of the national cultural minorities who by themselves or through their predecessors in interest have been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession and occupation of lands of the public domain suitable to agriculture, whether disposable or not, under a bona fide claim of ownership for at least 30 years shall be entitled to the rights granted in subsection (b) hereof. (Underscoring supplied.)

With the promulgation of Pres. Decree No. 1073 on January 25, 1977, Section 48 was further amended to limit the application of subsections (b) and (c) to alienable and disposable lands of the public domain. It further reduced the requisite period of occupation to a period beginning July 12, 1945.

Interpreting Section 48 (b) above, as amended, the Supreme Court ruled in the case of Meralco v. Castro-Bartolome  that the land referred to is public land, that the same would remain as such, and “would cease to be public land only upon the issuance of the certificate of title to any Filipino citizen claiming it under Section 48 (b)”. It cited the ruling in the case of Oh Cho v. Director of Lands  that “all lands that were not acquired from the Government, either by purchase or by grant, belong to the public domain [sic] ” to support its decision in the case.

Under the Cariño Doctrine, however, an exception to the above rule is any land that has been in the possession of an occupant and of his predecessors in interest since time immemorial, for such possession would justify the presumption that the land had never been part of the public domain or that it had been private property even before the Spanish conquest.

Without actually overturning the Cariño Doctrine, the Court in the present case sought to make a distinction between land possessed under a bona fide claim of ownership before 1880 or since a period of time “beyond the reach of memory” (Cariño case) and land held before the Pacific War broke out in 1941 (Meralco case). Thus, it decided that the Cariño Doctrine was inapplicable to the Meralco case. It instead turned to the ruling in the case of Uy Lin v. Perez  for guidance, where it was noted that the right of an occupant of a public agricultural land to obtain a confirmation of his title under section 48 (b) of the Public Land Law was a derecho dominical incoativo, and that, before the issuance of the certificate of title, the occupant was not, in the juridical sense, the true owner of the land since it pertained to the State. This ruling in the Meralco case was reaffirmed in Republic v. Villanueva.

In the Meralco case, Justice Claudio Teehankee authored a vigorous dissent, which dissent he reiterated in the Villanueva case. The dissent later became the basis of the majority decision in a 1986 case.77 It was premised on the failure of the majority opinions in the Meralco and Villanueva cases to adhere to the doctrine established in 1909 and thereafter reaffirmed in 1925 78 as well as in the 1980 case of Herico ” pursuant to the Public Land Law, as amended. The Supreme Court ruled in these cases that where a possessor has held the open, continuous and unchallenged possession of alienable public land for the period provided by law, the law itself mandates that the possessor shall be conclusively presumed to have performed all the conditions essential to a Government grant and shall be entitled to a certificate of title, and the land has already ceased to be of the public domain and has become private property.

Thus, the lands in question ceased, ipso jure, or by operation of law, to be lands of the public domain upon completion of the statutory period of open, continuous, exclusive, notorious and unchallenged possession by the applicants’ predecessors-in-interest who were qualified natural persons and entitled to registration by right of acquisitive prescription under the provisions of the Public Land Law.

In interpreting the same provision of law, the Supreme Court in the 1986 case of the Director of Lands v. Intermediate Appellate Court 81) defines the nature of confirmation proceedings as follows:

Nothing can more clearly demonstrate the logical inevitability of considering possession of public land which is of the character and duration prescribed by statute as the equivalent of an express grant from the State than the dictum of the statute itself that the possessor(s) “x x x shall be conclusively presumed to have performed all the conditions essential to a Government grant and shall be entitled to a certificate of title x x x.” No proof being admissible to overcome a conclusive presumption, confirmation proceedings would, in truth, be little more than a formality, at the most limited to ascertaining whether the possession claimed is of the required character and length of time; and registration thereunder would not confer title, but simply recognize a title already vested. The proceeding would not originally convert the land from public to private land, but only confirm such a conversion already effected by operation of law from the moment the required period of possession became complete x x x The effect of the proof, wherever made, was not to confer title, but simply to establish it, as already conferred by the decree, if not by earlier law.

Three years later, the Supreme Court laid down an exception to the rule in the case of the Director of Land Management and the Director of Forest Development v. Court of Appeals and Mino Hilario. 81 What was involved was a parcel of land situated within three adjoining classified forest reservations, namely, the Central Cordillera Forest Reserve which was established under Proclamation No. 217, dated 16 February 1929, the Ambuklao Binga Watershed covered by Proclamation No. 548, dated 19 April 1969, and the Upper Agno River Basin Multiple Use of Forest Management District created under Forestry Administrative Order No. 518, dated 9 March 1971.

Respondent Mino Hilario sought to register the land in dispute under Act No. 496 but alternatively invoked the benefits of Chapter VIII of Act No. 2874 (which is now section 48 of Com. Act No. 141) as well as provisions of Republic Act No. 1942 and Republic Act No. 3872, he being a member of the National Cultural Minorities. He claimed ownership by purchase from his father on April 17, 1972.

The opposition of the Director of the Bureau of Lands was anchored on the fact that the property in question pertained to the inalienable class of public lands. In support of this argument, the Director of the Bureau of Forest Development points out the fact that the property has not been re-classified as alienable or disposable.

Upon a finding that the applicant and his predecessors-in-interest had successively, continuously, publicly and adversely occupied, possessed and worked on the land in the concept of absolute ownership since before the outbreak of the First World War and that the property had been declared for taxation purposes in the father’s name in 1945, the Land Registration Court ruled that the testimonies of oppositor’s witnesses did not at all refute the applicant’s evidence as to the length, nature and manner of acquisition of the land by himself and his predecessors-in-interest.

On appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed the lower court’s decision, stating that the land, notwithstanding that it is within the said Forest Reservation, is registrable under Republic Act No. 3872, and that the applicant had acquired a private right to the land in question prior to the issuance of Proclamation Order No. 217, Proc. No. 548 and Forestry Administrative Order No. 518 relied upon by the Director of the Bureau of Lands.

The Supreme Court apparently disagreed with both the Land Registration Court and the Court of Appeals. It sustained the argument of the oppositors and ruled that there can be no imperfect title to be confirmed over lands not yet classified as disposable or alienable. The declassification of forest lands is an express and positive act of the Government so that it cannot be presumed. Neither can it be ignored or waived.

Citing Republic v. Court of Appeals  it reiterated the rule that forest lands or forest reserves are not susceptible to private appropriation and possession of said lands, however long, cannot convert them into private property unless such lands are reclassified and declared disposable and alienable by the Director of Forestry; but even then, possession of the land before its reclassification cannot be credited as part of the thirty year requirement under Section 48 (b) of Commonwealth Act No 141.

Neither could the provisions introduced by Republic Act No. 3872, according to the Court, be applied to the situation at bar for the same are merely amendatory to Commonwealth Act No. 141 which applies to agricultural lands and to no other type of land as borne out by the explicit terms of the said law.  Section 2 clearly states that the “provisions of this Act apply to the lands of the public domain; but timber and mineral lands shall be governed by special laws.” Similarly, Section 10 provides that “the methods authorized by the Act for the acquisition, lease, use, or benefit of lands referred to lands of the public domain other than timber or mineral lands.”

The Court construed the new subsection introduced by Republic Act No. 3872 together with the provisions of the preceding subsection which refers to agricultural lands of the public domain. It concluded that it does not appear that two different classes of lands were intended to be the subject matter of one section of the same Public Act.

As to the construction given by the Court of Appeals, that is, to include even forest reserves as susceptible to private appropriation, the same was held to be tantamount to unconstitutionally applying the provision. The 1973 Constitution does not consider timber or forest lands as alienable.

Finally, the Court declared that the land was neither non-forest nor agricultural land before the 1929 proclamation. It did not earn a classification from non-forest into forest land because of the proclamation. The proclamation merely declared a special forest reserve out of already existing forest land. Therefore, a person cannot enter into forest land and, by the simple act of cultivating a portion of that land, earn credit towards an eventual confirmation of imperfect title.

The Government must first declare the forest lands to be alienable and disposable agricultural land before the year of entry, cultivation, and exclusive and adverse possession can be counted for purposes of an imperfect title. The same issue was resolved in a different light by the Court in the recent case of Republic v. Court of Appeals and Paran. ” The Court reaffirmed the ruling that a positive act of the Executive Department is required to declassify public land which was previously classified as forestal and to convert it into alienable or disposable lands for agriculture or other purposes. Hence, once a parcel of land is shown to have been included within a forest reservation duly established by Executive Proclamation, a presumption arises that the parcel of land continues to be part of such Reservation until clear and convincing evidence of subsequent withdrawal or de-classification is shown. The rule cannot, however, be applied to the situation of members of cultural minorities.

According to the Court, in a situation where the applicant for confirmation of title is a member of a cultural community, the applicable provision is the third paragraph of section 48 of Commonwealth Act No. 141. The addition of subsection (c) was intended to create a distinction between applications for judicial confirmation of imperfect titles by members of National Cultural Communities and those by other qualified persons in general. Members of National Cultural Communities are entitled to the rights granted therein regardless of the alienability of the land of the public domain. It may be deduced from the use of the phrase “whether disposable or not” that they may apply to public lands even though such lands are legally forest lands or mineral lands of the public domain, as long as such lands are in fact suitable for agriculture. Other qualified persons’ rights under section 48. are limited only to agricultural lands of the public domain, that is, disposable lands of the public domain which would of course exclude lands embraced within forest reservations or mineral la reservations.

It further ruled that the distinction so established in 1964 Republic Act No. 3872 being expressly eliminated or abandoned thirteen (13) years later by Presidential Decree No. 1073 (affective e on January 25, 1977) only highlights the fact that during tho thirteen years, members of cultural communities had rights respect of lands of the public domain, whether disposable or not. The Court noted that the application for confirmation of tit was filed in 1970 and the land registration court rendered ids decision confirming the long continued possession of the land in question, that is, during the time when subsection (c) of section 418 in its original text was in legal force. Therefore, imperfect title wads perfected or vested by the completion of the required period of possession prior to the issuance of Presidential Decree No. 10 and those who acquired said right could not be divested there by the courts.

The effect of the 1977 amendment 85 on sections 48 (b) and (d) of Commonwealth Act No. 141 was, therefore, to vest rights on those whose possession and occupation had met the thirty-year requirement (provided that the possession was of the requisite character) at the time of the effectivity of Republic Act No. 387 regardless of the alienability of the public land in question. I other words, when Presidential Decree No. 1073 amended subsections (b) and (c) of section 48 of Commonwealth Act NO. 141 by limiting their application to alienable and disposable lands of the public domain, the said amendment could not operate to deprive the beneficiaries of Republic Act No. 3872 of vested rights.

Their titles to the lands they had been occupying for the requisite period and character were conferred upon them not upon the issuance of the titles, which was yet to take place, but upon the completion of the requisite period of occupation while Republic Act No. 3872 was still in force. So that, even if the application for confirmation of title was made only after the effectivity of Presidential Decree 1073, title had already vested rights in those who had fulfilled the requirements during the effectivity of Republic Act No. 3872.

Commenting on the fact that a succession of statutes had simply extended the original period, rather than establish a series of discrete periods of time with specific beginning and ending dates, the Court in the Paran case concluded that it only shows a clear legislative intent to avoid interregma which would have generated doubtful and difficult questions of law.

Agrarian Reform in the Uplands

The enactment of Republic Act No. 6657 by Congress was made in compliance with the constitutional mandate clearly expressed in the provisions to be discussed below. Article II of the Constitution adopts as a state policy the promotion of “comprehensive rural development and agrarian reform”.  Expounding on this avowed policy of the State, Article XIII specifically provides that:

The State shall, by law undertake an agrarian reform program founded on the rights of farmers and regular farmworkers, who are landless, to own directly or collectively the lands they till or, in the case of other farmworkers, to receive a just share of the fruits thereof. To this end, the State shall encourage and undertake the just distribution of all agricultural lands, subject to such priorities and reasonable retention limits as the Congress may prescribe, taking into account ecological, developmental, or equity considerations, and subject to the payment of just compensation. x x x x (Underscoring supplied.)

Section 6 of the same Article states that:

Sec. 6. The State shall apply the principles of agrarian reform or stewardship, whenever applicable in accordance with law, in the disposition or utilization of other natural resources, including lands of the public domain under lease or concession suitable to agriculture, subject to prior rights, homestead rights of small settlers, and the rights of indigenous communities to their ancestral lands.

The State may resettle landless farmers and farmworkers in its own agricultural estates which shall be distributed to them in the manner provided by law.

From the foregoing constitutional provisions, it is worthy to note that the implementation of an agrarian reform program necessarily considers the following objectives: (1) the distribution of agricultural lands, whether privately owned or belonging to the public domain; (2) the application of the principles of agrarian reform and stewardship in lands of the public domain; (3) the recognition of prior rights, homestead rights of small settlers, and the rights of indigenous communities to their ancestral lands.

Hence, in determining the specific tenurial rights afforded by this legislation to the indigenous peoples, it is essential at this point to acquire an understanding of how the various types of land are classified. The availability of a parcel of land for distribution under the program depends a great deal on the alienability of the same.

The lands presently occupied by most indigenous peoples are untitled and located in upland areas. Such areas may be categorized into: (1) lands formally classified as agricultural lands; (2) lands formally classified as forest or timber lands; and (3) unclassified lands of the public domain.

At the outset, the Constitution conveys the impression that agrarian reform, in respect of lands of the public domain, is applicable only to those which, under the law, have been classified as public agricultural lands. Thus, while the Constitution mandates that an agrarian reform program be undertaken to enable landless farmers to own, directly or collectively, the lands they till, it limits the power of the State to alienate public lands to agricultural lands of the public domain.

We must not lose sight, however, of the fact that the term “public agricultural land”, as used in the Constitution, has nothing to do with the purpose to which the land is devoted. As pointed out earlier, it is merely indicative of what lands of the public domain may be alienated. Thus:

Sec. 3. Lands of the public domain are classified into agricultural, forest or timber, mineral lands, and national parks. Agricultural lands of the public domain may be further classified by law according to the uses to which they may be devoted. Alienable lands of the public domain shall be limited to agricultural lands. x x x

Examining the above provision, it may be readily seen that the enumeration of the classes of lands of the public domain is exclusive.

In addressing the problem of how lands which have not been formally classified are to be treated in the light of existing laws, including the Constitution, for purposes of carrying out the provisions of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law, we may allow ourselves to be guided by the definition of terms contained therein.

The term “agricultural land” is defined by the law in the following manner:

Sec. 3. Definitions. For the purpose of this Act, unless the context indicates otherwise:

x x x x

(c) Agricultural Land refers to land devoted to agricultural activity as defined in this Act and not classified as mineral, forest, residential, commercial or industrial land.

x x x x

There are then only two (2) requisites to be satisfied in order that a land may be considered as agricultural within the purview of the law, to wit: (1) that the land is devoted to agricultural activity; and (2) that it is not classified as mineral, forest, residential, commercial or industrial. There is nothing in the law which imposes th requirement of prior classification of the land by the Government.

The second requisite is undoubtedly present with respect to, unclassified lands. In determining the existence of the first requisite; a perusal of the definition of “agricultural activity” would be iii order. Thus:

Sec. 3. Definitions. x x x x

(b) Agriculture, Agricultural Enterprise or Agricultural Activity means the cultivation of the soil, planting of crops, growing of fruit trees, raising of livestock, poultry or fish, including the harvesting of such farm products and other farm activities, and practices performed by a farmer in conjunction wih such farming operations done by persons whether natural or juridical. (Underscoring indicates that portion of the definition which has been declared by the Supreme Court in Luz Farms versus Secretary of the Department of Agrarian Reform ” as not comprising agricultural activity).

The above approach in construing the term “agricultural land” is supported by other provisions of the Law.

In identifying the scope of the law, section 4 provides that:

Sec. 4. Scope. The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law of 1988 shall cover, regardless of tenurial arrangement and commodity produced, all public and private agricultural lands as provided in Proclamation No. 131 and Executive Order No. 229, including other lands of the public domain suitable for agriculture.

More specifically, the following lands are covered by the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program:

(a) All alienable and disposable lands of the public domain devoted to or suitable for agriculture. No reclassification of forest or mineral lands to agricultural lands shall be undertaken after the approval of this Act until Congress, taking into account ecological, developmental and equity considerations, shall have determined by law, the specific limits of the public domain;

(b) All lands of the public domain in excess of the specific limits as determined by Congress in the preceding paragraph;

(c) All other lands owned by the Government devoted to or suitable for agriculture; and

(d) All private lands devoted to or suitable for agriculture regardless of the agricultural products raised or that can be raised thereon.

Paragraph (c) above refers, in particular, to other lands of the public domain devoted to or suitable for agriculture. Clearly,

Congress did not intend to restrict the applicability of the distribution plan under the Agrarian Reform Program to lands which have been formally classified as agricultural. It extends to lands which are devoted to or suitable for agriculture but which have not been formally classified as agricultural lands.

Significant is the promulgation of Executive Order No. 407 dated June 14, 1990 by President Corazon C. Aquino entitled, “Accelerating the Acquisition and Distribution of Agricultural Lands, Pasture Lands, Fishponds, Agro-Forestry Lands and Other Lands of the Public Domain Suitable for Agriculture”. Executive Order No. 407 seeks to implement the mandate of section 7 of Republic Act No. 6657 which provides that:

Sec. 7. Priorities. The DAR [Department of Agrarian Reform], in coordination with the PARC [Presidential Agrarian Reform Council] shall plan and program the acquisition and distribution of all agricultural lands through a period of ten (10) years from the effectivity of this Act. Lands shall be acquired and distributed as follows:

Phase One: Rice and corn lands under Presidential Decree No. 27; all idle or abandoned lands; all private lands voluntarily offered by the owners for agrarian reform; all lands foreclosed by government financial institutions; all lands acquired by the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG); and all other lands owned by the government devoted to or suitable for agriculture, which shall be acquired and distributed immediately upon the effectivity of this Act, with the implementation to be completed within a period of not more than four (4) years; x x x (Underscoring supplied.)

The third and sixth paragraphs of the “Whereas Clauses” of Executive Order No. 407 explicitly provide that:

Whereas, Section 7 of RA 6657 mandates, among others, that all lands foreclosed by government financial institutions, all lands acquired by the PCGG, and all other lands owned by the government devoted to or suitable for agriculture, shall be acquired and distributed immediately upon the effectivity of the said Act and with implementation to be completed within a period of not more than four (4) years there from.

x x x x

Whereas, Executive Order No. 360, series of 1989, enjoins all government financial institutions and government owned or controlled corporations to grant the Department of Agrarian Reform the right of first refusal in the sale or disposition of all lands owned by them which are suitable for agriculture;

x x x x

Section 1 of Executive Order No. 407 orders all Government instrumentalities to immediately execute Deeds of Transfer in favor of the Republic of the Philippines as represented by the Department of Agrarian Reform and to surrender to the latter Department all landholdings.

Thus, the redistribution program of the Agrarian Reform Law, with respect to the upland areas, applies to lands which are classified as public agricultural and to those unclassified lands of the public domain which are suitable for agriculture. Those who may avail of the redistribution program of the Agrarian Reform Law are identified as the “qualified beneficiaries” as the term is defined in the Law:

Sec. 22. Qualified Beneficiaries. The lands covered by the CARP shall be distributed as much as possible to landless residents of the same barangay, or in the absence thereof, landless residents of the same municipality in the following order of priority:

(a) agricultural lessees and share tenants;
(b) regular farmworkers;
(c) seasonal farmworkers;
(d) other farmworkers;
(e) actual tillers or occupants of public lands;
(f) collectives or cooperatives of the above beneficiaries; and
(g) others directly working on the land.

x x x x

Being actual tillers of the lands they occupy, the indigenous peoples could very well qualify as “beneficiaries” under paragraph (e) of the afore-quoted provision. A further requisite is his “willingness, aptitude and ability to cultivate and make the land as productive as possible.”

As such, the indigenous peoples can exercise the tenurial rights of control, direct use, right to economic gain, residual rights, right i to transfer and the symbolic rights over the land upon the award of the land to them as evidenced by the certificates of land ownership award (CLOA), subject to the conditions that they may not sell, transfer or convey the land within a period of ten (10) years, except through hereditary succession, or to the government, or to the Land Bank of the Philippines, or to other qualified beneficiaries,’ and that annual amortizations will have to be paid.”

For the purposes of the indigenous cultural communities, were they to avail of the benefits of the Agrarian Reform Program; the three (3) hectare limit may seem inappropriate for their system of communal ownership. An examination of a later provision twill reveal that a particular indigenous cultural community may, however, opt for collective ownership. Thus, section 25 provides that:

Sec. 25. Award Ceilings for Beneficiaries. Beneficiaries shall be awarded an area not exceeding three (3) hectares, which may cover a contiguous tract of land or several parcels of land cumulated up to the prescribed award limits.

x  x  x  x

The beneficiaries may opt for collective ownership, such as co-ownership or farmers cooperative or some other form of collective organization: Provided, That the total area that may be awarded shall not exceed the total number of co-owners or members of the cooperative or collective organization multiplied by the award limit above prescribed, except in meritorious cases as determined by the PARC. Title to the property shall be issued in the name of co-owners or the cooperative or collective organization as the case may be. Commenting on this provision, Prof. La Vilia observed that the enumeration of the possible modes of collective ownership does not preclude communal ownership as the concept is understood by indigenous peoples. Thus, “by distinguishing co-ownership and cooperative from ‘some other form of collective ownership’ it can be inferred that such other form of collective ownership can include communal ownership.. ”

Given this, the next issue to be dealt with is whether indigenous peoples occupying lands, which have been classified as timber or forest land and are therefore inalienable and not susceptible to distribution, are entitled to any tenurial rights; and if so, what these rights may be.

With respect to inalienable lands of the public domain, the Constitution empowers the State to directly undertake the exploration, development and utilization of these lands as the State, may enter into co-production, joint venture or production sharing agreements with Filipino citizens. Such agreements may be for a period of twenty five (25) years, and under such terms and  conditions as may be provided by law.

The Agrarian Reform Law takes into account the constitutional provision in its definition of the term “agrarian reform”. Thus:

Sec. 3 Definitions. For the purpose of this Act, unless the context indicates otherwise:

(a) Agrarian reform means the redistribution of lands, regardless of crops or fruits produced, to farmers and regular farmworkers who are landless, irrespective of tenurial arrangement, to include the totality of factor and support services designed to lift the economic status of the beneficiaries and all other arrangements alternative to the physical redistribution of lands, such as production or profit sharing, labor administration, and the distribution of shares of stock, which will allow beneficiaries to receive a just share of the fruits of the lands they work.(Underscoring supplied.)

Clearly, agrarian reform is not limited to the redistribution lands. Tenurial rights less than ownership rights may be grant to qualified beneficiaries. Other alternative arrangements are available or are to be made available to qualified beneficiaries.

Under these alternative types of arrangement, the beneficia would be granted various classes of rights, the most common f which would be the right to the direct use of the land. The right f control, together with the right to transfer, and the residual rights cannot, however, be alienated in his favor.

The implementation of these alternative arrangements has become the joint project of the Department of Agrarian Reform and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources. The mechanics of these projects, insofar as they are applicable to the situation of the indigenous peoples, will be discussed under the topic of the various Integrated Social Forestry Programs (ISFP).

The Revised Forestry Code

The Revised Forestry Code, which took effect on May 19, 1975 was promulgated for the purpose of classifying, managing, and utilizing lands of the public domain in order to meet the demands of increasing population. Concomitantly, the law seeks to protect, rehabilitate, and develop forest lands. ” As used in the Code, “forest lands” are lands of the public domain which have been: (1) subjected to the existing system of classification; or (2) determined necessary for forest purposes; or (3) reserved by the President for any specified use.

They are classified into: (1) public forests; (2) permanent forests or forest reserves; and (3) forest reservations.” The classification merely hinges on whether the said mass of lands has or has not been subjected to the existing system of classification and determined to be necessary for forest purposes, and whether such has been reserved by the President for any specific use.

Since forest lands are situated in areas topographically described as having slopes of eighteen percent (18%) or over, forest lands of whatever nature are generally declared excluded from lands which are alienable or disposable. Furthermore, lands which have been previously classified as alienable and disposable are, as a general rule, deemed reverted to the present classification as forest lands.

Under the Code, alienable and disposable lands of the public domain refer to those lands of the public domain which have been the subject of the present system of classification and declared as not needed for forestry purposes. Since the concept of “alienable and disposable land” implies the capability of such land to be owned, and transferred by sale, assignment, donation, or succession, it can be concluded that forest lands are not susceptible to private or individual ownership and appropriation.

Hence, as regards the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples on lands classified as forest lands, the rights of control and transfer inherent in the right of ownership are generally non-existent and their exercise is expressly prohibited.

Nevertheless, it is possible for ownership rights to be afforded recognition under the Code such as: (1) those already covered by existing titles or approved public land applications; and (2) those actually occupied openly, continuously, adversely and publicly for a period of at least thirty (30) years as of the effectivity of the Code, “where the occupant is qualified for a free patent under the Public Land Act”.

Accordingly, an individual must prove that he has such right under either of the two exceptional circumstances mentioned, namely, that the lands are covered by existing titles or approved public land application, or that these lands have been actually occupied openly, continuously, adversely and publicly for a period of not less than thirty (30) years as of May 19, 1975.

Except for these two isolated instances, the tenurial rights afforded by this Code to the indigenous peoples are reduced into the categories of possessory and use rights. This is illustrated in several provisions of the Code. First, in its definition of “private right” , the Revised Forestry Code provides that:

Private rights are titled rights of ownership under existing laws, and in case of primitive tribes, rights of possession existing at the time a license is granted under this Code, which possession may include places of abode and worship, burial grounds and old clearings, but exclude production forest inclusive of logged over areas, commercial forests and  established plantations of forest trees and trees of commercial value. (Underscoring supplied.)

This definition reveals the bias of the Code in favor of titled rights over untitled rights held by most indigenous peoples by literally vesting ownership rights to the people in general and mere possessory rights to the indigenous peoples in particular. This bias is further enunciated in the delineation of the areas where such rights may or may not be exercised through the exclusion of certain types of forest land and plantation from the covered areas.

Secondly, the Code explicitly allows the exercise of particular rights corollary to the right of possession by granting to qualified persons the privilege to utilize, exploit, occupy, possess and conduct any activity within specified portions of the forest land. To obtain such a privilege, one must first secure prior authorization from the proper government agency, as evidenced by the holding of a license, license agreement, lease, or permit, as the case may be. Without such requisite undertaking, the privilege can neither be exercised, nor may such persons be allowed to enter into such lands and cultivate the same. ICIS Any violation of such provisions may subject the unlicensed occupant to criminal prosecution.

Rights of occupation and possession may be acquired under a lease agreement. Such lease is taken to mean as “(1) a privilege granted by the State to a person to occupy and possess (2) in consideration of a specified rental (3) any forest land of the public domain (4) in order to undertake any activity therein”.

A lease for the establishment of an industrial tree plantation or a tree farm may be granted by the State as provided in Section 34 of the Code. This is allowed for a duration of twenty five years and renewable for another period not exceeding twenty five (25) years.

The privilege to utilize forest resources, to establish and operate a wood-processing plant, or conduct any activity involving the utilization of any forest resources is further allowed by the Stat after a license is issued for that purpose. Once extended, it can be exercised to the exclusion of other persons. Such privilege however, excludes the right of occupation and possession over the same.

Contrary to the provision on the grant of a license and the so-called “license agreement”, once issued by the State, a license agreement gives rise to the privilege of utilizing forest resources with the right of possession and occupation to the exclusion of other people. While the jus utendi and jus ponendi are both granted under this scheme, such rights impose the corresponding obligation to develop, protect and rehabilitate the forest land pursuant to the terms and conditions of the agreement. 110 Such license agreement may be valid for a maximum period of twenty five (25) years renewable for not more than twenty five (25) years, an conditioned upon the grantee’s capacity to reforest the cover areas.

Finally, the .Code provides for the issuance of a permit. This a modified version of the license in the sense that, as in licenses the privilege to utilize forest resources is also granted. The only difference lies in the period within which such authority or privilege may be exercised and as to the type of forest resource that may be utilized. In the case of a permit, the period is on short term basis and contemplates limited forest resources.

In addition to the above requirements, the indigenous peoples, must prove that they have the “financial resources and technical capability not only to minimize utilization, but also to practice forest protection and conservation and to develop measures that would insure the perpetuation of said forest in productive condition”.

As “the primary government agency responsible for the conservation, management, development and proper use of the country’s environment and natural resources, specific forest lands … and lands of the public domain” and particularly as the entity which exercises “exclusive jurisdiction over the management and disposition of all lands of the public domain”, “4 the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) has spearheaded several programs intended to develop the upland regions by encouraging the participation of the people, particularly those who dwell on these lands. These are the Integrated Social Forestry Program (ISFP) and the Contract Reforestation Program as modified by the Forest Land Management Agreement (FLMA).

The Integrated Social Forestry Plan (ISFP)

The Integrated Social Forestry Program is the first and oldest of the DENR programs. It aims “to protect the environment, alleviate poverty and promote social justice by enlisting the people directly using forest lands in the task of stewarding the uplands”. The exercise of stewardship rights requires the presence of the individual, family, group or community, as the case may be, in the area to be stewarded. Such presence can be demonstrated by the concurrence of two acts: first, by personally tilling whatever land is cultivated in the area to be stewarded, and second, by residing within the area or adjacent barangay.

Moreover, the Administrative Order provides for the following qualifications: (a) Filipino citizens; (b) of legal age; (c) actual tillers or cultivators of the land to be allocated; and (d) living within the projected or adjacent barangay or sitio.

From these two provisions, it may be deduced that the indigenous peoples in the upland regions could very well qualify and avail of the benefits of this program. As earlier mentioned, peoples have been in open and continuous possession of lands presently classified as forest lands. The mass tenurial rights afforded by the Integrated Social Forestry Program are broadly designated as “use rights” which may be exercised by the program participant for a period of 25 years, renewable for an additional 25 years. 118 This tenurial right is embodied in the contract or stewardship agreement itself, signed by the individual forest occupant or forest community association or cooperative and the Government, which gives the right to peaceful occupation, possession and sustainable management of the designated areas.

The area over which such tenurial right may be exercised depends on the type of stewardship agreement entered int with the government. In case of individual or family stewardship agreement, the area shall depend on topography, soil and general conditions of the land but shall not exceed five (5) hectares. In case of communal stewardship agreement, there is no provision as to the maximum area which could be allowed. Nevertheless, several factors should be considered, such as the nature of the site, the history of the group in the area, and the potential of the group to promote productive and protective activities.

Aside from the rights of possession, occupation and use of the subject area, the program provides ‘for other tenurial rights:

First. Right to transfer stewardship rights and responsibilities in case of (a) death or incapacity of original stewards; (b) movement outside of area by the steward and; (c) change of vocation of the stewardship agreement holders from upland farmers or when stewards cease to be the actual tillers of the area.

The exercise of this right is, however, subject to the approval of the DENR Secretary or his authorized representative.  Furthermore, this right is evidently available only during the prescribed period of the stewardship agreement, i.e., 25 or 50 years, and while the contract subsists.

Second. Right of pre-emption to any subsequent stewardship agreement covering their allocated land. This may be availed of by the program participants or their direct next of kin upon the expiration of the stewardship agreement.  The term “next of kin” refers to the spouse and children or, in their absence, to the parents, brothers or sisters of the program participant.

Third. Right to receive just compensation for permanent improvements introduced, including the trees. Like the right of pre-emption, this right is available upon the expiration of the stewardship agreement. However, such may only be availed of should the preceding right become impossible on account of the government’s decision not to allocate the land for stewardship purposes.

Corollary to these rights are the corresponding responsibilities imposed upon the program participants.  Failure to comply with these terms and conditions constitutes a ground, among others, for the cancellation of the agreement.

Contract Reforestration Program and the Forest Land Management Agreement (FLMA)

The Contract Reforestation Program of the government has its roots in a number of executive and administrative issuances.  Its underlying philosophy is the undertaking of reforestation activities by the government in collaboration with the private sector through family, community and corporate contractors.

Specifically, the program seeks to create incentives that will encourage the participation of “non-governmental organizations (NGOs), local government units and the private sector, including forest occupants and rural communities”, in the development, management, and protection of our forest resources.

In its initial stage, contracts were entered into between the Government, through the DENR, and the individual or entity concerned, whereby the latter agrees to implement an activity required to reforest a denuded portion of. the public domain land the former agrees to pay for the activity accomplished, pursuant to its terms and conditions. These contracts come in varied forms depending on the type of contractor, the size of the contract area, and the duration of the program.

Briefly, the first mode of contract reforestation is the so-called “family approach” whereby an individual or head of the family may reforest one to five hectares of denuded forest land for three (3) years subject to extension when certain conditions are met.

The second mode is the “community approach” where the tribal communities are lumped together with associations, cooperatives, civic or religious organizations, local government units, and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) as prospective contractors of this specific program.  The duration of this contract is the same as in the family approach, but the area covered is from five (5) to one hundred (100) hectares.

The third mode is the “corporate approach” whereby a duly registered corporation, selected through a competitive bidding, may undertake to reforest more or less than 500 hectares of forest land.

Under the first two modes, the three (3) year duration of the contract may be extended “when warranted. because of climatic conditions, security problems or similar unforeseen circumstances which interrupt the anticipated schedule of activities”. After the expiration of this period, any and all the rights to improvements made by the contractor shall automatically revert back to the government.

On June 24, 1991, the DENR issued an order 137 substantially modifying certain provisions of the previous guidelines, particularly with respect to the duration of the contract, as well as on the rights and obligations of the contractors.

Accordingly, the administrative order, coined as the “Forest Land Management Agreement”, is described as:

x x x a perpetuation of the present reforestation contracts under the National Forestation Program of the DENR. It emphasizes long term reforestation activities that will provide upland farmers the opportunity to become legitimate, licensed suppliers of timber and other products. x x x With the FLMA, tenure insecurities of contractors can be lessened.

This modified version, coined as the “Forest Land Management Agreement” (FLMA), is intended to take effect in the last stages of the 3 to 4 years of the original contract reforestation program whereby the contractors, now called “forest land managers”, shall sign new agreements with the DENR. The FLMA shall entitle the forest land managers “to harvest, process, sell or otherwise utilize the products grown on the land”  covered by the agreement for”25 years, renewable for another 25 years”.

These rights are further affirmed in the Revised Guidelines fo Contract Reforestation:

Forest Land Management Agreement is a contract issued by the DENR to duly organized and bona fide residents of communities where FLMA area is located granting them sole and exclusive privilege to develop said area, harvest and utilize its products for 25 years, renewable for another 25 years x x x.

In a related provision, the FLMA specifically grants the privilege “to interplant cash crops, fruit trees and otherwise agricultural or min forest products between existing trees” to augment the income the forest land manager.

It likewise provides for the transferability of rights in case inability on the part of the forest land manager to continue the implementation of the program due to old age, sickness, death or other valid reason.  This right may be transferred to his family, or to an immediate member of his family or next of kin, as the case may be.  Finally, the agreement shall entitle the forest land managers to security of tenure during the duration of the FLMA, a right which the DENR undertakes to ensure.

In return for the enjoyment of these rights, the forest land managers must comply with certain requirements that will help the government to presumably generate funds to help others receive the same assistance. In a broad sense, the FLMA obliges the forest land manager “to provide the DENR with a share of the proceeds from the sale of forest products grown on land covered by the FLMA”.  It requires the forest land manager “to pay the government a production share of income from sales in amount adequate to reforest one (1) hectare of denuded land for every hectare of 3 to 4 year old trees turned over to FLMA” which, in more accurate figures, consists of thirty percent (30%) of the gross sales made, inclusive of forest charges and sales tax paid.

With the foregoing discussion of the general features of the present contract reforestation program of the government focusing on the tenurial rights and obligations of the indigenous peoples, as forest land managers, it may be observed that, to a certain extent, the program has lessened the tenurial insecurities of upland dwellers.

First, it stretches the duration of the contract from 3 to 4 years tenure under the initial program to FLMA’s 25 years, renewable for another 25 years. Second, it expands the tenurial rights that may be exercised by the indigenous peoples by allowing them to harvest, process, sell and utilize the products grown on the land.

And third, it improved the status of the indigenous peoples from a mere contractual laborer, hired with the task of reforesting denuded portions of forest lands, to a lessee who pays his rent to, the government in the form of shares of proceeds from his sale.

Conclusion

This paper has shown that our legal system regards wit] distinction the culture and history of the Philippine indigenous peoples found in the upland regions. This has been manifested the various laws enacted since the colonial period as well as in the long line of cases decided by the Supreme Court. Their situation has been continuously afforded special attention by legislation an( jurisprudence dealing with land tenurial rights.

A number of legal scholars have labored on the status of native peoples vis-a-vis the Philippine legal system. Their works, however, consistently used the argument that the indigenous peoples possess vested ownership rights over lands occupied by them for generations but which lands are now classified as part of the public domain and that the present legal system operates to divest them of such title through laws and doctrines which are either manifestly inadequate or are in utter disregard of such rights.

This paper is not a departure from the line of reasoning advanced by these noted scholars. As has been shown, the concepts of “land” and “land ownership” have been understood in different perspectives by the Philippine legal system and by the indigenous peoples.

The contemporary notion of land is analogous to a commodity which can be owned, transferred and alienated to another person. Corollary to this are the various categories of rights which spring from the idea of land ownership. This concept takes its form in the well-avowed doctrine of Jura Regalia and is presently embodied in our constitutional precept of state ownership over all lands of the public domain.

On the other hand, the indigenous peoples regard land as something which brings forth life and appends to their very existence as a people. While such variance of perspectives is admittedly recognized, with a leaning towards lobbying for legislative reforms, in the attempt to harmonize the two perspectives, this paper focused on studying the precise nature and character of the tenurial rights in the legal system.

In pursuing this objective, this paper has used Ron Crocombe’s approach in the analysis of land tenure systems as a framework for studying tenurial rights of indigenous peoples. As discussed, rights with respect to land can be classified into several categories of rights which can be held by different persons simultaneously and under varying capacities.

Applying this approach to the present study, this paper focused on the interplay of the State’s right of ownership over the vast lands of the public domain and the rights afforded by it to the indigenous peoples. This was accomplished by an examination of the relevant laws and jurisprudence on the matter.

Of primary importance are the doctrine laid down in the Cariño case as well as the provisions of CA 141, RA 6657 and PD 705. Under these laws, a member of the indigenous peoples’ community can either be an owner, a beneficiary, a steward, a hired laborer, or a lessee of the land in his possession.

The rights of ownership, under the legal system, can be derived from three sources: (1) the ruling in Cariño; (2) CA 141 and subsequent amendments; and (3) RA 6657. In the Cariño case, the right of ownership is considered as a legal presumption. It operates ipso jure after proof of “time immemorial” possession in the concept of an owner.

In CA 141, ownership rights are vested in the person who openly, continuously, exclusively, and notoriously occupied and cultivated the land under a bona fide claim of title. Nevertheless, title thereto, as a legal evidence, is never presumed to exist and is considered imperfect. The same can be perfected after proof of the requisite thirty (30) year period of possession of the requisite Ancestral domain; tenurial

The Philippine legal system is a pervading culture. Its laws affect the people from all walks of life. It traverses the path where its power is claimed to prevail, even if its touch would disturb the rights of those who regard the land as their life and confound the People whose lives are inextricably linked with the land.

The historical documentation of the life and cultures of the indigenous peoples of the Philippines shows that they and their ancestors have been occupying and possessing various parts of the upland regions of the Archipelago for generations. Long before the first colonizers arrived, they had been inhabiting and continuously working on the land, thereby enjoying the fruits of their labor, unrestricted by any law other than their own customs and traditions.

The advent of the colonial era brought forth a national system  of land registration conceived by a people who had an entirely different cultural and social experience.’ Slowly but steadily, the efforts of the colonial power successfully penetrated the indigenous peoples’ way of life. The indigenous peoples soon found themselves no longer. the owners of the land they had been occupying and cultivating for generations. Suddenly, something as incomprehensible, as profound, and as alien as a national government or State claimed to be the sole owner of all the lands of the Philippine Archipelago.

As the authority from where all rights to land emanate, the State required the registration of lands and/or application for government grants as a precondition for the recognition of proprietary rights. Proof of title other than that mandated by the State was disregarded.2 By the time the consequences of this phenomenon on their rights finally dawned on them, the indigenous peoples found themselves having to defend what they truly believed to be their land and their life.

The bulk of existing materials concerning the indigenous peoples and the pertinent laws affecting them focus on a critique of national land legislation vis-a-vis the tenurial security of the indigenous peoples by identifying the inadequacies of – present legislation in recognizing their tenurial rights and by proposing reforms.

Such inadequacies of the present legislation have been made the subject matter of numerous legal opuses of Prof. Owen Lynch. In his article on the “Invisible Peoples and a Hidden Agenda: th Origins of Contemporary Philippine Land Laws (1900 – 1913) “, Lynch surveyed the historical premises which provide the popular and legal bases for ancestral land usurpation. He also discussed the- status of contemporary national laws concerning ancestral land.

In his article on “Agrarian Reform and the Philippine Publid Domain: The Constitutional Imperative to Recognize Existing Private Rights”,  Lynch demonstrated his position that Philippine citizens within the so-called “public domain” are often, with State sanction, unconstitutionally divested of their private property rights.

In another article,  Prof. Lynch presented a critique of five fundamental legal issues concerning people and land resources within the public domain, namely, the colonial foundation of contemporary national laws; property rights which emanate from-national laws; the overlapping allocation of the Executive Branch bureaucracies’ legal jurisdiction over the public domain; the origins and expansion of the Executive Branch’s public domain classification powers; and the local laws and customs which pertain to natural resources allocation.

In yet another article, Lynch made an introductory survey of the native title, private right, and tribal land laws of the indigenous peoples.6 This survey dealt with the rights and laws of the indigenous peoples from the perspective of the indigenous communities. Similarly, in his paper on “Whither the People? Demographic, Tenurial and Agricultural Aspects of the Tropical Forestry Action Plan”, Lynch underscored the significance of demographic studies, land tenure, swidden agriculture, and common or communal property systems of resource management in the processes of managing our tropical forests.

Meanwhile, other articles analyzed the legal implications of the constitutionally espoused Regalian Doctrine and the laws which sprung from it on the “vested” rights of the indigenous peoples. These articles demonstrate how the State, as owner of our country’s vast natural resources, justifies its act of implementing laws and measures on the lands of the public domain to the detriment of the tenurial right of the indigenous peoples.

Finally, articles were written in an attempt to resolve the confusion regarding the ownership of “public lands” by tracing their origins and development in the context of the various executive and legislative enactments made in history. These articles likewise touch on the transition from a pro-agricultural to pro-forest presumption of classifying lands of the public domain. In effect, these articles show how the vested rights of the indigenous peoples in the “public lands” are historically undermined by such legal classification.

In sum, the above articles pose the argument that the indigenous peoples possessed vested ownership rights over lands occupied by them for generations but which lands are now classified as part of the public domain. It would seem that the present legal system operates to divest the indigenous peoples of such title through laws and doctrines which are either manifestly inadequate or are in utter disregard of such rights.

While we recognize the persuasiveness of the arguments raised by the foregoing authors regarding their respective arialyses and critique of the pertinent legislations and doctrines affecting the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples in the upland region, we find it important, at this juncture, to inquire into the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples on the basis of the existing laws. Indeed, no attempt has yet been made° in looking for creative solutions to this problem on the basis of what our laws provide and in developing what is already within our hands in order to give the indigenous peoples more rights which they deserve.

While we admit a bias for recognizing the title of the indigenous peoples to their ancestral lands by lobbying for concrete reforms of the law , this paper simply endeavors to examine the relevant laws and jurisprudence pertaining to the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples in the uplands. It aims to inquire into the precise nature and character of tenurial rights afforded by our legal system to the indigenous peoples. Within this context, this paper endeavors to explore the possibility of formulating a fresh perspective on the existing laws and jurisprudence on the tenurial rights of indigenous peoples in the uplands with the end in view of giving them more rights.

The Inhabitants of the Uplands

The term “uplands” has not been concretely defined in Philippine statutes. However, in practice, the term “uplands” has been used to refer to the mountain and foothill portions of the country which are above the eighteen percent (18%) slope criterion set forth in the law as public and inalienable lands.

On the basis of the eighteen percent (18%) slope threshold, the uplands comprise about 15.5 to 16.8 million hectares or fifty four percent (54%) to fifty six percent (56%) of the national territory.” About 15.0 million hectares of the country have been classified as forest land, while about 0.9 million hectares have remained unclassified and inalienable. It has been reported that about 3.6 million hectares of the uplands have been classified as alienable and disposable. This is about twenty three percent (23%) of the total area of the uplands or about twenty seven percent (27%) of the total area of alienable and disposable lands.

With respect to the number of people living within the upland areas, there is a notable difference in the statistics available. The official estimate was 1.33 million people as of 1986.  In the DENR Masterplan, it discounted the estimate made by a researcher who pegged the upland population at around 17.88 million in 1988 by stating that researches made by the Department showed some discrepancy and resolved that actual upland population is only seventy percent (70%) to eighty percent (80%) of such estimate.15 An independent researcher using official census data concluded, by contrast, that the upland population was 14.4 million and that by 1990 it would have grown to about 18.6 inillion.

There are three major groups of people found in the uplands, namely: (1) timber lessees; (2) pasture lessees; and (3) upland farmers.

Timber lessees are those granted with access to upland areas for timber production on a sustained yield basis through a selective logging system. As of 1989, 82 timber licensees had access to 3.7 million hectares of forest lands. Pasture lessees, on the other hand, are those who were allowed to pasture in the uplands. The estimated 1,115 permit holders used 431,000 hectares of the uplands in 1989.

Upland farmers constitute the largest group of people fo d in the uplands. This group is estimated to number from 6 to 18 million in 1988. They are further classified into indigenous peop long term migrants and peasant settlers.

The Indigenous Peoples

The term indigenous peoples is used interchangeably, thmigh less appropriately, with the concepts of national cultural minorities, tribal communities, tribal Filipinos, ethnic groups, primitive people, and native tribes. The term emphasizes their length of habitation in a given area, distinct cultural and linguistic traditions passed on by ancestors for many generations, and a strong sense of ethnic self-identity.

In the Philippines, the indigenous peoples refer to the various groups of people found in the remote interiors of Luzon, Mindanao, and some islands of the Visayas.  They are described to have been least influenced by Christianity and Hispanization and have maintained the closest link to their ancestral past. Approximately 6.5 to 7.5 million in population, they form a diverse collection of over 40 ethnolinguistic groups, each with a distinct language and culture.

At present, the indigenous communities can be conveniently classified into the following groups:

Cordillera Peoples — occupy the Cordillera mountain range which covers five provinces in the middle of Northern Luzon. The major ethnolinguistic groups, numbering a total of 988,000, are the Ifugao, Bontoc, Kankanai, Yapayao, Kalinga, Ibaloi, Tingguian, and Isneg Tribes. Caraballo Tribes — these peoples inhabit the Caraballo mountain range in Eastern Central Luzon. They are composed of five ethnolinguistic groups, namely, the Ibanag, Ilongot, Gaddang, Ikalahan, and Isinal tribes.

Agta and Aeta — they are the short; dark-skinned and kinky-haired peoples who live in the scattered hills of Central Luzon. Those who occupy the nearby hills of Mount Pinatubo in Zambales and Pampanga were recently displaced due to volcanic eruption in 1991.

Mangyan of Mindoro — this group represents six ethnolinguistic groupings, the Batangan, Iraya, Hanunuo, Alangan, Ratagnon, Buhid, and Tadyawan, who inhabit the mountains and foothills of Mindoro.

Palawan Hilltribes — the tribal people of Palawan island which roughly consists of the Tagbanua, Batak, Kalamianes, Cuyonin, and Ken-uy.

Mindanao Lumad — refers to the approximately 18 ethnic groups living in the hilly portions of the provinces of Davao, Bukidnon, Agusan, Surigao, Zamboanga, Misamis, Cotabato, and other provinces of Mindanao. These non-Muslim hilltribes of Mindanao include the Subanon, Manobo, B’laan, T’boli, andaya, Mansaka, Tiruray, Higaonon, Bagobo, Bukidnon, Tagakaulo, Banwaon, Dibabawon, Tala-andig, Mamanua, and Manguangan.

Whatever the statistics may be regarding the number of indigenous communities in the uplands, it is undeniable that the peculiar situation of these peoples will remain relevant in the drafting of legislations that pertain to tenurial rights in the uplands.

The Variance of Perspectives on the Concept of Land

The concept of land has been thoroughly examined by Paul Bohanan in one of his essays.  He made a distinction between the concept of Westerners and that of non-Westerners in this case, the African people. According to him the Westerners ‘…divide the earth’s surface by an imaginary grid whose coordinates are determined by the location of certain celestial bodies.” this grid and its coordinates are then plotted on a piece of paper, to as a “map”. In cases of disputes, precise instruments fare used to define the land astrally.

Because of this concept, land, for the Westerners, becomes a measurable entity, divisible into thing-like parcels. As such, these parcels become marketable commodities which can be bought and sold by individuals.

Land tenure, on the other hand, implies a relationship between a person or community and land. This Western concept of land and land tenure is embodied in our present legal system.

The Legal Perspective

Under the present Law on Property, ownership is described as something which is “exercised over things or rights”.  It gives the owners several rights, such as the right to enjoy and dispose of the thing, the right to exclude others from enjoying or disposing of it, and the right to receive its fruits, among others.

Ownership has been defined as the “independent and general power of a person over a thing for purposes recognized by law and within limits established thereby.”  It has also been understood as a “relationship in private law by virtue of which a thing pertaining to one person is completely subjected to his will in everything not prohibited by public law or the concurrence with the rights of another.”

The right to enjoy includes the following rights: the jus utendi or the right to use the thing; jus fruendi or the right to receive the fruits from the thing that it produces; the jus abutendi or the jus disponendi which is the power to alienate, encumber, transform, and even destroy the thing owned. Ownership also Includes the jus vindicandi or the right to exclude from the possession of the thing owned any other person to whom the owner has not transmitted such thing.

This concept of ownership with respect to the lands of the public domain is enshrined in our Constitution, thus:

All lands of the public domain xxx are owned by the State. With the exception of agricultural lands, all other natural resources shall not be alienated. The exploration, development and utilization of natural resources shall be under the full control and supervision of the State. The State may directly undertake such activities, or it may enter into co-production, joint venture, or production sharing agreements with Filipino citizens, or corporations or associations at least 60 percent of whose capital is owned by such citizens.

The first part of the provision embodies the doctrine of Jura Regalia, commonly known as the Regalian Doctrine.  Under this doctrine, the State, as owner of all the public lands, has the sole power to exercise all the rights of an owner with respect to such land. Hence, it has the option to choose which lands can be alienated to and explored, developed or utilized by individuals or groups. Concommitantly, private ownership or title to such lands must emanate from the State.

The Indigenous Perspective

On the other hand, land , as perceived by the indigenous peoples, is not a commodity which one can own. Their concept of land can be best described in the following passage:

How can you buy or sell the sky, the warmth of the land? The idea is strange to us. We do not own the freshness of the air or the sparkle of the water. How can you buy them from us? Every part of the earth is sacred to my people. Every shining pine needle, clearing and humming insect is holy in the memory and experience of my people… We are part of the earth, and it is part of us…This we know: all things are connected like the blood which unites one family. Man did not weave the web of life; he is merely a strand of it. Whatever he does to the web he does to himself.

While there may be variations among the ethnolinguistic groupings with respect to their notion of land and land ownership, it could be fairly synthesized in the following words:

‘Ownership’ more accurately applies to the tribal right to use the land or to territorial control. Ownership is tantamount to work. If one ceases to work, he loses his claim to ownership. At best, the people consider themselves as ‘secondary owners’ or stewards of the land, since the beings of the spirit world are considered as the true and primary or reciprocal owners of the land.

‘Property’ usually applies only to the things which involve labor, or the things produced from labor.

‘Communal’, as a description of man-land relationship, carries with it extra connotations that the land is used by anybody, but actually, is limited only to the recognized members of the tribe, and is a collective right to freely use the particular territory.

There is also the concept of ‘trusteeship’ since not only the present generation, but also the future ones, possess the right to the land. ”

Thus, while ordinary persons regard the land as property which one can own, as one owns a pair of shoes, with the corresponding rights over such land, the indigenous peoples view land as a part of themselves and appended to their very existence. Our perspective of tenurial rights over land is clearly beyond the culture and understanding of indigenous peoples. Yet, these differing concepts have something in common, that is, the idea that the various rights with respect to land may be held by different persons simultaneously. An inquiry into the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples requires a prior appreciation of the classification of land ghts. According to Crocombe, land rights may be classified inthe ; following six categories:

1. Rights of or Claims to Direct Use, which include the rights to plant, to harvest, to gather or to build. There may be various rights of direct use that may be held by various persons in respect of the same parcel of land. Apart from the above rights which govern production! from the land, subsidiary rights of users may also be recognized, which include rights of access and rights to the use of water.

2. Rights of Indirect Economic Gain, such as those pertaining to tribute or to rental income.

3. Rights of Control. Rights of use are said to bel invariably limited by rights of control, which are held by persons other than the user. An example would be a person having an exclusive right to plant on land but is in turn required to plant a specific crop or to conform to certain technical requirements of husbandry or to erect a specific type of house. Control may also be taken negatively by restraining the user from allowing the land to be used for purposes other than what is agreed upon. Other rights of control include those held by land courts, chiefs, or others with authority over land.

4. Rights of Transfer, which the effective power to transmit rights, either those over the land itself or those over other property attached to the land, by will, sale, mortgage, gift or other conveyance.

5. Residual Rights include the reversionary interest acquired in the event of death of the former right -holders without descendants or collateral heirs; of non-compliance with specified conditions, as when persons are evicted for breaches of social norms; and of extreme need by the holder of the residual rights, such as the power of eminent domain which is held by the government.

6. Symbolic Rights or Rights of Identification. These rights stem from clearly recognized relationships between men and land which have no apparent economic or material function. These rights may be sources of prestige or personal satisfaction. Instances of these rights are: naming particular places after parts of their bodies; a church built on land which was informally given to the people a century ago; and the possession of colonial or dependent territories.

Significant in this approach to analyzing land tenure systems is the determination of the source of these rights and the machinery for their enforcement. Where land tenure rules are codified as laws, a distinction should be drawn between those that are quasi legal, and those that are outside statute law but still subject to customary constraints.

A Brief Historical Background of Philippine Tenurial Rights

To settle the issue of tenurial rights over lands held by the indigenous peoples, the first Philippine legislature, i.e. the Philippine Commission, enacted the first Public Land Act (Act No. 926) which took effect on October 8, 1903 to enable the indigenous peoples, among others, to apply for free patents after complying with or satisfying the requirements of the law. However, in 1909, the United States Supreme Court, in a case involving a parcel of land found to have been occupied and cultivated by an Igorot tribesman since time immemorial, had occasion to lay down the doctrine of aboriginal title whereby it ruled that lands which had been held under a claim of private ownership since time immemorial are presumed to have been held as such before the Spanish conquest and “never to have been public land”.

The second Public Land Act (Act No. 2874 of 1919) granted the indigenous peoples who, since July 4, 1907 or prior thereto, had continuously occupied and cultivated, either by himself or through his predecessors in interest, a tract of public agricultural land, the right to have his ownership to such land recognized.

The third Public Land Act (Com. Act No. 141) was subsequently enacted by the Commonwealth Government in 1936. At the time the law was passed the title of indigenous peoples that could be made the subject of confirmation proceedings was limited to alienable or disposable lands of the public domain.

It was only in 1964 that the benefits of the law were extended to “lands of the public domain, suitable to agriculture, whether disposable or not” in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession or occupation by national cultural communities under a bona fide claim of ownership for at least thirty (30) years.

This recognition was again restricted to disposable or alienable lands of the public domain by a subsequent amendment which took effect in 1977. ” Nonetheless, the 1977 amendment did not stop the Philippine Supreme Court from ruling in the case of the Director of Lands v. Intermediate Appellate Court and Acme Plywood and Veneer Corporation that upon completion of the thirty year requirement, the title recognizable by our legal system became vested on the indigenous peoples.

In 1989, the Supreme Court appears to have reversed itself in the case of the Director of Land Management v. Court of Appeals when it decided that no imperfect title could be confirmed over lands not yet classified as disposable or alienable.

Meanwhile, President Marcos, exercising his legislative powers under Amendment No. 6 to the 1973 Constitution, promulgated “The Ancestral Land Decree of 1974”  which declared, among others, that “all unappropriated agricultural lands of the public domain occupied and cultivated by members of the national cultural communities for at least ten (10) years prior to the effectivity of the Decree form part of the ‘ancestral lands’ of the national cultural community.” It defined “ancestral lands” as “lands of the public domain that have been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious occupation and possession by a national cultural community by themselves or through their ancestors, under a bona fide claim of acquisition of ownership according to their customs and traditions for a period of at least thirty (30) years before the date of approval of this Decree.”

When the Revised Forestry Code of the Philippines was promulgated on May 19, 1975, upland areas, i.e., those lands with slopes of 18 percent (18%) or steeper, were declared not susceptible for classification as alienable and disposable, and those which had earlier been declared alienable and disposable were to be reverted to the classification of forest lands. However, there are two exceptions: (1) those already covered by existing titles or approved public land application; and (2) those actually occupied openly, continuously, adversely and publicly for a period of not less than thirty (30) years as of the effectivity of the Code, where the occupant is qualified for a free patent under the Public Land Act.

The implementation of government programs with respect to lands classified as forest lands is currently being undertaken by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources.  Specifically, these programs are the Integrated Social Forestry Program and the Contract Reforestation Program, as modified by the Forest Land Management Agreement. In both programs, the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples are categorically recognized as vital to the development, management and utilization of public lands.

At the outset, the pertinent laws and jurisprudence on the matter seem to give the impression that the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples are amply secured and protected. Noted legal scholars who have closely examined the same would, however, controvert such a conclusion. They argue that these laws, on the contrary, operate to divest the indigenous peoples of their rights to their ancestral lands inasmuch as the very premise of these laws is that the lands occupied by these peoples form part of the public domain and are therefore owned by the State. They regard as a legal myth the argument that the State, as owner thereof, has the authority to impose conditions for its use and alienation by private parties. The objection set forth is based on the premise that the lands occupied by the indigenous peoples have never been public but had always been private in character. Thus, the State possesses no power whatsoever in respect to these lands and consequently, what it ought to undertake is the recognition of titles already held by the indigenous peoples.

Tenurial Rights Under the Philippine Legal System

Under the present legal system, there are four identifiable legal bases for the recognition of the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples in respect of the lands they have been occupying for generations: (1) the Carifio Doctrine; (2) grant of free patent and confirmation of title under Commonwealth Act No. 141; (3) the Agrarian Reform Law (Republic Act No. 6657); and (4) the Revised Forestry Code (Presidential Decree No. 705, as amended) Which include the various upland development programs of the Departmment of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR).

The above enumeration is a modified version of the six distinct tenurial rights, as well as a variety of correlative rights, identified by Lynch.  Most of these rights are predicated on occupancy for a specified period of time. Each right “… emanates from national laws recognized by the Philippine legal community as valid and in force as of February 1987.” None are contingent on documentation. Instead, they are presumed to exist where there is evidence of occupation and possession for the requisite number of years. These rights, identified by Prof. Lynch, are: (1) native title (Caritio Doctrine); (2) Sec. 48 (b) of Commonwealth Act No. 141 as amended; (3) the amendment introduced by Sec.l of Republic Act No. 3872 to Section 48 of Commonwealth Act No. 141; (4) the Migrants’ Amnesty of 1975 (Sec. 53 of Presidential Decree No. 705); 55 (5) the eligibility to participate in the various Integrated Social Forestry (ISF) programs of the Government; and (6) the constitutional guarantee of due process of law afforded to all property holders.

The Cariño Doctrine

During the early years of American occupation, the United States Supreme Court introduced into Philippine jurisprudence the common law concept of aboriginal title in the case of Cariño v. Insular Government. The decision gave rise to the time-honored Cariño doctrine which states that “when as far back as testimony or memory goes, the land has been held under a claim of private ownership it will be presumed to have been held in the same way before the Spanish conquest, and never to have been public land.”

Plaintiff Mateo Cariño, a member of the Igorot tribe, was applying for registration of a parcel of land in Benguet. He and his ancestors had held the land as owners for more than a hundred years. His grandfather had lived upon it and had maintained fences sufficient for the holding of cattle, according to the custom of his people. Some of the fences appeared to have been of much earlier date. His father had cultivated parts and had used other parts for pasturing cattle. Mateo himself had used the land in question for pasturing. As he had inherited the land from his father, in accordance with Igorot custom, he claimed title to the land. No document of title, however, had issued from the Spanish Crown, and although in 1893 -1894, and again in 1896 -1897 he applied for one under the Royal Decrees then in force, nothing came out of it. In 1901, plaintiff filed a petition, alleging ownership under the mortgage law, and the lands were registered in his name. That process, however, established only a possessory, not a proprietary, title.

Opposing Cariño’s application for registration, the Government argued that Spain assumed, asserted and had title to all the land in the Philippines except in so far as it saw fit to permit private titles to be acquired; that there was no prescription against the Crown and that, if there was, a decree of 25 June 1880 required registration within a limited time to make the title good; that Cariño’s land was not registered, and therefore became, if it was not always, public land; that the United States succeeded to the title of Spain so that the plaintiff had no rights that the Philippine Government was bound to respect. It submitted the question of whether plaintiff could have acquired title by prescription of land which belonged to the public domain.

Counsel for the plaintiff took exception to the definition of the legal issue for the reason that it erroneously assumed that the land formed part of the public domain and that the claimant and his ancestors were originally “squatters” thereon. He further stated that:

The real situation is essentially different. The land has never at any time belonged to the Crown, but had since, and of necessity before, the Spanish conquest been in the possession of natives who had settled customs and laws of their own, not the least of which was the ownership of lands in severalty. Cariño and his predecessors held the land not as “squatter” on Crown lands but according to the laws and customs of their people.

Furthermore, he argued that, contrary to the position taken by the government, aboriginal titles were afforded recognition by both the Spanish and American legal systems.

In disposing of the issue, the United States Supreme Court, through Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, held that:

Whatever the law upon these points may be, and we mean to go no further than the necessities of decision demand, every presumption is and ought to be against the government in a case like the present. It might, perhaps, be proper and sufficient to say that when as far back as testimony or memory goes, the land has been held by individuals under a claim of private ownership, it will be presumed to have been held in the same way from before the Spanish conquest, and never to have been public land.

Commenting on this decision, Prof. Lynch opines that the same has remained a landmark decision. By virtue of the said ruling, he concludes that “…Igorots, and by logical extension, other tribal Filipinos with complete customs and long associations, have constitutionally protected native titles to their ancestral lands.”

The Cariño ruling gives rise to a real right over land, a real right of the highest order—that of ownership, nothing less. It gave a member of the indigenous cultural community all classes of land tenurial rights pertaining to an absolute owner.

The rule that a legal presumption arises in favor of private ownership where the land has been in the possession of a tribal community since time immemorial admits of no exceptions. Upon a showing that possession of the land had been since time immemorial, the legal presumption begins to operate and cannot be defeated by any subsequent claim of the State nor by any subsequent classification of the land into public land. The doctrine, in effect, creates a significant exception to the Regalian Doctrine for, notwithstanding the absence of a certificate of title to evidence ownership, the land is presumed private upon a showing that the requisite period of possession has been satisfied.

However, the concept of aboriginal title in the Philippines has undergone modifications in subsequent legislations and judicial decisions. These subsequent modifications had one thing in common and that is, the presumption that lands occupied and cultivated by the tribal Filipinos by themselves or through their ancestors, where no certificate of title has been issued as to evidence ownership thereof, form part of the public domain and are converted into private lands only upon the award by the Government of such lands to them.

Presidential Decree No. 410, known as the Ancestral Land Decree of 1974, in particular, paragraph 2 of Section 1 thereof, defines ancestral lands as:

Section 1. Ancestral lands. x x x

For purposes of this Decree, ancestral lands are lands of the public domain that have been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious occupation and cultivation by members of the national cultural communities by themselves or through their ancestors, under a bona fide claim of acquisition of ownership according to their customs and traditions for a period of at least thirty (30) years before the date of approval of this Decree. The interruption of the period of their occupation and cultivation on account of civil disturbance or force majeur shall not militate against their right granted under this Decree.

The Decree was promulgated to give landless Muslims and members of other cultural minority groups the same opportunity to own the lands occupied and cultivated by them, which lands were likewise occupied and cultivated by their ancestors. It gave ethnic minority ancestral land owners in twenty-seven provinces 60 ten years to perfect their titles.

The same provision that speaks of the above right of members of cultural minority groups contained a proviso which states that:

Section 1. Ancestral Lands. x x x

Provided, however, that lands of the public domain heretofore reserved for settlement purposes under the administration of the Department of Agrarian Reform and other areas reserved for other public or quasi-public purposes shall not be subject to disposition in accordance with the provisions of this Decree. x x x x x

What is peculiar about this Decree is that, notwithstanding its avowed policy of assisting members of national cultural communities in acquiring full ownership of the lands occupied oi cultivated by them, it merely authorizes the issuance of a Land Occupancy Certificate to the beneficiaries. Moreover, it requires that the recipient must first be a member of a “farmers cooperative” before a Certificate of Land Occupancy may be issued to him.

Departing from this interpretation of the concept of aboriginal title is a proposed bill in the House of Representatives (House Bi11 No. 33881) which seeks “to recognize and promote the rights of indigenous cultural communities within the framework of nation 1 unity and development, to protect the rights of indigenous cultural communities to their ancestral domains to ensure their economic, social and cultural well being; and to provide for the applicability of customary laws governing the ownership and extent of their ancestral domain.”  It defines “ancestral domain” in the following manner:

[It] refers to all lands and natural resources owned, occupied or possessed by indigenous cultural communities, by themselves or through their ancestors, communally or individually, in accordance with their customs and traditions since time immemorial, continuously to the present except where interrupted by war, force majeur, or displacement by force, deceit or stealth. It shall include ancestral lands, titled properties, forest, pasture, residential, agricultural and other lands individually owned whether alienable /disposable or otherwise, hunting grounds, worship areas, burial grounds, bodies of water, air space, mineral and other natural resources

It defines “ancestral lands” as referring “to those real properties within the ancestral domain which are communally owned, either by the whole community or by a clan or group.”

Clearly, the object of the bill is not to grant any tenurial right to indigenous cultural communities in respect of the lands they and their ancestors have been occupying. Instead, its declared purpose is to give recognition to such tenurial rights already existing. It therefore admits the existence of such rights in favor of the indigenous peoples, regardless of whether the Government has declared the said lands as “alienable/disposable” or otherwise. It appears that its intention is to remove such lands from the class of public lands. In more concrete terms “formal certificates of recognition which officially and documentarily acknowledge the existence of ancestral domain rights over the area covered” shall be issued to the beneficiaries.” indigenous cultural communities to their ancestral domain. The bill likewise sought to create a Commission on Ancestral Domain which shall be primarily tasked to determine the location, extent and boundaries of the ancestral domain of each cultural community,. Another significant portion of the bill was its provision on the principle of communal ownership of land.

The Public Land Act (Commonwealth Act No. 141) provides for special modes of conveyance of public land to private citizens known as the grant of free patent and confirmation of imperfect title. These particular modes of conveyance are made expressly applicable to indigenous peoples.

The grant of free,patent is carried out through administrativ legalization while confirmation of imperfect title is coursed throug judicial legalization.

Free Patent or Administrative Legalization

Section 44 of the Act identifies who are qualified to avail of th benefits of a free patent. Its original text was amended in 1964 b Republic Act No. 3872 which added a second paragraph mentioning members of the national cultural communities. As amended, they provision reads:

Sec. 44. Any natural born citizen of the Philippines who is not the owner of more than twelve (12) hectares and who, for at least thirty (30) years prior to the effectivity of this amendatory Act, has continuously occupied and cultivated, either by himself or through his predecessors-in-interest a tract or tracts of agricultural public lands subject to disposition, who shall have paid the real estate tax thereon while the same has not been occupied by any person shall be entitled, under the provisions of this Chapter, to have a free patent issued to him for such tract or tracts of such land not to exceed twelve (12) hectares.

A member of the national cultural minorities who has continuously occupied and cultivated, either by himself or through his predecessors-in-interest, a tract or tracts of land, whether disposable or not since July 4, 1955, shall be entitled to the right granted in the preceding paragraph of this section: Provided, that at the time he files his free patent application he is not the owner of any real property secured or disposable under this provision of the Public Land Law. ”

The second paragraph of the same provision has not been expressly amended by subsequent legislation. However, in view of the provisions of Sections 2 and 3 of Article XII of the 1987 Constitution which took effect on 2 February 1987, it has appar-ently become the official stand of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources that the free patent to which any member of a national cultural community is entitled under Section 44 may be granted only if the land in question is classified or declared as alienable by the Government.

A free patent or administrative legalization may be obtained in accordance with the following procedure:

1. Filing of the application (with the required supporting papers) with the Community Environment and Natural Resources Office (CENRO) where the land applied for is located, after the land is surveyed and the application is duly accomplished. Supporting papers accompanying the application are the plans and technical descriptions of the land, affidavits of two (2) disinterested residents of the municipality where the land is located, and documentary evidence of possession or ownership.

2. Indexing and verification by the CENRO whether the land applied for is already covered by any previous application.

3. Final investigation to be conducted by land investigators or inspectors or duly deputized public land inspectors to determine whether the land applied for is disposable through free patent and the applicant is entitled to the same.

4. Posting of notice for two (2) consecutive weeks in the provincial capital, municipality and in the barrio where the land is located if the application is filed under Republic Act No. 782, Republic Act No. 3872, Presidential Decree No. 1073 or Republic Act No. 6940.

If no claim is presented and the area of the land applied for is up to five (5) hectares or five (5) up to ten (10) hectares, patent is prepared for the signature of the Provincial Environment and Natural Resources Officer (PENRO) and Regional Executive Director (RED) respectively, pursuant to the provisions of Administrative Order No. 38 dated April 19, 1990.

If the land applied for is more than ten (10) hectares the proposed patent, together with the records of the applicatidn, is submitted to the Secretary for approval and signature.

5. Once the patent is signed by the [PENRO/RED]/Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources, as the case may be, the same is transmitted to the Register of Deeds concerned for registration and issuance of the corresponding certificate of title, in accordance with Sec. 103 of the Property Registration D cree (P.D. 1529).

The privilege to apply for legalization must be availed oI not later than December 31, 2000.

Judicial Confirmation of Imperfect Title

The provisions of Section 48 have undergone thre (3) amendments to date. In its original text, it read as follows:

Sec. 48. The following described citizens of the Philippines, occupying lands of the public domain or claiming to own any such lands or an interest therein, but whose titles have not been perfected or completed, may apply to the Court of First Instance of the province where the land is located for confirmation of their claims and the issuance of a certificate of title therefor, under the Land Registration Act, to wit:

(a) Those who prior to the transfer of sovereignty from Spain to the United States have applied for the purchase, composition or other form of grant of lands of the public domain under the laws and royal decrees then in force and have instituted and prosecuted the proceedings in connection therewith, but have, with or without default upon their part, or for any other cause, not received title therefor, if such applicants or grantees and their heirs have occupied and cultivated said lands continuously since the filing of their applications.

(b) Those who by themselves or through their predecessors-in-interest [sic] have been in the open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession and occupation of agricultural lands of the public domain, under a bona fide claim of acquisition of ownership, except as against the Government since July twenty sixth, eighteen hundred and ninety four, except when prevented by war or force majeure. These shall be conclusively presumed to have performed all the conditions essential to a Government grant and shall be entitled to a certificate of title under the provisions of this chapter.

In 1957 the words in bold above were deleted by Rep. Act No. 1942. In addition, the period of occupation was reduced to a period of at least thirty (30) years prior to the filing of the application for confirmation of title.

Republic Act No. 3872 (approved on June 18, 1964) added a new subsection, referring to the members of national cultural communities as beneficiaries. As introduced by Republic Act No. 3872, said subsection reads as follows:

Sec48. x x x x x

(c) Members of the national cultural minorities who by themselves or through their predecessors in interest have been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious possession and occupation of lands of the public domain suitable to agriculture, whether disposable or not, under a bona fide claim of ownership for at least 30 years shall be entitled to the rights granted in subsection (b) hereof. (Underscoring supplied.)

With the promulgation of Pres. Decree No. 1073 on January 25, 1977, Section 48 was further amended to limit the application of subsections (b) and (c) to alienable and disposable lands of the public domain. It further reduced the requisite period of occupation to a period beginning July 12, 1945.

Interpreting Section 48 (b) above, as amended, the Supreme Court ruled in the case of Meralco v. Castro-Bartolome 72 that the land referred to is public land, that the same would remain as such, and “would cease to be public land only upon the issuance of the certificate of title to any Filipino citizen claiming it under Section 48 (b)”. It cited the ruling in the case of Oh Cho v. Director of Lands ” that “all lands that were not acquired from the Government, either by purchase or by grant, belong to the public domain [sic] ” to support its decision in the case.

Under the Cariño Doctrine, however, an exception to the above rule is any land that has been in the possession of an occupant and of his predecessors in interest since time immemorial, for such possession would justify the presumption that the land had never been part of the public domain or that it had been private property even before the Spanish conquest.

Without actually overturning the Cariño Doctrine, the Court in the present case sought to make a distinction between land possessed under a bona fide claim of ownership before 1880 or since a period of time “beyond the reach of memory” (Cariño case) and land held before the Pacific War broke out in 1941 (Meralco case). Thus, it decided that the Cariño Doctrine was inapplicable to the Meralco case. It instead turned to the ruling in the case of Uy Lin v. Perez 75 for guidance, where it was noted that the right of an occupant of a public agricultural land to obtain a confirmation of his title under section 48 (b) of the Public Land Law was a derecho dominical incoativo, and that, before the issuance of the certificate of title, the occupant was not, in the juridical sense, the true owner of the land since it pertained to the State. This ruling in the Meralco case was reaffirmed in Republic v. Villanueva.

In the Meralco case, Justice Claudio Teehankee authored a vigorous dissent, which dissent he reiterated in the Villanueva case. The dissent later became the basis of the majority decision in a 1986 case.77 It was premised on the failure of the majority opinions in the Meralco and Villanueva cases to adhere to the doctrine established in 1909 and thereafter reaffirmed in 1925 78 as well as in the 1980 case of Herico ” pursuant to the Public Land Law, as amended. The Supreme Court ruled in these cases that where a possessor has held the open, continuous and unchallenged possession of alienable public land for the period provided by law, the law itself mandates that the possessor shall be conclusively presumed to have performed all the conditions essential to a Government grant and shall be entitled to a certificate of title, and the land has already ceased to be of the public domain and has become private property.

Thus, the lands in question ceased, ipso jure, or by operation of law, to be lands of the public domain upon completion of the statutory period of open, continuous, exclusive, notorious and unchallenged possession by the applicants’ predecessors-in-interest who were qualified natural persons and entitled to registration by right of acquisitive prescription under the provisions of the Public Land Law.

In interpreting the same provision of law, the Supreme Court in the 1986 case of the Director of Lands v. Intermediate Appellate Court 81) defines the nature of confirmation proceedings as follows:

Nothing can more clearly demonstrate the logical inevitability of considering possession of public land which is of the character and duration prescribed by statute as the equivalent of an express grant from the State than the dictum of the statute itself that the possessor(s) “x x x shall be conclusively presumed to have performed all the conditions essential to a Government grant and shall be entitled to a certificate of title x x x.” No proof being admissible to overcome a conclusive presumption, confirmation proceedings would, intruth, be little more than a formality, at the most limited to ascertaining whether the possession claimed is of the required character and length of time; and registration thereunder would not confer title, but simply recognize a title already vested. The proceeding would not originally convert the land from public to private land, but only confirm such a conversion already effected by operation of law from the moment the required period of possession became complete x x x The effect of the proof, wherever made, was not to confer title, but simply to establish it, as already conferred by the decree, if not by earlier law.

Three years later, the Supreme Court laid down an exception to the rule in the case of the Director of Land Management and the Director of Forest Development v. Court of Appeals and Mino Hilario. 81 What was involved was a parcel of land situated within three adjoining classified forest reservations, namely, the Central Cordillera Forest Reserve which was established under Proclamation No. 217, dated 16 February 1929, the Ambuklao Binga Watershed covered by Proclamation No. 548, dated 19 April 1969, and the Upper Agno River Basin Multiple Use of Forest Management District created under Forestry Administrative Order No. 518, dated 9 March 1971.

Respondent Mino Hilario sought to register the land in dispute under Act No. 496 but alternatively invoked the benefits of Chapter VIII of Act No. 2874 (which is now section 48 of Com. Act No. 141) as well as provisions of Republic Act No. 1942 and Republic Act No. 3872, he being a member of the National Cultural Minorities. He claimed ownership by purchase from his father on April 17, 1972.

The opposition of the Director of the Bureau of Lands was anchored on the fact that the property in question pertained to the inalienable class of public lands. In support of this argument, the Director of the Bureau of Forest Development points out the fact that the property has not been re-classified as alienable or disposable.

Upon a finding that the applicant and his predecessors-in-interest had successively, continuously, publicly and adversely occupied, possessed and worked on the land in the concept of absolute ownership since before the outbreak of the First World War and that the property had been declared for taxation purposes in the father’s name in 1945, the Land Registration Court ruled that the testimonies of oppositor’s witnesses did not at all refute the appplicant’s evidence as to the length, nature and manner of acquisition of the land by himself and his predecessors-in-interest.

On appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed the lower court’s decision, stating that the land, notwithstanding that it is within the said Forest Reservation, is registrable under Republic Act No. 3872, and that the applicant had acquired a private right to the land in question prior to the issuance of Proclamation Order No. 217, Proc. No. 548 and Forestry Administrative Order No. 518 relied upon by the Director of the Bureau of Lands.

The Supreme Court apparently disagreed with both the Land Registration Court and the Court of Appeals. It sustained the argument of the oppositors and ruled that there can be no imperfect title to be confirmed over lands not yet classified as disposable or alienable. The declassification of forest lands is an express and positive act of the Government so that it cannot be presumed. Neither can it be ignored or waived.

Citing Republic v. Court of Appeals  it reiterated the rule that forest lands or forest reserves are not susceptible to private appropriation and possession of said lands, however long, cannot convert them into private property unless such lands are reclassified and declared disposable and alienable by the Director of Forestry; but even then, possession of the land before its reclassification cannot be credited as part of the thirty year requirement under Section 48 (b) of Commonwealth Act No 141.

Neither could the provisions introduced by Republic Act No. 3872, according to the Court, be applied to the situation at bar for the same are merely amendatory to Commonwealth Act No. 141 which applies to agricultural lands and to no other type of land as borne out by the explicit terms of the said law.  Section 2 clearly states that the “provisions of this Act apply to the lands of the public domain; but timber and mineral lands shall be governed by special laws.” Similarly, Section 10 provides that “the methods authorized by the Act for the acquisition, lease, use, or benefit of lands referred to lands of the public domain other than timber or mineral lands.”

The Court construed the new subsection introduced by Republic Act No. 3872 together with the provisions of the preceding subsection which refers to agricultural lands of the public domain. It concluded that it does not appear that two different classes of lands were intended to be the subject matter of one section of the same Public Act.

As to the construction given by the Court of Appeals, that is, to include even forest reserves as susceptible to private appropriation, the same was held to be tantamount to unconstitutionally applying the provision. The 1973 Constitution does not consider timber or forest lands as alienable.

Finally, the Court declared that the land was neither non-forest nor agricultural land before the 1929 proclamation. It did not earn a classification from non-forest into forest land because of the proclamation. The proclamation merely declared a special forest reserve out of already existing forest land. Therefore, a person cannot enter into forest land and, by the simple act of cultivating a portion of that land, earn credit towards an eventual confirmation of imperfect title.

The Government must first declare the forest lands to be alienable and disposable agricultural land before the year of entry, cultivation, and exclusive and adverse possession can be counted for purposes of an imperfect title. The same issue was resolved in a different light by the Court in the recent case of Republic v. Court of Appeals and Paran. ” The Court reaffirmed the ruling that a positive act of the Executive Department is required to declassify public land which was previously classified as forestal and to convert it into alienable or disposable lands for agriculture or other purposes. Hence, once a parcel of land is shown to have been included within a forest reservation duly established by Executive Proclamation, a presumption arises that the parcel of land continues to be part of such Reservation until clear and convincing evidence of subsequent withdrawal or de-classification is shown. The rule cannot, however, be applied to the situation of members of cultural minorities.

According to the Court, in a situation where the applicant for confirmation of title is a member of a cultural community, the applicable provision is the third paragraph of section 48 of Commonwealth Act No. 141. The addition of subsection (c) was intended to create a distinction between applications for judicial confirmation of imperfect titles by members of National Cultural Communities and those by other qualified persons in general. Members of National Cultural Communities are entitled to the rights granted therein regardless of the alienability of the land of the public domain. It may be deduced from the use of the phrase “whether disposable or not” that they may apply to public lands even though such lands are legally forest lands or mineral lands of the public domain, as long as such lands are in fact suitable for agriculture. Other qualified persons’ rights under section 48. are limited only to agricultural lands of the public domain, that is, disposable lands of the public domain which would of cour e exclude lands embraced within forest reservations or mineral la reservations.

It further ruled that the distinction so established in 1964 Republic Act No. 3872 being expressly eliminated or abandoned thirteen (13) years later by Presidential Decree No. 1073 (effecti e on January 25, 1977) only highlights the fact that during tho thirteen years, members of cultural communities had rights respect of lands of the public domain, whether disposable or not. The Court noted that the application for confirmation of tit was filed in 1970 and the land registration court rendered ids decision confirming the long continued possession of the land in question, that is, during the time when subsection (c) of section 418 in its original text was in legal force. Therefore, imperfect title wads perfected or vested by the completion of the required period of possession prior to the issuance of Presidential Decree No. 10 and those who acquired said right could not be divested there by the courts.

The effect of the 1977 amendment 85 on sections 48 (b) and (d) of Commonwealth Act No. 141 was, therefore, to vest rights on those whose possession and occupation had met the thirty-year requirement (provided that the possession was of the requisit character) at the time of the effectivity of Republic Act No. 387 regardless of the alienability of the public land in question. I other words, when Presidential Decree No. 1073 amende subsections (b) and (c) of section 48 of Commonwealth Act NO. 141 by limiting their application to alienable and disposable lands of the public domain, the said amendment could not operate to deprive the beneficiaries of Republic Act No. 3872 of vested rights.

Their titles to the lands they had been occupying for the requisite period and character were conferred upon them not upon the issuance of the titles, which was yet to take place, but upon the completion of the requisite period of occupation while Republic Act No. 3872 was still in force. So that, even if the application for confirmation of title was made only after the effectivity of Presidential Decree 1073, title had already vested rights in those who had fulfilled the requirements during the effectivity of Republic Act No. 3872.

Commenting on the fact that a succession of statutes had simply extended the original period, rather than establish a series of discrete periods of time with specific beginnining and ending dates, the Court in the Paran case concluded that it only shows a clear legislative intent to avoid interregna which would have generated doubtful and difficult questions of law.

Agrarian Reform in the Uplands

The enactment of Republic Act No. 6657 by Congress was made in compliance with the constitutional mandate clearly expressed in the provisions to be discussed below. Article II of the Constitution adopts as a state policy the promotion of “comprehensive rural development and agrarian reform”.  Expounding on this avowed policy of the State, Article XIII specifically provides that:

The State shall, by law undertake an agrarian reform program founded on the rights of farmers and regular farmworkers, who are landless, to own directly or collectively the lands they till or, in the case of other farmworkers, to receive a just share of the fruits thereof. To this end, the State shall encourage and undertake the just distribution of all agricultural lands, subject to such priorities and reasonable retention limits as the Congress may prescribe, taking into account ecological, developmental, or equity considerations, and subject to the payment of just compensation. x x x x (Underscoring supplied.)

Section 6 of the same Article states that:

Sec. 6. The State shall apply the principles of agrarian reform or stewardship, whenever applicable in accordance with law, in the disposition or utilization of other natural resources, including lands of the public domain under lease or concession suitable to agriculture, subject to prior rights, homestead rights of small settlers, and the rights of indigenous communities to their ancestral lands.

The State may resettle landless farmers and farmworkers in its own agricultural estates which shall be distributed to them in the manner provided by law.

From the foregoing constitutional provisions, it is worthy to note that the implementation of an agrarian reform program necessarily considers the following objectives: (1) the distribution of agricultural lands, whether privately owned or belonging to the public domain; (2) the application of the principles of agrarian reform and stewardship in lands of the public domain; (3) the recognition of prior rights, homestead rights of small settlers, and the rights of indigenous communities to their ancestral lands.

Hence, in determining the specific tenurial rights afforded by this legislation to the indigenous peoples, it is essential at this point to acquire an understanding of how the various types of land are classified. The availability of a parcel of land for distribu-tion under the program depends a great deal on the alienability of the same.

The lands presently occupied by most indigenous peoples are untitled and located in upland areas. Such areas may be categorized into: (1) lands formally classified as agricultural lands; (2) lands formally classified as forest or timber lands; and (3) unclassified lands of the public domain.

At the outset, the Constitution conveys the impression that agrarian reform, in respect of lands of the public domain, is applicable only to those which, under the law, have been classified as public agricultural lands. Thus, while the Constitution mandates that an agrarian reform program be undertaken to enable landless farmers to own, directly or collectively, the lands they till, it limits the power of the State to alienate public lands to agricultural lands of the public domain.

We must not lose sight, however, of the fact that the term “public agricultural land”, as used in the Constitution, has nothing to do with the purpose to which the land is devoted. As pointed out earlier, it is merely indicative of what lands of the public domain may be alienated. Thus:

Sec. 3. Lands of the public domain are classified into agricultural, forest or timber, mineral lands, and national parks. Agricultural lands of the public domain may be further classified by law according to the uses to which they may be devoted. Alienable lands of the public domain shall be limited to agricultural lands. x x x

Examining the above provision, it may be readily seen that the enumeration of the classes of lands of the public domain is exclusive.

In addressing the problem of how lands which have not been formally classified are to be treated in the light of existing laws, including the Constitution, for purposes of carrying out the provisions of the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law, we may allow ourselves to be guided by the definition of terms contained therein.

The term “agricultural land” is defined by the law in the following manner:

Sec. 3. Definitions. For the purpose of this Act, unless the context indicates otherwise:

x x x x

(c) Agricultural Land refers to land devoted to agricultural activity as defined in this Act and not classified as mineral, forest, residential, commercial or indusrial land.

x x x x

There are then only two (2) requisites to be satisfied in order that a land may be considered as agricultural within the purview of the law, to wit: (1) that the land is devoted to agricultural activity; and (2) that it is not classified as mineral, forest, residential, commercial or industrial. There is nothing in the law which imposes th requirement of prior classification of the land by the Government.

The second requisite is undoubtedly present with respect to, unclassified lands. In determining the existence of the first requisite; a perusal of the definition of “agricultural activity” would be iii order. Thus:

Sec. 3. Definitions. x x x x

(b) Agriculture, Agricultural Enterprise or Agricultural Activity means the cultivation of the soil, planting of crops, growing of fruit trees, raising of livestock, poultry or fish, including the harvesting of such farm products and other farm activities, and practices performed by a farmer in conjunction wih such farming operations done by persons whether natural or juridical. (Underscoring indicates that portion of the definition which has been declared by the Supreme Court in Luz Farms versus Secretary of the Department of Agrarian Reform ” as not comprising agricultural activity).

The above approach in construing the term “agricultural land” is supported by other provisions of the Law.

In identifying the scope of the law, section 4 provides that:

Sec. 4. Scope. The Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law of 1988 shall cover, regardless of tenurial arrangement and commodity produced, all public and private agricultural lands as provided in Proclamation No. 131 and Executive Order No. 229, including other lands of the public domain suitable for agriculture.

More specifically, the following lands are covered by the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program:

(a) All alienable and disposable lands of the public domain devoted to or suitable for agriculture. No reclassification of forest or mineral lands to agricultural lands shall be undertaken after the approval of this Act until Congress, taking into account ecological, developmental and equity considerations, shall have determined by law, the specific limits of the public domain;

(b) All lands of the public domain in excess of the specific limits as determined by Congress in the preceding paragraph;

(c) All other lands owned by the Government devoted to or suitable for agriculture; and

(d) All private lands devoted to or suitable for agriculture regardless of the agricultural products raised or that can be raised thereon.

Paragraph (c) above refers, in particular, to other lands of the public domain devoted to or suitable for agriculture. Clearly,

Congress did not intend to restrict the applicability of the distribution plan under the Agrarian Reform Program to lands which have been formally classified as agricultural. It extends to lands which are devoted to or suitable for agriculture but which have not been formally classified as agricultural lands.

Significant is the promulgation of Executive Order No. 407 dated June 14, 1990 by President Corazon C. Aquino entitled, “Accelerating the Acquisition and Distribution of Agricultural Lands, Pasture Lands, Fishponds, Agro-Forestry Lands and Other Lands of the Public Domain Suitable for Agriculture”. Executive Order No. 407 seeks to implement the mandate of section 7 of Republic Act No. 6657 which provides that:

Sec. 7. Priorities. The DAR [Department of Agrarian Reform], in coordination with the PARC [Presidential Agrarian Reform Council] shall plan and program the acquisition and distribution of all agricultural lands through a period of ten (10) years from the effectivity of this Act. Lands shall be acquired and distributed as follows:

Phase One: Rice and corn lands under Presidential Decree No. 27; all idle or abandoned lands; all private lands voluntarily offered by the owners for agrarian reform; all lands foreclosed by government financial institutions; all lands acquired by the Presidential Commission on Good Governmment (PCGG); and all other lands owned by the government devoted to or suitable for agriculture, which shall be acquired and distributed immediately upon the effectivity of this Act, with the implementation to be completed within a period of not more than four (4) years; x x x (Underscoring supplied.)

The third and sixth paragraphs of the “Whereas Clauses” of Executive Order No. 407 explicitly provide that:

Whereas, Section 7 of RA 6657 mandates, among others, that all lands foreclosed by government financial institutions, all lands acquired by the PCGG, and all other lands owned by the government devoted to or suitable for agriculture, shall be acquired and distributed immediately upon the effectivity of the said Act and with implementation to be completed within a period of not more than four (4) years there from.

x x x x

Whereas, Executive Order No. 360, series of 1989, enjoins all government financial institutions and government owned or controlled corporations to grant the Department of Agrarian Reform the right of first refusal in the sale or disposition of all lands owned by them which are suitable for agriculture;

x x x x

Section 1 of Executive Order No. 407 orders all Government instrumentalities to immediately execute Deeds of Transfer in favor of the Republic of the Philippines as represented by the Department of Agrarian Reform and to surrender to the latter Department all landholdings.

Thus, the redistribution program of the Agrarian Reform Law, with respect to the upland areas, applies to lands which are classified as public agricultural and to those unclassified lands of the public domain which are suitable for agriculture. Those who may avail of the redistribution program of the Agrarian Reform Law are identified as the “qualified beneficiaries” as the term is defined in the Law:

Sec. 22. Qualified Beneficiaries. The lands covered by the CARP shall be distributed as much as possible to landless residents of the same barangay, or in the absence thereof, landless residents of the same municipality in the following order of priority:

(a) agricultural lessees and share tenants;
(b) regular farmworkers;
(c) seasonal farmworkers;
(d) other farmworkers;
(e) actual tillers or occupants of public lands;
(f) collectives or cooperatives of the above beneficiaries; and
(g) others directly working on the land.

x x x x

Being actual tillers of the lands they occupy, the indigenous peoples could very well qualify as “beneficiaries” under paragraph (e) of the aforequoted provision. A further requisite is his “willingness, aptitude and ability to cultivate and make the land as productive as possible.”

As such, the indigenous peoples can exercise the tenurial rihts of control, direct use, right to economic gain, residual rights, right i to transfer and the symbolic rights over the land upon the award of the land to them as evidenced by the certificates of land ownership award (CLOA), subject to the conditions that they may not sell, transfer or convey the land within a period of ten (10) years, except through hereditary succession, or to the government, or to the Land Bank of the Philippines, or to other qualified beneficiaries,’ and that annual amortizations will have to be paid.”

For the purposes of the indigenous cultural communities, were they to avail of the benefits of the Agrarian Reform Program; the three (3) hectare limit may seem inappropriate for their system of communal ownership. An examination of a later provision twill reveal that a particular indigenous cultural community may, however, opt for collective ownership. Thus, section 25 provides that:

Sec. 25. Award Ceilings for Beneficiaries. Beneficiaries shall be awarded an area not exceeding three (3) hectares, which may cover a contiguous tract of land or several parcels of land cumulated up to the prescribed award limits.

x  x  x  x

The beneficiaries may opt for collective ownership, such as co-ownership or farmers cooperative or some other form of collective organization: Provided, That the total area that may be awarded shall not exceed the total number of co-owners or members of the cooperative or collective organization multiplied by the award limit above prescribed, except in meritorious cases as determined by the PARC. Title to the property shall be issued in the name of co-owners or the cooperative or collective organization as the case may be. Commenting on this provision, Prof. La Vilia observed that the enumeration of the possible modes of collective ownership does not preclude communal ownership as the concept is understood by indigenous peoples. Thus, “by distinguishing co-ownership and cooperative from ‘some other form of collective ownership’ it can be inferred that such other form of collective ownership can include communal ownership.. ”

Given this, the next issue to be dealt with is whether indigenous peoples occupying lands, which have been classified as timber or forest land and are therefore inalienable and not susceptible to distribution, are entitled to any tenurial rights; and if so, what these rights may be.

With respect to inalienable lands of the public domain, the Constitution empowers the State to directly undertake the exploration, development and utilization of these lands as the State, may enter into co-production, joint venture or production sharing agreements with Filipino citizens. Such agreements may be for a period of twenty five (25) years, and under such terms and  conditions as may be provided by law.

The Agrarian Reform Law takes into account the constitutional provision in its definition of the term “agrarian reform”. Thus:

Sec. 3 Definitions. For the purpose of this Act, unless the context indicates otherwise:

(a) Agrarian reform means the redistribution of lands, regardless of crops or fruits produced, to farmers and regular farmworkers who are landless, irrespective of tenurial aarrangement, to include the totality of factor and support services designed to lift the economic status of the beneficiaries and all other arrangements alternative to the physical redistribution of lands, such as production or profit sharing, labor administration, and the distribution of shares of stock, which will allow beneficiaries to receive a just share of the fruits of the lands they work.(Underscoring supplied.)

Clearly, agrarian reform is not limited to the redistribution lands. Tenurial rights less than ownership rights may be grant to qualified beneficiaries. Other alternative arrangements are available or are to be made available to qualified beneficiaries.

Under these alternative types of arrangement, the beneficia would be granted various classes of rights, the most common f which would be the right to the direct use of the land. The right f control, together with the right to transfer, and the residual rights cannot, however, be alienated in his favor.

The implementation of these alternative arrangements has become the joint project of the Department of Agrarian Reform and the Department of Environmment and Natural Resources. The mechanics of these projects, insofar as they are applicable to the situation of the indigenous peoples, will be discussed under the topic of the various Integrated Social Forestry Programs (ISFP).

The Revised Forestiy Code

The Revised Forestry Code, which took effect on May 19, 1975 was promulgated for the purpose of classifying, managing, and utilizing lands of the public domain in order to meet the demands of increasing population. Concomitantly, the law seeks to protect, rehabilitate, and develop forest lands. ” As used in the Code, “forest lands” are lands of the public domain which have been: (1) subjected to the existing system of classification; or (2) determined necessary for forest purposes; or (3) reserved by the President for any specified use.

They are classified into: (1) public forests; (2) permanent forests or forest reserves; and (3) forest reservations.” The classification merely hinges on whether the said mass of lands has or has not been subjected to the existing system of classification and determined to be necessary for forest purposes, and whether such has been reserved by the President for any specific use.

Since forest lands are situated in areas topographically described as having slopes of eighteen percent (18%) or over, forest lands of whatever nature are generally declared excluded from lands which are alienable or disposable. Furthermore, lands which have been previously classified as alienable and disposable are, as a general rule, deemed reverted to the present classification as forest lands.

Under the Code, alienable and disposable lands of the public domain refer to those lands of the public domain which have been the subject of the present system of classification and declared as not needed for forestry purposes. Since the concept of “alienable and disposable land” implies the capability of such land to be owned, and transferred by sale, assignment, donation, or succession, it can be concluded that forest lands are not susceptible to private or individual ownership and appropriation.

Hence, as regards the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples on lands classified as forest lands, the rights of control and transfer inherent in the right of ownership are generally non-existent and their exercise is expressly prohibited.

Nevertheless, it is possible for ownership rights to be afforded recognition under the Code such as: (1) those already covered by existing titles or approved public land applications; and (2) those actually occupied openly, continuously, adversely and publicly for a period of at least thirty (30) years as of the effectivity of the Code, “where the occupant is qualified for a free patent under the Public Land Act”.

Accordingly, an individual must prove that he has such right under either of the two exceptional circumstances mentioned, namely, that the lands are covered by existing titles or approved public land application, or that these lands have been actually occupied openly, continuously, adversely and publicly for a period of not less than thirty (30) years as of May 19, 1975.

Except for these two isolated instances, the tenurial rights afforded by this Code to the indigenous peoples are reduced into the categories of possessory and use rights. This is illustrated in several provisions of the Code. First, in its definition of “private right” , the Revised Forestry Code provides that:

Private rights are titled rights of ownership under existing laws, and in case of primitive tribes, rights of possession existing at the time a license is granted under this Code, which possession may include places of abode and worship, burial grounds and old clearings, but exclude production forest inclusive of logged over areas, commercial forests and  established plantations of forest trees and trees of commercial value. (Underscoring supplied.)

This definition reveals the bias of the Code in favor of titled rights over untitled rights held by most indigenous peoples by literally vesting ownership rights to the people in general and mere possessory rights to the indigenous peoples in particular. This bias is further enunciated in the delineation of the areas where such rights may or may not be exercised through the exclusion of certain types of forest land and plantation from the covered areas.

Secondly, the Code explicitly allows the exercise of particular rights corollary to the right of possession by granting to qualified persons the privilege to utilize, exploit, occupy, possess and conduct any activity within specified portions of the forest land.'” To obtain such a privilege, one must first secure prior authorization from the proper government agency, as evidenced by the holding of a license, license agreement, lease, or permit, as the case may be. Without such requisite undertaking, the privilege can neither be exercised, nor may such persons be allowed to enter into such lands and cultivate the same. ICIS Any violation of such provisions may subject the unlicensed occupant to criminal prosecution.

Rights of occupation and possession may be acquired under a lease agreement. Such lease is taken to mean as “(1) a privilege granted by the State to a person to occupy and possess (2) in consideration of a specified rental (3) any forest land of the public domain (4) in order to undertake any activity therein”.

A lease for the establishment of an industrial tree plantation or a tree farm may be granted by the State as provided in Section 34 of the Code. This is allowed for a duration of twenty five years and renewable for another period not exceeding twenty five (25) years.

The privilege to utilize forest resources, to establish and operate a wood-processing plant, or conduct any activity involving the utilization of any forest resources is further allowed by the Stat after a license is issued for that purpose. Once extended, it can 1:4 exercised to the exclusion of other persons. Such privilege however, excludes the right of occupation and possession over the same.

Contrary to the provision on the grant of a license and the so-called “license agreement”, once issued by the State, a license agreement gives rise to the privilege of utilizing forest resources with the right of possession and occupation to the exclusion of other people. While the jus utendi and jus ponendi are both grante under this scheme, such rights impose the corresponding obligatio to develop, protect and rehabilitate the forest land pursuant to th terms and conditions of the agreement. 110 Such license agreement’ may be valid for a maximum period of twenty five (25) years renewable for not more than twenty five (25) years, an conditioned upon the grantee’s capacity to reforest the cover areas.

Finally, the .Code provides for the issuance of a permit. This a modified version of the license in the sense that, as in licenses the privilege to utilize forest resources is also granted. The onl difference lies in the period within which such authority o privilege may be exercised and as to the type of forest resourc that may be utilized. In the case of a permit, the period is on short term basis and contemplates limited forest resources.

In addition to the above requirements, the indigenous peoples, must prove that they have the “financial resources and technical! capability not only to minimize utilization, but also to practice’ forest protection and conservation and to develop measures that would insure the perpetuation of said forest in productive condition”.

As “the primary government agency responsible for the conservation, management, development and proper use of the country’s environment and natural resources, specific forest lands … and lands of the public domain” and particularly as the entity which exercises “exclusive jurisdiction over the management and disposition of all lands of the public domain”, “4 the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) has spearheaded several programs intended to develop the upland regions by encouraging the participation of the people, particularly those who dwell on these lands. These are the Integrated Social Forestry Program (ISFP) and the Contract Reforestation Program as modified by the Forest Land Management Agreement (FLMA).

The Integrated Social Forestry Plan (ISFP)

The Integrated Social Forestry Program is the first and oldest of the DENR programs. It aims “to protect the environment, alleviate poverty and promote soda! justice by enlisting the people directly using forest lands in the task of stewarding the uplands”. The exercise of stewardship rights requires the presence of the individual, family, group or community, as the case may be, in the area to be stewarded. Such presence can be demonstrated by the concurrence of two acts: first, by personally tilling whatever land is cultivated in the area to be stewarded, and second, by residing within the area or adjacent barangay.

Moreover, the Administrative Order provides for the following qualifications: (a) Filipino citizens; (b) of legal age; (c) actual tillers or cultivators of the land to be allocated; and (d) living within the projected or adjacent barangay or sitio.

From these two provisions, it may be deduced that the indigenous peoples in the upland regions could very well qualify and avail of the benefits of this program. As earlier mentioned, peoples have been in open and continuous possession of lands presently classified as forest lands. The mass tenurial rights afforded by the Integrated Social Forestry Program are broadly designated as “use rights” which may be exercised by the program participant for a period of 25 years, renewable for an additional 25 years. 118 This tenurial right is embodied in the contract or stewardship agreement itself, signed by the individual forest occupant or forest community association or cooperative and the Government, which gives the right to peaceful occupation, possession and sustainable management of the designated areas.

The area over which such tenurial right may be exercised depends on the type of stewardship agreement entered int with the government. In case of individual or family stews dship agreement, the area shall depend on topography, soil and general conditions of the land but shall not exceed five (5) hectares. Iii case of communal stewardship agreement, there is no provision as to the maximum area which could be allowed. Nevertheless, several factors should be considered, such as the nature of the site, the history of the group in the area, and the potential of the group to promote productive and protective activities.

Aside from the rights of possession, occupation and use of the subject area, the program provides ‘for other tenurial rights:

First. Right to transfer stewardship rights and responsibilities in case of (a) death or incapacity of originai stewards; (b) movement outside of area by the steward and; (c) change of vocation of the stewardship agreement holders from upland farmers or when stewards cease to be the actual tillers of the area.

The exercise of this right is, however, subject to the approval of the DENR Secretary or his authorized representative.  Furthermore, this right is evidently available only during the prescribed period of the stewardship agreement, i.e., 25 or 50 years, and while the contract subsists.

Second. Right of pre-emption to any subsequent stewardship agreement covering their allocated land. This may be availed of by the program participants or their direct next of kin upon the expiration of the stewardship agreement.  The term “next of kin” refers to the spouse and children or, in their absence, to the parents, brothers or sisters of the program participant.

Third. Right to receive just compensation for permanent improvements introduced, including the trees. Like the right of pre-emption, this right is available upon the expiration of the stewardship agreement. However, such may only be availed of should the preceding right become impossible on account of the government’s decision not to allocate the land for stewardship purposes.

Corollary to these rights are the corresponding responsibilities imposed upon the program participants.  Failure to comply with these terms and conditions constitutes a ground, among others, for the cancellation of the agreement.

Contract Reforestration Program and the Forest Land Management Agreement (FLMA)

The Contract Reforestation Program of the government has its roots in a number of executive and administrative issuances.  Its underlying philosophy is the undertaking of reforestation activities by the government in collaboration with the private sector through family, community and corporate contractors.

Specifically, the program seeks to create incentives that will encourage the participation of “non-governmental organizations (NGOs), local government units and the private sector, including forest occupants and rural communities”, in the development, management, and protection of our forest resources.

In its initial stage, contracts were entered into betweenthe Government, through the DENR, and the individual or entity concerned, whereby the latter agrees to implement an activity required to reforest a denuded portion of. the public domain land the former agrees to pay for the activity accomplished, pursuant to its terms and conditions. These contracts come in varied forms depending on the type of contractor, the size of the contract area, and the duration of the program.

Briefly, the first mode of contract reforestation is the so-called “family approach” whereby an individual or head of the family may reforest one to five hectares of denuded forest land for three (3) years subject to extension when certain conditions are met.

The second mode is the “community approach” where the tribal communities are lumped together with associations, cooperatives, civic or religious organizations, local government units, and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) as prospective contractors of this specific program.  The duration of this contract is the same as in the family approach, but the area covered is from five (5) to one hundred (100) hectares.

The third mode is the “corporate approach” whereby a duly registered corporation, selected through a competitive bidding, may undertake to reforest more or less than 500 hectares of forest land.

Under the first two modes, the three (3) year duration of the contract may be extended “when warranted. because of climatic conditions, security problems or similar unforeseen circumstances which interrupt the anticipated schedule of activities”. After the expiration of this period, any and all the rights to improvements made by the contractor shall automatically revert back to the government.

On June 24, 1991, the DENR issued an order 137 substantially modifying certain provisions of the previous guidelines, particularly with respect to the duration of the contract, as well as on the rights and obligations of the contractors.

Accordingly, the administrative order, coined as the “Forest Land Management Agreement”, is described as:

x x x a perpetuation of the present reforestation contracts under the National Forestation Program of the DENR. It emphasizes long term reforestation activities that will provide upland farmers the opportunity to become legitimate, licensed suppliers of timber and other products. x x x With the FLMA, tenure insecurities of contractors can be lessened.

This modified version, coined as the “Forest Land Management Agreement” (FLMA), is intended to take effect in the last stages of the 3 to 4 years of the original contract reforestation programl whereby the contractors, now called “forest land managers”, shall sign new agreements with the DENR. The FLMA shall entitle the forest land managers “to harvest, process, sell or otherwise utilivi the products grown on the land” 148 covered by the agreement fo “25 years, renewable for another 25 years”.

These rights are further affirmed in the Revised Guidelines fo Contract Reforestation:

Forest Land Management Agreement is a contract issued by the DENR to duly organized and bona fide residents of communities where FLMA area is located granting them sole and exclusive privilege to develop said area, harvest and utilize its products for 25 years, renewable for another 25 years x x x.

In a related provision, the FLMA specifically grants the privilege “to interplant cash crops, fruit trees and otherwise agricultural or min forest products between existing trees” to augment the income the forest land manager.

It likewise provides for the transferability of rights in case inability on the part of the forest land manager to continue the implementation of the program due to old age, sickness, death or other valid reason.  This right may be transferred to his family, or to an immediate member of his family or next of kin, as the case may be.  Finally, the agreement shall entitle the forest land managers to security of tenure during the duration of the FLMA, a right which the DENR undertakes to ensure.

In return for the enjoyment of these rights, the forest land managers must comply with certain requirements that will help the government to presumably generate funds to help others receive the same assistance. In a broad sense, the FLMA obliges the forest land manager “to provide the DENR with a share of the proceeds from the sale of forest products grown on land covered by the FLMA”.  It requires the forest land manager “to pay the government a production share of income from sales in amount adequate to reforest one (1) hectare of denuded land for every hectare of 3 to 4 year old trees turned over to FLMA” which, in more accurate figures, consists of thirty percent (30%) of the gross sales made, inclusive of forest charges and sales tax paid.

With the foregoing discussion of the general features of the present contract reforestation program of the government focusing on the tenurial rights and obligations of the indigenous peoples, as forest land managers, it may be observed that, to a certain extent, the program has lessened the tenurial insecurities of upland dwellers.

First, it stretches the duration of the contract from 3 to 4 years tenure under the initial program to FLMA’s 25 years, renewable for another 25 years. Second, it expands the tenurial rights that may be exercised by the indigenous peoples by allowing them to harvest, process, sell and utilize the products grown on the land.

And third, it improved the status of the indigenous peoples from a mere contractual laborer, hired with the task of reforesting denuded portions of forest lands, to a lessee who pays his rent to, the government in the form of shares of proceeds from his sale.

Conclusion

This paper has shown that our legal system regards wit] distinction the culture and history of the Philippine indigenou peoples found in the upland regions. This has been manifested the various laws enacted since the colonial period as well as in th long line of cases decided by the Supreme Court. Their situatio] has been continuously afforded special attention by legislation an( jurisprudence dealing with land tenurial rights.

A number of legal scholars have labored on the status of native peoples vis-a-vis the Philippine legal system. Their works, however, consistently used the argument that the indigenous peoples possess vested ownership rights over lands occupied by them for generations but which lands are now classified as part of the public domain and that the present legal system operates to divest them of such title through laws and doctrines which are either manifestly inadequate or are in utter disregard of such rights.

This paper is not a departure from the line of reasoning advanced by these noted scholars. As has been shown, the concepts of “land” and “land ownership” have been understood in different perspectives by the Philippine legal system and by the indigenous peoples.

The contemporary notion of land is analogous to a commodity which can be owned, transferred and alienated to another person. Corollary to this are the various categories of rights which spring from the idea of land ownership. This concept takes its form in the well-avowed doctrine of Jura Regalia and is presently embodied in our constitutional precept of state ownership over all lands of the public domain.

On the other hand, the indigenous peoples regard land as something which brings forth life and appends to their very existence as a people. While such variance of perspectives is admittedly recognized, with a leaning towards lobbying for legislative reforms, in the attempt to harmonize the two perspectives, this paper focused on studying the precise nature and character of the tenurial rights in the legal system.

In pursuing this objective, this paper has used Ron Crocombe’s approach in the analysis of land tenure systems as a framework for studying tenurial rights of indigenous peoples. As discussed, rights with respect to land can be classified into several categories of rights which can be held by different persons simultaneously and under varying capacities.

Applying this approach to the present study, this paper focused on the interplay of the State’s right of ownership over the vast lands of the public domain and the rights afforded by it to the indigenous peoples. This was accomplished by an examination of the relevant laws and jurisprudence on the matter.

Of primary importance are the doctrine laid down in the Cariño case as well as the provisions of CA 141, RA 6657 and PD 705. Under these laws, a member of the indigenous peoples’ community can either be an owner, a beneficiary, a steward, a hired laborer, or a lessee of the land in his possesssion.

The rights of ownership, under the legal system, can be derived from three sources: (1) the ruling in Cariño; (2) CA 141 and subsequent amendments; and (3) RA 6657. In the Cariño case, the right of ownership is considered as a legal presumption. It operates ipso jure after proof of “time immemorial” possession in the concept of an owner.

In CA 141, ownership rights are vested in the person who openly, continuously, exclusively, and notoriously occupied and cultivated the land under a bona fide claim of title. Nevertheless, title thereto, as a legal evidence, is never presumed to exist and is considered imperfect. The same can be perfected after proof of the requisite thirty (30) year period of possession of the requisite

character either through the free patent system or through the system of judicial confirmation of imperfect title.

Under this law, full ownership can be confirmed upon compliance with the administrative or judicial procedures of which due application must be made by the indigenous peoples within the prescribed period.

Moreover, this right was initially available to indigenous peoples occupying lands of the public domain, excepting only timber and mineral lands. RA 3872 subsequently made the provisions of sec. 48 of CA 141 applicable to lands of the public domain regardless of their alienability where the applicant is a member of a national cultural community, provided the land in question is suitable to agriculture. The provision was further amended by PD 1073 to cover only alienable and disposable lands of the public domain.

Nevertheless, the ruling of the Supreme Court in the Piaran case explains that the latter amendment could not operate to deprive the, beneficiaries of the rights acquired under RA 3872 inasmuch as said rights became vested during the effectivity of RA 3872 but prior to the effectivity of PD 1073.

The final source of the right of ownership is the prsent Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Law whereby indigenous peOples are considered as among the “qualified beneficiaries” of the program by virtue of their actual and direct tilling or working upon the land.

The Agrarian Reform Law has been applied to all lands of the public domain. But for purposes of determining which lands can give rise to ownership rights, the law limits them to two kinds, namely: (1) those which have been formally declared as agricultural lands of the public domain; and (2) those lands of the public domain which have not been formally classified as agricultural or forestal, but are suitable to agriculture.

Under this law, the indigenous peoples can be considered as “direct” or “collective” owners of the land they till, as evide’nced by a certificate of land ownership award, after compliance with its  rules and subject to limitations as to the right of transferring the same.

With respect to inalienable lands of the public domain, the tenurial rights of the indigenous peoples can be described as merely possessory in character in the concept of a steward, lessee or hired laborer.

This category of right can be seen in the Revised Forestry Code which was enacted to apply to lands classified as forest lands. As such, the only rights which can be obtained therefrom are possessory and use rights. Specifically, these rights include the rights to utilize, exploit, occupy, and conduct other activities thereon, subject to the grant of license and other limitations.

The rights of the indigenous peoples have likewise been considered in the various DENR programs which cater to the Governmment’s task of protecting the environmment.

Under the ISFP, a member of the indigenous community can enjoy the exclusive rights of possession, occupation and use of the land by undertaking the role and responsibilities of a steward. Corollary to such rights are the rights of transfer, but not the right of ownership, the rights and duties of a steward; the right of pre-emption and the right to receive just compensation in certain cases. The exercise of these rights is limited as to the area, period of possessidn, species that may be planted, and other responsibilities.

Under the Contract Reforestation Program, as modified by the FLMA, indigenous peoples’ rights are shared with NGOs, local government units, and the private sector, in the task of reforesting denuded portions of the public domain. Initially, the rights given were similar to those of a hired laborer whereby contractors are compensated for the work accomplished. Nevertheless, the subsequent issuance of the FLMA expanded to a certain extent the rights and improved the status of the indigenous peoples to that of a lessee with rights to harvest, process, sell or otherwise utilize the products grown on the land for a maximum period of fifty (50) years.

Having examined the foregoing tenurial rights afforded by the Philippine legal system with respect to lands they have been occupying since time immemorial, let us now review their options. Indeed, the utmost interest of the indigenous peoples is to have their titles, acquired by virtue of their own customs and traditions, recognized by our legal system.

On the strength of the Supreme Court ruling in the Paran case — that notwithstanding the present classification of lands into inalienable lands where the applicant is found to have satisfied the requisites of RA 3872 while the same was still in force and prior to its amendment by PD 1073, the right to a confirmation of title has become vested as of the moment that the requisite character and period of possession was completed by the applicant for registration indigenous peoples can have their rights of ownership registered under our legal system.

Where the applicant is unable to satisfy the ruling in Paran, he can opt to avail of the redistribution plan under the Agrarian Reform Law, provided the land is not among those excluded from the coverage of the program.

Where the land is classified as timber or forest land and the applicant is unable to satisfy the requirements laid down in the Paran case, he can avail of the arrangements under the various 1SF and Contract Reforestation Programs. Nevertheless, their participation in these programs might be construed as an abandonment of their claims of ownership over the land.

Ancestral Domain: Concepts and Applications

Up until now, the rights of indigenous people or cultural communities have remained largely in the domain of preserving a quaint cultural heritage, something that the mainstream, i.e. Christian and westernized culture, has graciously accorded recognition to. But, as competitors for socio-political and economic rights, the Philippine indigenous cultures have yet to extricate themselves from the status of a marginalized minority in order to be counted among the rest of the society whose rights are guaranteed and protected by existing Philippine laws. In this paper, the right of the ancestral domain is treated as a focal point at which all other rights of indigenous peoples find convergence and context. The recognition and legislation of this most ancient human right translate to recognition and acknowledgement of the right to life and, more importantly, of the right to the means to sustain life.

The term “indigenous peoples and cultures” refers to the pre-colonial inhabitants of the Philipines and their descendants whose cultures have survived acculturation, remaining more or less intact despite unceasing and prolonged contact with westernized Filipino culture and Christianization over the last 400 years. On the island of Luzon, they are the inhabitants of the Cordilleras, a prominent chain of mountains that bisect the island into an east-west division. At the turn of the century, this whole region was known as Mountain Province.

On the smaller island of Luzon and in the Visayas there live various types of Pygmy peoples known as Agta, Aeta or Negritos who are considered as the oldest aboriginal race in the Philippines. In Mindanao and Sulu, the indigenous populations are the Islamized Maranaos, Tausug, Maguindanao, Sangil, etc. and the animist highlanders of Davao, Cotabato, Agusan, Misamis and Bukidnon Provinces. Although intermarriages among the different indigenous groups and, to a lesser degree, with Visayan, Ilocano, and other Christian groups have been observed over the last four centuries , each group has been able to preserve a distinct cultural identity, mainly through the preservation of its native language. Thus, they are commonly referred to as ethnolinguistic groups or cultural communities, to distinguish them from the mainstream Christianized and westernized Filipino cultures.

The Indigenous Peoples of the Cordilleras

Filipinos born on the Gran Cordillera Central were popularly and collectively known as “Igorots” ( Scott 1977:2). There were, however, six main ethnolinguistic groups: the Isneg, Kalinga, Bontoc, Ifugao, Kankanay, and Ibaloy. The Spaniards made use of the native word tingues or tinguianes, meaning high or elevated as in a mountain, and indiscriminately applied this word to all peoples who dwelt in the mountainous regions of Luzon, particularly the Cordilleras, synonymously with the word “Igorrotes” from where the popular term Igorot, came. This was done to distinguish them from the lowland- dwelling and Christianized Filipinos who were called “Indios”, as the rest of the colonized peoples and nations of the vast Spanish colonial’ empire, España en Ultramar were known. It was also during this time that the word “tribe”, tribus independientes, was appropriately applied to these groups who paid no taxes to the Spanish King, did not attend masses or wore trousers, etc. Although in 1839 the Comandancias Politico- Militares were organized for the Cordillera region, very little was known of its success or failure, since the whole Spanish’ colonial government in the Philippines came to an end in 1898 ( Ibid:2- 4).

From the start, Spaniards were drawn to the famed gold in the Cordilleras, although their efforts to exploit and control the gold trade were on the whole, unsuccessful. The succeeding American colonization period might have done better work in this regard. American prospectors staked mining claims all over the Benguet area. The imposition of new land laws–including mining— finally ended the Ibaloy monopoly on the gold trade (Brett 1989:9). Moreover, Ibaloys lost their lands through sale, non-registration, expropriation, and donations as in the case of Mateo Carifio ‘s donation of an extensive area, beginning with the present site of Burnham Park up to the Baguio City Hall. However, Carifio a native Ibaloy, won a landmark decision from the US Supreme Court over the expropriation of his pasture lands—totalling 174 hectares—by the American government. The US Supreme Court’s decision to recognize Cariiio’s ownership of these lands was based on the now famous legal doctrine that, “land which has been occupied since time immemorial is presumed never to have been public” (Ibid.). Eventually, all mining activities in Bontoc and Kalinga were ordered to cease by American administrators because of the intensive opposition of the natives who considered the area as their heritage and patrimony.

The Aetas

Of the few true Negrito groups still surviving in the country today, the Aetas of Zambales or Pinatubo Aytas ( Shimizu 1989: 6-19) are an example of an indigenous ethnic group that has persisted despite centuries of being a marginalized population. Unlike the Ifugaos, the Kalingas or Bontocs of the Cordilleras who became cultural minorities as a consequence of colonization- the Aetas from the very beginning of Spanish colonial history were already a cultural and racial minority. The rest of their kind, such as the Palawan Aetas, the Dumagats of Quezon, and the Bataks of Palawan Islands may already be on the verge of extinction. The same may be said of the Mamanua of Mindanao who have intermarried with other indigenous groups such as the Manobo to the extent that many Mamanua are no longer recognizable as Negritos.

On the other hand, the Aetas of Zambales or Pinatubo Aytas, although no longer speaking their original language, have managed to preserve the rest of their culture as evidenced by 20th century ethnographic documentation by modern scholars. It seems that of all the Negrito groups presently surviving in the Philippines, the Pinatubo Aytas have evinced a high degree of resilience, as reflected in marked increases in their present population.

The collective experience of the Aetas may not be very different from other non-Christian Filipinos. Their relationships ,1 with neighboring lowlanders, such as the Kapampangans and Sambals, were characteristically blighted by landgrabbing and other forms of despoliation. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries the Kapampangan drove them away from their settlements and planted these with rice and sugarcane. The  Sambals, were wont to kidnap Aetas for slavery. On their part, the Aetas made economic forays to the lowlands for cattle and other food. This state of affairs persisted well into the American regime and even into the present times (Larkin in Shimizu 1989:12).

The Indigenous Peoples of Mindanao and Sulu

Most of the indigenous peoples of Mindanao, who lived in the vast interiors of the second biggest island in the Philippines, were not known to the Spaniards until the nineteenth century. The Spaniards were more acquainted with the Muslim groups who lived in the Sulu Archipelago and western part of Mindanao. In many parts of the island their mode of occupation and settlement more or less followed a certain distinct pattern. They were mostly coastal and riverine dwellers who controlled strategic points of trade such as the mouths of rivers of the various bays along the indented coastline of Mindanao. The forests and mountainous interiors, on the other hand, were home to several animist groups, beginning with the Manobos, who might have been the largest cultural group in Mindanao at this time. It was this group which appeared everywhere in the Spanish historical accounts. There were Manobos in all four directions of the compass, in contrast to other groups which appeared to be localized in certain areas, such as the Bagobo of Davao, the Tiruray of Northern Cotabato, the B’laan of Sarangani Bay, etc.

The modus vivendi obtaining in the nineteenth century among these different indigenous groups could be best described as an economic one; the animist peoples were mostly swidden farmers who cultivated rice as their main crop. In excess of subsisitence needs, rice and forest products were traded with the Muslims for articles such as iron, beads, and other ornamental products. The Muslims appeared to play a middlemen’s role in this seagoing export trade; forest products from Mindanao were traded with goods from other islands, such as the Malay Archipelago, and particularly, Singapore.

The preponderance of the Spanish terms infieles (pagans) and asesinos ( assasins) in Mindanao accounts betrayed, in many ways, the failure of the missionaries’ efforts to Christianize and “reduce”, i.e. subjugate the natives of Mindanao and Sulu. This is a historical fact, which to many native groups, particularly the Muslim Tausug, Maguindanao, Maranao, etc., is a source of “national “pride. Today, it is most unfortunate that this same source of pride among those who were not effectively colonized and Christianized is, at the same time, the source of their cultural alienation from the present mainstream culture of Christianized and Westernized Filipinos. Even more unfortunate is the fact that the history of the Philippine indigenous cultural communities has been one of despoliation, first by the foreign colonizers and now, by some of their own countrymen.

A Brief Historical Background of the Ancestral Lands Question

In a review of legal and juridical precedents of land .tenure cases involving indigenous cultural communities, authors Angeles and Gloria arrived at some portentous findings: legal decisions affecting the tenurial rights of indigenous cultural communities appeared to diminish rather than enhance these rights. “It would seem that the present legal system operates to divest the indigenous peoples of such titles through laws and doctrines which are either manifestly inadequate or are in utter disregard of such rights” ( Angeles and Gloria 1993:4). The landmark decision on the Carifio case in 1909 was persistently attenuated by succeeding laws, beginning with the Public Land Act of 1936, which limited applications for land titles to “alienable or disposable lands of the public domain”.

In 1964, this right was extended to lands of the public domain, suitable to agriculture, whether disposable or not, for as long as such lands have been in “open”, continuous, exclusive and notorious occupation”by members of the national cultural communities, i.e. indigenous communities, under a bona fide claim of ownership for at least thirty years. Then, in 1974, the Ancestral Lands Decree, which defined ancestral lands for the first time, was promulgated by the then President Ferdinand Marcos:

[Ancestral lands are] lands of the public domain that have been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious occupation and possession by a national cultural community by themselves or through their ancestors , under a bona fide claim of acquisition of ownership according to their customs and traditions for a period of at least thirty (30) years before the date of approval of this decree. (Ibid:14)

This decree covered all appropriated agricultural lands of the public domain occupied and cultivated by indigenous Filipinos .The following year, the Revised Forestry Code of the Philippines declared that lands with slopes of 18% or more were not to be classified as alienable or disposable and even those which had earlier been classified as such were to be reverted to forest lands. By this law, almost all indigenous communities being the predominant occupants of uplands, were legally prevented from claiming ownership of the lands they had occupy and cultivated since the time of their ancestors.

Thus, the vagaries of the concept of aboriginal title are such that, presently, no legal pronouncement recognizes it. “… the presumption [ is] that lands occupied and cultivated by the tribal Filipinos by themselves or through their ancestors, where no certificate of title has been issued… form part of the public domain and are converted into private lands only upon the award by the government with such lands to them.”(Ibid:21)

A definition of ancestral lands that embodies the concert of aboriginal title, has been pending in the Philippine Congress since 1988 in two versions: Senate Bill Nos. 152(1988) and 909 (1989) and House Bill No. 33881 (1990). The Senate Bull recognizes the “historic rights of indigenous communities and the principle of communal ownership of land. House Bill Not 33881, on the other hand, would recognize tenurial rights adz already existing, regardless of whether the lands in question were alienable or disposable.”

More recently, the implementing guidelines for the identification, delineation, and recognition of Ancestral Domain claims were provided for by Department Administration Order No.2 (DAO No.2) of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources. The Administrative Order reaffirmed the definition of Ancestral Lands and Ancestral Domain contained in House Bill No. 33881. Moreover, the composition of Ancestral Domain has been extended to residences, farms, and burial grounds irrespective of their present classification and utilization. As of this writing, however, this Administrative  Order has not been applied to any indigenous cultural community.

Land As Property and Wealth

The concept of real property in regard to land has no counterpart in the indigenous categories. This is not to say that land. and the “ownership” of it, holds no significance to the indigenous peoples who directly and exclusively derive their subsistence from the land. Not a few native myths and legends trace the origins of the world and mankind to the soil. The creation myths of the T’ boli of South Cotabato and the Tagakaulo of Davao del Sur, among others, tell of how the world was created from bits of soil that clung to a bird’s claws. Mankind itself could only be sustained after the world was moulded from bits of the mythical soil.

The primacy of land ownership as an index of wealth or property has been sufficiently established in agricultural societies such as the Philippines. Among the indigenous communities, however, land is not regarded as a material possession that could make one rich. On the other hand, the number of horses, wives, and the number of relatives and other people one could afford to feed at any given time are signs of wealth. As for land, there was more than enough of it for everybody, at least in the past, and if one did not like one’s neighbors, one simply moved out to look for another kaingin where one could enjoy his home and his work in tranquility. Few desired to become rich; the acquisition of material possessions, such as horses or number of wives, was not the aspiration of the ordinary individual. Indeed, even a bountiful harvest was not really desirable, since it would only attract hordes of relatives and friends to one’s table.

In order to appreciate the indigenous concept of land meaningfully, it is necessary to contextualize it in the ecological relationship that exists between the people and their land. Within the ecological purview, the people owe their existence to the land, much as the land is nurtured by the people. This bondedness between land and people is explicit in the culture. which in more ways than one truly represents the aggregate of adaptations that the people have made to the land and the rest of the physical environment. The land bears the unmistakable imprints, (e.g. kaingin farms, gravesites, houses, etc.) of those who live off its various resources.

Territorial boundaries are difficult to delineate because these are frequently crossed by intercommunal marriages and the attitude of openness in regard to living space. Swidden practises are sustained by field rotations which require families and households to constantly move around in search of new swidden plots. This openness, rather than exclusiveness, of settlements complements the sparseness of upland populations. On the other hand, the extensive requirements of land use is a stark contrast to the limited notion of possesory rights, especially in regard to land. Yet, the geographic distribution of native settlements, as described in historical documents of more than a hundred years ago, corresponds with amazing accuracy to present day accounts. Necessarily, this implies a more or less stable geographic occupation, by each ethnolinguistic group, of its turf.

The notion of exclusiveness of turf or territory is applied only on certain occasions, such as during a wake in the community. The norms of silence and proper decorum are strictly observed during funerals and burials. The exclusion of strangers and other outsiders, who are ignorant of the local norms in respect of the dead, is necessary to prevent the violation of these norms. For the same reason, gravesites are tabooed places
and among the same people great effort is exerted in making gravesites secret and their locations hidden from public knowledge.

Among the Ata of Kapalong, Davao Province, a previously agreed upon schedule for radiotaping songs and dances in the community had to be canceled because someone had died, and the local datu or chieftain, who was supposed to lead the other native performers, refused to proceed for fear of offending his own people.

The Dulangan Manobo of Sultan Kudarat Province practice secondary burial. The primary burial of their dead is made in the same house where the living relatives also stay. The tree coffin, sealed with almaciga resin and ashes from the family hearth, allows no tell-tale bad odors to escape and the coffin itself may look like a piece of furniture to outsiders. After a good harvest, which may be two or three years after the primary burial, the coffin is removed from the house, to be transferred to its secondary, and final, resting place in the forest. The exact place of burial is known only to a few relatives and friends who helped carry the coffin.

The true value of the land is usufruct. The land must be worked to make it yield the fruits of the earth. In this way, the fruits of one’s labor on the land become the true model of the concept of personal and real properties. Clothes, weapons, personal ornaments, especially those fashioned and crafted by one’s own hand through the use of one’s skills, are regarded as personal properties. Those which are highly valued by their owners are buried with them at death and may not be transferred to someone else.

It is apparent that wealth brings with it the responsibility,e.g. the obligation to feed visitors who flock to the datu’s table during festivals. A model for a rich man is the datu, the local chieftain, who has several horses, wives/children and can afford to provide not only for his big family but also fora number of warriors, who are attached to his household. As an institution, however, the datu is significant, not so much as the repository of wealth and power, as one who is known for his wisdom in settling disputes and resolving conflicts. Hence, another kind of wealth is prestige, which derives from the attributes of the datu’s personality. As for land, it is not a commodity that may be possessed with a legal title to be sold, traded, or preserved under anyone’s rights in perpetuity.

Law and Order

Transgressions of customary law are settled by the payment of fines – to avert bloodshed. Violence, as in many pre-modern societies, is the inevitable outcome of heinous behavior and other social aberrations, such as murder or homicide. Retaliation and vengeance for such crimes are exacted through vendetta or private wars, which can easily involve a great number of people from other communities, since the desire to avenge oneself is inflicted indiscriminately, costing the lives of many innocent people. This is the notorious pangayao, a customary form of warfare, still practiced by many native groups in Mindanao.

In the town of Lebak, in Sultan Kudarat, a Dulangan Manobo boy was accidentally killed by a bayatik, a local trap for wildboars. The boy’s family was so aggrieved by his death that two male relatives were designated to “avenge” it. These two killed a young B ‘laan boy whom they chanced upon along the trail. He was alone on his way home from school.

…mediately, the B’ laan boy’s relatives made ready to retaliate. But for the timely intervention of the school authorities and local police, who rounded up the Dulangan Manobo killers, together with their relatives who attempted to stand off the authorities in a cave in the forests, the incident would have easily escalated into a full blown pangayao.

Sometimes, a violent crime such as murder would be punished only by banishment. In 1992, among the same people, a jealous man killed his wife, who was a relative of the datu. The cause of the husband’s jealousy was well-known to the community – a man already known for past indiscretions and an inability to keep his affairs secret. The police arrested the husband for the murder, but the community’s rage at the man who was the cause of it all was implacable. This man, knowing his precarious situation in the community, vanished after the incident and his act, according to the people, was just the right thing to do. It was equivalent to voluntary banishment – he may never return to the same community whose dignity he had sullied. The datu confiscated his crops, house, and animals.

Resource Utilization

Indigenous communities derive their livelihood directly from the land, forest, mountains, and streams found in the environment. The physical environment is likened to an indigenous” supermarket” where many, if not all, of their needs are satisfied. The main difference is that one does not have to pay for the commodities that one secures from this indigenous supermarket. One simply helps oneself to the trees for construction and fuel needs, the fruits and wild animals for food, and the secret herbs for medicine and rituals.

Swidden farmers are partly food collectors and gatherers
who regard the environment as a communal resources Occasionally, they would “gather food” from other people’s farms, if these happen to live in the same vicinity. and deny that they were stealing, for the forest is for everybody. The bigger problem is resource utilization where the uplands and forest have ceased to be communally owned because portions of them have been leased by big industrial companies, or worse titled and owned by migrant and non-indigenous farmers. Until now, the influx of migrant farmers to the Mindanao upland continues to displace hundreds of families of indigenous peoples and to drive them to much higher slopes, where they are accused of being the immediate cause of soil erosion because of their farming methods, forest denudation. due to the unauthorised cutting of trees or illegal logging, and other environmental offenses.

Ironically, the indigenous concepts and methods of resource utilization preclude the dangers of abuse and depredation of nature. Unlike commercial users, indigenous communities take only what they need. They only clear what they can cultivate in the forest; plant and hunt only what they can consume, etc. Until now, their wants and needs seldom exceed subsistence requirements for themselves and their families. The field rotation methods employed in kaingin or-swidden farming are extensive rather than intensive cultivation. thus allowing the land and the soil to lie fallow and regenerate The native upland farmers say that, in the past, fields were planted only once. Today they say that if the same piece of land were planted more than twice in succession, it would he offended and would not allow the plants to grow. A further deterrent to the abuse or overuse of nature’s resources is inherent in their belief system, which is polytheistic and animistic. Plants and animals, rocks, caves, rivers, and streams, etc. are each believed to have an owner or a resident spirit which acts as its

guardian and protector. To appropriate or use any of these I One must first ask the permission of the spirit-guardian some cases, perform the necessary ritual.

The Individual and Society

The “community-ness- of swidden farmers is not easily apprehended. As a correlate of the extensive method of agriculture, swidden dwellings are rarely found in compact settlements. Habitations are widely dispersed along mountain slopes or hilltops, each household preferring to live as far away from its neighbor as wisely possible. However, it is not as if they have little wish for human company. A generation or two native of the Mindanao highlands would go without personal adornments of beads and bangles. A ubiquitous ornament was the tiny, brass belts, armlets, and anklets so that the tiniest movement of the body produced the tinkling of numerous hells. It would he impossible to hide one’s presence in the forest because of these bells hut, as a matter of fact, as a native woman said, the tinkling of the bells was meant to announce the presence of another human being and an invitation to make a new acquaintance.

Despite sporadic contacts with one another, each indigenous cultural group is held together by a common language, an evidence of active communication among members of the same group and across different ethnolinguistic groups, since one can he understood in another indigenous community which has a different language. Besides language, the little that left of the socioeconomic, religious, and aesthetic institutions hold the native communities together. Myths and legends have ants everywhere, while characteristics of the material culture c. exhibited in various forms by different communities. This is true of weaving, dresses and ornaments, musical instruments. tools and weapons, etc.

A problem that arises from a highly stable culture is ethnocentrism. Small cultural groups are often prone to this. The native perspective is frequently shackled to its own perception of reality and may regard the larger society and the state as not only extraneous but irrelevant to this reality. Rarely do indigenous communities regard themselves as part of the nation-state, with rights as well as corresponding obligations.

The most salient political institution is the datu, who is a local funtionary and, at best, an informal leader. The datu wields no real political power in the western sense, but as an arbitrator, his job is to settle disputes through the use of good counsel and wise directions. When peaceful counsellings fails, the datu usually takes recourse in the exercise of the power to punish violently. He bids his warrior – followers to kill and eliminate recalcitrant elements.

The ordinary individual in the community takes care of his/her own problems on a personal level, seldom bringing any of them to the datu. This is because the customs governing social interaction usually are enough to prevent conflict. For instance, the mode of settlement pattern which favors scattered as against compact settlements fortuitously reduces interpersonal contact between and among households thereby minimizing potential conflicts at their source. In the relative isolation of dwellings and households, individual problems are those that revolve around prosaic activities in the family kaingin and for most of these the agency of the various spirits and gods in the indigenous belief system is sufficient to deal with a wide range of problems.

It would seem that, in this case, the ordinary individual in an indigenous community has little need of the society or the state and conversely, the larger society and state must be hard put to find a measure of pertinence for the indigenous communities, except that they exist. But for the fact that they co-exist in the same geographic, social, and historical context, these two entities – the indigenous communities and the nation-state-would probably be better off without each other.

Stewardship vs. Ownership: The Application of Ancestral Domain

The implementation of Ancestral Domain has been the responsibility of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), the government agency which exercises jurisdiction over the management and disposition of lands of the public domain. This department is also the implementing agency for Republic Act No. 7586, which provides for the due recognition of Ancestral Domain and other customary rights of indigenous peoples under the program, National Integrated Protected Areas System (NIPAS). Under the DENR’s National Forestry Program and, in particular, of the Integrated Social Forestry Program (ISFP), the interpretation and application of Ancestral Domain has been one of the stewardship and not ownership. The ISFP allows members of indigenous communities and the communities themselves to apply for a certificate of stewardship of forest land for a period of 25 years, renewable for another 25 years.

At best, the ISFP provides indigenous communities a maximum tenure of fifty years for purposes of farming and agriculture in the uplands. However, unlike ownership, stewardship is conceivably limited by the objectives of the Program which are the development of the uplands and maintaining ecological balance. Although the improvement of socio-economic conditions and alleviation of poverty of peoples who derive their livelihood from forest lands are also cited as part of the Program concerns, clearly, the more paramount interest is the rehabilitation of the upland watersheds through reforestation, among other means.

The idea of stewardship, rather than ownership, must have been derived from the very same economic and cultural characteristics of the indigenous communities who do not regard land as property and do not consider the ownership of it as wealth. However, apart from the fact that stewardship is a circumvention of the concept of Ancestral Domain, the application of stewardship is fraught with numerous impositions that serve to attenuate even the indigenous concept of usufruct.

The size of stewardship areas is limited to five hectares for individuals and families, whereas the indigenous land use and the requirements of field rotation for extensive cultivation in kaingin practices would easily cover a couple of square kilometers or 200 hectares for any two generations of indigenous communities. The best evidence for this is the geographic spread of indigenous communities which has remained virtually unchanged over the last one hundred years.

The ISFP is open to “Individuals, families, or forest communities/associations including indigenous cultural communities…” (TheISFP : A primer, 1982: 12 underscoring supplied). The inclusion of indigenous communities is somewhat an afterthought and clearly indicates that the Program was not designed for the special case of the indigenous groups. It is a recognition of the presence of farmers, other than the indigenous cultivators in the Philippine uplands. Wittingly or unwittingly, the Program is an inducement for more migrant settlers to populate the ancestral lands of the indigenous peoples.

In fact, the thrust of the whole National Forestry Program (DENR„ 1991) is the economic development of forest plantations and agro-forestry estates by upland communities, government (GOs), and non-government organization (NGOs), and other enterpreneurs. The development and well-being of human communities who live in the uplands are expected to automatically follow the economic growth that will result from large-scale commercial activities in the heretofore unproductive and denuded uplands.

In this enterprise, man appears as a secondary, if not incidental, factor in the main goal, which is redressing the ecological imbalance between ” man vs. nature”. That man is seen as an antagonist of nature is a further indication of an underlying orientation of man as nature’s adversary. Certainly, the indigenous perception of nature is quite contrary to this.

The 50- year limitation on stewardship might have been based on a prognosis that in two generations the indigenous cultural communities would have been completely acculturated and transformed into Westernized and Christianized communities, living sedentarily in compact upland hamlets, using intensive rather than extensive farming methods, and planting trees instead of rice as their main crop. A hindsight of more than 100 years however, tells us that such a prognosis is far-fetched. It would take more carefully designed methods of intervention other than community organization and transfer technology, to induce and catalyze the acculturation process.

On the other hand, ownership of land under Ancestral Domain would be a recognition not only of the indigenous
right to lands that they have been tilling “since time immemorial” but also of the right to sustain a culture different from the rest of the nation. Entitlement, in the aboriginal sense, would enable the indigenous communities not only to assert their right on the land but to manage forest and other natural resources in their respective domains. Even if the exercise of this right were to be interpreted in a limited sense,i.e. the DENR reserves the right to regulate the cutting of forest timber, it would nevertheless serve as an ample protection of the interest of the indigenous communities from the encroachments of outsiders.

The most critical problem facing the indigenous communities at present is land despoliation, which opens the door to the other deprivations currently suffered by them. Without lands, they are forced to seek subsistence from dubious sources, such as mendicancy, or through some illegal means like cattle rustling and illegal logging. In the 1980s, a number of indigenous communities were driven to throw in their lot with the Communist New People’s Army. In South Cotabato, the B’laan, who have leased their land to DOLE Philippines for as low as $135 a year per hectare, are encouraged to plant their crops along the margins of pineapple plots. Landless B’laan and other indigenous communities, who have been forced to leave the uplands, are the most destitute. They have been clustered in makeshift lowland dwellings and earn a living as hired laborers in Christian – owned farms for a wage of $1.50 a day. To all appearances, these indigenous groups are a captive labor force for other Filipinos.

Conclusion

The concept of Ancestral Domain has long been fettered with westernized and legalist notions of land ownership, a state of affairs that places the indigenous communities at a severe disadvantage. The requirements of procedure and compliance have been made from assumptions that native peoples think and behave appropriately whenever mandated by lawful authority. These assumptions fail to consider the point that the indigenous peoples perceive law and authority from an altogether different standpoint.

Thus, while the indigenous valuation of land is usufruct, to say that stewardship, rather than ownership, is the equivalent of the concept is treading on precarious grounds. Indigenous communities regard the continuous utilization of the land as an aboriginal right. It is the right that the diwata or spirits have given to them and their ancestors at the beginning of time for as long as the use of land is necessary to sustain their existence on this earth. It is a birthright that no legal title can proscribe or diminish. This right is inextricably intertwined with the kaingin or swidden economy and, ultimately, the whole of the indigenous culture. Without land, their cultures cannot be sustained. Without a cultural equipment, indigenous communities cannot long survive in their struggle for existence.