1935-1987 Constitution, I.P.R.A. 8371, U.N. Declaration Of I.P. IPRA CASE Book And Other R.A. And P.D.
Table of Contents
- 1935 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines
- United Nation Declaration of Indigenous People
- A Divided Court: I.P.R.A. Case Book
- Philippine Constitution 1987
- Implementing Guidelines R.A. 8371
- 20 100 Peso Bill 1935 Constitution
- NCIP-DENR-CIR. MEMO. ORDER P.D. 772
- Supreme Court History
- Overdue Philippine Independence
- Presidential Decree 722
- Jones Law
- KFH Compromise Agreement
- Presidential Decree 892
- Wiki US Memo
- NCIP Cover Letter
- Constitution of the Philippines evolution 6.2.10
- International Covenant on Economic. O.C.T.01-04
- Judicial corruption phil.9.12.10
- L.R.A. 1903. PHIL ACT 496
- LAND RIGHTS HISTORY SOVEREIGNTY 12.18.09
- PENA LAW BOOK LRA. LAND TITLES AND DEEDS
- PRESIDENTIAL DECREE NO 1521
- Promotion of Human Rights and Democratisation in the EU
- R.A.386 WORKOUT
- R.P. NATIONAL TREASURY CIRCULAR 2009
- REPUBLIC ACT NO. 4864 LOCALPOLICE COMMISSION
- REPUBLIC ACT No. 6040.C.S.C
- REPUBLIC ACT No. 6770 OMBUDSMAN
- Republic Act No. 6975 D.I.L.G. PNP
- RES JUDICATA
- State and Jusdicial 9.11.10. 1987 Constitution
- The Constitution of the United States 9.12.10
- The Philippine-American Constitution and Independence
- U.S. Declaration Treaty of Paris
- Laws
Implementing Guidelines R.A. 8371
National Commission on Indigenous Peoples
Administrative Order No. 1
Series of 1998
RULES AND
REGULATIONS IMPLEMENTING
REPUBLIC ACT NO. 8371, OTHERWISE KNOWN AS
“THE INDIGENOUS PEOPLES’ RIGHTS ACT OF 1997”
Pursuant to Section 80 of
Republic Act No. 8371, otherwise known as “The Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Act
of 1997” (IPRA), the following rules and regulations are hereby promulgated for
the guidance and compliance of all concerned.
RULE I . PRELIMINARY
PROVISIONS
Section 1.
Title. These
rules shall be known and cited as “The Rules and Regulations Implementing The
Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Act of 1997” (IPRA).
Section 2.
Purpose. These
rules are hereby promulgated to prescribe the procedures and guidelines for the
implementation of Republic Act No. 8371, otherwise known as “The Indigenous
Peoples’ Rights Act of 1997” (IPRA) in order to facilitate compliance therewith
and achieve the objectives thereof.
Section 3.
Declaration of Policy. The State recognizes the inherent dignity and equal and
inalienable rights of all members of Philippine society as the foundation of
freedom, justice and peace. The rights of indigenous cultural communities /
indigenous peoples are universal, indivisible, interdependent and interrelated.
It is, therefore, the policy of the state to recognize and promote all
individual and collective rights of ICCs/IPs within the framework of national
unity and development in accordance with the Constitution and applicable norms
and principles.
Section 4. Operating
Principles. In implementing the policies enumerated in these Rules, the
following operating principles shall be adhered to:
a) Cultural Diversity. As the beginning of unity is
difference, the diversity of cultures, traditions, beliefs and aspirations of
indigenous peoples shall be encouraged and fostered in openness, mutual respect
for, and active defense of the equal and inalienable dignity and universal,
indivisible, interdependent and interrelated rights of every human being, in
the spirit of inter-people cooperation;
b) Consensus and Peace-Building. In resolving conflicts or
disputes affecting or pertaining to indigenous peoples, any determination or
decision thereon shall be reached through dialogue and consensus as far as
practicable;
c) Cultural Integrity. Within ancestral domains/lands, the
holistic and integrated adherence of indigenous peoples to their respective
customs, beliefs, traditions, indigenous knowledge systems and practices, and
the assertion of their character and identity as peoples shall remain
inviolable;
d) Human Dignity. The inherent and inalienable distinct
character, sacred human dignity, and unique identity of indigenous peoples as
peoples shall be respected;
e) Subsidiary, Solidarity and Total Human Development. In
the pursuit of civil, political, economic, social and cultural development, the
human person shall be the central subject thereof and its active participant
and beneficiary. Everyone has duties to the community. In the exercise of
rights and freedoms, everyone shall be subject only to such limitations as are
determined by custom or law, solely for the purpose of securing due recognition
and respect for the rights and freedoms of others and of meeting the just
requirements of morality, public order and the general welfare in a democratic
society; and
f) Transparency and
RULE II. DEFINITION OF
TERMS
Section 1.
Definition of Terms. For purposes of these Rules and Regulations the following terms
shall mean:
a) Ancestral Domains. Refers to all areas generally
belonging to ICCs/IPs, subject to property rights within ancestral domains
already existing and/or vested upon the effectivity
of the Act, comprising lands, inland waters, coastal areas, and natural
resources therein, held under a claim of ownership, occupied or possessed by
ICCs/IPs by themselves or through their ancestors, communally or individually
since time immemorial, continuously to the present, except when interrupted by
war, force majeure or displacement by force, deceit, stealth, or as a
consequence of government projects or any voluntary dealings entered into by
the government and private individuals/ corporations, and which are necessary
to ensure their economic, social and cultural welfare. It shall include
ancestral lands, forests, pasture, residential, agricultural, and other lands
individually owned whether alienable and disposable or otherwise; hunting
grounds: burial grounds; worship areas; bodies of water; mineral and other
natural resources; and lands which may no longer be exclusively occupied by
ICCs/IPs, but from which they traditionally had access to, for their
subsistence and traditional activities, particularly the home ranges of
ICCs/IPs who are still nomadic and/or shifting cultivators.
b) Ancestral Lands. Refers to land, subject to property
rights within the ancestral domains already existing and/or vested upon effectivity of the Act, occupied, possessed and utilized by
individuals, families and clans who are members of the ICCs/ IPs since time
immemorial, by themselves or through their predecessors-in-interest, under
claims of individual or traditional group ownership, continuously, to the
present except when interrupted by war, force majeure or displacement by force,
deceit, stealth, or as a consequence of government projects and other voluntary
dealings entered into by government and private individuals/corporations,
including, but not limited to, residential lots, rice terraces or paddies,
private forests, widen farms and tree lots.
c) Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT). Refers to
a title formally recognizing the rights of possession and ownership of ICCs/IPs
over their ancestral domains identified and delineated in accordance with this
law.
d) Certificate of Ancestral Land Title (CALT). Refers to a
title formally recognizing the rights of ICCs/IPs over their ancestral lands.
e) Culture Sensitive. Refers to the quality of being
compatible and appropriate to the culture, beliefs, customs and traditions,
indigenous systems and practices of ICCs/IPs.
f) Communal Claims. Refer to claims on land, resources and
rights thereon belonging to the whole community within a defined territory.
g)
h) Customary Laws. Refer to a body of written or unwritten
rules, usages, customs and practices traditionally observed, accepted and
recognized by respective ICCs/ IPs.
i) Customs and Practices. Refers to norms of conduct and
patterns of relationships or usages of a community over time accepted and
recognized as binding on all members.
j) Community Intellectual Rights. Refer to the rights of
ICCs/IPs to own, control, develop and protect: (a) the past, present and future
manifestations of their cultures, such as but not limited to, archeological and
historical sites, artifacts, designs, ceremonies, technologies, visual and
performing arts and literature as well as religious and spiritual properties;
(b) science and technology including, but not limited to, human and other
genetic resources, seeds, medicine, health practices, vital medicinal plants,
animals and minerals, indigenous knowledge systems and practices, resource
management systems, agricultural technologies, knowledge of the properties of
fauna and flora, oral traditions, designs, scientific discoveries; and, (c)
language, script, histories, oral traditions and teaching and learning systems.
k) Free and Prior Informed Consent. As used in the Act,
shall mean the consensus of all members of the ICCs/IPs to be determined in
accordance with their respective customary laws and practices, free from any
external manipulation, interference and coercion, and obtained after fully
disclosing the intent and scope of an activity, in a language and process
understandable to the community.
l) Indigenous Cultural Communities/ Indigenous Peoples
(ICCs/IPs). Refer to a group of people or homogenous societies identified
by self-ascription and ascription by others, who have continuously lived as
organized community on communally bounded and defined territory, and who have, under
claims of ownership since time immemorial, occupied, possessed and utilized
such territories, sharing common bonds of language, customs, traditions and
other distinctive cultural traits, or who have, through resistance to
political, social and cultural inroads of colonization, non-indigenous
religions and cultures, became historically differentiated from the majority of
Filipinos. ICCs/IPs shall, likewise include peoples who are regarded as
indigenous on account of their descent from the populations which inhabited the
country, at the time of conquest or colonization or at the time of inroads of
non-indigenous religions and cultures or the establishment of present state
boundaries who retain some or all of their own social, economic, cultural and
political institutions, but who may have been displaced from their traditional
domains or who may have resettled outside their ancestral domains.
m) Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Act (IPRA) or Act. Heretofore,
the Act shall refer to Republic Act No. 8371.
n) Indigenous Political Structures. Refer to organizational
and cultural leadership systems, institutions, relationships, patterns and
processes for decision making and participation identified by ICCs/ IPs such
as, but not limited to, Council of Elders, Council of Timuay,
Bodong Holders, or any other tribunal or body of
similar nature.
o) Individual Claims. Refer to claims on land and rights
thereon which have been devolved to individuals, families and clans including,
but not limited to, residential lots, rice terraces or paddies and tree lots.
p) Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Practices. Refer to
systems, institutions, mechanisms, and technologies comprising a unique body of
knowledge evolved through time that embody patterns of relationships between and
among peoples and between peoples, their lands and resource environment,
including such spheres of relationships which may include social, political,
cultural, economic, religious spheres, and which are the direct outcome of the
indigenous peoples, responses to certain needs consisting of adaptive
mechanisms which have allowed indigenous peoples to survive and thrive within
their given socio-cultural and biophysical conditions.
q) Large Scale Agriculture. Refers to any commercial or
profit making business activity or enterprise, involving the cultivation of
soil, planting of crops, growing of trees, raising of livestock, poultry fish
or aquaculture production including the harvesting of such farm products, and
other farm activities and practices performed in conjunction with such farming
operations, agribusiness or services, by natural or juridical persons whether
single proprietorship, cooperative, partnership or corporation.
r) National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP). Refers
to the office created under the Act, which shall be under the Office of the
President, and which shall be the primary government agency responsible for the
formulation and implementation of policies, plans and programs to recognize,
protect and promote the rights of ICCs/ IPs.
s) Native Title. Refers to pre-conquest rights to lands and
domains which, as far back as memory reaches, have been held under a claim of
private ownership by ICCs /IPs, have never been public lands and are thus
indisputably presumed to have been held that way since before the Spanish
Conquest.
t) Natural Resources. Refer to life support systems such
as, but not limited to, the sea, coral reefs, soil, lakes, rivers, streams and
forests as well as useful products found therein such as minerals, wildlife,
trees and other plants, including the aesthetic attributes of scenic sites that
are not man-made.
u) Non-Government Organization (NGO). Refers to a private,
non-profit voluntary organization that has been organized primarily for the
delivery of various services to the ICCs/ IPs and has an established track
record for effectiveness and acceptability in the community where it serves.
v) Peoples’ Organization. Refers to a private, non-profit
voluntary organization of members of an ICC/IP which is accepted as
representative of such ICCs/IPs.
w) Self Governance. Refers to the right of ICCs/IPs to
pursue their economic, social, and cultural development; promote and protect
the integrity of their values, practices and institutions; determine, use and
control their own organizational and community leadership systems,
institutions, relationships, patterns and processes for decision making and
participation, such as, but not limited to, Council of Elders, Bodong Holders, Dap-ay, Ator,
Council of Mangkatadong, or any other body of similar
nature.
x) Sustainable Traditional Resource Rights. Refer to the
rights of ICCs/IPs to sustainably use, manage, protect and conserve: a) land,
air, water, and minerals; b) plants, animals and other organisms; c)
collecting, fishing and hunting grounds; d) sacred sites; and e) other areas of
economic, ceremonial and aesthetic value in accordance with their indigenous
knowledge, belief systems, and practices.
y) Time Immemorial. Refers to a period of time when as far
back as memory can go, certain ICCs /IPs are known to have occupied, possessed
and utilized a defined territory devolved to them, by operation of custom law
or inherited from their ancestors, in accordance with their customs and
traditions.
z) Unlawful or Unauthorized Intrusion. Refers to the
occupation of lands and utilization of resources within the ancestral domain
without the consent of the IP concerned or through invasion, violation,
wrongful entry or entry by stealth or force or uninvited entrance upon the
territorial domain of another.
aa) Usurpation. Usurpation of real rights in property or
occupation of real property as defined in Article 312 of the Penal Code is committed
by any person who, by means of violence against or intimidation of persons,
shall take possession of any real property belonging to another.
RULE III : RIGHTS TO
ANCESTRAL DOMAINS/LANDS
Section. 1.
Constitutional and Legal Framework. The State shall protect the rights of ICCs/IPs to their ancestral
domains to ensure their economic, social and cultural well being and shall
recognize the applicability of customary laws governing property rights or
relations in determining the ownership and extent of ancestral domains.
Section 2.
Composition of Ancestral Domains/Lands. Ancestral Domains/ Lands are all areas
generally belonging to the ICCs/IPs, owned, occupied or possessed by themselves
or through their ancestors, communally or individually since time immemorial.
Ancestral lands/domains
shall include such concepts of territories which cover not only the physical
environment but the total environment including the spiritual and cultural
bonds to the areas which the ICCs/IPs possess, occupy and use and to which they
have claims of ownership. Ancestral domain consists of lands, inland waters,
coastal areas, minerals and other natural resources.
Lands within ancestral
domains shall include, but not limited to, ancestral lands, forests,
pasturelands, residential lands, agricultural lands, hunting grounds, burial
grounds, worship areas, land no longer occupied by the ICCs/IPs but from which
they traditionally had access to for their subsistence and traditional activities,
home ranges of ICCs/IPs who are still nomadic and/or shifting cultivators, and
other lands individually owned whether alienable and disposable or otherwise.
Ancestral land shall consist of, but not be limited to, residential lots, rice
terraces or paddies, private forests, swidden farms,
and tree lots. Provided that property rights within the ancestral domains
already existing and/or vested upon effectivity of
the Act, within ancestral domains/lands, shall be respected and recognized. Inland
waters and coastal areas include fishing grounds, collecting grounds, and
bodies of water.
Section 3.
Indigenous Concept of Ownership. Ancestral domains/lands and all resources found therein form the
material bases of the ICCs/IPs’ cultural integrity. The indigenous concept of
ownership therefor, generally holds that ancestral
domains are the ICCs’/IPs’ private but communal property which belongs to all
generations and shall not be sold, disposed nor destroyed. The present
generation who are today’s occupants have the inter-generational responsibility
of conserving the land and natural resources for future generations of ICCs/IPs
to enjoy.
Section 4.
Recognition of Ancestral Domain and Land Rights. The rights of the ICCs/IPs
to their ancestral domains and lands by virtue of native title shall be
recognized and respected. Native title to ancestral domains and lands may be
formally recognized or established through the issuance of corresponding
Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT) or Certificate of Ancestral Land
Title (CALT) as provided in the Act.
All areas within ancestral
domains, whether delineated or not, are presumed to be communally owned and,
pursuant to the indigenous concept of ownership, could not be sold, disposed
nor destroyed.
Areas and resources in the
domains are deemed destroyed if on account of the activity conducted or
applied:
a) The area or resource could no longer serve its normal or
natural functions; or
b) That the area or resource is used in a manner not consistent
with customary laws or agreements of the indigenous peoples concerned; or
c) That the area or resource is used or gathered in a wasteful or
excessive manner resulting to irreversible loss or irreparable damage.
Part II. Rights of
Indigenous Cultural Communities/Indigenous Peoples to Ancestral Domains
Section 1.
Rights of Ownership. ICCs/IPs have rights of ownership over lands, waters, and natural
resources and all improvements made by them at any time within the ancestral
domains/lands. These rights shall include, but not limited to, the right over
the fruits, the right to possess, the right to use, right to consume, right to
exclude and right to recover ownership, and the rights or interests over land
and natural resources. The right to recover shall be particularly applied to
lands lost through fraud or any form of vitiated consent or transferred for an
unconscionable price.
Section 2.
Right to Develop Lands and Natural Resources. Subject to property rights
within the ancestral domains already existing and/or vested upon effectivity of the Act, ICCs/IPs have the right to control,
manage, develop, protect, conserve, and sustainably use: a) land, air, water
and minerals; b) plants, animals and other organisms; c) collecting, fishing
and hunting grounds; d) sacred sites; and, e) other areas of economic,
ceremonial and aesthetic value in accordance with their indigenous knowledge
systems and practices (IKSPs) and customary laws and traditions, and duly
adopted Ancestral Domain Sustainable Development and Protection Plan (ADSDPP)
where ADSDPPs have been adopted; and to equitably benefit from the fruits
thereof. In all instances, ICCs/IPs shall have priority in the development,
extraction, utilization and exploitation of natural resources.
a) Right to Benefits. The ICCs/IPs have the right to
benefit from the utilization, extraction, use and development of lands and
natural resources within their ancestral lands/domains and to be compensated
for any social and/or environmental costs of such activities.
Accordingly,
the concerned ICC/IP community shall be extended all the benefits already
provided under existing laws, administrative orders, rules and regulations
covering particular resource utilization, extraction or development
projects/activities, without prejudice to additional benefits as may be
negotiated between the parties. The NCIP, as third party, shall , among others,
assist the ICCs/IPs in the negotiation process to safeguard and guarantee that
the terms and conditions of the agreement negotiated are not inimical to the
rights of the ICCs/IPs.
The NCIP shall
ensure that at least 30% of all funds received from such activities will be
allocated to the ICC/IP community for development projects or provision of
social services or infrastructure in accordance with their duly adopted
Ancestral Domain Sustainable Development and Protection Plan (ADSDPP) whenever.
In the absence of such ADSDPP, the NCIP shall assist the ICCs/IPs in the
development of a program or project to utilize such funds.
In consultation
with ICCs/IPs, the NCIP shall set guidelines for the utilization of funds
accruing to ICCs/IPs.
b) Other Related Rights. The rights of ICCs/IPs to
develop their territories including all the natural resources therein shall
further include, but not limited to, the following:
(1) The right to source out, control, manage, disburse or use any
funds or appropriations from any legal entity, for the development of the
territories, provided that the community concerned shall have adequate systems
to ensure individual and collective accountability and responsibility for such
funds;
(2) The right of ICCs/IPs through their Council of Elders/
Leaders, subject to the principle of Free and Prior Informed Consent provided
in these Rules and Regulations, to enter into agreement with any legal entity,
for the utilization, extraction or development of natural resources, subject to
a limited term of 25 years, renewable at the option of the ICCs/IPs for another
25 years, and to visitorial and monitoring powers of
the ICCs/IPs and the NCIP for purposes of ensuring that the ICCs’/IPs’ rights
and interests are adequately safeguarded and protected;
(3) The right of ICCs/IPs to protect, conserve and manage portions
of the ancestral domains/lands which they find necessary for critical
watersheds, mangroves, wildlife sanctuaries, wilderness, protected areas,
forest cover or reforestation, with the full and effective technical and
financial support of concerned government agencies or other legal entities; and
(4) Subject to the customary laws, and Free and Prior Informed
Consent of ICCs/IPs concerned, the right to temporarily allow or permit
appropriate government agencies to manage the areas enumerated in the preceding
paragraph, under a written agreement that shall ensure that: a) a program of
technology transfer shall be pursued to enable the concerned ICCs/IPs to
ultimately manage the area themselves; and b) that no displacement or
dislocation of ICCs/IPs shall occur as a result of the implementation of the
project/activity.
Section 4.
Right to Stay in Territories and Not to be Displaced There from. The right of ICCs/IPs to
stay in their territories shall remain inviolate. No ICCs/IPs shall be
relocated without their free and prior informed consent nor through any means
other than eminent domain. Relocation or displacement as an exceptional measure
or as a result of calamity or catastrophe shall only be temporary. ICCs/IPs
shall have the right to return to their ancestral domain as soon as the grounds
for such relocation cease to exist, and shall have the right to be compensated
for damages sustained as a consequence of the relocation.
a) Temporary Relocation as an Exceptional Measure. Temporary
relocation is an exceptional measure if, after exhausting all legal remedies,
it stands as the only option to avoid loss of lives, and to safeguard the
health and safety of the populations affected. Temporary relocation shall
generally occur as a result of force majeure, natural calamities or
catastrophes.
Where
temporary relocation is determined by the ICC/IP concerned, in consultation
with the NCIP and other appropriate government agencies as an exceptional
measure, the concerned government agencies shall provide the affected ICCs/IPs
with habitable relocation sites and adequate shelter, food, and other basic
services, as well as livelihood opportunities to ensure that their needs are
effectively addressed.
b) Right to Return to Ancestral Domain. When the reason for
the relocation ceases to exist as determined by the ICCs/IPs, in consultation
with appropriate government agencies, the ICCs/IPs shall have the right
to return to their ancestral domains.
c) Rights in Case of Permanent Relocation/ Displacement.
Should the conditions for their return pose grave and long-term risks for the
displaced ICCs/IPs, and normalcy and safety of the previous settlements are
irreversibly lost, the displaced ICCs/IPs shall, upon their Free and Prior
Informed Consent, be accorded the following:
(1) Relocation to a site, which shall, in all possible cases, be
of equal quality and legal status as that previously occupied, and which shall
be suitable to provide for their present needs and future development;
(2) Security of tenure over lands to which they will be resettled
or relocated; and.
(3) Compensation for loss, injury or damage as a consequence of
such relocation or displacement.
(d) Compensation for Loss, Injury or Damage. Compensation
for loss, injury, or damage shall be obtained through the following procedures:
(1) Who may file. The
following shall be entitled to compensation for loss, injury or damage:
i) Any individual in the event of loss of life, injuries or damage
to property;
ii) Concerned ICC/IP Elders/Leaders representing their
communities, in case of damage to burial grounds, worship areas, hunting
grounds, or any other parts or communal structures within the ancestral
domains; or
iii) The NCIP may motu propio file the claim for loss, injury or damage for and in
behalf of the ICC/IP community.
(2) Notification to NCIP. In case the claim is filed by the
affected ICC/ IP, the NCIP must be notified through its field office, of such
loss, injury or damage suffered as a result of the relocation or displacement.
(3) Filing of claim. The NCIP or affected ICC/IP with the
assistance of NCIP shall file the claim for compensation of loss, damage or
injury with the appropriate office of the agency which has caused such
relocation or displacement.
(4) Payment of compensation. The NCIP shall ensure that
such claim for payment is given due consideration and that the claimant is duly
compensated within a reasonable time.
Section 5.
Right to Regulate Entry of Migrants and Other Entities. The collective right to
use everything within the domain/land is limited only to the recognized members
of the ICCs/IP community. Accordingly, the ICCs/IPs shall have the right to
regulate the entry of migrants, including organizations who intend to do
business, engage in development or other form of activities, in their ancestral
domains/lands. For this purpose, the following shall be applicable:
a) Migrants. For purposes of these rules, a migrant is a
person who is not a native to the ancestral domain or not a part owner of
ancestral land but who, as a consequence of social, economic, political or
other reasons, such as displacement due to natural disasters, armed conflict,
population pressure, or search for seasonal work, opted to occupy and utilize
portions of the ancestral domains/lands and have since established residence
therein;
b) Other entities. Other entities shall include all
organizations, corporations, associations or persons who intend to enter the
ancestral domains/lands for the purpose of doing business, development or other
activities therein; and
c) Procedure for Regulating Entry of Migrants and Other
Entities. All migrants and other entities must first secure the express
permission of the community’s council of elders/leaders who shall, in
accordance with their consensus building process, community practices, customs
and traditions and upon the Free, Prior and Informed Consent of the community
members agree to accept such migrant or entity within the domains, subject to
the following conditions:
(1) Said persons and entities can be allowed to perform activities
as are expressly authorized and which are not inimical to the development of
the ancestral domains and cultural integrity of the ICCs/IPs, and
(2) The ICCs/IPs shall maintain the right to impose penalties for
violation of the conditions in accordance with their customary laws, the Act or
its rules and regulations.
The ICCs/IPs’ Council of Leaders/Elders, with the assistance of
NCIP shall take appropriate action to ensure the effective implementation and
enforcement of these rights.
Section 6. Right to Safe
and Clean Air and Water.
a) The ICCs/IPs through their
indigenous knowledge systems and practices and their customs and traditions
have preserved the environment and have demonstrated their capability to
conserve and protect the integrity of their ecological systems. To enable these
ecologically-sound and sustainable practices to flourish, the ICCs/IPs have the
right to regulate activities that may adversely affect their airspace, bodies
of water and lands. Any violation of environmental laws adversely affecting the
integrity of the ecological systems in ancestral domains/territories shall be
penalized according to customary laws of the ICCs/IPs concerned.
The ICCs/IPs
shall take the necessary steps to source out adequate and effective technical
and financial support to protect the environment. Government shall adopt
effective measures to implement environmental laws that will preserve the
quality of freshwater, surface and ground water and minimize air pollution and
other forms of pollution that may affect the domains.
b) Environmental Conservation and Protection Program (ECPP). All
persons or entities allowed under the Act to participate in land development,
utilization, exploitation, and extraction of natural resources, and government
offices or agencies allowed to undertake or implement infrastructure projects
within ancestral lands/domains, shall submit to the NCIP, through the concerned
Regional Office, a culture-sensitive Environmental Conservation and Protection
Program (ECPP) stating in detail the environmental impact of such activities or
projects proposed, control and rehabilitation measures and financial resource
allocations therefor, implementation schedules,
compliance guarantees, and evaluation and monitoring schemes.
Within twenty
(20) working days from receipt thereof, the concerned Regional Office shall
conduct preliminary evaluation of the ECPP. Based on its findings, the Regional
Office may order the ECPP to be revised and/or additional requirements may be
imposed and/or other documents may be required. The concerned Regional office
shall endorse the ECPP, with recommendations, to the Commission.
Detailed
guidelines for the preparation and implementation of the ECPPs shall be
prescribed by the Commission based on principles underlying the ICCs/IPs
framework for sustainable development of the ancestral domains and
nationally-defined environmental standards.
Section 7.
Right to Claim Parts of Reservations. The dispossession of indigenous peoples from their ancestral
domains/lands by operation of law, executive fiat or legislative action
constitute a violation of the constitutional right to be free from the
arbitrary deprivation of property. As such, ICCs/IPs have the right to claim
ancestral domains, or parts thereof, which have been reserved for various
purposes.
a) Procedure for Reclaiming Ancestral Domains or Parts thereof
Proclaimed as Reservations.
(1) For purposes of the enforcement of this right, the NCIP shall
review all existing Executive Orders, Administrative Orders, Presidential
Proclamations covering reservations within ancestral domains to determine the
actual use thereof.
(2) Thereafter, it shall take appropriate steps to cause the dis-establishment of the reservation or the segregation and
reconveyance of ancestral domains or portions thereof
to the concerned ICCs/IPs.
b) Conditions for Continued
Use of Ancestral Domains as Part of Reservations. ICCs/IPs communities whose
ancestral domains or portions thereof continue to be used as part of
reservations, have the right to negotiate the terms and conditions thereof in a
Memorandum of Agreement. The ICC/IP community may negotiate for such use,
including the grant of benefits such as, but not limited to, preferential use
of facilities in the area and free access to basic services being dispensed therefrom, through appropriate IP desks to be established
by the administrator of the reservation.
Section 8. Right to
Resolve Conflicts According to Customary Laws. All conflicts pertaining
to property rights, claims and ownership, hereditary succession and settlement
of land disputes within ancestral domains/ lands shall be resolved in
accordance with the customary laws, traditions and practices of the ICCs/IPs in
the area where the conflict arises.
If the conflict between or
among ICCs/IPs is not resolved, through such customary laws, traditions and
practices, the Council of Elders/Leaders who participated in the attempt to
settle the dispute shall certify that the same has not been resolved. Such
certification shall be a condition precedent for the filing of the complaint
with the NCIP, through its Regional Offices for adjudication.
Decisions of the NCIP may
be brought on Appeal to the Court of Appeals by way of a Petition for Review.
Part III. Rights of the
ICCs/IPs to Their Ancestral Lands
Section 1.
Right to
Section 2. Right to
Redemption. Transfer of ancestral lands by IPs to non-IPs attended by vitiated
consent or made for an unconscionable price shall, upon investigation and proof
thereof, be declared null and void ab initio and the
transferor has the right to redeem the property within a period of fifteen
years from the date of transfer. In case of fraudulent transactions, the
redemption period shall be reckoned upon the discovery of the fraud.
Consent is deemed vitiated
when given through error or mistake, violence, intimidation, undue influence,
fraud or deceit. The price is considered unconscionable when the amount
compared to the value of the property is so disproportionate as to be revolting
to human conscience.
The transferor shall
exercise his right to redeem within fifteen years from date of transfer. The
NCIP shall provide, as part of its Rules of Procedures, the process for the
exercise of this right. It shall include the filing of a petition therefor stating the circumstances of vitiated consent or
unconscionable price; due notice and hearing; and the reconveyance
of the property to the transferor ICC/IP.
Section 3.
Option to Secure Patents under Commonwealth Act No. 141, as Amended. Formal recognition of
native title to ancestral lands is secured through the issuance of a
Certificate of Ancestral Land Title under the Act.
Members of the ICCs/IP
communities who individually own ancestral lands shall have the option to
secure Certificates of Title to such land pursuant to the provisions of
Commonwealth Act No. 141, as amended, provided such option is exercised within
twenty (20) years from approval of the Act.
Pursuant to Section 12 of
the Act, all ancestral lands which have been individually owned and actually
used continuously by ICCs/IPs for a period of at least thirty (30) years for
agricultural, residential, pasture, or tree farming purposes, including those
with slope of more than eighteen (18) degrees are hereby classified as
alienable and disposable agricultural lands and may be titled in accordance
with the provisions of Commonwealth Act No. 141, as amended.
Ancestral lands within
ancestral domains shall remain an integral part thereof and can only be
transferred or otherwise encumbered subject to customary laws and traditions of
the community where the same is located.
Part IV. Responsibilities
of ICCs/IPs to their Ancestral Domains.
Section 1. Maintain
Ecological Balance. Based on their indigenous and traditional practices, ICCs/IPs
shall formulate and implement their respective systems for protecting and
conserving the flora and fauna, watershed areas, sacred places and all other
objects of ritual and ecological importance in order to preserve, restore and
maintain a balanced ecology within their ancestral domains. To ensure
biological diversity, sustainable indigenous agriculture shall be encouraged
while the system of mono-cropping shall be discouraged.
The ICCs/IPs shall establish
their own institutions, systems and standards for protecting their natural
resources. Such standards shall consider the national standards as minimum,
without prejudice to imposing stricter standards. For this purpose, the
ICCs/IPs shall be authorized by the government, through appropriate issuance,
to exercise powers to apprehend and prosecute all persons violating
environmental and natural resources laws within ancestral domains in accordance
with Section 72 of the Act.
The ICCs/IPs shall have
access to all government funds earmarked for environmental protection in
relation to their domains. For this purpose, the NCIP shall negotiate and enter
into agreements with concerned agencies for the effective transfer of funds
appropriated for such purposes to the concerned indigenous peoples’ communities
through the NCIP. The ICCs/IPs may, on their own initiative, likewise secure
funds for such purposes from other local and foreign sources.
Section 2.
Restore Denuded Areas. The concerned ICCs/IPs, in collaboration with appropriate
government agencies, shall restore denuded areas within their ancestral
domains.
In cases where the
denudation of areas within the domains is caused by identified natural resource
licensees, the ICCs/IPs through the NCIP shall make the proper representation
to the appropriate government agency for the enforcement of the licensees’
obligation under the contract to reforest said areas. Should the licensee fail
to implement a restoration program, the concerned government agency shall cause
the execution of the bond and apply the same in favor of the ICCs/IPs, without
prejudice to payment of compensation for damages to the ancestral domains’
eco-systems.
Through their own POs, the
concerned ICCs/IPs shall develop their own systems for undertaking
reforestation projects under such terms and conditions that will ensure the
application of IKSPs and customary laws, and the promotion and propagation of
indigenous species as well as those of ecological importance. All such projects
shall be considered an integral part of the domains and are therefore
communally-owned by such ICCs/IPs.
The management of all
existing government reforestation projects within the ancestral domains shall
be transferred to the NCIP through the execution of the appropriate
instruments. The NCIP, in turn, shall execute Memoranda of Agreement with
concerned ICCs/IPs for the implementation of the projects.
Section 3 .
Observe Laws. In maintaining ecological balance and restoring denuded areas
within their ancestral domains, the ICCs/IPs shall adhere to the letter, spirit
and intent of the Act.
RULE IV: RIGHT TO
SELF-GOVERNANCE AND EMPOWERMENT
Part 1: Self-Governance
and Political Leadership Systems.
Section 1: Recognition of
Authentic Leadership. In pursuance of the right to self-governance and
self-determination, the ICCs/IPs, in coordination with the Department of the
Interior and Local Government, through the NCIP, shall formulate measures to
ensure that :
a) The socio-political structures, systems and institutions of
ICCs/IPs are strengthened;
b) The indigenous structures, systems, and institutions are not
supplanted by other forms of non-indigenous governance; and/ or
c) Mechanisms that allow the interfacing of indigenous systems of
governance with the national systems are established.
Section 2. Authentication
of Indigenous Leadership Titles and Certificates of Tribal Membership. The ICCs/IPs concerned
shall have the sole power to authenticate indigenous leadership titles and
certificates of membership. Accordingly, the ICCs/IPs shall have the following
powers and rights:
a) Right to Confer Leadership Titles. The ICCs/IPs
concerned, in accordance with their customary laws and practices, shall have
the sole right to vest titles of leadership such as, but not limited to, Bae, Datu, Baylan,
Timuay, Likid and such
other titles to their members.
b) Recognition of Leadership Titles. To forestall undue
conferment of leadership titles and misrepresentations, the ICCs/IPs concerned,
may, at their option, submit a list of their recognized traditional
socio-political leaders with their corresponding titles to the NCIP. The NCIP
through its field offices, shall conduct a field validation of said list and
shall maintain a national directory thereof.
c) Issuance of Certificates of Tribal Membership. Only the
recognized registered leaders are authorized to issue certificates of tribal
membership to their members. Such certificates shall be confirmed by the NCIP
based on its census and records and shall have effect only for the purpose for
which it was issued.
All Certificates of Tribal
Membership previously issued under Executive Order No. 122-B, and 122-C, as
amended, shall be validated by the ICCs/IPs in accordance with their own
process and shall be endorsed to the NCIP for confirmation and recording
purposes.
Section 3.
Indigenous Political Leadership Development. Indigenous leadership emerges from the
dynamics of customary laws and practices. Indigenous leaders evolve from a
lifestyle of conscious assertion and practice of traditional values and beliefs
as seen, among others, by the following attributes:
a) Demonstrates sustained wisdom and integrity in the
administration of justice and pronouncement of judgments and decisions based on
truth and the maintenance of peace;
b) Model head of the family, as a provider and protector of family
and community values such as cooperation, sharing and caring;
c) Contributes and makes decisions aimed at protecting the
ancestral domain, community peace, truth, IKSPs and sustaining harmonious
relationships with neighboring tribes;
d) Recognized authority on customary laws and practices, conflict
resolution mechanism, peace-building processes, spiritual , rituals and
ceremonials; and
e) Personal integrity and honesty.
The NCIP shall
support the initiatives, projects and activities of ICCs/IPs that will
strengthen and develop their socio-political and leadership systems.
Section 4. Recognition of
Socio-Political Institutions and Structures. The ICCs/IPs have the right to use their
traditional justice systems, conflict resolution institutions or peace building
processes which are oriented to settlements, reconciliation and healing, and as
may be compatible with national laws and accepted international human rights,
in all conflict situations between and among IP individuals and between and
among other ICCs/IP communities.
The NCIP shall assist
ICCs/IPs to document cases resolved under the indigenous justice systems,
conflict resolution mechanisms and peace building processes in order to provide
references to be used in resolving conflicts involving ICCs/IPs.
Section 5. Support for
Autonomous Regions. The autonomous regions created under the 1987 Constitutions, in
accordance with their requirements and needs, shall be strengthened and
supported by the State, following the principles of self-governance and
cultural integrity.
ICCs/IPs not included or
outside Muslim Mindanao and the
Section 6. Mandatory
Representation in Policy Making Bodies. The ICCs/IPs shall be provided mandatory
representation in all policy making bodies and in local legislative councils.
ICC/IP representation shall be proportionate to their population, and shall
have the same privileges as the regular members of the legislative bodies
and/or policy making bodies.
ICC/IP representatives
shall be qualified and chosen by their own communities in accordance with a
process to be determined by them. In consultation with ICCs/IPs, the NCIP in
close coordination with DILG shall come up with appropriate measures to ensure
the full participation of ICCs/IPs in matters affecting their development. Such
measures shall also include the provision of technical assistance to develop
the ICC/IP representative’s knowledge of traditional socio-political systems,
customary laws, justice system and skills in interfacing with non-IP governance
and policy making.
Section 7: Right to
Determine and Decide Own Development and Right to Develop as Peoples. The ancestral domains of
the ICCs/IPs is the foundation of their right to self-determination. As such
the ICCs/IPs shall have the right to decide their own priorities for
development affecting their lives, beliefs, institutions, spiritual well-being
and the lands they own, occupy and use. Towards these ends, the ICCs/IPs shall
participate in the formulation, implementation and evaluation of plans,
policies and programs for national, regional and local development which may
affect them.
The NCIP shall take
special measures to guarantee the right of ICCs/IPs to pursue their economic,
social and cultural development at their own choice and pace and to ensure that
economic opportunities created by the government are extend to them based on
freedom of initiative and self-reliance.
Section 8.
Tribal Barangays. The ICCs/IPs living in contiguous areas or
communities where they form the majority may form or constitute a separate barangay in accordance with the Local Government Code. In consultation
with the ICCs/IPs the NCIP, in close coordination with the DILG shall formulate
measures to ensure the implementation of the principle of Equivalent Free
Voting Procedure in such barangays in order to
effectively recognize indigenous political systems, leadership structures and
governance in such barangays. The NCIP shall
undertake studies and propose legislative measures to ensure the applicability
of traditional socio-political structures and processes for local governance in
ancestral domains/lands and geographic areas occupied by ICCs/IPs.
Part II: Role of Peoples
Organizations
Section 1.
Right to Organize and Associate for Collective Actions. The NCIP shall recognize
the vital role of IPOs as autonomous partners in development and shall fully
support the development and empowerment of indigenous peoples organizations, or
associations to pursue and protect their legitimate and collective interests
and aspirations.
In consultation with the
Indigenous Peoples Organizations (IPOs), the NCIP shall prepare guidelines for
strengthening the capability of the members which shall be culture sensitive
and shall cover, among others, the following:
a) Awareness and knowledge of IPRA and its IRR;
b) IPs’ holistic and sustainable development framework;
c) Research and documentation skills particularly in taking the
testimonies of elders by way of individual and group interviews;
d) Community Organization to include traditional leadership,
community and cooperative value system, socio-political structures and self
advocacy;
e) Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Practices (IKSPs) to include
but not limited to customary laws, traditions and practices; sustainable
resource management systems and practices; family and community life value
systems;
f) Conflict resolution mechanisms and peace-building processes;
g) Project management; and
h) Networking and development work partnership with other POs,
NGOs and GOs.
Section 2.
Registration Requirements for Indigenous Peoples Organizations (IPO). For the purpose of
acquiring legal personality, indigenous peoples’ organizations may register
with the NCIP.
The application for
registration shall be filed with the concerned NCIP Provincial Office with the
following attachments:
a) Duly accomplished NCIP Registration Form;
b) List of Officers/Leaders;
c) Petition/Resolution signed by authorized officers/or members;
d) Written accounts of organizational decision-making processes;
e) Written commitment to recognize and assert customary laws and
decision-making by consensus.
f) List of authorized representatives of the ICC/IP community;
g) Written accounts of the ICCs/IPs customs and traditions;
h) Written accounts of the ICCs/IPs political structure and
institutions;
i) Written accounts of community decision-making processes;
j) Anthropological data; and
k) Genealogical surveys.
The NCIP Provincial
Officer shall evaluate and field validate the authenticity of the IPO and
submit a report of the same including the IPO’s application for registration to
the NCIP Regional Director who shall, within 15 days issue the Certificate of
Registration. The NCIP Regional Director shall furnish the National Office
updated lists of all such organizations registered by them.
Section 3.
Monitoring and Reporting. All registered IPOs and accredited NGOs shall submit to the NCIP
Field Offices the following documents annually:
a) Change of officers or leaders;
b) Financial and Accomplishment Reports; and
c) Changes in programs, projects or activities.
Section 4.
Accreditation of NGOs Operating Within Ancestral Domains. For regulatory and
monitoring purposes, non-government organizations with intentions of operating,
or already operating, within ancestral domains shall have to be accredited by
the NCIP Regional Office where the NGO operates. To be accredited, the NGOs
shall submit the following:
a) Duly accomplished NCIP Accreditation Form for NGOs;
b) Certified copy of registration with Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) or other government agency;
c) Organizational structure and officers of the organization;
d) Organization’s vision, mission, goals and objectives,
programs/plans and membership policies; and
e) Written historical track record of the NGO.
Accreditation shall be
renewable every two (2) years.
Section 5. Suspension and
Revocation of
a) Unauthorized negotiation with natural or juridical persons
relative to land development, use, extraction, harvest, and exploitation of
natural resources;
b) Misrepresentation and entering into agreement or compromise
with investors to the detriment of the community;
c) Accepting bribery such as project contracts, gifts or donations
in exchange of favors;
d) Loss of trust and confidence of the members of the community;
e) Violation of customary processes and community collective
decision-making; and
f) Other analogous circumstances.
The cancellation
proceedings shall be initiated by complaint with the NCIP Regional Office, who
shall hear and decide the same and if warranted and upon due course order the
cancellation of registration. The decision of the NCIP Regional Office may be
brought on appeal to the Commission.
The NCIP shall establish a
data-base for indexing and monitoring all registered IPOs.
Part III. Instrument of
Empowerment
Section 1. Inroads into the ancestral
domains/lands of ICCs/IPs resulted to their disenfranchisement and
marginalization. Policies, plans, development programs and projects which may
have been prejudicial to the rights and interests of ICCs/IPs have been adopted
and implemented within ancestral domains/lands without the consent of concerned
IP communities. Free and prior informed consent, as an instrument of
empowerment, enables IPs to exercise their right to self-determination.
Section 2.
General Application. The provisions herein on free and prior informed consent shall
generally be applicable to all the provisions of the Act and these rules
requiring the free and prior informed consent of ICCs/IPs.
Section 3. Free and Prior
Informed Consent. The ICCs/IPs shall, within their communities, determine for
themselves policies, development programs, projects and plans to meet their
identified priority needs and concerns. The ICCs/IPs shall have the right to
accept or reject a certain development intervention in their particular
communities.
The acceptance or
rejection of proposed policy, program, project or plan shall be assessed in
accordance with the following IPs development framework and value systems for
the conservation and protection of:
a) Ancestral domains/lands as the ICCs/IPs’ fundamental source of
life;
b) Traditional support system of kinship, friendship, neighborhood
clusters, tribal and inter-tribal relationships rooted in cooperation, sharing
and caring;
c) Sustainable and traditional agricultural cycles, community
life, village economy and livelihood activities such as swidden
farming, communal forests, hunting grounds, watersheds, irrigation systems and
other indigenous management systems and practices; and
d) Houses, properties, sacred and burial grounds.
Section 4.
Scope of ICCs/IPs whose Consent shall be Secured. The scope of the ICCs/IPs
whose free and prior informed consent is required shall depend upon the impact
area of the proposed policy, program, projects and plans, such that:
a) When the policy, program, project or plan affects only the
particular community within the ancestral domain, only such community shall
give their free and prior informed consent;
b) When the policy, program, project or plan affects the entire
ancestral domain, the consent of the concerned ICCs/IPs within the ancestral
domain shall be secured; and
c) When the policy, program, project or plan affects a whole range
of territories covering two or more ancestral domains, the consent of all affected
ICCs/IP communities shall be secured.
Section 5. Procedure and
Requirements for Securing ICCs/IPs Consent. The consensus building process of each
particular indigenous cultural community shall be adhered to in securing the
ICCs/IPs’ Free and Prior Informed Consent. For purposes of documentation and
monitoring, the NCIP shall assist, document and witness the process of securing
Free and Prior Informed Consent. The basic elements in the consensus building
process shall include, at the minimum, information dissemination to all members
of the concerned indigenous peoples communities, assessment of the concerns or
issues by appropriate assemblies in accordance with customs and traditions and
discernment and initial decision by recognized council of elders, affirmation
of the decision of the Elders by all the members of the community.
The following minimum
requirements shall be strictly complied with:
a) For every meeting, notices thereof written in English or
Pilipino and in the IP language and authorized by community elders/leaders
shall be delivered and posted in conspicuous places or announced in the area
where the meeting shall be conducted at least two (2) weeks before the
scheduled meeting;
b) All meetings and proceedings where the proponent shall submit
and discuss all the necessary information on the proposed policy, program,
project or plan shall be conducted in a process and language spoken and
understood by the ICCs/IPs concerned;
c) The minutes of meetings or proceedings conducted shall be
written in English or Pilipino and in the language of the concerned ICCs/IPs
and shall be validated with those who attended the meeting or assembly before
the finalization and distribution of the minutes;
d) Consent or rejection by the ICC/IP community shall be signified
by affixing signatures or thumb marks in a document written in their own
language or dialect with corresponding English or Pilipino translation.
Signatures or thumb marks shall be considered valid, only when it is affixed on
each and every page of the document signifying consent or rejection. In case of
rejection, the ICCs/IPs shall state in the document of rejection whether or not
they shall entertain alternative proposals of similar nature; and
e) Any alternative proposal shall be subject to the Free and Prior
Informed Consent of the ICCs/IPs in accordance with the foregoing procedures
and requirements.
Section 6.
Obligations of the Proponent. The proponent of any policy, program, project, or activity
requiring the Free and Prior Informed Consent of the ICCs/IPs community shall:
a) Submit to the IP community an undertaking written in a language
spoken and understood by the community concerned that it shall commit itself to
full disclosure of records and information relevant to the policy, program,
project or activity, and allow full access to records, documents, material
information and facilities pertinent to the same;
b) Submit to the IP community and the NCIP in a language
understandable to the concerned community an Environmental and Socio-cultural
Impact Statement, detailing all the possible impact of the policy, program,
project or activity upon the ecological, economic, social and cultural aspect
of the community as a whole. Such document shall clearly indicate how adverse
impacts can be avoided or mitigated;
c) Submit an undertaking in writing to answer for damages which
the ICCs/IPs may suffer on account of the policy, program, project, plan or
activity and deposit a cash bond or post a surety bond with the NCIP when
required by the community equivalent to a percentage of its investments,
subject to progressive increase, depending upon the impact of the project. The
amount of bond shall be determined by the NCIP with the concurrence of the
ICCs/IPs concerned; and
d) Underwrite all expenses attendant to securing the free and
prior informed consent of ICCs/IPs.
The NCIP shall
subsequently issue additional guidelines hereon whenever necessary.
Section 7. Development and
Cultural Activities Subject to Free and Prior Informed Consent (FPIC). Policies, programs,
projects, plans and activities subject to free and prior informed consent shall
include but not limited to the following:
a) Exploration, development, exploitation and utilization of
natural resources within ancestral domains/lands;
b) Research in indigenous knowledge, systems and practices related
to agriculture, forestry, watershed and resource management systems and
technologies, medical and scientific concerns, bio-diversity, bio-prospecting
and gathering of genetic resources;
c) Displacement and relocation;
d) Archeological explorations, diggings and excavations and access
to religious and cultural sites;
e) Policies affecting the general welfare and the rights of
ICCs/IPs; and
f) Entry of the Military or paramilitary forces or establishment
of temporary or permanent military facilities within the domains.
The NCIP shall prescribe
terms and conditions regarding public presentation, display, performance and
other forms of utilization of ICCs/IPs’ lifeways and
material culture.
Section 8.
Memorandum of Agreement. As a component part of the process of securing the free and prior
informed consent of the concerned ICCs/IPs a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA)
shall be executed by and between the proponent, host ICC/IP community, and the
NCIP, written in the dialect or language of the concerned ICCs/IPs, with
corresponding English and Pilipino translation. The MOA shall stipulate, among
others:
(1) Benefits due the host ICCs/IP communities;
(2) Measures to protect IPs’ rights and value systems enumerated
in the Section on Free Prior and Informed Consent of these Rules and
Regulations;
(3) Responsibilities of the proponent as well as those of the host
ICC/IP community and the NCIP;
(4) In case of change of proponent as a result of partnership,
joint venture, reorganization, merger, acquisition, sale, or transfer of
rights, the terms and conditions of the MOA shall bind the new proponent
without necessarily executing another MOA; and
(5) Penalties for non-compliance and or violation of the terms and
conditions.
For the
purposes of validity of the Memorandum of Agreement referred to above, the
signatories thereto shall be; a) for corporations, partnerships or single
proprietorship entities, the authorized officers, representatives, or partners
as per Board resolution; b) for the ICC/IP community, all the authorized
community elders or traditional leaders, who are registered with the NCIP in
accordance with Section 2, Part III, Rule IV; and c) the NCIP or authorized
representative. The NCIP shall keep a copy of the MOA for records and
monitoring purposes.
Section 9.
Non-Transferability of Consent The free and prior informed consent granted by the ICCs/IPs for a
particular proposed policy, program, project or plan, as a general rule, shall
not be transferable to any other party, except in case of merger,
reorganization, transfer of rights, acquisition by another entity, or joint
venture: Provided; that there will be no changes in the original plan, program,
project or policy and: Provided further; that the same shall not prejudice the
interest, rights and welfare of the concerned ICCs/IPs.
RULE V:
SOCIAL JUSTICE AND HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1. Equal
Protection Before the Law. With due recognition of the ICCs/IPs’ distinct characteristics and
identity, the State shall accord to members of the ICCs/IPs the rights,
protections and privileges enjoyed by the rest of the citizenry. The NCIP shall
ensure that fundamental human rights and freedom are guaranteed to all members
of the ICCs/IPs as already accorded to every member of society.
Section 2.
Rights During Armed Conflict. The ICCs/IPs have the right to declare their territories as zones
of peace and to special protection and security in periods of armed conflict.
The NCIP shall ensure that international standards are observed for the
protection of civilian populations in circumstances of emergency and armed
conflict, particular, the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949. Accordingly the
State shall not:
a) Recruit children of the ICCs/IPs into the armed forces under
any circumstance;
b) Conscript or recruit ICC/IP individuals against their will to
the armed forces, and in particular for use against other indigenous peoples;
c) Relocate ICC/IP communities to special centers for military
purposes;
d) Force ICC/IP communities, families or individuals to abandon
their lands, territories, or means of subsistence; and
e) Require indigenous individuals to work for military purposes
under discriminatory conditions.
In consultation with the
ICCs/IPs who are victims of armed conflict, the NCIP in collaboration with
national and international specialized agencies shall implement an integrated
emergency program for the victim families’ and communities’ relief and
rehabilitation. Such integrated program shall take special attention on the
impact of armed conflict activities to the indigenous children’s psycho-social
functioning and development.
Section 3. Freedom from
Discrimination. ICCs/IPs are free and equal to all other individuals in their
dignity as human beings and shall be free from any kind of adverse
discrimination for reason of their indigenous origin or identity. The NCIP
shall ensure that every member of the ICCs/IPs is accorded full respect as
valuable citizens of the Republic of the
The NCIP shall take
special measures to ensure the effective protection with regard to the
recruitment and conditions of employment of persons belonging to the ICCs/IPs
to the extent that they are not protected by laws applicable to workers in
general.
Section 4. Right to
Employment.
a) The right of members of ICCs/IP communities to employment
includes the right to:
(1) Be free from any form of discrimination, with respect to
recruitment and conditions of employment;
(2) Enjoy equal opportunities for admission to employment, both
skilled and unskilled;
(3) Just and legal remuneration of work for equal value;
(4) Medical and social assistance, occupational safety, social
security and any other occupationally related benefits, including housing;
(5) Freedom of association and freedom for all lawful trade union
activities including the right to conclude collective bargaining agreements
with employers;
(6) Be informed of their rights and privileges under existing
labor laws and to avail for equal protection of these rights;
(7) Enjoy a wholesome and healthy working environment free from
any forms of life hazards and dangers and other conditions hazardous to their
health, in particular through exposure to pesticides and other toxic
substances;
(8) Be free from any coercive recruitment system, including bonded
labor and other forms of debt servitude; and
(9) Equal opportunities and just treatment in employment for men
and women, including protection against sexual harassment;
b) Special Measures. The NCIP in close coordination with
the Department Of Labor and Employment and such other related agencies shall adopt
special measures to ensure the effective and legal protection of members of
ICCs/IPs with regard to the following:
(1) Recruitment and employment conditions applicable to workers in
general;
(2) Establishment of an IP Desk at the Department Of Labor and
Employment (DOLE);
(3) Protection of IPs right to affirmative action with regards to
their employment in government and private undertakings by setting up
mechanisms for the recruitment and hiring of IPs in proportion to their
population in their areas of operation; and
(4) Periodic monitoring of IPs employment with GOs, NGOs and
private companies.
c. The NCIP shall develop a Jobs and Employment Program for the
appropriate training and placement of IPs, whether professionals, skilled or
unskilled. The program shall assess and determine the number of unemployed and
underemployed IPs and establish training and placement procedure to assist IPs
to meet job/employment demands.
Section 5. Right to Basic
Services. The
ICCs/IPs are entitled to basic services. The equitable delivery of basic
services to all ICCs/IPs all over the country shall be the focus of the NCIP’s
Five Year Master Plan. In close coordination with other government line
agencies mandated to deliver basic needs the NCIP shall work towards the
establishment of IP Desks with such agencies but not limited to Department of
Labor and Employment (DOLE), Department of Health (DOH), Department of
Education, Culture and Sports (DECS), Commission on Higher Education (CHED),
National Housing Authority (NHA), Social Security System (SSS), Technical
Education and Skills Authority (TESDA), National Commission on Culture and the
Arts (NCCA), Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), Department of
the Interior and Local Government (DILG) and other offices for the delivery of
basic services covering employment, vocational training and retraining,
housing, sanitation, health, water, education, infrastructure, electrical facilities
and social security.
In consultation with
ICCs/IPs the NCIP shall prepare a flexible Five Year Master Plan focused on the
delivery of basic services by among other things doing the following:
a) Census of IPs;
b) Conduct needs assessment consultations with all ICCs/IPs and
prepare an inventory of community identified priority basic services;
c) Formulate and incorporate in the Five Year Master Plan, a
special program for meeting the special needs of women, the elderly, youth,
children and differently-abled persons;
d) Provide technical and financial support services for the
empowerment of ICCs/IPs to generate their own resources for basic services in
their ancestral domains; and
e) Collaborate with mandated government line agencies to establish
IP Desks that will ensure and monitor the equitable, effective and efficient
delivery of basic services to ICCs/IPs by the particular agency/or agencies;
and support for the sustained utilization of indigenous self-reliant health
care services by supporting traditional practices of prolonged breast feeding
and use of herbal medicines.
Section 6. Rights of Women. In partnership with ICC/IP women’s
organizations and other GO/NGO support groups, the NCIP shall prepare and
develop programs and
projects to ensure that women shall fully participate in community
and nation building through, among others, the following:
a) Provision of appropriate support for women’s’ groups/
organizations to conduct research and document IP women’s traditional roles in marriage,
family, community, political and economic life to determine gender issues and
concerns among ICCs/IPs;
b) Development of appropriate programs and projects to respond to
gender issues and concerns as these relate to the full realization and protection
of women’s rights for maximum participation in community and nation building;
and
c) Women community-based initiated projects aimed at empowering
women shall be given priority in terms of financial and technical support.
Section 7. Rights of Children
and Youth. The
NCIP in consultation with ICCs/IPs shall assess the situation of children and
youth both in rural areas and highly urbanized centers with regards to the
recognition, promotion and protection of their rights as provided in the Act and
the Universal Declaration on the Rights of the Child.
The NCIP shall work
closely other government line agencies and international bodies, such as the
Department of Education, Culture and Sports (DECS), the Department of Social
Welfare and Development (DSWD), Department of Justice (DOJ), Commission on
Human Rights (CHR), Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE), International
Organizations including the World Health Organization (WHO), the International
Labor Organization (ILO) and the United Nations Children’s Educational Fund
(UNICEF); with NGO support groups; and other agencies mandated to serve the
sector and formulate programs and projects intended for their development and
rearing of the children and youth belonging to the ICCs/IP communities. The
NCIP shall ensure the establishment of an effective mechanism towards the
protection of the rights of ICC/IP children and youth and more specifically the
achievement of the following:
a) Production of indigenous education literature about the
indigenous culture in order to facilitate efforts at integrating such subject
matter into the IP curriculum;
b) Establishment of appropriate mechanisms in accordance with
customary laws, for involving the children and youth in community leadership
and decision making and relevant development programs and activities;
c) Encourage and support the integration of ICCs/IPs IKSPs in both
formal and non-formal educational systems for the formation of both male and
female children and youth;
d) Provision of technical training and education and the
improvement and strengthening of regional state colleges, universities and
technical schools with regards to their role in providing quality education,
relevant to the needs, interests and aspirations of ICCs/IPs children and youth;
and
e) Use of IP dialect or language as the medium of instruction in
early childhood and primary educational levels.
The NCIP in
close coordination with Department of Social Welfare and Development shall take
special measures to prepare a culture-sensitive daycare program that ensures
the holistic development and formation of IP children and affirms their
cultural integrity.
Section 8. Right to
Education. In
consultation with ICCs/IPs the NCIP shall work, in collaboration with the
Department of Education, Culture and Sports (DECS), the Commission on Higher
Education (CHED) and with private and public schools at all levels towards the
development of appropriate programs and projects related to the following:
a) The curricula and appropriate teaching materials and resources;
b) The equitable distribution, selection and implementation of
scholarship programs;
c) Appropriate career development;
d) Training of teachers for IP communities;
e) Construction of school buildings in IP communities;
f) Inclusion of IPs resistance to colonization in the academic
curricula, in the context of IPs assertion and defense of their freedom,
independence and territorial integrity and culture; and
g) Establish schools for living traditions and cultural heritage.
RULE VI: CULTURAL
INTEGRITY
Section 1.
Constitutional and Legal Framework. The State shall recognize, respect and protect the rights of
ICCs/IPs to preserve and develop their cultures, traditions and institutions,
and shall take measures, with the participation of ICCs/IPs concerned to
protect their rights and guarantee respect for cultural integrity in order that
ICCs/IPs shall at all times benefit on an equal footing from the rights and opportunities
which national laws and regulations grant to other members of the population.
It shall recognize its
obligations to respond to the strong expression of the ICCs/IPs for cultural
integrity by assuring maximum ICCs/IPs participation in the direction of
education, health, as well as other services to the ICCs/IPs, in order to
render such services more responsive to the needs and desires of these
communities.
Section 2. Conceptual
Framework of Cultural Integrity. Cultural integrity shall refer to the holistic and integrated
adherence of a particular ICC/IP community to their customs, religious beliefs,
traditions, indigenous knowledge systems and practices and their right to
assert their character and identity as peoples.
Section 3:
Right to Cultural Integrity. The rights of indigenous peoples to cultural integrity shall
include:
a) Protection of indigenous culture, traditions and institutions;
b) Right to establish and control educational and learning
systems;
c) Recognition of cultural diversity;
d) Right to name, identity and history;
e) Community intellectual property rights;
f) Protection of Religious, Cultural Sites and Ceremonies
g) Right to indigenous spiritual beliefs and traditions;
h) Protection of Indigenous Sacred Places
i) Right to protection of indigenous knowledge systems and
practices; and
j) Right to science and technology.
Section 5. Protection of
Indigenous Culture, Traditions and Institutions. The NCIP in its
coordinative role and through the IP Desks of government line agencies,
particularly with the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA),
Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), Department of Tourism (DOT), Department
of Justice (DOJ), Department of Education, Culture and Sports (DECS),
Commission on Higher Education (CHED), National Commission for the Culture and
the Arts (NCCA), and other government agencies or instrumentalities, shall
ensure that ICCs/IPs’ culture, traditions, and institutions are considered in
the formulation and application of said agencies national programs, plans and
policies.
Section 6.
Right to Establish and Control Educational and Learning Systems. To enable the ICCs/IPs to
exercise their right to establish and control their educational systems and
institutions, the NCIP shall establish a program to support the following:
a) Establish, maintain and support a complete, adequate and
integrated system of education relevant to the needs of the ICCs/ IPs
particularly their children and young people;
b) Develop and implement school curricula for all levels relevant
to the IPs/ICCs using their language, learning systems, histories and culture
without compromising quality of education and building the indigenous
children’s capacity to compete for higher education;
c) Encourage indigenous learning as well as self-learning,
independent, out-of school study programs, school of heritage and living
traditions that nurture cultural integrity and diversity and that responds to
the needs of IP communities;
d) Provide adult indigenous peoples with skills needed for civic
efficiency and productivity; and
e) Establish processes and implement affirmative action in the
employment of indigenous teachers in schools within indigenous peoples
communities and assist indigenous teachers in their professional advancement as
this relate to the protection, promotion and protection of IP rights.
Section 7. Recognition of
Cultural Diversity. The NCIP, in coordination with concerned government line agencies
shall ensure that the dignity and diversity of the cultures, traditions,
histories and aspirations of the indigenous peoples are appropriately reflected
in all forms of education, public information, public services,
cultural-exchange programs. In particular, the NCIP shall work closely with the
State-owned media to ensure that the ICCs/IPs’ cultural diversity are reflected
and presented within the proper context.
The NCIP in consultation with
ICCs/IPs shall take effective measures to promote affirmative action to
systematically eradicate prejudice and discrimination against indigenous
peoples and engender understanding and unity among ICCs/IPs and all segments of
society. The ICCs/IPs diverse cultures, traditions and beliefs shall not be
allowed to sow divisiveness and disunity among them.
Through the IP Desks in
government line agencies, the NCIP shall ensure that all policies, programs and
services shall promote the recognition and respect for ICCs/IPs’ cultural
diversity.
Section 8. Recognition of
Customary Laws and Practices Governing Civil Relations. Marriage as an inviolable
social institution shall be protected. Marriages performed in accordance with
customary laws, rites, traditions and practices shall be recognized as valid.
As proof of marriage, the testimony of authorized community elders or
authorities of traditional socio-political structures shall be recognized as
evidence of marriage for purposes of registration. Accordingly, the NCIP shall
coordinate with the Office of the Civil Registrar General (OCRG) to establish
an appropriate procedure for the registration of marriages performed under
customary laws to include, among others, the following:
a) System of facilitating early and late registration of marriages
performed under Customary Laws the OCRG shall issue guidelines to their local
offices for this purpose;
b) The OCRG Certificate of Marriage forms for use of authorized
tribal leaders/elders solemnizing marriages under Customary Laws shall be
translated in the language understood by both parties;
c) The NCIP, in consultation and coordination with ICCs/IPs, shall
cause the registration and regular update of a list of those authorized to
solemnize marriages according to customary laws; and
d) The NCIP field offices in coordination with Local Civil
Registrar offices shall ensure that all marriages performed under Customary
Laws before the enactment of IPRA shall be registered accordingly and from
thereon, marriages performed under Customary Laws shall be registered within
fifteen (15) days following the solemnization.
Section 9. Right to a
Name, Identity and History. The fundamental right of a person to a name and peoples’ right to
their history shall be recognized and respected. Accordingly, the ICCs/IPs
naming systems and customs shall also be recognized and respected and shall
have the right to their indigenous names registered with the Civil Registry as
their formal appellation to be used in all official documents establishing
their identity.
In close coordination with
the Office of the Civil Registrar General (OCRG) the NCIP shall take
appropriate measures to facilitate the registration of the ICCs/IPs indigenous
names. For purposes of effective and efficient civil registration of births and
deaths and census taking, the NCIP field offices shall be deputized to register
said births and deaths. The paternal or maternal grandfather’s name maybe used
as surname. All registrations and census shall be submitted to the nearest
Office of Local Registrar.
The ICCs/IPs have the
right to their histories and to maintain the indigenous names of places within
and outside their domains that reflect their unique identity.
Section 10.
Protection of Community Intellectual Property. The ICCs/IPs have the
right to own, control, develop and protect the following:
a) The past, present and future manifestations of their cultures,
such as but not limited to, archeological and historical sites, artifacts,
designs, ceremonies, technologies and visual and performing arts and literature
as well as religious and spiritual properties;
b) Science and Technology including, but not limited to, human and
other genetic resources, seeds, medicines, health practices, vital medicinal
plants, animals, minerals, indigenous knowledge systems and practices, resource
management systems, agricultural technologies, knowledge of the properties of
flora and fauna, and scientific discoveries; and
c) Language, Music, Dances, Script, Histories, Oral Traditions,
Conflict Resolution Mechanisms, Peace Building Processes, Life Philosophy and
Perspectives and Teaching and Learning Systems.
In partnership with the
ICCs/IPs, the NCIP shall establish effective mechanisms for protecting the
indigenous peoples’ community intellectual property rights along the principle
of first impression first claim, the Convention on Bio-diversity, the Universal
Declaration of Indigenous Peoples’ Rights, and the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights.
Section 11. Protection of
Religious, Cultural Sites and Ceremonies. The indigenous artistic and historic wealth,
ceremonial objects, cultural properties and artifacts constitutes the cultural
treasures of the ICCs/IPs and shall be under their protection and disposition:
Provided; that cultural treasures and properties shall not be brought outside
of the indigenous peoples’ ancestral domains. Towards this end, the initiatives
of indigenous peoples to establish museums or centers shall be supported
financially and technically by the government.
Section 12.
Right to Indigenous Spiritual Beliefs and Traditions. The ICCs/IPs have the
right to:
a) Manifest, practice, develop and teach their spiritual beliefs,
traditions, customs and ceremonies;
b) Maintain, protect and have access to their spiritual and
cultural sites;
c) Use and control ceremonial objects; and
d) Repatriation of human remains and artifacts collected without
their free and prior informed consent.
To ensure that indigenous sacred places, including burial sites
are preserved, respected and
protected, the ICCs/IPs shall regulate access to these sacred
sites.
Section 13. Protection of
Indigenous Sacred Places. Penal sanctions in accordance with Section 72 of the Act and
customary laws shall be applicable in case of:
a) Exploration and/or excavation of archeological sites in
ancestral domains/lands for the purpose of obtaining materials of cultural
value without the free and prior informed consent of the community concerned;
and
b) Defacing, removing or otherwise destroying artifacts which are
of great importance and significance to the ICCs/IPs for the preservation of
their cultural heritage.
Section 14. Right to Indigenous
Knowledge Systems and Practices and to Develop Own Sciences and Technologies. Indigenous knowledge
systems and practices (IKSP) are systems, institutions, mechanisms,
technologies comprising a unique body of knowledge evolved through time embodying
patterns of relationships between and among peoples and between peoples, their
lands and resource environment, including such spheres of relationships which
may include social, political, cultural, economic, religious, and which are the
direct outcome of the indigenous peoples responses to certain needs consisting
of adaptive mechanisms which have allowed indigenous peoples to survive and
thrive within their given socio-cultural and biophysical conditions.
The infusion of science
and technology in the field of agriculture, forestry and medicine to ICCs/IPs
is subject to their free and prior informed consent and shall build upon
existing indigenous peoples knowledge and systems and self-reliant and
traditional cooperative systems of the particular community.
Section 15.
Protection and Promotion of Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Practices (IKSPs).
The
following guidelines, inter alia, are hereby adopted to safeguard the rights of
IPs to their indigenous knowledge systems and practices:
a) The ICCs/IPs have the right to regulate the entry of
researchers into their ancestral domains/lands or territories. Researchers,
research institutions, institutions of learning, laboratories, their agents or
representatives and other like entities shall secure the free and prior
informed consent of the ICCs/IPs, before access to indigenous peoples and
resources could be allowed;
b) A written agreement shall be entered into with the ICCs/IPs
concerned regarding the research, including its purpose, design and expected
outputs;
c) All data provided by the indigenous peoples shall be
acknowledged in whatever writings, publications, or journals authored or
produced as a result of such research. The indigenous peoples will be
definitively named as sources in all such papers;
d) Copies of the outputs of all such researches shall be freely
provided the ICC/IP community; and
e) The ICC/IP community concerned shall be entitled to royalty
from the income derived from any of the researches conducted and resulting
publications.
To ensure
effective control of research and documentation of their IKSPs, the IPOs’
initiatives in this regard shall receive technical and financial assistance
from sources of their own choice.
Section 16.
Protection of Manifestations of Indigenous Culture. Indigenous culture shall
not be commercialized or used for tourism and advertisement purposes without
the free and prior informed consent of the indigenous peoples concerned. Where
consent is alleged, the NCIP will ensure that there is free and prior informed
consent.
In instances where the
presentation of indigenous culture and artistic performances are held, the IPs
shall have control over the performance in terms of its content and manner of
presentation according to customary laws and traditions, and shall have the
right to impose penalties for violation thereof .
Indigenous peoples shall
also have the right to equitably share in the benefits of such presentation or
performance. All funds collected from these activities shall be managed directly
by the community concerned through the registered IPO, otherwise, the same
shall be held in trust by the NCIP for the benefit of the concerned IP
community.
Section 17.
Protection of Biological and Genetic Resources. The ICCs/IPs may, on their
own initiative, make an inventory of biological and genetic resources found
inside their domains/lands, for their exclusive use. They shall retain and
reserve all rights pertaining to the storage, retrieval, and dissemination of
the information, in whatever form and system, gathered as a result of the
inventory. A certificate of free and prior informed consent shall be required
in case the concerned ICCs/IPs may enter into a joint undertaking with natural
or juridical persons for the use of biological and genetic resources for
industrial, commercial, pharmaceutical and other profit-making purposes and
ventures. Violation hereof shall be strictly prohibited and subject to
penalties under customary law and as provided for by the Act. The NCIP shall
assist the concerned ICCs/IPs in the enforcement hereof.
Section 18.
Agro-technological Development. The ICCs/IPs, in coordination with the NCIP may choose to
establish cooperatives in accordance with the indigenous concept of cooperative
system.
The NCIP shall adopt
programs for research and development of the ICCs/IPs’ agricultural systems and
provide necessary funds therefor.
Section 19. Funds for
Archeological and Historical Sites. The ICCs/IPs shall initiate proposals for the management and
preservation of their archeological and historical sites with the adequate and
effective technical and financial support of the appropriate government
agencies. All funds allocated for the management of these sites shall be
immediately transferred to the IPs concerned through the NCIP. For this
purpose, the NCIP shall take the necessary steps to ascertain that these funds
are transferred to the communities concerned.
RULE VII. THE NATIONAL
COMMISSION ON INDIGENOUS PEOPLES (NCIP)
Part I: Creation, Mandate
and Operating Principles of the NCIP
Section 1. Creation of
NCIP. The
National Commission on Indigenous Peoples shall be established as the primary
government agency to implement the policies set forth in the Act.
Section 2. General and
Specific Mandates.
a) General Mandate. The NCIP shall protect and promote the
interest and well-being of the ICCs/IPs with due regard to their beliefs,
customs and traditions and institutions.
b) Specific Mandates.
(1) The promulgation of the Implementing Rules and Regulations as
provided by Section 80 of the Act, within sixty (60) days after the appointment
of the NCIP Chairperson and Commissioners, the Commission shall cause the
preparation of the Implementing Rules and Regulations of the Act in
consultation with the Committees on National Cultural Communities of the Senate
and House of Representatives; and
(2) The promulgation of rules and regulations governing the
hearing and disposition of cases filed before it and those pertaining to
internal functions.
Section 3.
Primary Objectives and Responsibilities.
a) To be the primary government agency responsible for the
formulation and implementation of policies, plans and programs for, and with
its main public clientele, the indigenous peoples;
b) To promote and protect the rights and well-being of the
ICCs/IPs and the recognition of their ancestral domains/lands based on customs,
traditions and institutions; and
c) To serve as the primary government agency through which the
ICCs/IPs can seek government assistance and as the medium through which such
assistance may be extended.
Part II: NCIP as an
Independent Agency Under the Office of the President.
Section 1. NCIP as an
Independent Agency Under the Office of the President. The NCIP is the primary
agency of government for the formulation and implementation of policies, plans
and programs to recognize, promote and protect the rights and well-being of
indigenous peoples. It shall be an independent agency under the Office of the
President. As such, the administrative relationship of the NCIP to the Office
of the President is characterized as a lateral but autonomous relationship for
purposes of policy and program coordination. This relationship shall be carried
out through a system of periodic reporting. Matters of day-to-day
administration or all those pertaining to internal operations shall be left to
the discretion of the Chairperson of the Commission, as Chief Executive
Officer.
Section 2. Annual Reports.
Within
sixty (60) days after the close of each calendar year, the Commission shall
submit an Annual Report to the Office of the President which shall reflect the
status of policy formulation and coordination, and the implementation of plans,
programs projects and activities for the best interest of the indigenous
peoples. The Annual Report shall be comprehensive in scope and, as much as
possible, be prepared in accordance with the following form and contents:
a) Message contains important policies, programs, projects and
activities of the Commission; the status of their implementation; and other
relevant information that affect the lives and welfare of the ICCs/IPs. It may
also contain information on what the ICCs/IPs, in particular, and the general
population may expect for the coming year or years. This portion of the Report
shall be signed solely by the Chairperson of the Commission;
b) Executive Summary contains significant results of the
Commission’s operations for the year under review;
c) National ICC/IP Situation provides an overview of the policy
and social environment from the perspective of the ICCs/IPs; the socioeconomic
and demographic profile; the political and peace and order conditions;
development activities conducted by the public and private sector , including
voluntary organizations which affect the ICCs/IPs; and , other related
information;
d) Organization and Management identifies the offices and
personnel of the Commission, including a description of their functions,
duties, and responsibilities; and describes the roles of each office and key
personnel. For each office, the report of accomplishments shall be focused on
key result areas related to policy promotion and enhancement, and delivery of
basic services and facilities. The accomplishments shall be expressed in
quantitative and qualitative terms to reflect the holistic policy and
development framework of the Act. In all cases, physical results shall
correspond with financial expenditures. These reports shall include a
comparative statement showing actual accomplishments versus target
outputs/outcomes;
e) Budget Performance and Financial Statements report on the
results of the budgetary and financial transactions of the Commission for the
preceding year. Such data shall include an analysis of performance versus
approved budget, sources of funds, disbursements, and cash balances;
comparative data for the year preceding the year under review; fund generating
pattern for three (3) to five (5) years; efficiency and effectiveness of each
office in the delivery of basic services and technical/legal assistance
vis-à-vis budgetary expenditures on a national/regional/provincial/community
and per capita basis. These financial statements shall be duly certified by the
COA;
f) Plans, Programs, and Accomplishments describe in narrative and
pictorial manner the major plans and programs of the Commission as a whole, and
individual offices, and their accomplishments for the year under review. The
presentation is performance-oriented indicating types of services delivered and
projects undertaken;
g) Decisions of the Commission En Banc provides digests of all the
decisions of the Commission en banc for the resolution of cases on ancestral
domains/lands; formal queries referred to it on policy matters related to IPRA;
action on complaints presented on that level; policy issuances on the interface
of customary law and other laws; and other similar rulings
Part III: Composition,
Appointment, Qualification, Tenure, Compensation and Removal from Office.
Section 1. Composition of the
Commission. The Commission shall be composed of seven Commissioners appointed
by the President representing each of the ethnographic regions stated below.
They shall serve as Commissioners in charge of their respective region. In no
case shall one Commissioner serve or represent more than one ethnographic
region:
a) Region I and Cordillera,;
b) Region II;
c) The Rest of
d) Island Groups including
e) Northern and Western
f) Southern and Eastern
g)
Section 2.
Appointment of Commissioners. In constituting the NCIP, the President of the
a) They shall come from one of the seven ethnographic/cultural
areas;
b) Representation of indigenous women in the Commission shall be
assured by the appointment
of a minimum of two women;
c) Appointment of at least two Members of the Philippine Bar,
preferably with a working knowledge of customary law;
d) The Commissioners shall likewise be favorably recommended by
authentic ICCs/IPs in their respective ethnographic region. For purposes of
these rules, recommendation by authentic ICCs/IPs shall be a certification from
community elders/leaders, indigenous peoples’ organizations or IP sectoral groups, that vouches for the exemplary experience
of the recommendee in ethnic affairs and his proven
honesty and integrity; and
e) The principle of rotation of tribal representation in the
composition of the NCIP shall be observed by the authentic ICCs/IPs in their
recommendation.
The ICCs/IPs
shall pro-actively participate in the selection of Commissioners and
Chairperson through such mechanisms as may be provided by them.
Section 3. Qualifications.
The seven
Commissioners shall possess the following qualifications and submit the
required documents to the Office of the President as indicated:
a) He/She must be natural born Filipino
citizen;
b) He/She must be at least thirty five
(35) years of age at the time of appointment;
c) He/She must be bona-fide member, by
consanguinity, of the ICCs/IPs as certified by his/her tribe, through the
attestation of the Council of Elders, community barangay
leaders, or IPOs. The aspirant must likewise submit anthropological proof of
bona-fide ICC/IP membership, through the submission of his/her genealogy, at
least, to the fourth generation in the ascending order, duly certified by
traditional leaders in the role of key informants;
d) He/She must submit a sworn statement
containing his/her experience in ethnic affairs for at least ten (10) years
with an ICC/IP community and/or any government agency involved with ICCs/IPs;
e) He/She must be of proven honesty and
integrity, and must not be convicted of any crime involving moral turpitude,
graft and corruption or administrative charges. To this effect, the aspirant
must submit clearances from the Ombudsman and/or National Bureau of
Investigation; and in the case of aspirants in the public service, clearances
from all liabilities and misconduct from the Commission on Audit and Civil
Service Commission;
f) All documents submitted by the aspirant-Commissioner shall be
verified by the Office of the President through field validation; and
g) Any act of public or ethnic misrepresentation by an aspirant
shall be penalized according to the customary law of the aggrieved tribe and/or
other related laws.
Section 4. Appointment and
Authority of the Chairperson. The Chairperson shall have the authority to preside over the
Commission en banc. He/She shall likewise be the
Chief Executive Officer of the NCIP as an independent agency under the Office
of the President. Any delegation of authority by the Chairperson to other
Commissioners and to the Executive Director shall be done in writing.
Section 5. Tenure. The members of the
Commission shall hold office for a period of three (3) years , and may be
subject to re-appointment for another term. In no case shall a Commissioner
serve for more than two (2) terms, or six consecutive years. Appointment to any
vacancy shall only be for the unexpired term of the predecessor and in no case
shall a member be appointed or designated in a temporary or acting capacity.
Section 6. Compensation. The Chairperson and the
Commissioners shall be entitled to compensation in accordance with the Salary
Standardization Law.
Section 7. Removal from
Office. Any
member of the NCIP may be removed from office for cause, after due notice and
hearing, by the President on his own initiative or upon recommendation by any
ICC/IP community before the expiration of his term and after complying with the
due process requirement of law.
Section 8. Requirements
for Removal of Commissioners from Office. The removal for cause of any Commissioner
shall require the following:
a) A formal petition or complaint shall be filed by any indigenous
community to the Office of the President in
b) The petition or complaint shall include, but not be limited to,
a narration of facts and circumstances describing the crime, illegal act/s, or
other act/s contrary to customary law which subject the indigenous community to
unnecessary risks that threaten their territorial and cultural integrity, which
were committed by the Commissioner/s. The petitioners shall attach the
necessary documents supporting the petition or complaint.
Section 9. Inhibitions
Against Members of the Commission. All prohibitions governing the conduct of national public officers
relating to prohibited business and pecuniary interests so provided in Republic
Act 6713, otherwise known as the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for
Public Officials and Employees, and other laws, rules and regulations shall
also be applicable to the NCIP Commissioners, officers and employees.
Part IV: Powers and
Functions of the NCIP
Section 1: Policy Review,
Formulation and Implementation. In relation to its function of policy review formulation and
implementation, the NCIP shall have the following responsibilities:
a) Review and assess the conditions of ICCs/IPs including existing
laws and policies pertinent thereto and to propose relevant laws and policies
to address their role in national development;
b) Formulate and implement policies, plans, programs and projects
for economic, social, political and cultural development of the ICCs/IPs and to
monitor the implementation thereof;
c) Convene periodic conventions or assemblies of ICCs/IPs to
review, assess, as well as propose policies or plans;
d) Submit to the Legislature/ Congress appropriate legislative
proposals intended to carry out the policies under the Act; and,
e) Study areas of cooperation and complementation with other
organizations in the public and private sectors for appropriate interface and
agreements to enhance policy coordination.
Section 2: Managerial
Functions. In
relation to managerial functions, the NCIP shall have the responsibility to:
a) Prepare and submit the appropriate annual budget to the Office
of the President;
b) Request and engage the services and support of experts from
other agencies of the government or employ private experts and consultants as
may be required in the pursuit of its objectives subject to existing laws,
rules and regulations;
c) Advise the President of the
d) Prepare and submit the staffing pattern to the Department of
Budget and Management and the Civil Service Commission for approval; and
implement the approved staffing pattern in accordance with these Rules and
Regulations;
e) Design and implement an appropriate human resource development
program to ensure proper staff motivation and sensitivity in the discharge of
their functions;
f) Institute an organization development program that enhances
organizational effectiveness in the shaping of the desired holistic policy
environment for the implementation of the Act; and
g) Exercise such other powers and functions as may be directed by
the President of the Republic of the
Section 3:
Functions Pertaining to Ancestral Domains/Lands. In relation to its
functions pertaining to Ancestral Domains and lands, the NCIP shall have the
following responsibilities/ roles:
a) Titling of Ancestral Domains/Lands. To issue
certificates of ancestral land/ domain titles in accordance with the procedures
prescribed in these Rules and Regulations;
b) Registration of CADTs/CALTs. To register all CADTs and
CALTs with the appropriate Register of Deeds pursuant to these Rules and
Regulations;
c) Issuance of Certification as a Precondition. To issue
appropriate certification as a pre-condition to the grant or renewal of permit,
concession, license, lease, production sharing agreement, or any other similar
authority for the disposition, utilization, management and appropriation by any
private individual, corporate entity or any government agency, corporation or
subdivision thereof on any part or portion of the ancestral domain taking into
consideration the free and prior informed consent of the ICCs/ IPs concerned.
d) Action on Fraudulent Claims. To take appropriate legal
action for the cancellation of illegally acquired titles and for the reconvenyance of the areas to the ICCs/IPs concerned as
provided for in these Implementing Rules and Regulations; and
e) To take appropriate legal action for the enforcement of the
rights of ICCs/ IPs provided under the Act.
Section 4: Fund Sourcing and Allocation. In relation to fund
sourcing and allocation,
the NCIP shall have the following powers and responsibilities:
a) Subject to existing laws, to enter into contracts, agreements,
or arrangement, with government or private agencies or entities as may be
necessary to attain the objectives of the Act, and subject to the approval of
the President, to obtain loans from government lending institutions and other
lending institutions to finance its programs; and
b) To negotiate for funds and to accept grants, donations, gifts
and/or properties in whatever form and from whatever source, local and
international, subject to the approval of the President of the Philippines, for
the benefit of ICCs/ IPs and administer the same in accordance with the terms
thereof; or in the absence of any condition, in such manner consistent with the
interest of ICCs/ IPs as well as existing laws.
Section 5: Power to
Represent IPs. To represent the Philippine ICCs/IPs in all international
conferences and conventions dealing with indigenous peoples and other related
concerns. The NCIP shall likewise authorize the attendance of a non-NCIP
official or employee to international gatherings, conferences, convention,
training, and similar undertakings who shall present the Philippine position in
such activities. Such authorized individual or groups shall submit a written
post-action report, and conduct briefings or re-echo seminars to the NCIP
within thirty (30) days upon arrival.
Part V: Accessibility and
Transparency
Section 1.
Accessibility and Transparency. Subject to such limitations as may be provided by law or by rules
and regulations promulgated pursuant thereto, all official records, documents
and papers pertaining to official acts, transactions or decisions, as well as
research data used as basis for policy development of the Commission shall be
made accessible to the public.
Section 2. Exercise of
Right to Information. In recognition of the right of the people to information on matters
of public concern, the NCIP shall make accessible to the public all official
records, documents and papers pertaining to official acts, transactions, as
well as research data used as basis for policy development of the Commission.
The exercise of the right to information includes, but shall not be limited to
the following:
a) Installation of an information monitoring system to serve the
information needs and requirements of the ICCs/IPs, POs, NGOs, government
agencies and the general public; and
b) Periodic reports to the information users on the following areas;
(1) Transfer of personnel, assets, projects, funds and records
corresponding to the reorganization of the ONCC/OSCC,
(2) Establishment and strengthening of the NCIP organizational
structure from the service centers to the national office,
(3) Management of the Ancestral Domains Fund,
(4) Formation and operationalization of
the consultative body, and people empowerment programs, including processes and
indicators in the exercise of free and prior informed consent and other
mandatory consultations with respect to communal and individual IP rights,
(5) Compliance with established standards, guidelines, systems and
procedures, grants, aids and subsidies given to the NCIP, and
(6) Other relevant information.
Part VI: Offices of the
National Commission on Indigenous Peoples
Section 1: Offices within
the NCIP.
The NCIP shall have the following offices which shall be responsible for the
implementation of the policies, plans and programs herein provided.
a) Ancestral Domains Office
b) Office on Policy, Planning and Research
c) Office on Education, Culture and Health
d) Office on Socio-Economic Services and Special Concerns
e) Office of Empowerment and Human Rights
f) Administrative Office
g) Legal Affairs Office
h) Office of the Executive Director
i) Regional and Field Offices
j) Other Offices
Section 2. Ancestral
Domains Office. The Ancestral Domains Office shall be responsible for the
identification, delineation and recognition of ancestral lands/domains. Accordingly,
it shall perform the following functions:
a) Determine and define the boundaries of ancestral domains and
ancestral lands in accordance with the procedure prescribed in these Rules and
Regulations, provide cartographic services and upon the final and official
delineation of the ancestral domain/land, endorse the same to the Commission
for the issuance of the appropriate titles thereto;
b) Conduct, upon the request of ICCs/IPs concerned, surveys of
ancestral lands, verify and approve parcellary or
subdivision surveys of the same;
c) Issue, upon the free and prior informed consent of the ICCs/IPs
concerned, certification prior to the grant of any license, lease or permit for
the exploitation of natural resources affecting the interest of the ICCs/IPs
and their ancestral domains;
d) Assist the ICCs/IPs in protecting the territorial integrity of
each and every ancestral domain;
e) Coordinate and ensure the enforcement of policies and laws
protecting the rights of ICCs/IPs to their ancestral domains and land,
including the application of customary laws governing property rights and
relations in determining ownership procedures and standards therefor;
and for the purpose, seek the assistance of appropriate government and
non-government agencies;
f) Be responsible for conducting census of the ICCs/IPs within an
ancestral domain;
g) Keep a registry of CADTs and CALTs or any formal certificate of
recognition which officially and formally acknowledges the existence of
ancestral domain rights over the area;
h) Compile information on the location, size, and number of people
living within the ancestral domains;
i) Review all government grants, reservations, franchises and
projects, licenses, leases, concessions and titles which affect ancestral
domains and recommend to the Commission the cancellation of the same or
segregation of such portions within ancestral domains in order to reconvey the same to the ICCs/IPs concerned as part of the
ancestral domains;
j) Formulate and implement such procedures for the cancellation of
officially documented titles which were acquired through spurious or illegal
means and those for the redemption of lands lost through the ICCs/IPs vitiated
consent or through sale for an unconscionable price;
k) Establish its own, or in cooperation with other government
agencies a Geographic Information System that would assist ICCs/IPs in
formulating Ancestral Domains Sustainable Development and Protection Plans;
l) Assist ICCs/IPs in the management of ancestral lands/domains in
accordance with a master plan as well as the implementation of the Ancestral
Domain Rights of the ICCs/ IPs as provided in Chapter III of the Act;
m) Conduct research and documentation on indigenous peoples
property rights regimes, property relations, ownership systems and other
related aspects of ancestral domains management; and
n) Perform such other functions as the Commission may deem
appropriate and necessary.
Section 3. Office on
Policy, Planning and Research. The Office on Policy, Planning and Research shall:
a) Compile and update listing of authentic IP organizations and
leaders/ elders;
b) Formulate appropriate policies and programs for ICCs/ IPs such
as, but not limited to a Five-Year Master Plan for the ICCs/ IPs. The NCIP
shall review the plan periodically and make modifications in accord with the
changing situations;
c) Undertake the documentation of customary law and shall
establish and maintain a
d) Develop and maintain the management information system of the
Commission;
e) Conduct a population census of the ICCs/IPs including a
sex-desegregated data base system in coordination with the National Statistics
Office;
f) Assist the Congress in the formulation of appropriate
legislation beneficial to the ICCs/IPs;
g) For purposes of policy coordination, the Commission shall
create a Policy Desk to serve as the organic linkage of the NCIP to the Office
of the Regional Governor and Office of the Speaker of the Regional Legislative
Assembly. This desk shall provide technical assistance to the ARMM on such
policy matters as;
(1) Pertaining to the exercise of residual powers of the national
government affecting the ICCs/IPs, such as, but not limited to: the protection
of community intellectual rights; nationwide ethnographic research projects;
census of ICCs/IPs, and the like,
(2) Formulation of policies, plans, and programs transcending the
geographical boundaries of the ARMM and contiguous ethnographic regions, and
(3) Other policy issues as may be the subject of Memorandum of
Agreement with the Office of the Regional Governor and the Office of the
Speaker of the Regional Legislative Assembly; and
h) Perform such other functions as the Commission may deem
appropriate and necessary.
Section 4: Office on
Education, Culture and Health. This office shall be responsible for the effective implementation
of the education, cultural and health related rights as provided in the Act. It
shall:
a) Undertake studies, plans, and programs and implement the same
for the development of an indigenous curriculum and preservation of the
historical and cultural heritage of the ICCs/IPs;
b) Establish and maintain a Museum, library and audio-visual arts
center as a repository for the arts and culture of the IPs;
c) To assist, promote and support community schools, both formal
and non-formal, for the benefit of the local indigenous community, especially
in areas where exiting educational facilities are not accessible to members of
the indigenous group;
d) Administer all scholarship programs and other educational
projects intended for ICC/IP beneficiaries in coordination with the Department
of Education, Culture and Sports and the Commission on Higher Education;
e) Provide for health programs and services to the ICCs/IPs and
promote indigenous health practices and the use of traditional medicine;
f) Undertake a special program which includes language and
vocational training, public health and family assistance program and related
subjects. It shall likewise generate the necessary funds and technical support
from other sources to augment the available appropriation;
g) Identify members of ICCs/IPs for training in health profession
and encourage and assist them to enroll in schools of medicine, nursing,
medical technology, physical therapy and other allied courses;
h) Deploy a representative in appropriate government offices who
shall personally perform the foregoing tasks and who shall receive complaints
from the ICCs/IPs and compel action from the concerned agency; and
i) Monitor the activities of the
Section 5: Office on
Socio-Economic Services and Special Concerns. The Office on
Socio-Economic Services and Special Concerns shall serve as the office through
which the Commission shall coordinate with pertinent government agencies
especially charged with the implementation of various basic socio-economic
services, policies, plans and programs affecting the ICCs/ IPs to ensure that
the same are properly and directly enjoyed by them. It shall also:
a) Formulate and implement a program of action which will bring
agro-technological development among the ICCs/IPs, building upon existing
customary practices and traditions;
b) Facilitate the delivery of socio-economic services to the
ICCs/IPs communities including, but not limited to infrastructure, extension,
credit, financing, marketing, and other social services;
c) Coordinate and collaborate with other government agencies for
the formulation of policies, plans and programs that will ensure the
alleviation, if not eradication, of poverty among ICCs/IPs;
d) To promote and encourage cooperatives in accordance with the
beliefs, traditions and customs of the ICCs/ IPs;
e) To assist ICCs/IPs and coordinate disaster and relief
operations in ICC/IP communities affected by natural calamities, disasters or
catastrophes;
f) Provide the indigenous women, youth and elderly with
programs/projects for the improvement of their socio-economic conditions; and
g) Perform such other functions as the Commission may deem
appropriate and necessary.
Section 6: Office of
Empowerment and Human Rights. The Office of Empowerment and Human Rights shall ensure that
indigenous socio-political, cultural and economic rights are respected and
recognized. It shall:
a) Ensure that capability building mechanisms are instituted and
ICCs/ IPs are afforded every opportunity, if they so choose, to participate in
all levels of decision-making;
b) Ensure that the Basic Human Rights and such other rights as the
NCIP may determine, subject to existing laws, rules and regulations are
protected and promoted;
c) To assist ICCs/IPs work out an appropriate interface between
customary political structures and self-governance with the mainstream
machinery for governance including the establishment and administration of
tribal barangays and support for autonomous regions;
d) To ensure that the basic elements of free and prior informed
consent are present and are complied with in all instances when such must be
secured;
e) To study and establish models for appropriate interface in
tribal and non-tribal governance;
f) Facilitate the participation of ICCs/IPs in all national and
international fora where their effective
representation is required;
g) Conduct researches on the IP women and youth situation
including their basic human rights situation and recommend programs for their
development in accordance with indigenous practices;
h) Empower ICCs/IP communities through community organizing; and
i) Perform such other functions as the Commission may deem
appropriate and necessary.
Section 7. Administrative
Office. This
office shall provide the NCIP with economical, efficient and effective services
pertaining to personnel, finance, records, equipment, security, supplies and
related services. It shall:
a) Study and recommend the organizational and functional set up of
the Commission, and to upgrade and develop personnel skills through a
comprehensive program, taking into special consideration issues of ethnicity
and divergence in ethnic origins of the staff and the diversity of cultures of
its ICC/IP clientele;
b) Develop systematic records management including systems for
participating in the electronic communications highway;
c) Develop and maintain a personnel program which shall include
recruitment, selection, appointment, transfer, performance evaluation and
employee relations;
d) Administer the Ancestral Domain Fund; and
e) Perform such other functions as the Commission may deem
appropriate and necessary.
Section 8.
Legal Affairs Office. The Legal Affairs Office shall :
a) Advise the NCIP on all legal matters concerning ICCs/IPs;
b) Provide ICCs/IPs with legal assistance in litigation involving
community interest;
c) Act as the general counsel of the NCIP in all cases, in
collaboration with the Office of the Solicitor General;
d) Conduct preliminary investigation on the basis of complaints
filed by the ICCs/ IPs against natural or juridical persons believed to have violated
ICCs/IPs rights. On the basis of its findings, it shall initiate the filing of
appropriate legal or administrative action to the Commission;
e) Initiate legal or administrative action as the case may be,
against any person or government agency believed to be have violated any of the
rights of ICCs/IPs;
f) Investigate and hear administrative cases filed against
officers and employees of the NCIP; and
g) Perform such other functions as the Commission may deem
appropriate and necessary.
Section 9.
Office of the Executive Director. The Office of the Executive Director shall serve as the
secretariat of the Commission. It shall be headed by an Executive Director who
shall be appointed on a permanent basis by the President of the
a) Advise and assist the Chairman in the formulation and
implementation of the objectives, policies, plans, and programs of the
Commission;
b) Serve as the principal assistant of the Chairman in the overall
supervision of the administrative business of the Commission;
c) Ensure an effective and efficient performance of the functions
of the Commission and prompt implementation of the programs;
d) Propose effective allocation of resources for the projects
stated under approved programs;
e) Oversee all the operational activities of the Commission;
f) Coordinate programs and projects of the Commission and be
responsible for the economical, efficient and effective administration;
g) Submit periodic reports to the Commission on the progress and
accomplishment of programs and projects;
h) Prepare regular and annual reports of all the activities of the
Commission;
i) Accept all pleadings and papers authorized or required to be
filed in the Commission, except in cases where the matter, question or
controversy before the Commission is being held elsewhere;
j) Keep in his care the seal of the Commission, books necessary
for recording the proceedings of the Commission, records, files and exhibits;
k) Prepare the Calendar of hearings and sessions of the Commission;
l) Attend the hearings and sessions by himself or his deputies or
assistants and enter the proceedings in the Minutes Book;
m) Serve all notices, orders, resolutions, decisions, subpoenas
and other processes issued by the Commission;
n) Keep a general docket of all cases brought before the
Commission and compile all final orders, decisions and resolutions of the
Commission;
o) Implement the Commission’s directives, orders and decisions;
p) Issue certified copies, under the Seal of the Commission, of
all papers, documents, orders, record, decisions, and resolutions of the
Commission;
q) Exercise supervision and control over the various staff,
regional and field offices and determine and assign matters to appropriate
offices;
r) Have administrative responsibility for
correspondence/communications coming from the various government line agencies
and corporations;
s) Exercise primary authority to sign papers by authority of the
Chairperson;
t) Provide technical, consultative, research, fact-finding and
advisory service to the Commission;
u) Serve as the information arm of the NCIP; and
v) Perform such other functions and duties as the Commission may
direct.
Part VII. Regional, Field
and Other Offices
Section 1. Regional
Offices and Field Offices. The Commission shall operate and maintain sub-national offices
such as the regional and field offices consistent with its mandate and
organizational objectives, the NCIP shall operate and maintain Regional
Offices.
a) The regional offices shall be distributed according to
equitable number of the clientele population. Regional centers shall be
physically located in strategic geographical sites to maximize the delivery of
basic services and technical support to ICCs/IPs. The distribution of resources
shall be proportionate to the number of clientele and requirements of the
ancestral domains/lands of ICCs/IPs located in each region. The distribution of
the regional offices is as follows:
(1) Ilocos Region - to serve the
indigenous peoples in the Provinces of Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, La Union, and Pangasinan;
(2) Cordillera Region - to serve the IPs in the City of Baguio and
the Provinces of Abra, Benguet,
Mountain Province, Ifugao, Kalinga
and Apayao;
(3) Caraballo and Cagayan Valley Region
- to serve the IPs in the Provinces of Batanes,
Cagayan, Isabela, Quirino,
and Nueva Viscaya;
(4) Pinatubo and Northern Sierra Madre Region - to serve the IPs
in the Provinces of Bulacan, Aurora, Nueva Ecija, Tarlac, Pampanga, Zambales, and Bataan;
(5) Southern Sierra Madre and Bicol Region - to serve the IPs in
the Provinces of Rizal, Quezon, National Capital Region, Camarines
Sur, Camarines Norte, Albay,
and Sorsogon;
(6) Western Islands Region - to serve the IPs in the island
Provinces of Palawan, Oriental Mindoro, Occidental Mindoro, and Romblon;
(7) Central Philippine Islands Region - to serve the IPs in the
island provinces of Antique, Aklan, Capiz, Iloilo, Guimaras, Cebu,
Negros Occidental, Negros Oriental, and Bohol;
(8) Zamboanga Peninsula Region - to
serve IPs in the provinces of Zamboanga del Norte, Zamboanga del Sur, and Basilan;
(9) Northwestern Mindanao Region - to serve the IPs in the
provinces of Misamis Occidental, Misamis
Oriental, Bukidnon and Camiguin;
(10) Northeastern Mindanao Region - to serve the IPs in the
Provinces of Surigao del Norte, Surigao
del Sur Agusan del Norte, Agusan
del Sur;
(11) Southern and Eastern Mindanao Region - to serve the IPs in
the provinces of Davao Oriental, Davao del Sur, Compostela
Valley, Davao del Norte, South Cotabato, Sarangani, and the cities Davao, Tagum
and Island Garden City of Samal; and
(12) Central Mindanao Region - to serve IPs in the provinces of Lanao del Norte, North Cotabato,
Sultan Kudarat, and the cities of Cotabato,
Iligan and Marawi;
b) Field Offices at the provincial and community levels shall
likewise be created. These shall be known respectively as Provincial Offices and
c) Existing regional offices shall continue to function within the
purview of reorganization, revitalization and strengthening of the NCIP
structure. The Commission shall determine the number and scope of regional,
provincial and community service centers based on the management principles of
economy, efficiency and effectiveness.
d) Other field offices shall be created wherever appropriate and
the staffing pattern thereof shall be determined by the NCIP: Provided; that in
provinces where there are ICCs/IPs but without field offices, the NCIP shall
establish appropriate field offices thereat.
Section 2. Other Offices. The NCIP shall have the
power to create additional offices as it may deem necessary subject to existing
rules and regulations, such as, but not limited to, the following:
a) Finance Management Office. For purposes of setting clear
directions on financial policies, and institutionalize checks and balances in
the management of the financial resources and other assets of the Commission,
there is hereby created the Finance Management Office which shall provide
efficient and effective services relating to budgeting, accounting and internal
audit.. It shall:
(1) Prepare the annual budget of the Commission in coordination
with the Office on Policy, Planning, and Research, Department of Budget and
Management and the Office of the President;
(2) Develop, maintain and administer the accounting and financial
management and auditing systems of the Commission ;
(3) Exercise supervision and control over the implementation of
internal auditing rules and regulations within the Commission, including all
funds received by the Commission from whatever source for the implementation of
its programs, projects and activities. and,
(4) Prepare the budget performance and financial statements for
inclusion in the annual and other periodic reports of the Commission for
submission to the Office of the President.
b) Ancestral Domains Fund Division. A special division
under the Administrative Office shall be created to manage the ancestral
domains fund. It shall perform the following functions and responsibilities, viz:
(1) To determine the priority areas for funding;
(2) To equitably allocate funds to the various priority areas for
the delineation and development of ancestral domains, in coordination with the
Ancestral Domains Office;
(3) To prepare a consolidated report of expenditures on a
quarterly basis, in coordination with the Finance Management Office; and
(4) To monitor the implementation of programs funded by the
ancestral domains fund; and
(5) To perform such other functions relative hereto or as may be
assigned by the Commission.
c) Office for Foreign Assisted Programs and Projects. This
office shall be responsible for the completion of the necessary technical
requirements for program and project development. It shall develop programs and
projects for foreign assistance, complete requirements for the approval thereof
, and follow up proposals with the respective institutions; supervise and
manage foreign-funded programs and projects being implemented by the NCIP;
assist people’s organizations and NCIP offices in the development,
implementation and management of foreign-funded projects; and perform such other
functions as may be defined by the Commission.
d) International Relations Office. This unit shall be
responsible for all matters and concerns involving international bodies and
foreign countries and affecting the enjoyment and realization of all human rights
of the ICCs/IPs. To accomplish this mandate, it shall have the following
specific functions:
(1) Assist the NCIP in representing the Philippine ICC/IPs in all
international conferences and conventions dealing with indigenous peoples and
other related concerns;
(2) Monitor the implementation and promotion of international
conventions, treaties and other international instruments affecting the
ICCs/IPs to which the Philippines is a party or a signatory or which are
generally considered part of customary international law and practice.
(3) Maintain and manage, in coordination with the Department of
Foreign Affairs, an Attaché Service for ICCs/IPs at the United Nations in
(4) Conduct research and training in new developments in
international law, trade and world affairs, with special emphasis on the
effects of globalization on the ICCs/IPs and maintain a data base and serve as
a repository of relevant international materials;
(5) Pursue and maintain international linkages and ensure the
proper dissemination abroad of accurate information about ICCs/IPs in the
(6) Perform such other services and functions that the NCIP may
deem necessary.
Part VIII. Composition of
and Guidelines for the Convening of the Consultative Body
Section 1. Definition and
Composition. Pursuant to Section 50 of the Act, the NCIP shall convene the
consultative body which is defined as:
a) A body consisting of the traditional leaders, elders and
representatives from the women and youth sectors of the different ICCs/IPs
shall be constituted by the NCIP from time to time to advise it on matters
relating to the problems, aspirations and interests of the ICCs/IPs.
b) A grassroots consensus building process, and/or multi-level mechanism
of people’s participation in the implementation of the provisions of the Act
and the objectives of the NCIP.
Section 2. Guidelines for
the Convening of the Consultative Body. In convening the Consultative Body as
provided in Section 50 of the Act, the following guidelines shall be
applicable:
a) The Consultative Body shall be composed of tribal leaders and
indigenous peoples representatives from the elderly, women, youth and children
sectors, who shall be accredited for this purpose, and where applicable, in
accordance with the principle of equitable representation of all ICCs/IPs at
each level;
b) The Consultative Body shall be constituted from time to time at
the ancestral domain, barangay, municipal,
provincial, regional and national levels, to advise the NCIP on matters
relating to the problems, aspirations and interests of the ICCs/IPs;
c) On matters pertinent to the formulation of development plans
and monitoring of programs and projects, including those concerning poverty
alleviation/reduction, the Commission shall convene the Consultative Body at
the national level, preferably on a quarterly basis;
d) Regional representation to the national consultative body shall
be selected through an ascending multi-level process emanating from the
community level, and shall be rotated among the different ICC/IP communities;
e) The national consultative body shall be composed of regional
representatives not exceeding a total of thirty five (35), at the participation
rate of five (5) representatives from each of the seven (7) ethnographic
regions as allocated under Section 40 of the Act;
f) The consultative body shall promulgate its own internal rules
of procedure, and whenever possible, it shall use consensual and other
traditional decision making processes during sessions, assemblies or meetings;
and
g) The Commission shall provide the funds necessary to ensure the
viability of the Consultative Body.
RULE VIII. DELINEATION AND
RECOGNITION OF ANCESTRAL DOMAINS
Section 1.
Principle of Self Delineation. Ancestral domains shall be identified and delineated by the
ICCs/IPs themselves through their respective Council of Elders/Leaders whose
members are identified by them through customary processes. The metes and
bounds of ancestral domains shall be established through traditionally
recognized physical landmarks, such as, but not limited to, burial grounds,
mountains, ridges, hills, rivers, creeks, stone formations and the like.
Political or
administrative boundaries, existing land uses, licenses, leases, programs and
projects or presence of non-ICCs in the area shall not limit the extent of an
ancestral domain nor shall these be used to reduce its area.
Section 2.
Procedure on Ancestral Domain Delineation.
The Ancestral
Domains Office (ADO) shall be responsible for the official delineation of
ancestral domains and lands. For this purpose the ADO, at its option and as far
as practicable, may create mechanisms to facilitate the delineation process,
such as the organization of teams of facilitators which may include, among
others, an NGO representative chosen by the community, the Municipal Planning
and Development Officer of the local government units where the domain or
portions thereof is located, and representatives from the IP community whose
domains are to be delineated. The
The identification,
delineation and recognition of ancestral domains shall be in accordance with
the following procedure:
a) Filing of Petition for Delineation. A majority of the
members of the ICCs/IPs in a specific area, through their own recognized
Council of Elders/Leaders, may file a petition with the NCIP through the
Provincial Office for the identification, delineation and recognition of their
ancestral domain. No other entity shall file said petition and to ensure the
legitimacy of the Petition, the same shall be signed by all members of the
concerned ICCs/IPs’ Council of Elders or popularly recognized and accepted
leadership body.
b) Delineation Proper. Upon receipt of a Petition for
Delineation, the
(1) Community-wide information dissemination and consultation with
the ICCs/IPs concerned shall be conducted to inform them about the delineation
process and to establish the genuineness of the Petition.
(2) The Council of Elders/Leaders of the IPs concerned, in
accordance with customary law and/or community history, shall convene to
identify the landmarks indicating the boundaries of their ancestral domains in
a topographic map and submit the same to the NCIP Provincial Office;
(3) Whenever applicable, the Council of Elders/Leaders shall
likewise identify all parts of the domains which may no longer be exclusively
occupied by them but from which they traditionally had access to for their
subsistence and traditional activities, including but not limited to, sacred
sites, worship areas, hunting, gathering, collecting and fishing grounds;
(4) The NCIP Provincial Office, based on the indicative map, shall
approximate the land area of the territory in hectares; and
(5) The ICCs/IPs concerned, with the assistance of the NCIP
Provincial Office shall conduct a census of its community members, the results
of which shall be attached as part of the record.
c) Submission of Proof. To prove its ancestral domain
claim, the concerned ICCs/IPs shall submit to the NCIP Provincial Office the
following:
(1) the testimony of the community elders who participated in the
identification of physical boundaries and who took part in giving the oral
historical accounts; and
(2) any one (1) of the following proofs:
i) Written accounts of the ICCs/IPs customs and traditions;
ii) Written accounts of the ICCs/IPs political structure and
institutions;
iii) Pictures showing long term occupation such as those of old
improvements, burial grounds, sacred places and old villages;
iv) Historical accounts, including pacts and agreements concerning
boundaries entered into by the ICCs/IPs concerned with other ICCs/IPs;
v) Survey plans and sketch maps;
vi) Anthropological data;
vii) Genealogical surveys;
viii) Pictures and descriptive histories of traditional communal
forests and hunting grounds;
ix) Pictures and descriptive histories of traditional landmarks
such as mountains, rivers, creeks, ridges, hills, terraces and the like; and
x) Write-ups of names and places derived from the native dialect
of the community.
d) Notice of Ocular Inspection. The NCIP Provincial Office
shall notify the applicant community through its Council of Elders/ Leaders,
adjoining communities through their elders or leaders, and other affected
entities, five (5) days in advance, that an ocular inspection of the ancestral
domain claim of applicant community shall be conducted on such a date and time
and that their presence is required especially in the verification of the metes
and bounds thereof.
e) Ocular Inspection. The NCIP Provincial Office, in
cooperation with the ICCs/IPs concerned and representatives of adjoining
communities shall conduct an ocular inspection of the area being claimed in
order to verify the landmarks indicating the boundaries of the ancestral domain
and the physical proofs in support of the claim.
f) Evaluation and Appreciation of Proof. The NCIP
Provincial Office shall evaluate the proofs submitted. If the claim is found to
be patently false or fraudulent after diligent inspection and verification,
notice of such rejection which includes the reasons for the denial shall be
sent to the ICC/IP claimant. The ICC/IP claimant, may bring the denial on
appeal with the NCIP on the grounds of arbitrary and/or erroneous appreciation
of facts.
In addition to
the proof submitted, the NCIP Provincial Office may require additional proof
for purposes of substantiating the claim.
g) Survey and Preparation of Survey Plans. Based on its
appreciation of proofs, the NCIP Provincial Office shall request the Regional
Surveys Division to conduct a perimeter survey and prepare survey plan of the
area with the necessary technical description, including the significant
natural features and landmarks found therein.
h) Boundary Conflicts. In cases where there are boundary
conflicts among ICCs/IPs, the NCIP Provincial Office shall refer the matter for
settlement at the community level. If no settlement is reached, the NCIP
Provincial Office shall cause the contending parties to meet and come up with a
preliminary resolution of the conflict to pave the way for the delineation
without prejudice to its full adjudication pursuant to the pertinent provisions
of the Act and these Rules and Regulations.
i) Preparation of Report of Investigation and Other Documents. The
NCIP Provincial Office shall prepare an official report of investigation which
shall include its findings during the ocular inspection; evaluation and
appreciation of proofs submitted, and a preliminary report on the census of
community members, the minimum contents of which shall be the number of ICC/IP
and non-ICC/IP households in the community; a list of community-recognized
indigenous leaders/elders; and a description of the community-recognized PO in
the area.
j) Validation of Map. The NCIP Provincial Office shall
present the survey plan prepared pursuant to item (g) above, to the applicant
ICC/IP community for validation. If not validated, proper corrections may be
made or another survey may be conducted.
k) Basic Documents of the Delineation Process. The approved
and validated survey plan of the Ancestral Domain Claim and the Petition for
Delineation shall constitute the basic documents of the delineation process.
l) Notice and Publication of Ancestral Domain Claim. The
following shall constitute the procedure for notice and publication:
(1) The NCIP Provincial Office shall prepare a copy of the basic
documents of the ancestral domain claim, including a translation thereof in the
native language of the ICCs/IPs concerned;
(2) These documents shall be posted in a prominent place within
the ancestral domain which may be, but not limited to, the tribal hall, the
market place or places of worship and the Service Center, Provincial and
Regional Offices of the NCIP for at least fifteen (15) days;
(3) The basic documents shall also be published in a newspaper of
general circulation in the area once a week for two consecutive weeks to allow
other claimants to file opposition thereto within fifteen (15) days from the
date of last publication; and
(4) In areas where no newspapers exist, broadcasting in a radio
station could be a valid substitute for publication. In case of broadcast, the
same shall be made twice in a week and any opposition may be filed within 15
days from date of last broadcast. If both newspaper and radio station are not
available, the mere posting of the basic documents as in stated in
sub-paragraph (b) above shall be deemed sufficient and any opposition thereto
must be filed within 15 days from last day of posting.
m) Endorsement of the Ancestral Domain Claim to the NCIP. Within
fifteen (15) days after publication, the NCIP Provincial Office shall endorse
the ancestral domain claim to the NCIP Regional Office for verification. If the
Regional Office deems the claim to have been sufficiently proven, it shall
endorse the same to the Ancestral Domains Office with its corresponding recommendation.
n) Review by the Ancestral Domains Office. Within fifteen
(15) days from receipt of the endorsement by the NCIP Regional Office of the
ancestral domain claim , the Ancestral Domains Office, shall review the
documents. If the
o) Preparation and Issuance of CADT. Upon receipt of the
report of the
p) Submission of Maps. The official map of the ancestral
domain shall be submitted to the appropriate government agency for records and
control purposes.
Section 5. Validation of
Prior Delineation of Ancestral Domains
a) Validation of Certificates of Ancestral Domain Claims
(CADCs) ICCs/IP communities whose ancestral domains have been
satisfactorily delineated pursuant to DENR Special Order No. 31, Series of
1989, as amended, and Administrative Order No. 2, Series of 1993, may apply for
the issuance of a Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT) over the area
without going through the process prescribed in the Act. Such application shall
be made through the filing of a duly accomplished application form with the
NCIP Provincial Office for the purpose.
b) Turn-Over of Pertinent Records. The NCIP shall cause the
turn-over, by the DENR or other concerned government agency, of all records
pertinent to approved applications for CADCs immediately upon approval of these
Rules and Regulations, without prejudice to the prerogative of the NCIP to
enter into a Memorandum of Agreement with DENR or other concerned agency, to
ensure a continuous and satisfactory delineation of ancestral lands/domains.
Upon receipt of such records, the NCIP shall require the Provincial Office to
review the same in order to establish the correctness of the delineation made,
sufficiency of proof and regularity of the process undertaken for the purpose.
c) Endorsement to NCIP. Upon favorable findings, the NCIP
Provincial Office shall endorse to the
d) Re-delineation of Areas Covered by CADCs. In case of
irregularity in the delineation process of CADCs granted under DENR DAO No. 2,
Series of 1993, the NCIP Provincial Office shall refer the matter to the NCIP
Regional Office for a field investigation and appropriate re-delineation, if
necessary, in accordance with the process hereinabove described.
e) Other Tenurial Instruments.
The NCIP shall conduct a study of other tenurial
instruments issued to members of ICC/IP communities such as, but not limited
to, Certificates of Land Ownership Awards (CLOA) of the Department of Agrarian
Reform (DAR), and Certificate of Stewardship Contracts (CSC) of the DENR, in
order to determine the feasibility of their conversion to CADTs or CALTs, and
the case may be.
Section 6. Turn-over of
Areas within Ancestral Domains.
Once an area is certified
as an ancestral domain, the Chairperson of NCIP shall issue a notice to
concerned government agencies, such as but not limited to, the DENR, DAR, DILG,
DECS, DOT, DTI, DND, DOH, or DOE, having jurisdiction over these areas, that
the same is within ancestral domains and therefore falls under the jurisdiction
of the concerned ICCs/IPs by operation of law.
The ICCs/IPs and the
concerned government agencies may enter into agreements on the exercise of
joint management responsibilities over such areas. Such agreements shall,
whenever possible, incorporate a plan for the eventual transfer of full
management powers and responsibilities to the ICCs/IPs. The NCIP shall exercise
visitorial and monitoring powers to safeguard the
rights of the ICCs/IPs under the agreement.
Section 7.
Delineation of Ancestral Lands. The procedures for delineation of ancestral lands shall be
undertaken by the
a) Identification of Ancestral Lands within Ancestral Domains. The
ICCs/IPs, through their POs and/or Council of Elders, shall be responsible for
identifying and establishing ancestral lands within their respective ancestral
domains based on their own customs and traditions. With the free and prior
informed consent of its members, the community may also allocate portions of
the ancestral domain to individuals, families or clans in accordance with their
customary laws and traditional practices.
b) Application for Issuance of Certificate of Ancestral Land
Title (CALT) over Ancestral Lands within Ancestral Domains. Individuals,
families or clans belonging to the concerned ICCs/IPs within certified
ancestral domains may apply for Certificate of Ancestral Land Titles over their
identified ancestral lands, without going through the formal delineation
process and in spite of the issuance of any tenurial
instrument issued over the same area before the effectivity
of the Act by filling up the appropriate NCIP Form and filing it with the NCIP
Service Center.
c) Application for Issuance of Certificate of Ancestral Land
Title of Ancestral Lands outside Ancestral Domains. Claimants of ancestral
lands located outside certified ancestral domains may have such ancestral lands
officially established by filling up the appropriate NCIP Form and filing it
with the
(1) Written accounts of the ICCs/IPs customs and traditions;
(2) Written accounts of the ICCs/IPs political structure and
institutions;
(3) Pictures showing long term occupation such as those of old
improvements, burial grounds, sacred places and old villages;
(4) Historical accounts, including pacts and agreements concerning
boundaries entered into by the ICCs/IPs concerned with other ICCs/IPs;
(5) Survey plans and sketch maps;
(6) Anthropological data;
(7) Genealogical surveys;
(8) Pictures and descriptive histories of traditional communal
forests and hunting grounds;
(9) Pictures and descriptive histories of traditional landmarks
such as mountains, rivers, creeks, ridges, hills, terraces and the like; and
(10) Write-ups of names and places derived from the native dialect
of the community.
d) Notice and Publication . Upon receipt of the application
the
(1) The NCIP Service Center shall prepare a copy of the petition
and survey or sketch plans, these being the basic documents of the ancestral
land claim, including a translation thereof in the native language of the
ICCs/IPs concerned;
(2) These documents shall be posted in a conspicuous or prominent
place within the ancestral land which may be, but not limited to, the tribal
hall, the market place or places of worship and the Service Center, Provincial
and Regional Offices of the NCIP for at least fifteen (15) days;
(3) Whenever available, the basic documents shall also be
published in a newspaper of general circulation in the area once a week for two
consecutive weeks to allow other claimants to file opposition thereto within
fifteen (15) days from the date of last publication; and
(4) In areas where no newspapers exist, broadcasting in a radio station
could be a valid substitute for publication. In case of broadcast, the same
shall be made twice in a week and any opposition may be filed within 15 days
from date of last broadcast. If both newspaper and radio station are not
available, the mere posting of the basic documents as in stated in
sub-paragraph (b) above shall be deemed sufficient and any opposition thereto
must be filed within 15 days from last day of posting.
e) Ocular Inspection and Appreciation of Proof. Within
fifteen (15) days after such publication, the
If the
f) Resolution of Conflicting Claims. In case of conflicting
claims, the
g) Parcellary Survey. -Upon
the recommendation of the
h) Report of Investigation. The
i) Review by the NCIP Provincial Office. Upon review by the
NCIP Provincial Office and finding the application to be sufficiently proved,
the same shall be endorsed to the NCIP Ancestral Domains Office through the
NCIP Regional Office.
j) Issuance of Certificate of Ancestral Land Title (CALT). The
Section 8.
Registration of Certificates of Ancestral Domain Title (CADTs) and Certificates
of Ancestral Land Title (CALTs). The NCIP, through the Ancestral Domains Office (ADO), shall
register all CADTs and CALTs with the Register of Deeds in the place where the
properties are located. The NCIP together with the Land Registration Authority
shall formulate the procedure for such registration. Awardees of CADT and CALT
themselves may opt to personally cause such registration..
Section 9. Reconveyance of Fraudulently Transferred Ancestral Lands. Within two years from the effectivity of the Act, the NCIP shall take appropriate
legal action for the cancellation of illegally acquired titles ensuring however
that the rights of possessors in good faith are protected. Procedures for reconveyance to the ICCs/IPs concerned shall be undertaken
by the ICCs/IPs with the assistance of NCIP if requested.
This provision shall not
prejudice the right of ICCs/ IPs to redemption of lands transferred under vitiated
consent and/or unconscionable consideration as provide for in Chapter III,
Section 8 of the Act and these Rules and Regulations.
Part II. Ancestral Domain
Development and Protection
Section 1.
Right to Manage and Develop Ancestral Domains. The ICCs/IPs shall have
the right to freely pursue their economic, social, political and cultural
development. In the exercise of this right, the ICCs/IPs shall formulate and
pursue their own plans for the sustainable management and development of the
land and natural resources as well as human resources within their ancestral
domains based on their indigenous knowledge systems and practices and on the
principle of self-determination. Such plans may be consolidated into an
Ancestral Domain Sustainable Development and Protection Plan (ADSDPP) which
shall be the basis of the Five Year Master Plan defined under these Rules and
Regulations.
Section 2.
Preparation and Adoption of Ancestral Domains Sustainable Development and
Protection Plans (ADSDPP). With the assistance of the NCIP, the ICCs/IPs concerned shall
prepare their own ADSDPP in accordance with their customary practices, laws and
traditions. The ADSDPP shall contain the following basic information:
a) Manner by which the ICCs/IPs will protect the domains;
b) Kind or type of development programs adopted and decided by the
ICCs/IPs, in relation to livelihood, education, infrastructure, self
governance, environment, natural resources, culture and other practical
development aspects;
c) Basic community policies covering the implementation of all
forms of development activities in the area; and
d) Basic management system, including the sharing of benefits and
responsibilities among members of the concerned ICC/IP community.
All ADSDPPs shall be
disseminated among community members in any mode of expression appropriate to
the customs and traditions of the ICCs/IPs including, but not limited to,
writings in their own language, oral interactions, visual arts, and analogous
modes.
The ICCs/IPs shall submit
to the municipal and provincial government unit having territorial and
political jurisdiction over them their ADSDPP in order for the said LGU to
adopt and incorporate the same in the Municipal Development Plan, Municipal
Annual Investment Plan, Provincial Development Plan, and Provincial Annual
Investment Plan.
Section 3.
Basic Steps in the Formulation of an ADSDPP. For purposes of ensuring the authenticity and
effectiveness of the Plan, the community members, through their
a) Information Dissemination. The Council of
Elders/Leaders, with the assistance of the NCIP, shall conduct of intensive
information-dissemination on the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA) among the
community members. For the purpose of information-dissemination, the NCIP may
engage the services of an authorized NGO or IPO;
b) Baseline Survey. The Council of Elders/Leaders, with the
assistance of the NCIP, shall conduct a participatory baseline survey of the
ancestral domain focusing on the existing population, natural resources,
development projects, land use, sources of livelihood, income and employment,
education and other concerns. For the purpose of the baseline survey, the NCIP
may engage the services of an authorized NGO or IPO;
c) Development Needs Assessment. The Council of
Elders/Leaders, with the assistance of the NCIP, shall conduct workshops in
every village within the ancestral domain to determine the will of the
community members regarding the kind of development the community should pursue
in terms of livelihood, education, infrastructure, self-governance,
environment, natural resources, culture and other aspects. For the purpose of
the Development Needs Assessment, the NCIP may engage the services of an
authorized NGO or IPO;
d) Formulation of Ancestral Domain Sustainable Development and
Protection Plan (ADSDPP). The concerned ICC/IP, through its IPO and/or
Council of Elders, and with the assistance of the NCIP, shall formulate its
Ancestral Domain Sustainable Development and Protection Plan;
e) Validation of ADSDPP. With the assistance of the NCIP,
the IPO and/or Council of Elders shall conduct assemblies among the ICC/IP
members for the validation and approval of the ADSDPP.
f) Submission of ADSDPP to NCIP. Upon validation and
approval, the IPO and/or the Council of Elders shall submit the ADSDPP to the
NCIP for their information and concurrence. The ADSDPP shall form part of the
data base on ICC/IP communities in the country, in relation to development
projects, programs and activities within the ancestral domain, which the NCIP
is mandated to establish.
g) Conversion of Ancestral Domain Management Plans (ADMPs) to
Ancestral Domain Sustainable Development and Protection Plans (ADSDPPs). ICCs/IP
communities have the option to convert or modify their existing Ancestral
Domain Management Plans prepared and completed pursuant to DENR-DAO 96-34 into
Ancestral Domain Sustainable Development and Protection Plan in accordance with
these rules.
Section 4.
Management of Joint Undertakings Within Ancestral Domains. The ICCs/IPs shall have
priority rights in the harvesting, extraction, development or exploitation of
the natural resources within the ancestral domain. Should the ICCs/IPs give
their free and prior informed consent to any development activity, project,
program or plan to be implemented by any government or private entity, they
shall have the following rights:
a) The right to an informed and intelligent participation in the
formulation and implementation of the project;
b) The right to receive just and fair compensation for any damage
or loss which may be sustained as a result of such project;
c) The right to benefit sharing; and
d) The right to exercise visitorial
powers and take appropriate action to safeguard the rights of the community
under the same contract.
Section 5. Existing
Property Rights Regimes. Property rights within the ancestral domains already existing
and/or vested upon effectivity of the Act, shall be
recognized and respected.
Section 6.
Existing Contracts, Licenses, Concessions, Leases, and Permits Within Ancestral
Domains. Existing
contracts, licenses, concessions, leases and permits for the exploitation of
natural resources within the ancestral domain may continue to be in force and
effect until they expire. Thereafter, such contracts, licenses, concessions,
leases and permits shall not be renewed without the free and prior informed
consent of the IP community members and upon renegotiation of all terms and
conditions thereof. All such existing contracts, licenses, concessions, leases
and permits may be terminated for cause upon violation of the terms and
conditions thereof.
Section 7.
Right To Manage Protected and Environmentally Critical Areas. The ICCs/IPs, through
their POs and/or Council of Elders, shall determine the terms and conditions
for the exploration of natural resources within the ancestral domain for the
purpose of ensuring ecological balance, environmental protection and
conservation. Accordingly, the ICCs/IPs, with the assistance of the NCIP,
shall:
a) Inventory of all Portions of Ancestral Domains. Conduct
an inventory of all portions of ancestral domains which have been determined by
appropriate government agencies as necessary for critical watersheds,
mangroves, wildlife sanctuaries, wilderness, protected areas, forest cover or
reforestation, national parks, or natural parks for purposes of evaluating the
same under their own parameters;
b) Environmentally Critical Areas. All areas found by the
concerned community as environmentally critical areas as determined in
paragraph (a) above shall be maintained, developed, protected and conserved in
accordance with their indigenous knowledge systems and practices (IKSPs) and
Customary Laws;
c) Turn-over of Funds to Community. Funds previously
allocated by government for the management of the area shall be turned over,
through the NCIP, to the community to be used for the same purpose; and
d) Transfer of Management Responsibility. Should the
community decide, on the basis of free and prior informed consent, to transfer
management responsibility over the area to another entity, such decision shall
be made in writing to be signed by all members of the community’s Council of
Elders. Provided, that all forms of exploitation of the natural resources in
the area shall not be allowed and that appropriate technology transfer aimed at
speeding up the reversion of management of the area to the community is
effected. The process of transfer of Management Responsibility shall be
witnessed by the NCIP, without prejudice to its visitorial
and monitoring powers.
Section 8.
Five Year Master Plan. Based on the Ancestral Domain Sustainable Development and
Protection Plans (ADSDPP) of the various ICCs/IPs and other relevant
information, the Office on Policy, Planning and Research shall formulate a
Five-Year Master Plan for the delivery of appropriate support services to the
ICCs/IPs.
Such support services,
which includes infrastructure, health and educational services, training,
credit facilities, community production and marketing facilities,
organizational support services and the like, shall be identified by the
ICCs/IPs themselves through traditional and customary consultative processes
facilitated by the community-recognized POs and/or Council of Elders.
The allocation of funds
for and delivery of such support services shall be made with utmost
transparency and with the involvement of the community POs, Councils of Elders
and community members. Any violation of this provision shall be subject to
administrative sanction and be punishable under Section 72 of the Act.
The Five-Year Master Plan
shall also indicate the priorities for development of the ICCs/IPs affecting
their lives, beliefs, institutions, spiritual well-being and ancestral domains
or lands pursuant to Section 17 of the Act.
Section 9. Certification
Precondition Prior to Issuance of any Permits or Licenses.
a) Need for Certification. No department of government or
other agencies shall issue, renew or grant any concession, license, lease,
permit, or enter into any production sharing agreement without a prior
certification from the NCIP that the area affected does not overlap any
ancestral domain.
b) Procedure for Issuance of Certification by NCIP.
(1) The certification, above mentioned, shall be issued by the
Ancestral Domain Office, only after a field based investigation that such areas
are not within any certified or claimed ancestral domains.
(2) The certification shall be issued only upon the free, prior,
informed and written consent of the ICCs/IPs who will be affected by the
operation of such concessions, licenses or leases or production-sharing
agreements. A written consent for the issuance of such certification shall be
signed by at least a majority of the representatives of the all households
comprising the concerned ICCs/IPs.
c) When the Areas Affected are within Ancestral Domains. When
the areas affected are certified to be within ancestral domains, all licenses,
leases, permits or the like may henceforth be issued only upon compliance with
the procedures for securing of free and prior informed consent, pursuant to
these Rules and Regulations. The NCIP, upon complaint of the ICCs/IPs, or on
its own initiative, shall issue compulsory processes to stop or suspend any
project that has not satisfied the consultation process and the requirements of
Free and Prior Informed Consent of the ICCs/IPs or upon violation of any of the
terms and conditions of the contract, lease, permit or production sharing
agreement.
The NCIP in collaboration
with the ICCs/IPs concerned shall closely monitor the implementation of the
Project and for this purpose may gain access to the premises, facilities,
records and documents of the project to ascertain that their rights are
adequately protected.
Section 10.
Right to Stop and Suspend Projects. The NCIP, may motu propio
or upon the instance of ICCs/IPs, shall have the right to stop and suspend the
implementation of any development program, project, policy or plan, and after
due investigation and proof that consent was obtained due to manipulation,
coercion, intimidation and deceit or where proponent has violated any or all of
the terms and conditions stipulated in the Memorandum of Agreement. Whenever
applicable and after due notice, the cash bond deposited or surety bond posted
by the proponent shall be confiscated and forfeited to answer for compensatory
measures shall be imposed upon the proponent.
Section 11.
Exemption from Taxes. All lands certified as Ancestral Domains shall be exempt from the
payment of real property taxes, special levies, and other forms of exaction
except such portions of the ancestral domains as are actually used for
large-scale agriculture, commercial forest plantations and residential purposes
or upon titling by private persons.
All exaction shall be used
to facilitate the development and improvement of the ancestral domains. For
this purpose the NCIP shall coordinate with the appropriate government offices
to facilitate the transfer of such revenues to the concerned ICC/IP community.
For purposes
hereof, residential houses refer to buildings or structures used as the
personal residence of an individual and shall not include any indigenous houses
that are used communally, such as, but not limited to, houses of worship and
other similar structures for ritual purposes.
Section 12.
Temporary Requisition Powers. Prior to the establishment, organization and staffing of its
survey divisions and/or units through which it can effectively fulfill its
mandate, and within three (3) years after its creation, the NCIP may request
the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, or engage private survey
companies, to conduct the survey of ancestral lands/domains, under a Memorandum
of Agreement. Such Memorandum of Agreement shall stipulate among others, a
provision on technology transfer to the NCIP. The Secretary of the DENR shall
accommodate any such request within one (1) month from its issuance.
Section 13.
Expropriation. Pursuant to Section 64 of the Act, expropriation of lands under
existing laws may be resorted to for purposes of resolving conflicts of
interest in relation to ancestral domains or for the promotion of the “common
good”.
RULE IX. JURISDICTION AND
PROCEDURES FOR ENFORCEMENT OF RIGHTS
Section 1.
Primacy of Customary Law. All conflicts related to ancestral domains and lands, involving
ICCs/IPs, such as but not limited to conflicting claims and boundary disputes,
shall be resolved by the concerned parties through the application of customary
laws in the area where the disputed ancestral domain or land is located.
All conflicts related to
the ancestral domains or lands where one of the parties is a non-ICC/IP or
where the dispute could not be resolved through customary law shall be heard
and adjudicated in accordance with the Rules on Pleadings, Practice and
Procedures Before the NCIP to be adopted hereafter.
All decisions of the NCIP
may be brought on Appeal by Petition for Review to the Court of Appeals within
fifteen (15) days from receipt of the Order or Decision. Page 50
Section 2. Rules of Interpretation. In the interpretation of
the provisions of the Act and these rules, the following shall apply:
a) All doubts in the interpretation of the provisions of the Act,
including its these rules, or any ambiguity in their application shall be resolved
in favor of the ICCs/IPs.
b) In applying the provisions of the Act in relation to other
national laws, the integrity of the ancestral domains, culture, values,
practices, institutions, customary laws and traditions of the ICCs/IPs shall be
considered and given due regard.
c) The primacy of customary laws shall be upheld in resolving
disputes involving ICCs/IPs.
d) Customary laws, traditions and practices of the ICCs/IPs of the
land where the conflict arises shall first be applied with respect to property
rights, claims and ownership, hereditary succession and settlement of land
disputes.
e) Communal rights under the Act shall not be construed as
co-ownership as defined in Republic Act No. 386, otherwise known as the New
Civil Code of the
f) In the resolution of controversies arising under the Act, where
no legal provisions or jurisprudence apply, the customs and traditions of the
concerned ICCs/IPs shall be resorted to; and
g) The interpretation and construction of any of the provisions of
the Act shall not in any manner adversely affect the rights and benefits of the
ICCs/IPs under other conventions, international treaties and instruments,
national laws, awards, customary laws and agreements.
Section 3. Appeals to the
Court of Appeals. Decisions of the NCIP is appealable to the Court of Appeals by way
of a petition for review within fifteen (15) days from receipt of a copy
thereof.
Section 4. Execution of
Decisions, Awards, and Orders. Upon expiration of the period herein provided and no appeal is
perfected by any of the contending parties, the Hearing Officer of the NCIP, on
its own initiative or upon motion by the prevailing party, shall issue a writ
of execution requiring the sheriff or the proper officer to execute final decisions,
orders or awards of the Regional Hearing Officer of the NCIP.
Section 5.
Jurisdiction and Quasi-judicial Functions of the NCIP. In relation to its
quasi-judicial powers, the NCIP shall :
a) Through its regional offices, have jurisdiction over all claims
and disputes involving the rights of ICCs/IPs;
b) Promulgate rules and regulations governing the hearing and
disposition of cases filed before it as well as those pertaining to its
internal functions and such rules and regulations as may be necessary to carry
out the purposes of the Act;
c) To administer oaths, summon the parties to a controversy, issue
subpoenas requiring the attendance and testimony of witnesses or the production
of such books, papers, contracts, records, agreements and other documents of
similar nature as may be material to a just determination of the matter under
investigation or hearing conducted in pursuance of the Act;
d) To hold any person in contempt, directly or indirectly, and impose
appropriate penalties therefor; and
e) To enjoin any or all acts involving or arising from any case
pending before it which, if not restrained forthwith, may cause grave and
irreparable damage to any of the parties to the case or seriously affect social
or economic activity.
Section 6.
No Restraining Order or Preliminary Injunction. No inferior court of the
Philippines shall have jurisdiction to issue any restraining order or writ of
preliminary injunction against the NCIP or any of its duly authorized or
designated offices in any case, dispute or controversy arising from, necessary
to, or interpretation of the Act and other pertinent laws relating to ICCs/IPs
and ancestral domains.
RULE X. ANCESTRAL DOMAIN
FUNDS
Section 1. Sourcing and
Appropriation. The NCIP shall endeavor to realize the amounts intended for the
Ancestral Domain Fund appropriated under Section 71 of the Act. It shall
augment this fund by actively seeking additional government funds and
soliciting donations, endorsements and grants from various sources, including
foreign funds made available for the ICCs/IPs through the Government of the
Section 2. Allocation and
Disposition. For purposes of delineation and development of ancestral domains,
Ancestral Domain Funds shall be allocated equitably, to be computed on a per
linear/kilometer basis. Where the POs and/or Councils of Elders have
sufficiently expertise for purpose of delineation and ancestral domain
development activities, the NCIP shall grant these funds directly to the POs
and/or Council of Elders, who shall be held accountable for such funds, without
prejudice to the NCIP’s visitation and monitoring powers; Provided, otherwise,
that the NCIP shall manage and supervise the delineation and development, while
ensuring the transfer of technology to the ICCs/IPs concerned.
Section 3. Reporting and
Audit. The
Ancestral Domain Fund shall be subject to the usual government accounting and
auditing procedures. A consolidated report of expenditures under this fund
shall be prepared and presented to the NCIP en banc regularly on a quarterly
basis. The same report shall also be presented to the Consultative Body when it
is in session and made available to any indigenous cultural community
RULE XI . PENALTIES AND
SANCTIONS
Section 1. Punishable Acts
Related to Ancestral Lands/Domains. Any person found guilty of any the
following acts shall be penalized:
a) Unlawful or unauthorized intrusion into ancestral domains/lands;
b) Misrepresentation in obtaining the free and prior informed
consent of ICCs/IPs;
c) Usurpation of real rights in property;
d) Forcible displacement or relocation of ICCs/IPs from their
ancestral lands/domains;
e) Pollution of the air and bodies of water within the ancestral
domain/land;
Section 2.
Punishable Acts Related to Employment. Any person who commits any of the following
acts are subject to punishment as prescribed in the Act:
a) Exposure to hazardous working conditions;
b) Non-payment of salaries, wages and other work benefits;
c) Violation of the freedom of association and trade union
activities;
d) Exploitation of child labor;
e) Sexual harassment; and
f) Other analogous circumstances
Section 3.
Punishable Acts Related to Cultural Integrity. Commission of any of the
following acts or violation of any of the following rights are punishable under
the Act:
a) Exploring, excavating or making diggings on archeological sites
of the ICCs/IPs for the purpose of obtaining materials of cultural value
without the free and prior informed consent of the community concerned; and
b) Defacing, removing or otherwise destroying artifacts which are
of great importance and significance to the ICCs/IPs for the preservation of
their cultural heritage.
Part II. Persons Liable
Section 1.
Persons Liable. The following are liable for punishment for violation of the
rights of ICCs/IPs enumerated in the Act:
a) Any individual, whether a member of the same or different
ICC/IP community or not;
b) Any individual who is non-IP, whether a Filipino or alien;
c) In case of violation of rights committed by juridical persons,
the Manager, President, Chief Executive Officer, or any of the officers of such
juridical persons; and
d) Government officials, officers or employees.
Part III. Penalties
Section 1. Imposable
Penalties in Accordance With Customary Law. The ICC/IP community whose rights have been
violated may penalize any violator in accordance with their customary law,
except:
a) Where the penalty is cruel, degrading or inhuman; or
b) Where the penalty is death or excessive fine
Section 2.
Penalties Imposed by the Act. All violators shall be punished, as follows:
a) Imprisonment for not less than nine (9) months but not more
than twelve (12) years;
b) Fine of not less than One Hundred Thousand Pesos (P100,000.00)
but not more than Five Hundred Thousand Pesos (P500,000.00); or
c) Both such fine and imprisonment at the discretion of the court.
Section 3.
Accessory Penalties. In addition to the penalties referred to in the preceding article,
the following may be imposed:
a) For all violators, payment of damages suffered by the ICCs/IPs
as a consequence of the unlawful act;
b) For corporations or other juridical persons, cancellation of
their registration certificate or license; and
c) For public officials, perpetual disqualification to hold public
office.
RULE XII: MERGER OF THE ONCC/OSCC
Part I: Reorganization
Process
Section 1. Definition and
Policy. Merger
refers to the reorganization of the ONCC and OSCC to establish the NCIP as the
primary government agency that is efficient, effective and fully responsive to
the needs and requirements of the indigenous peoples, its main public
clientele. The reorganization shall lead to a revitalized and strengthened
structure to achieve the objectives of the NCIP.
Section 2. Reorganization
Procedures. The procedures for the merger are the following:
a) Revitalization and Strengthening. To achieve this
purpose, the NCIP shall:
1) Form a common staff support system which shall be organized
along the various offices and functions of the Commission as provided in
Sections 46 to 49 of the Act;
2) Maintain a multi-level structure from the national to
sub-national and community levels, to ensure a responsive, competent
organization. Sub-national offices are categorized as regional and provincial
offices. The basic unit of organization is the
3) Relocation and establishment of Service Centers in strategic
sites intended to serve the most number of constituents in contiguous ancestral
domains/lands for greater efficiency, effectiveness and economy: Provided; that
officers and employees assigned to Service Centers shall receive compensation
and incentives commensurate to the risks and hardship of these Service Centers:
Provided further; that the NCIP shall assign the most qualified, experienced
personnel, possessing of proven inter-disciplinary skills to facilitate a people-centered
development program;
4) Reorientation of the work ethic and values of all officers and
employees through regular and intensive human resource and organization
development programs in the context of the IPRA; and
5) Cultivation of a policy of preferential option for IPs in the
personnel policies of the NCIP.
b) Retirement of Officials and Employees of the ONCC and OSCC. Pursuant
to the rules of government reorganization, all officials and employees of the
ONCC and OSCC are deemed retired and shall be on holdover status upon the effectivity of the Act, until the issuance of a thirty
(30-day) notice of termination;
c) Notice of Termination. Incumbent ONCC/OSCC officials and
employees shall be individually served a notice of termination of service
thirty (30) days before such termination;
d) Staffing Pattern. The NCIP shall prepare a staffing
pattern composed of newly created positions subject to the approval of the
Department of Budget and Management and the Civil Service Commission and shall
implement the same; and
e) Criteria for Filling Up of the Newly Created Positions. The
newly created positions shall be filled up according to the:
1) Qualifications and standards set by the Civil Service; and
2) Criteria of retention and appointment prepared by the
consultative body convened for this purpose, for the implementation of the
Placement Committee.
Section 3. Order of
Priority and Preferential Rights. The exercise of priority rights in the appointment of the retired
ONCC/OSCC personnel shall be in the following order:
a) Former ONCC/OSCC officers and employees who are IPs and have
held permanent appointments to positions comparable to vacant or new position;
or in case there are not enough comparable positions to positions next lower in
rank; Provided that the Civil Service rules and regulations and guidelines
approved by the Placement Committee shall apply in case of conflict between two
equally qualified former officers/employees who are IPs; Provided, further,
that those with CESO rank shall have priority in employment to comparable
positions in the new staffing pattern; and
b) Bona fide IP applicants over non-IP applicants with equal
qualifications.
Section 4. Reappointment
of Former ONCC/OSCC Personnel. Former officers and employees of the ONCC and OSCC may be
re-appointed to the NCIP after meeting the qualifications and standards set by
the Civil Service and Placement Committee, in accordance with the criteria set
by the Consultative Body.
Section 5. Payment of
Gratuity and Retirement Benefits. Personnel of the ONCC/OSCC who may be retired or separated from
service as a result of the reorganization shall be entitled to gratuity or
retirement benefits at the rate of one and a half (1 1/2) months pay for every
year of service, as provided in Section 74 of the Act; Provided, that the
computation of the retirement benefits or gratuity shall begin upon the effectivity of the notice of termination; Provided further,
that the same gratuity and retirement benefits shall be refunded by the former
ONCC/OSCC personnel upon his/her reappointment to the NCIP.
Section 6. Placement
Committee. Pursuant
to Section 77 of the Act, the Commission shall create a Placement Committee to
assist in the judicious selection and placement of the NCIP personnel.
Section 7. Composition of
the Placement Committee. The NCIP Chairperson shall be the Chairperson and Presiding
Officer of the Committee. It shall prepare and approve its own Rules of
Procedures.
a) At the national level, it shall be composed of the following:
(1) The seven Commissioners of the NCIP; Provided, that majority,
or four (4) Commissioners shall suffice to constitute the NCIP representation;
(2) An IP representative from each of the first level employees
association of the ONCC and OSCC;
(3) An IP representative from each of the second level employees
association of the ONCC and OSCC;
(4) Representatives of accredited non-government organizations
(NGOs) with national constituencies, and with at least five years in community work
among the IPs. The exact number of NGO representatives shall be determined by
the NCIP, but in no case shall it exceed three. They shall be informed of their
appointments five (5) days before the initial meeting of the Committee; and
(5) Representatives of accredited indigenous peoples’
organizations (IPOs) with regional constituencies representing the seven
ethnographic regions, and with at least five years of existence or proven track
records. The exact number of IPO representatives shall be determined by the
NCIP but in no case shall it exceed three. They shall be informed of their
appointments five (5) days before the initial meeting of the Committee.
b) At the
Regional Level, the Placement Committee shall be composed of the following:
(1) The Chairperson of the Commission or his duly authorized
representative; the Commissioner representing the ethnographic area of the
Region or his/her duly authorized representative;
(2) An IP representative from each of the first level employees
association of the ONCC or OSCC in the region, as the case maybe;
(3) An IP representative from each of the second level employees
association of the ONCC or OSCC in the region;
(4) Representatives of accredited non-government organizations
(NGOs) with regional constituencies, and with at least five years in community
work among the IPs. The exact number of NGO representatives shall be determined
by the NCIP, but in no case shall it exceed two (2). They shall be informed of
their appointments five (5) days before the initial meeting of the Committee;
and
(5) Representatives of accredited indigenous peoples’
organizations (IPOs) based in the region. The exact number of IPO
representatives shall be determined by the NCIP but in no case shall it exceed
two (2). They shall be informed of their appointments five (5) days before the
initial meeting of the Committee
Section 3. NGO
Accreditation to the Placement Committee. To qualify for appointment to the Placement
Committee, the non-government organizations must submit their accreditation
papers to the Chairperson of the NCIP, not later than seven days after the effectivity of these Rules and Regulations. The documents
shall consist of the following:
a) Certificate of Registration with the Securities and Exchange
Commission;
b) Organizational Profile and Record of Accomplishments related to
community work among three regional IPOs, or one IPO with a national
constituency, five years prior to the enactment of the IPRA; in the case of
accreditation for regional level Placement Committee accreditation,
Organizational Profile and Record of Accomplishments related to community work
among three (3) community IPOs;
c) Record of Advocacy for IP rights, particularly their constructive
roles in the passage of the IPRA; and
d) Letter of Intent of the NGO to participate in the performance
of the various tasks and functions of the Placement Committee and the formal
nomination of its representative and alternate, to sit as member of the
Placement Committee. The nomination shall be accompanied by the
representative’s bio-data.
Section 4. IPO
Accreditation to the Placement Committee. To qualify for appointment to the Placement
Committee, the indigenous peoples’ organizations must submit their
accreditation papers to the Chairperson of the NCIP, not later than seven days
after the effectivity of these Rules and Regulations,
consisting of the following:
a) Organizational Profile and Record of Accomplishments in
community organizing and social development related to the protection and
recognition of ancestral domains/lands, five years prior to the IPRA;
b) Favorable endorsement from at least three different communities
in an ethnographic region or where the IPO is based, or operating; in the case
of accreditation for regional level Placement Committee, favorable endorsement
from two IP communities of the region.
c) Report on their role in support of the enactment of IPRA; and
d) Letter of Intent of the IPO to participate in the performance
of the various tasks and functions of the Placement Committee, and the
nominations of the IPO representative and alternate.
Section 5. Operational
Guidelines of the Placement Committee. Within three (3) days from receipt of the resolution of the
Placement Committee, the NCIP Chairperson shall issue an administrative order
implementing the Operational Guidelines on personnel appointment. The
Operational Guidelines shall be effective immediately.
Section 6. Incorporation
of the Placement Committee’s Operational Guidelines The Placement Committee
Operational Guidelines shall be incorporated in the Merit and Promotion Plan of
the NCIP, any amendments to the Criteria and Guidelines shall be made in
coordination with the consultative body called for this specific purpose. The
recommendations of the consultative body shall be submitted to the Commission
for consideration.
Section 8. Principles In
Formulating the Criteria of Appointment. The consultative body shall apply, but not
be limited to, the following principles in the formulation of the criteria :and
guidelines for retention and appointment:
a) Adoption of qualifications and standards set by the Civil
Service Commission as the minimum set of qualifications and standards;
b) Adoption of evaluation measures to determine the applicant’s
working knowledge on the IPRA; and
c) Actual accountability and performance records of former
ONCC/OSCC personnel who are seeking appointment.
Part III: Transition
Period
Section 1. Definition of
Transition Period. This term shall refer to the following stages of reorganization
leading to the establishment of the NCIP:
a) Winding up of the ONCC/OSCC This period covers six months,
beginning from the date of effectivity of the Act, on
November 22, 1997, and ending on May 22, 1998, during this period, the
ONCC/OSCC shall conduct an audit of their finances, and prepare Terminal
Reports of their accomplishments including financial audit which shall be
submitted, on or before May 22, 1998, to the offices and agencies of government
listed below:
1) Office of the President
2) NCIP; and
3) Commission on Audit.
b) The NCIP main clientele, and the general public may exercise
their Rights to Accessibility and Transparency as provided in Section 45 of the
Act, to obtain all official records, documents and papers pertinent to the
financial audit and Terminal Report of the ONCC/OSCC.
c) The NCIP shall initiate a transition mechanism during the transition
period which shall consist of the following:
1) Creation of the Transition Staff composed of a skeletal force
from among the former personnel of the ONCC/OSCC, who shall be selected based
on the criteria set by the Commission. The Transition Staff shall assist the
Commission in the performance of the following tasks:
i) Preparation of the NCIP CY 1999 Budget;
ii) Inventory of the transferred assets/properties of the
ONCC/OSCC to the NCIP in accordance to Section 76 of the IPRA; and the review
of all transferred contracts, records, and documents as to their status, and
evaluation of the same for purposes of continuance, termination, modification
or amendment, pursuant to Section 76 of the Act;
iii) Provision of staff support as the Commission may require in
preparation for the full functional operation of the new offices created under
Sections 46 to 50 of the Act;
iv) Preparatory policy planning and research activities for
institutional development of the NCIP and formulation of development programs
in line with the IPRA framework;
v) Activities in response to special concerns affecting IPs as may
be brought to the attention of the Commission; and,
vi) Setting up of mechanisms of technical/financial cooperation
with foreign funding agencies and Civil Society, for the implementation of its
policies, programs and projects; and
vii) Such other tasks pertinent to the implementation of the IPRA,
as may be required by the NCIP.
RULE XIII. FINAL
PROVISIONS
Section 1.
Special Provision. The provisions of the Act relating to the civil, political, social
and human rights and those pertaining to the identification, delineation,
recognition, and titling of ancestral lands and domains are applicable
throughout the entire country: Provided; That lands within the Baguio Townsite Reservation shall not be reclassified except
through appropriate legislation: Provided further; That all land rights and
titles acquired or recognized in Baguio City through judicial, administrative
or other processes before the effectivity of the Act
shall remain valid: Provided finally; That the City of Baguio shall not
dispossess claimants of their undocumented private lands as guaranteed under
Act No. 1963, as amended by Act No. 2711, C.A. No. 143 and R. A. No. 329.
The undocumented private
lands of claimants in
The Ancestral Domains
Office shall organize and operationalize a
Coordinating Desk for Baguio Ancestral Domain/Land Rights. This desk shall
serve the indigenous peoples of
a) Accept the Terminal Report of the status of all Ancestral
Domains/Land Claims in the City of Baguio from the DENR-CAR, including a final
and validated list of claims and claimants and complete records of all claims
filed, processed and the actions taken thereon, if any;
b) Within a period of one and one-half (1 1/2) years from the effectivity of these rules, process and validate all
Ancestral Domains/Land Claims filed with the Department of Environment and
Natural Resources pursuant to the provisions of Special Order No. 31, Series of
1989, as amended, and Department Administrative Order No. 02, Series of 1993,
adopting procedures provided in the Act; and
c) Present to a consultative body to generate a consensus on the
following matters: procedures on the disposal of all ancestral domain/land
claims; representation of the IPs in the quarterly national consultations; and
resolution of all other matters that may arise within the premises.
Section 2. Separability Clause. In case any clause, sentence, Section, or
provision of these rules and regulations or any portion hereof is held or
declared unconstitutional or invalid by a competent court, the other Sections
or provisions hereof which are not affected thereby shall continue to be full
force and effect.
Section 3.
Repealing and Amending Clause. All Administrative Orders, rules and regulations, memoranda,
circulars, and other orders inconsistent herewith or contrary to the provisions
of these rules and regulations are hereby repealed or modified accordingly. The
Commission shall have the authority, among others, to amend, revise, add to,
supplement, interpret, clarify, delete, or make exemptions to any provision of
these rules and regulations with the end in view of ensuring that the
provisions of the Act are properly implemented and enforced, and the goals and
objectives adequately achieved.
Section 4. Effectivity. These rules shall take
effect fifteen (15) days upon its publication in any two newspapers of general
circulation.
APPROVED this 9th of June,
1998.
MAI T.
TUAN |
ERLINDA
M. DOLANDOLAN |
Commissioner
|
Commissioner
|
CASTILLO
B. TIDANG, JR. |
MIGKETAY
VICTORINO L. SAWAY |
Commissioner
|
Commissioner
|
DAVID A.
DAOAS, CESO I |
|
Chairperson |