Church backs Ati tribal people’s struggle

Church backs Ati tribal people’s struggle
Members of the Missionaries of Charitywith ethnic Ati tribal people. Photo: UCAN/Jimmy Domingo

(UCAN): The Philippines Church has extended support to the Ati tribal people’s struggle to protect land awarded to them by the government on Boracay Island, a popular tourist spot renowned for white sand beaches and crystalline waters. 

“The Ati people have been stewards of the land for generations. They have nurtured it and made it productive,” said Bishop Jose Colin Bagaforo, head of Caritas Philippines while referring to the threat the tribal people face over the ownership of land awarded by the Rodrigo Duterte government through a Certificate of Land Ownership Award (CLOA) in 2018.

“Their right to the land is a matter of human rights and we urge all parties to respect these rights,” said Bishop Bagaforo of Kidapwan in a statement on March 27.

“These CLOAs were aimed at alleviating poverty,” observed the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines Episcopal Commission on Indigenous Peoples (ECIP).

The development of tourism has posed challenges to the ethnic people, the original inhabitants of Boracay Island in the Visayas region who are called Negritos. They occupied the island before it became a famous tourism spot.

To prevent the tribal people’s displacement from the island, the Philippine government issued them land titles for 3.2 hectares, equivalent to approximately one  per cent of the island’s total area, in 2018.

However, the indigenous people received an order approving the cancellation of their CLOA in 2023.

Despite filing motions for reconsideration at regional and central levels, their requests were denied. They have filed a motion for reconsideration with the Bureau of Agrarian Legal Assistance, awaiting a verdict.

The ECIP recalled how the Ati community faced displacement from their ancestral lands.

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Security guards, acting on behalf of developers, have made attempts to confiscate the land, ECIP noted in a statement on March 25. “On the night of March 25, many Ati mothers were forcibly prevented from accessing their homes, and had to spend the night elsewhere, while their children remained alone,” the commission said.

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