Antique gov’t creates office for indigenous peoples

By Annabel Consuelo Petinglay

April 1, 2024, 4:59 pm

<p><strong>INDIGENOUS PEOPLES</strong>. The Antique provincial board approves on final reading an ordinance creating the Provincial Indigenous Peoples Office (PIPO) during its regular session on Monday (April 1, 2024). Ordinance sponsor board member Karmila Rose Dimamay said the PIPO will attend to the needs of the IP communities in Antique. (<em>PNA photo by Annabel Consuelo J. Petinglay)</em></p>

INDIGENOUS PEOPLES. The Antique provincial board approves on final reading an ordinance creating the Provincial Indigenous Peoples Office (PIPO) during its regular session on Monday (April 1, 2024). Ordinance sponsor board member Karmila Rose Dimamay said the PIPO will attend to the needs of the IP communities in Antique. (PNA photo by Annabel Consuelo J. Petinglay)

SAN JOSE DE BUENAVISTA, Antique – An office dedicated to indigenous peoples (IP) got the nod of the Antique provincial board during its regular session on Monday.

The Provincial Indigenous Peoples Office (PIPO) is mandated under an ordinance passed on final reading by the provincial board to respond to the needs of some 38,440 IPs in Antique, assuring them of their maximum participation in the direction of education, health as well as other services, said board member Karmila Rose Dimamay.

“Antique has three IP communities, namely Iraynon Bukidnon, Cuyon-on, and Ati, which also need to be given priority in terms of better healthcare and livelihood,” Dimamay said during her report to the provincial board.

The ordinance carries with it a provision for an annual allocation of PHP3 million for maintenance and other operating expenses.

The office will advise the Office of the Governor on matters relating to IPs and coordinate with the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) and all existing IP desks in the province in formulating projects and programs for the benefit of their sector.

An IP desk under the Provincial Youth Development Office (PYDO) currently looks after their concerns.

Elpidio Canja, an IP Mandatory Representative (IPMR) in the municipality of Valderrama, welcomed the creation of the office because it would help them push for IP representation in the municipal councils of 17 other towns in Antique.

“Right now, I am the only IPMR in the province of Antique,” he said.

As an IPMR, he lobbied for livelihood programs such as hog-fattening for IPs in their municipality, as well as bringing up their other concerns to the attention of their municipal council.

Seven of the 22 barangays of Valderrama, with about 9,000 population, are certified as 100 percent IP barangays. (PNA)

 

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