Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Chocolate Hills’ resort land titling befuddles

- BY LADE JEAN KABAGANI, RAFFY AYENG AND EDJEN OLIQUINO WITH JING VILLAMENTE

Proclamati­on 1037, issued by then-President Fidel Ramos in 1997, designated the Chocolate Hills and surroundin­g areas in the province of Bohol as a National Geological Monument and Protected Landscape.

Ramos issued the proclamati­on that prohibited all further private land titling activities in the said areas, recognizin­g the Chocolate Hill’s “unique geological formations and the importance of covering this wonder for future generation­s.”

The question that baffles, to which the local government of Sagbayan, Bohol, could only hazard a guess, is: How were the owners of the Captain’s Peak resort built at the foot of the Chocolate Hills able to get a title for the land in 2005?

Felito Pon, executive secretary of the Office of the Sagbayan Mayor, said the original landowners could have sold their landholdin­g to the owners of the resort.

“There’s an original title awarded to the original owner, then they tended to sell them (land parcels) to others… and it’s beyond our control,” Pon said in Filipino in a television interview.

He explained that applicatio­ns (permits, etc.) related to the resort reached the local government in 2018 and were referred to the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources and its Protected Area Management Board.

Pon said the resort’s business permit would be revoked if violations had been committed. Likewise, the LGU could have stopped constructi­on activities at the resort as soon as they learned of a temporary closure order by the DENR against the facility.

“We just learned about it yesterday because no one gave us a copy of the temporary closure order,” he added. “If we had known about the temporary closure order, the resort’s applicatio­n for renewal would not have been approved.”

Despite being declared a protected area, Pon admitted that some lands near Chocolate Hills were privately owned.

The Senate and the House of

Representa­tives vowed to investigat­e the matter, while the Department of the Interior and Local Government said it would look at the liability of the local government units concerned.

According to the DENR, the Captain’s Peak Resort operates without an environmen­tal compliance certificat­e and was issued a Notice of Violation on 22 January this year.

However, the resort operator maintained in a media statement that their constructi­on plans underwent rigorous scrutiny and received the necessary approvals from relevant authoritie­s, including the DENR.

On Wednesday, Senator Nancy Binay said the DENR and PAMB could have been “complicit” in allowing the resort to be built in a protected area, now serving as an eyesore to the beauty of Chocolate Hills.

Binay criticized the constructi­on of “illegal and informal structures” such as swimming pools, slides, and cottages by Captain’s Peak Garden and Resort in Sagbayan town and the Bud Agta Resort in Barangay Tamboan, Carmen.

She said the tourist destinatio­ns are “too close to the feet” of Chocolate Hills.

Amid netizens’ left and right attacks, the owner of the controvers­ial Captain’s Peak Garden and Resort in Bohol announced on Thursday that it had temporaril­y halted its operation.

“In accordance with the directives from the DENR, Captain’s Peak Garden and Resort will be temporaril­y closed for maintenanc­e and environmen­tal preservati­on efforts,” the official statement said in its Meta (Facebook) account.

“We apologize for any inconvenie­nce this may cause and appreciate your understand­ing and support as we work towards a greener, more sustainabl­e future for Captain’s Peak Garden and Resort. Thank you for your cooperatio­n, and we look forward to welcoming you back soon,” the statement further read.

The Department of Tourism had earlier issued a statement that the resort is not accredited to them.

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