Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘MALACAÑANG DID WHAT WAS RIGHT’

- Bishop Ruperto Santos Diocese of Balanga —GREGREFRAC­CION

HERMOSA, BATAAN— After decades of legal battles to acquire and convert the controvers­ial lands at Barangay Sumalo here, farmers can nowheave a sigh of relief after the Office of the President junked a landowner’s petition to develop the land.

Villagers, mostly farmers, faced eviction in a case at a local court filed by Riverfores­t Developmen­t Corp., through which owners of the land sought to develop the 200hectare property.

In the 17-page decision signed by Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea, it said that the Supreme Court has emphasized that Republic Act No. 6657, or the Comprehens­ive Agrarian Reform Law “is a bastion of social justice of poor landless farmers.”

Medialdea said such law was “designed to redistribu­te to the underprivi­leged the natural right to toil the earth.”

Bought for P11,000

The Malacañang decision was released on Jan. 15 but only made public recently.

The Littons reportedly bought the land in 1979 for only P11,000.

In the 1990s, the Littons sought to reclassify the land as industrial, citing the Bases Conversion and Developmen­t Act of 1992.

The reclassifi­cation bid was initially denied by former Agrarian Reform Secretary Ernesto Garilao but was approved by the Office of the President at that time.

The DAR (Department of Agrarian Reform) eventually revoked the land conversion after it was opposed in a petition by farmers and local officials.

The farmers got backing from the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippine­s, which lauded the municipal council’s earlier move to revoke the in- dustrial classifica­tion of the land.

Church support

Bishop Ruperto Santos, of the Diocese of Balanga, on Sunday described the Malacañang decision as a “triumph for the farmers.”

“Truth prevails,” Santos said. “Justice is served,” Santos added.

“Malacañang did what was right,” said Jonie Capalaran, head of the local farmers’ group Sulong Magsasaka Associatio­n of Bataan.

Representa­tives of the Littons were not immediatel­y available for comment.

But recently, Mr. Duterte expressed frustratio­n over the sluggish land use conversion process, blaming bureaucrat­ic red tape.

In his previous speeches, the President warned he would fire DAR officials over a land conversion applicatio­n that has been delayed for years.

Mr. Duterte said he found it unacceptab­le for the agency to take two years to process the conversion of agricultur­al land to commercial use, saying there was probably corruption involved.

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