Philippine Daily Inquirer

Govt stops Boracay structures on Ati land

- By TJ Burgonio

THE GOVERNMENT has barred three people from developing a beach-front property that is part of the Atis’ ancestral land onworld-famous Boracay island.

In an order handed down onwednesda­y, the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) granted a petition brought by the Atis and permanentl­y stopped Rudy Banico, Gregorio Sanson, and Lucas Gelito from infringing on the Atis’ ownership rights to the 2.1hectare property in Barangay Manoc-manoc, Malay town.

The NCIP also ordered Banico, Sanson, and Gelito to stop from further building structures on the property, located on the southern end of the island-resort.

“That’s no longer theirs. They should not be constructi­ng anything [there],” NCIP Chair Zenaida Brigida H. Pawid said in an interview yesterday morning.

The NCIP also requested the Department of the Interior and Local Government and the Philippine National Police to ensure the installati­on of the Atis, who moved into a portion of the property on April 17 despite developmen­t by the three claimants.

“They’ve been there since [Wednesday],” Pawid said, explaining why there was no need for a formal installati­on.

Pawid clarified that the NCIP issued an order to install the Atis on the property, not a writ of possession.

In January 2011, the NCIP awarded a Certificat­e of Ancestral Domain Title to the Ati tribe, the first inhabitant­s of the island, who brought a petition in 2000 to be given legal possession of their ancestral land.

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