Philippine Daily Inquirer

Permanent dwelling on PH isles urged

- —STORY BY DJ YAP

Members of the House of Representa­tives are promoting “permanent dwelling” in the Kalayaan Group of Islands by allowing residents and investors to obtain titles to the land. The House committee on natural resources has approved a bill declaring the Kalayaan Group, which is part of Palawan, “alienable and disposable” land for agricultur­al, residentia­l and commercial purposes.

The House of Representa­tives wants to encourage “permanent dwelling” in the Kalayaan Group of Islands, a 79-hectare chain of islets and reefs occupied by the Philippine­s in the disputed Spratly archipelag­o, by allowing residents and investors to obtain titles to the land.

The House committee on natural resources has approved House Bill No. 5614 that would declare the Kalayaan Group, which is part of the province of Palawan, “alienable and disposable” land for agricultur­al, residentia­l and commercial purposes.

At a hearing before the Christmas break, the bill authored by Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez and Majority Leader Rodolfo Fariñas was approved by the panel after it was sponsored by Southern Leyte Rep. Roger Mercado.

Alienable and disposable

In their explanator­y note, Alvarez and Fariñas cited the urgent need to declare landholdin­gs in the Kalayaan Group alienable and disposable to “promote permanent dwelling and develop a viable source of livelihood for the residents therein.”

The declaratio­n will promote the growth of business opportunit­ies and spur the developmen­t of trade and industry by attracting investors to the area, according to the House leaders.

Alvarez said the Kalayaan Group offered rich fishing grounds, and significan­t oil and natural gas reserves. It is “vital to the security and economic survival of the Philippine­s,” he said in the note.

He further said the municipali­ty of Kalayaan was in the process of making new projects to promote tourism for the island group and inviting Filipino entreprene­urs to invest in Kalayaan.

Reluctant investors

But investors are “reluctant because the island group is inalienabl­e and nondisposa­ble for agricultur­al, residentia­l and commercial purposes,” he said.

“Even residents who have been long tilling and developing the parcels of land within the Kalayaan Group cannot apply for title for their occupied area,” he added.

Under Presidenti­al Decree No. 1596, the Kalayaan Group is considered a distinct and separate municipali­ty of the province of Palawan, and it is now known as the municipali­ty of Kalayaan.

Kalayaan, according to Fariñas, is composed of islets and reefs with a total land area of 79 hectares, including the biggest island called Pag-asa with 32.7 ha; Likas, 18.6 ha; Parda, 12.7 ha; Lawak, 7.9 ha; Kota, 6.45 ha; Patag, 0.57 ha and Parata, 0.44 ha.

The small Ayungin (Second Thomas) Shoal and Rizal (Commodore) Reef are also part of the archipelag­o.

There is a small community on Pag-asa, composed of soldiers and their families. The island has an airstrip, used by the military in supplying the community.

Ayungin Shoal, also known as Ayungin Reef, hosts a small Philippine garrison aboard the BRP Sierra Madre, a rusting medical ship that the government grounded there in 1999 to mark the country’s territory in the Spratlys after China seized Panganiban Reef (Mischief Reef) in 1995.

Military dev’t plans

At the hearing, Armed Forces Deputy Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Salvador Melchor Mison Jr. spoke about the military’s developmen­t plans for the nine Kalayaan islands that would cost P11.6 billion.

The developmen­t plans in- clude enhancemen­t of the habitabili­ty of the islands, constructi­on of a berthing space for Philippine Navy vessels and other vessels, upgrading of the defense structures of the islands, improvemen­t of existing facilities, such as roads and airstrip, and provision of water and power facilities and communicat­ion equipment.

Angry response from China

Any Philippine activity in Kalayaan, however, will surely draw an angry response from China, which claims nearly all of the South China Sea, including waters within the Philippine­s’ 370-kilometer exclusive economic zone called West Philippine Sea.

The UN-backed Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n in The Hague, ruling in July last year in a case brought by the Philippine­s, invalidate­d China’s sweeping claims.

But Beijing, which did not take part in the arbitratio­n, refused to recognize the ruling and went ahead building artificial islands on reefs in the Spratlys and topping them with military installati­ons.

President Duterte, who came to power last year, has refused to assert the ruling, preferring im- provement of diplomatic and economic relations with China.

Any constructi­on in the Kalayaan Group will also violate a 2002 status quo agreement between China and the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) to maintain peace and stability in the South China Sea, although China goes on building in the waterway with impunity.

A government report posted on a website run by China’s National Marine Data and Informatio­n Service and the overseas edition of the ruling Communist Party’s People’s Daily says China has enhanced its military presence in the South China Sea and “reasonably” expanded the area covered by the artificial islands.

Apart from what it termed “large radar”—it is unclear if the report is referring to more than one—constructo­n this year has included facilities for undergroun­d storage and administra­tive buildings.

In contrast, the Philippine­s has been forced to stop constructi­on of thatch and bamboo shelters for fishermen on Sandy Cay, a sandbar not far from the Kalayaan Group, when China protested the activity as a violation of the status quo agreement with Asean.

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 ?? —PHOTO COURTESY OF PAF ?? PAGASA Soldiers and their families live on Pagasa, the biggest island in the Kalayaan Group. The island has an airstrip used by the military in supplying the community.
—PHOTO COURTESY OF PAF PAGASA Soldiers and their families live on Pagasa, the biggest island in the Kalayaan Group. The island has an airstrip used by the military in supplying the community.

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