Philippine Daily Inquirer

7 PH sites added to Unesco World Heritage tentative list

Corregidor, Samar Island and Agusan Marsh are among the places added

- By Edgar Allan M. Sembrano @Inq_Lifestyle Cultural sites —CONTRIB-

Seven new Philippine sites have been added to the United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on (Unesco) World Heritage Tentative List, bringing the total to 25.

On Feb. 1, the Unesco National Commission of the Philippine­s (Unacom) submitted to the World Heritage Center the country’s updated tentative list, which includes 14 natural sites, eight cultural sites and three mixed (natural and cultural) sites.

The natural sites are the Mount Mantalinga­han Protected Landscape in southern Palawan; Mayon Volcano Natural Park in Albay; Turtle Islands Wildlife Sanctuary in Tawi-Tawi; Chocolate Hills Natural Monument in Bohol; Mount Malindang Range Wildlife Sanctuary in Misamis Occidental; Mount Pulag National Park straddling the provinces of Benguet, Ifugao and Nueva Vizcaya; Apo Reef Natural Park in Occidental Mindoro; El Nido-Taytay Managed Resource Protected Area in Palawan; Coron Island Natural Biotic Area also in Palawan; Mount Iglit-Baco National Park in Mindoro Island; and Northern Sierra Madre Natural Park and outlying areas, inclusive of the buffer zone.

Mantalinga­han, Mayon and Turtle Islands have been on the tentative list since 2015, with Chocolate Hills, Mount Malindang, Mount Pulag, Apo Reef, El Nido-Taytay, Coron, Mount Iglit-Baco and Northern Sierra Madre on the list since 2006.

New natural sites added to the list include the Agusan Marsh Wildlife Sanctuary in Agusan del Sur, Samar Island Natural Park and the Pujada Bay Protected Landscape and Seascape, which is an added extension of the Mount Hamiguitan Range Wildlife Sanctuary World Heritage Site in Davao Oriental.

For cultural properties, in the list are The Tabon Cave Complex and all of Lipuun Point in Palawan (2006), Butuan Archaeolog­ical Sites in Agusan del Norte (2006) and an extension to the Baroque Churches of the Philippine­s (2006), which includes the churches of Tumauini in Isabela, Boljoon in Cebu, Loboc in Bohol, Lazi in Siquijor and Guiuan in Eastern Samar.

New to this list are Sugar Cultural Landscape of Negros and Panay Islands (including Guimaras), Colonial Urban Plan and Fortificat­ions of the Walled City of Manila, and Corregidor Island and Historic Fortificat­ions of Manila Bay.

Also new to this list are the extension for the Rice Terraces of the Philippine Cordillera­s World Heritage Site, which will add the Ahin Rice terraces in Tinoc, Ifugao; Hingyon, Ifugao Rice Terraces Cluster of Cababuyan South, Northern Cababuyan, Mampolia, and Poblacion; Central Banaue Rice Terraces Cluster of Pula, Cambulo, Poitan, Tam-am, Amganad, Kinakin, Gohang, San Fernando, Uhaj, Bocos and Viewpoint; and the Ducligan Rice Terraces of Banaue.

Removed from this list are Paleolithi­c Archaeolog­ical Sites in Cagayan Valley (2006), Neolithic Shell Midden Sites in Lallo and Gattaran Municipali­ties in Cagayan Province (2006), Kabayan Mummy Burial Caves in Benguet (2006) and Petroglyph­s and Petrograph­s of the Philippine­s (2006).

The first two were consolidat­ed to form a new serial nominated property, the Prehistori­c Sites of the Cagayan River Basin, while the last two were recommende­d to be dropped from the tentative list by the National Museum of the Philippine­s, most likely due to issues on their outstandin­g universal value (OUV).

Paragraph 49 of the World

Heritage Convention states that OUV “means cultural and/ or natural significan­ce which is so exceptiona­l as to transcend national boundaries and to be of common importance for present and future generation­s of all humanity.”

Mixed properties

An existing property on this list is the Batanes Protected landscapes and seascapes (1993), while two sites were recently added: Kitanglad and Kalatungan Mountain Ranges: Sacred Sites of Bukidnon and The Historic Towns and Landscape of Taal Volcano and its Caldera Lake in Batangas province.

The National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) endorsed the cultural sites, while the natural sites are endorsed by the Department of the Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR). Both government institutio­ns endorse mixed sites.

For a heritage property to be included in the tentative list and possible inscriptio­n as a World Heritage Site, it must have an OUV and should meet at least

one of 10 criteria for inscriptio­n.

The Sugar Cultural Landscape, according to the NCCA, “showcases the legacy of the sugar industry brought by the industrial­ization of sugar production in the late 18th century, such as mills, factories, plantation­s, buildings and mansions, that reflect the social and economic dynamics of the late Spanish-colonial and American-colonial eras.”

Sugar was also produced without slave labor, as workers are “not bound by race, were not classified as chattel.”

Manila’s Walled City was included in the tentative list since it “became the nexus of global trade in the Western Pacific, the crucial point of convergenc­e between East and Southeast Asia with the Americas, and onward to Europe.”

It “was the focus of contestati­on between colonial powers, shaping the culture and identity of the Philippine­s, ultimately being reflected and reflected in its built environmen­t—from its fortificat­ions to its places of worship, the fusion of concepts

developed in Europe and the Americas yet ultimately contextual­ized into the environmen­t and culture of the Philippine­s and its people.”

For Corregidor, its fortificat­ions are “outstandin­g examples of building and technologi­cal advancemen­ts in military fortificat­ions, the fact that the island became a battlecry and a symbol of hope during the early dark days of World War II, the seat of the Philippine Commonweal­th government in early 1942, and a major shrine for all sides today also underlines its significan­ce.”

The DENR added the Agusan Marsh to the tentative list since it “hosts the last remaining intact and largest concentrat­ion of peatlands in the Philippine­s,” and is “a vital refuge for lowland forest biodiversi­ty, safeguardi­ng the largest expanses of swamp forests remaining in the Philippine­s.”

Exhaustive process

Due to rich biodiversi­ty and high rate of endemism, Samar Island, another property on the list, “represents significan­t species from the Greater Mindanao faunal region, known for the high level of its lowland forest taxa,” while the Kitanglad and Katalungan mountain ranges is home to diverse flora and fauna and “one of the country’s priority protected areas and a prime spot for ecotourism.”

The latter is also home to ethnic groups Talaandig, Bukidnon and Manobo, with the Kalatungan range “recognized as an Indigenous Community Conserved Area since 2012, for its historical significan­ce of the tribes that have become guardians of tradition and bearers of a unique identity in the park.”

The Taal volcano region, which includes many Batangas towns and Tagaytay in Cavite, “is outstandin­g example of significan­t ongoing ecological and biological processes in the evolution and developmen­t of ecosystems” and the towns, especially Taal, “demonstrat­e the blending of different cultures as a result of colonizati­on in architectu­re and urban planning, reflected in grand houses and places of worship.”

Also, both the DENR and NCCA note that “the transition of Taal Lake from a saltwater to a freshwater environmen­t as a result of historical­ly recent volcanic activity—and the resulting endemism and adaptation of its unique fauna—is unique in the world and captures the dynamism of the processes of evolution as a response to rapid geological change.”

Two of the saltwater to freshwater species noted are the Bombon sardine or tawilis and the rare sea snake called duhol matapang.

These sites will undergo a rigorous process through Unesco’s World Heritage Committee for possible inscriptio­n into the World Heritage List.

Unacom secretary-general Ivan Henares said his organizati­on with NCCA and DENR will be “assisting these communitie­s as they prepare their respective nomination dossiers” for world heritage inscriptio­n.

 ?? —PHOTOS BY EDGAR ALLAN M. SEMBRANO ?? Portion of Agusan Marsh in Loreto, Agusan del Sur
Shell midden site at the ruins of Tocolana Church, Cagayan
Lazi Church, Siquijor
Tam-an Rice Terraces, Banaue
A cave in Samar’s Sohoton Caves and Natural Bridge Park
Sacred site Dingin in Alitagtag, Batangas
Part of the old Bauan Church ruins in Sta. Teresita, Batangas
—PHOTOS BY EDGAR ALLAN M. SEMBRANO Portion of Agusan Marsh in Loreto, Agusan del Sur Shell midden site at the ruins of Tocolana Church, Cagayan Lazi Church, Siquijor Tam-an Rice Terraces, Banaue A cave in Samar’s Sohoton Caves and Natural Bridge Park Sacred site Dingin in Alitagtag, Batangas Part of the old Bauan Church ruins in Sta. Teresita, Batangas

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