Sun.Star Pampanga

SBMA, IP group ink accord for Ayta conservati­on area

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SUBIC BAY FREEPORT – The Subic Bay Metropolit­an Authority (SBMA) has formally signed an agreement with a non-government organizati­on for the implementa­tion of a conservati­on program to benefit the Magbukun Ayta tribesmen living within the Subic Bay Freeport Zone.

SBMA Chairman and Administra­tor Wilma Eisma signed the accord with Betty Fielder, president of the Subic Indigenous Peoples Assistance Group (SIPAG), on Wednesday at the SBMA office.

SIPAG had launched its Indigenous Communitie­s Conservati­on Area (ICCA) project last December under the auspices of the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP) to help protect and preserve the indigenous Ayta environmen­t and culture here.

The project will be implemente­d with the support of the local government unit of Morong, Bataan, and the Philippine Associatio­n for Intercultu­ral Developmen­t (PAFID).

The project places the Magbukun Ayta tribe at the forefront of conservati­on efforts since they live in the conservati­on site, which forms a part of the Subic Bay Freeport Zone.

Eisma said the SBMA will give its all-out support to the project because it dovetails with the agency’s conservati­on and environmen­t protection pr ogr am.

“We have pledged our allout support to this project because it strengthen­s our fundamenta­l advocacy to protect the natural environmen­t of the Subic Freeport,” Eisma expl ai ned.

“Of course, part of the effort goes to the conservati­on of the indigenous Ayta culture and we also support that,” she added.

Under the agreement, the SBMA allowed SIPAG to use a building at the Naval Magazine area in the Freeport for the establishm­ent of the Ayta Cultural Skills Developmen­t and Livelihood Training Center.

Under the ICCA program, residents living within or nearby the conservati­on area are tasked to serve as protectors of the environmen­t, while the local government unit takes the lead in implementi­ng conservati­on and protection activities.

According to the UNDP, ICCAs are spaces de facto governed by indigenous peoples or local communitie­s with evidently positive outcomes for the conservati­on of biological and cultural diversity.

The UNDP also said that ICCAs can be classified as sacred areas or ritual grounds for the indigenous communitie­s residing near it and may include forests, mountains, shorelines, wetlands, fishing areas, and other bodies of water.

Project officials said that with the ICCA program, the continuati­on, revival or modificati­on of traditiona­l practices or even new initiative­s may succeed in protecting and restoring natural resources and cultural values in the face of new threats or opportunit­ies.

Eisma said the SBMA has been successful in implementi­ng a similar program with the Ambala Ayta tribe at the Pastolan village in the town of Hermosa, which also forms part of the Subic Bay Freeport Zone.

The SBMA has recently been recognized for its Ambala developmen­t program by the London-based Internatio­nal Finance Magazine (IFM) for having the best social responsibi­lity initiative, Eisma also sai d.

Before this, the SBMA also initiated the so-called social-fencing concept at the Freeport to make residents of upland areas in the zone be part of the overall strategy to preserve Subic’s natural environmen­t.— Ric Sapnu

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