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Thursday, April 18, 2024

OPAPP, DSWD turn over 300 houses to IPs in Davao Norte

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Three hundred housing units and a multi-purpose tribal center were recently turned over to residents of indigenous peoples communities in Brgy. Gupitan, Kapalong, Davao Del Norte through the national government’s PAyapa at MAsaganang PamayaNAn (PAMANA) program.

With a total cost of P53 million, the PAMANA-funded infrastructure projects were built through the Department of Social Welfare and Development’s Modified Shelter Assistance Program and will benefit the people of Sitio Kapatagan and Sitio Kimataan in this municipality known for its thriving agriculture sector.

“The projects we have turned over now aim to provide decent housing to our Lumad brothers and sisters in Kapalong,” Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Processdirector Andres S. Aguinaldo Jr. said.

He underscored the impact of the housing project on beneficiary communities during the turn-over ceremony last Feb. 4.

“We know how valuable a house is to a Filipino family. Having a house you can call your own will not only give a greater sense of security, but more importantly, dignity to those who own them,” said Aguinaldo

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Together with local officials, the OPAPP also witnessed the groundbreaking of the second phase of the shelter program worth more than P17 million.

PAMANA is among the national government’s multi-agency convergence programs which provides much-needed development assistance to remote, conflict-affected communities across the country.

OPAPP is tasked to oversee all PAMANA projects with other line agencies as implementing partners. All of these projects are designed to ensure that no one is left behind in the development process, and everyone enjoys the benefits of economic growth.

According to Aguinaldo, the PAMANA Program is highly effective because “it primarily seeks to reduce poverty, address the vulnerability of residents in conflict-affected areas, and strengthen their capacity to address challenges confronting them.”

“The PAMANA Program is in line with the national government’s Whole-Of-Nation approach under Executive Order No. 70 which aims to create greater synergy in the delivery of services among national government agencies and local government units in underdeveloped, conflict-ridden communities,” Aguinaldo explained.

Through this approach, he said, the government seeks to address the root causes of the decades-long armed rebellion in the country such as poverty and the lack of access to basic services.

“We know that the Lumads are among the main victims whenever there is an outbreak of armed conflict in Mindanao. What is more disheartening is that they are being used by the rebel groups as instruments to fight their fellow Lumads,” Aguinaldo noted.

“This is the reason, he said, why the Duterte Administration is carrying out initiatives which aim to give the Filipino people a better and more comfortable life.”

He added that through the PAMANA Program, “people will have the capacity to uplift their lives, and consequently, follow the path of peace.”

“As they say, when people have the capacity to put food on the table and provide for the needs of their families, there is no reason for them to participate in armed struggle. And when people enjoy the dividends of progress, they in turn, are encouraged to help others improve their well-being,” Aguinaldo said.

“As development planners say, peace and development should not be carried out separately but should be undertaken simultaneously. This is the lesson the PAMANA Program would like to impart not only with its project beneficiaries but to all Filipinos,” he said.

In 2019, PAMANA projects worth P386,862,000 were implemented through the DSWD’s Community Driven Development Program for Indigenous Peoples (IP-CDD); the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) for the provision of educational assistance programs for IP communities; and the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation for the awarding of health insurance coverage to Lumad beneficiaries.

To provide greater assistance to more remote, underdeveloped communities across the country, particularly in conflict-ridden and vulnerable areas, OPAPP proposed to Congress a PhP 3.8B PAMANA budget for FY 2020.

Presidential Peace Adviser Carlito G. Galvez, Jr. is hopeful that the proposed PAMANA budget will be approved by the legislative body, as this will help bring sustainable development and long-lasting peace to the target communities.

“Projects such as farm-to-market roads, water supply systems, livelihood programs, and environmental protection initiatives are designed to be impact-driven, and will hugely contribute to boosting socio-economic development in the countryside, especially in last-mile communities,” Galvez said.

To date, the PAMANA Program has benefitted communities in the Cordillera Administrative Region, Bicol-Quezon-Mindoro, Negros and Panay area, Davao-Compostella Valley-Caraga zones, Central Mindanao, and ZamBaSulTa (Zamboanga, Basilan, Sulu, and Tawi-tawi).

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