Wednesday, May 08, 2024

Pag-update sa Environmental Code sa Bukidnon gitutokan

Gitutokan pinaagi sa sunod-sunod nga workshop on Policy Analysis and Formulation ang pag-update sa Bukidnon Environmental Code

Ang kalihokan gipartisiparan sa mga Chief of Hospital, City/Municipal Health Unit, City/Municipal Environment and Natural Resources Officer, ug mga pribadong sector.
Ang panagtigum gipasiugdahan sa Bukidnon Environment and Natural Resources Office (BENRO).
Gipahigayon kini sa Loizas Pavillion, Malaybalay City niadtong Nobyembre 29-30, 2023.
Sumala sa press release sa buhatan sa Gobernador, ang Bukidnon Environmental Code giproklamar niadtong Marso 27, 2001 pinaagi sa Ordinance No. 001-03.
Kini gikinahanglan nga ma-update isip sumbanan sa epektibo ug malungtaron nga pagpanalipod sa limpyo ug hamugaway nga palibot, malungtaron nga pagdumala sa mga natural resources, ingon man ang pagdumala sa province-wide risk reduction management ug mga lakang sa climate change adaption measures. (melbmadera)

3 suspek sa pagpangawat nakorner

Tingkagol sa selda sa kapolisan sa dakbayan sa Malaybalay ang tulo ka mga suspek sa pagpangawat sa Bides residence sa San Isidro St. Ext., Purok 2, Brgy. 9, Malaybalay City, Bukidnon

Sila giingon nga nasapon sa biktima uban sa mga silingan pasado alas 8:00 sa gabii niadtong Nobyembre 16.

Sumala sa report sa kapolisan, ang mga nasikop tanan mga lalaki. Sila kasamtangan ubos sa kustodya sa kapolisan sa Malaybalay.

Apan ang duha ka mga kauban sa nasikop ang hingpit nga nakasibat ug gipangita pa sila sa kapolisan.

Nasayran nga namatikdan sa mga silingan nga milayat ang mga suspek sa sementong kural sa Bides Residence. Gumikan niini, nirespondi ang biktima kinsa nagpuyo kilid lang sa ilang ancestral house uban sa pipila ka mga silingan ug nasikop ang tulo ka mga suspek. (Omar Rashid Z. Abdullah)

5 balay nasunog sa Valencia

Naugdaw ang lima ka mga balay sa nahitabong sunog sa Purok 3A, Brgy. San Isidro, Valencia City, Bukidnon gabii sa Nobyembre 17

sa sunog ang Valencia City Bureau Fire Protection ug napalong nila ang kalayo. Giingon nga ang kalayo nagsugod sa panimalay sa isa ka Romeo Tongal.

Walay natalang namatay o nasamdan sa hitabo apan ang damyos gibanabanang muabot sa P280,000.00.

Sa pagkutlo ning balita padayon pa ang imbestigasyon sa BFP Valencia aron pagsuta sa hinungdan sa sunog. (Omar Rashid Z. Abdullah)

5 NPA rebels misurender sa Manolo Fortich

Gikatahong mitahan niadtong Nobyembre 25 ngadto sa militar ang lima ka mga miyembro sa rebeldeng New People’s Army (NPA) nga naglihok sa Bukidnon

Gibutyag kini ni Major Gen. Jose Maria Cuerpo II, commander sa 4th Infantry Division (4ID) pinanaagi sa isa ka pamahayag.

Sumala sa report sa Philippine News Agency, si Cuerpo miingon nga ang lima misurender ngadto sa 1st Special Forces Battalion sa Brgy. Mampayag sa Manolo Fortich.

Lakip sa mitahan ang vice commander sa Headquarters Neo sa NPA ubos sa North Central Mindanao Regional Committee (NCMRC).

Gitahan sab sa lima ang duha AK-47 rifles, duha ka M16 rifles, ug isa ka M14 rifle.

Dugang ni Cuerpo, nga ang mga NPA mitahan human sa intensive military operations nga gipahigayon sa 1st SF Battalion sa ilang area of responsibility. (melbmadera)

Bukidnon banana farmers trained on insect pests, disease management

MALAYBALAY CITY, BUKIDNON – The Regional Crop Protection Center (RCPC) of the Department of Agriculture RFO – 10 has trained Bukidnon farmers on Banana Insect Pests and Diseases Management on November 14-15 in this city

Eighteen Bukidnon banana farmers finished the two-day training at the Northern Mindanao Crops and Livestock Research Complex (NMACLRC) in Dalwangan, Malaybalay City that immersed them in the field to properly identify friendly and non-friendly insect pests and diseases.

Further, they observed the various Biological Control Agents or Biocon in RCPC to demonstrate the management and production of the technology.

Regional Technical Director for Research and Regulations, Cora A. Dumayaca highlighted the need for banana farmers to be part of associations and cooperatives to access and benefit various DA programs and projects.

Importantly, she added that it will diversify and be certified through Philippine Good Agricultural Practices (PhilGAP) certification, which will potentially be greenlit to market security.

Speakers from DA-RFO 10 focused the discussion on the banana industry roadmap; potential products and market trade and value chain; and, the importance of good agricultural practices, including farmer certification through PhilGap.

Center Chief, Lucille T. Minguez hopes to instill a resilient mindset and commitment among farmers, empowering them to seize every learning opportunity for prosperity and reach their full potential.

RCPC is the arm of DA dedicated to the production and promotion of Biological Control Agents (Biocon) in the region, which are friendly organisms that feed (Earwig, Lacewing, Eocanthecona furcellata) parasitizes (Trichogramma) and infect diseases (Metarhizium anisopliaea, Trichoderma harzianum, Beauvaria bassiana) to insect pest enemies.

The training was made possible through the effort of DA-10 Regional Executive Director Carlene C. Collado. (PR)

Students from 23 schools in Bukidnon receive bags, school supplies

MALAYBALAY CITY, Bukidnon-Selected students from 23 schools in the landlocked province of Bukidnon were recently given backpacks and school supplies

The 403rd Brigade in a press release said that the program was spearheaded by the Office of the Vice President (OVP) Davao Satellite Office through its special project called PagbaBAGo program.
Peoples Organizations (POs) and schoolchildren are the program’s intended beneficiaries.
A series of activities were held in conjunction with the planting of 2,000 Narra trees in Brgy. Kalasungay on November 8, 2023, which was followed by the distribution of backpacks containing school supplies for Bukidnon’s identified underprivileged schoolchildren from November 8-10, 2023.
A total of 4,019 school bags were provided to students from various schools in Malaybalay City (2,890 beneficiaries), Impasugong (973 beneficiaries), and Cabanglasan (156 beneficiaries).
Furthermore, the aforementioned operations were carried out in collaboration with the Office of the Provincial Governor, the 403rd Infantry “Peacemaker” Brigade, Bukas Kalinaw, 8th Infantry
Infantry Battalion, 88th Infantry Battalion, and 16th Infantry Battalion under 402nd Infantry Brigade.
Ms. Regina Rose D. Tecson, the OVP Officer-in-Charge of the Davao-based satellite office noted that the Tree planting and distribution of bags are the flagship program of the Vice President Sara Duterte that are shown to be beneficial to the community even during her term as Mayor of Davao City.
The OVP is optimistic that the bag distribution will encourage pupils to work hard despite their poverty and to harvest what they sow in the future.
Meanwhile, Brigadier General Michele B Anayron Jr, commander of the 403rd Brigade, expressed gratitude to the Vice President for selecting Bukidnon, primarily in the Area of Responsibility of the 403rd Brigade, to be the beneficiary of the PagbaBAGo program.
“We in the Philippine Army in collaboration with the Bukas Kalinaw and other stakeholders and government agencies will continue to support in extending social services to the community for the sustainable peace and development effort in order to finally end the insurgency,” Anayron said. (melbmadera)

FIRST PERSON: In Honor of Datu Makapukaw, Bukidnon’s “Bantay hu Buntod, hu Batasan daw hu Banuwa” (guardian of the forests, Talaandig culture and society)

By Mary Ann Manahan

GHENT, Belgium (BukidnonNews.net/24 November 2023) “Ang Kalambuan maisip nga tawhanon nga pag-uswag. Ang kalambuan alang sa tribu mao ang padayun pagtuman sa balaod sa kinaiyahan (law of nature). Ang pag-uswag ngadtu sa pagkamahadlokon sa Labaw Makagagahom. Mao kini ang gikahiusahan sa katigulangan ug mga tumanod”. (Development is human progress, a Western term. But the tribe’s ‘development’ has to do with implementing our own culture (and good values). It is progress for the Supreme Being. It is about an agreement with the elders and the spirits.)

That was emphatically mentioned by Datu Makapukaw during our last conversation on February 17, 2023, in Brgy. Songco, Lantapan. We were talking about the foreign concept of ‘development’ and how Talaandig’s vision of a ‘good life’ had to do with what he calls “total harmonization between humans, Nature, and spirits”. He was referring to the spirits, the kadiwatahan that inhabit their sacred mountain, Mt. Kitanglad.

Little did I know that it would be my last conversation with Datu Makapukaw. On November 11, he passed away due to lung failure. Datu Makapukaw, which translates to the one who awakens the conscience and imparts wisdom, was one of the well-beloved and well-known datus in Bukidnon. As the eldest son of the late Datu Kinulintang Saway and Bae Pilar Linsahay, Datu Makapukaw Adolino Saway, was born in the forest of Maagnaw in 1949. His birth is as enchanted as the messages and stories he often shares in various gatherings.

From our last kwentuhan, he told me the origins of Mt. Kitanglad, that before there used to be abundant tanglad or lemongrass that grew in the mountains. That Mt. Kitanglad is sacred because it does not only encompass their yutang kabilin (ancestral domains), but equally important, it is the home of various diwatas, the mountains’ guardian spirits. His narrative around the sacredness of the mountain is deeply connected to his understanding of the self-determination of the Talaandig tribe and how they derive their identity, knowledge, and practices to the lands and forests. Sacredness is about achieving balance and embodied relations with the forests and the more-than-human.

Datu Makapukaw also often spoke about the centrality of Kilalaha ha Batasan (mutual recognition), of following the cultural protocols or batasan of their indigenous community and doing actions that will not anger the spirits and plunder the mountains. His life’s work revolved around advocating for indigenous peoples’ knowledge, culture, and belief system— how intimately woven and central these are in the protection of Mt. Kitanglad. He was a local historian who can give a full lecture on the history of the Spanish colonization and forced slavery of the indigenous peoples. For someone who never graduated from high school, Datu Makapukaw’s knowledge about his people’s history stemmed from decades of self-study, community dialogues, intense debates, and collective reflection.

This is, perhaps, why I saw him as a man of navigation. He navigated the halls of power, critically engaging with the state, while asserting their right to self-determination. In his many roles, as a former barangay captain, elected president of the municipal association of barangay councils, and hereditary chieftain of his tribe, Datu Makapukaw’s leadership was about fostering dialogue, harmony, and finding common grounds. Such navigation entailed building horizontal alliance, linking multiple datus from different indigenous communities as in the case of the Mt. Kitanglad Council of Elders, a grassroots collegial body of different datus and baes advocating for indigenous cultural conservation and forest protection.

Datu Makapukaw’s critical engagement and collaboration with state institutions bring with it a set of contradictions that one has to grapple with: his aspiration to make the government understand the life and culture of indigenous peoples, especially their role in forest protection and biodiversity conservation meant that they had to accept and support the protected area management program of the government, for fear that they may lose their rights and connections to the Kitanglad mountain ranges: “Ang maong bukid sa nahimo na nga usa ka national park, nagkaproblima ug nabalaka kami na basin mawad-an na kami og katungod niini. Lakip na unya mawala ang among kaalam, patakaran sa kultura, pagtulun-an, ug tinu-ohan.

(When the mountain became a national park, at the beginning we worried that we will lose our rights there. We will lose our wisdom, the rules, and the beliefs that we follow, practice, and teach.)

When I met Datu Makapukaw two years ago at the 59th Protected Area Management Board-Mt. Kitanglad Range Natural Park en banc meeting, he took a stance that indigenous peoples must be at the front and center of the protected area governance. That accepting the idea of a national park should not exclude and displace indigenous peoples from their ancestral lands. Co-existence, is perhaps, Datu Makapukaw’s subtler message.

I have only known him for a short period, but I knew that in his passing, Bukidnon’s indigenous communities lost a great man.

As a cultural expert and wisdom keeper, I will fondly remember Datu Makapukaw’s wit, humor, never-ending stories, and love for his tribe. Perhaps, one can never measure the full extent, depth, and vitality of one’s legacy and footprints on this earth. After all, death for the Talaandig is not the end. The departed join their ancestors in the spiritual world, in their sacred forests, praying for, guiding, and watching the people and the world they left behind.

Datu Makapukaw’s hope for his tribe still reverberates in my head: “Ang amo lang sa tribu- nga makabaton sa kinabuhing’dayun. Ang among kaliwat nga mokayab sa langit nga buhi, dili mo-agi sa kamatayon. (My aspiration for the tribe— eternal life. The descendants of the tribe [have access] to a heaven full of life.)

Padayon, Datu! Your memory and legacy will live on.

The author is a Filipina feminist, activist, researcher, and teacher. She is currently connected with the Ghent University’s Department of Conflict and Development Studies in Belgium.

FIRST PERSON is a sub-section of BUKIDNON VIEWS, the opinion section of the BukidnonNews.Net website dedicated to select statements, speeches, tributes, comments, and other views on public matters. If you want to contribute to FIRST PERSON, email your piece, contact details, and bio profile to [email protected].) (BukidnonNews.Net)

DPWH project shields Bukidnon communities from heavy flooding

The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) has completed the construction of the flood control structure that will protect the public in Cabanglasan, Bukidnon against the overflowing river during heavy rains of long duration

Completed along the Bobonawan River in Barangay Cabulohan in Bukidnon, the P57.2-million project involves the construction of a dike reinforced concrete, which has a length of 340 meters and a height of six meters, “will protect people’s lives and property, and areas close to the river will be better shielded from potential flooding during severe rainfall.’’

“We hope that this project will no longer cause the displacement of locals in the occurrence of typhoons and heavy rains and help increase economic activities in the area to further promote local industries and tourism in the Province of Bukidnon,” the DPWH Region 10 Office Director
Zenaida Tan noted.

The project is implemented by DPWH Bukidnon 1st District Engineering Office headed by District Engineer Flordelis C. Enriquez and Assistant District Engineer Jan Paulo C. Lisondra funded under the General Appropriations Act of 2023. (Trixee Rosel/MANILA BULLETIN-Nov
22, 2023 03:47 PM)

DBP lends P1.4-B for 8.4MW Mindanao hydropower plant

CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY (Nov. 26, 2023/PIA) — State-owned Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) has extended a P1.4 billion loan to a top renewable energy firm as partial funding to construct an 8.4-megawatt hydroelectric power plant in Bukidnon in line with the national government’s efforts to expand new and sustainable energy sources, a top official said

DBP President and Chief Executive Officer Michael O. de Jesus said the bank approved the loan to INVESTCO BHPI, Inc. under its Financing Utilities for Sustainable Energy Development (FUSED) Program, which seeks to help increase access to electricity services, particularly in the countryside.

“We are honored to be a part of this worthy endeavor. The construction of the 8.4MW Maladugao River hydroelectric power plant bodes well for the people of Bukidnon and is a tangible manifestation of President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr.’s vision of an energy-sufficient Philippines,” de Jesus said.

DBP is the ninth largest bank in the country in terms of assets and provides credit support to four strategic sectors of the economy – infrastructure and logistics; micro, small, and medium enterprises; the environment; and social services and community development.

INVESTCO BHPI, Inc. is a stock corporation established in 2013 mainly involved in developing, operating, and managing renewable energy with its proposed 8.4MW Maladugao River hydroelectric power plant expected to be on stream by 2025.

De Jesus said that under the FUSED program, DBP has approved a total of P81.5 billion in loans to 95 borrowers, while total loan releases have reached P57.2 billion as of the end of September this year.

He said the First Bukidnon Electric Cooperative contracted the 8.4MW Maladugao River hydroelectric power plant to supply an initial 5.5MW of electricity to southern Bukidnon, including Valencia City. This move aims to mitigate the impact of a looming energy shortage in the province by 2028 based on data from the Department of Energy.

“More importantly, this project is seen to stimulate the growth of local industries and small businesses, fostering increased economic opportunities for the people of Bukidnon,” de Jesus said. (DBP/PIA-10)

37 bungi nakaangkon sa libreng surgical operation

Mikabat sa 37 ka mga ngungo o bungi ang nakaangkon sa libreng surgical operation kaniadtong Nobyembre 16-18, 2023

Sumala sa kasayoran sa PGO Public Affairs, Information and Assistance Division, nahigayon ang operasyon sa Bukidnon Provincial Medical Center (BMPC) sa Malaybalay City.

Ang kalihokan gipaluyohan sa Provincial Government of Bukidnon (PGB) sa pakigtimbayayong sa Maharlika Charity Foundation kauban ang Smile Train Foundation ug ang Agila Shriners Temple 195-Bukidnon Chapter.

Si Dr. Miguel Antonio C. Prantilla, hepe sa BMPC miingon nga gumikan sa programa ang mga pasyente mahatagan sa halos normal nga kinabuhi.

Emosyonal nga mipaabot sa mensahe pasalamat ngadto sa mga tigpasiugda sa kalihokan ang isa ka inahan gumikan sa pagkalakip sa iyang anak sa maong free cleft lip surgical operation.

“𝑊𝑒 𝑤𝑜𝑢𝑙𝑑 𝑝𝑢𝑡 𝑡ℎ𝑒 𝑝𝑎𝑡𝑖𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑠 𝑎𝑠 𝑡ℎ𝑒 𝑐𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑒𝑟 𝑜𝑓 𝑜𝑢𝑟 𝑒𝑛𝑑𝑒𝑎𝑣𝑜𝑟, 𝑘𝑎𝑠𝑖 𝑡ℎ𝑒𝑠𝑒 𝑎𝑟𝑒 𝑡ℎ𝑒 𝑝𝑒𝑜𝑝𝑙𝑒 𝑤ℎ𝑜 𝑎𝑟𝑒 𝑚𝑎𝑟𝑔𝑖𝑛𝑎𝑙𝑖𝑧𝑒𝑑 𝑎𝑛𝑑 𝑡ℎ𝑒 𝑛𝑎𝑚𝑒𝑙𝑒𝑠𝑠, 𝑤ℎ𝑒𝑟𝑒 𝑡ℎ𝑒𝑦’𝑟𝑒 𝑝𝑢𝑡𝑡𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝑡ℎ𝑒𝑖𝑟 𝑡𝑟𝑢𝑠𝑡 𝑎𝑛𝑑 𝑐𝑜𝑛𝑓𝑖𝑑𝑒𝑛𝑐𝑒, ℎ𝑜𝑝𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝑡ℎ𝑎𝑡 𝑡ℎ𝑒𝑖𝑟 𝑘𝑖𝑑𝑠 𝑤𝑖𝑙𝑙 ℎ𝑎𝑣𝑒 𝑎 𝑏𝑒𝑡𝑡𝑒𝑟 𝑙𝑖𝑓𝑒 𝑎ℎ𝑒𝑎𝑑. 𝑆𝑜 𝑖𝑛 𝑠ℎ𝑜𝑟𝑡, 𝑖𝑓 𝑤𝑒 𝑎𝑟𝑒 𝑡𝑟𝑒𝑎𝑡𝑖𝑛𝑔