SOUTH COTABATO -- For ages, the T’boli tribe
people and settlers in the town of T’boli in the
province of South Cotabato had to walk for hours
under the sun or through rains in the rocky and muddy mountain trails while
carrying heavy loads down to the town market. Farmers in the communities of Lam
Buling, Lam Salome, and Maan had to sacrifice sweat and blood to earn their
living.
But 40 years since the establishment of the municipality of T’Boli in 1974, the farmers of the town
would finally benefit from a farm-to-market road that would connect their farms
to the market, a significant change in life that raises their incomes and
improves their mobility as well as the members of their families.
The Department of Agriculture, the Department of Interior
and the T’Boli municipal government oversee the construction of a 13-kilometer
concrete road network that by the end of the year would be completed.
The Php108-million road project is part of the national
government’s Payapa at Masaganang Pamayanan (PAMANA) Program, which is overseen
and monitored by the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process or
OPAPP.
Another Php21 million has been allocated to finance
livelihood programs in Barangays Lambuling, Salome, and Maan, bringing the
total PAMANA allocation for T’boli to Php124.5 million.
Tam Salambat, a former rebel who is now a village elder in
Lam Salome, said he and his neighbors never imagined they would see a road
built within their community within their life time.
“I thought death would come sooner than (the time would come
we would see) these roads,” he said. “I am grateful to the government for
giving us farmers this project because it is now easier to transport our
produce to the town.”
Bapa (Uncle) Tam said the farmers no longer have to walk for
five hours while carrying their heavy load of produce on muddy paths in the
mountain during the rainy days while it takes three hours of walk under the
heat of the sun during summer to traverse the mountain trail. He said the road
now makes it easier to shepherd their cows to the fields.
Today, it takes local farmers only 45 minutes to transport
their produce to the market in downtown.
OPAPP Assistant Secretary Howard B. Cafugauan, head of the
PAMANA National Program Monitoring Office, acknowledged the effort of the local
government to see through the implementation of the programs.
“We are heartened by the enthusiasm of the local government
of T’boli in implementing this project because their active participation
helped speed up the roll-out of the programs,” Cafugauan said.
Meanwhile, municipal agriculturist Olivia M. Miramon said
the PAMANA project was the most relevant for the farmers in the province among
the programs implemented in the town of T’boli .
“The farmers were really grateful because it lifted such
heavy burden from their shoulders. The transportation cost is now much cheaper
because the roads have improved,” she said.
T’boli Mayor Dibu S. Tuan said only the Aquino
Administration gave this much importance to T’Bolis (a tribe in South Cotabato ) since the town was founded 40 years ago.
“We never thought that we will have a 13-kilometer road
finished in just one year. Forty years, and this is the first time we have
received a program of this magnitude from the government,” he said.
The funds disbursed in the project are chargeable against
the budget of the Department of Agriculture and was implemented through the
local government office of T’Boli.
The PAMANA aims to cover areas in Regions IV-B, V, VI, VII,
VIII, IX, X, XI, XII, XIII, ARMM, CAR and NCR through the Department of Public
Works and Highways, Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, Department of
Agriculture, Department of Interior and Local Government, Department of Social
Welfare and Development, Department of Environment and Natural Resources,
Philippine Health Insurance Corporation, and Commission of Higher Education.
For 2016, the proposed PAMANA Program budget of all these national agencies
amounts to Php12,841,602,600.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=813192
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