E/CN.4/2003/90/Add.3
page 12
23.
The Special Rapporteur is of the view that priority should be accorded to the rights of
indigenous peoples, as stipulated in IPRA, and as recognized in both long-standing indigenous
occupation and government practice and legal precedent. The legislative intent of IPRA
regarding the rights of indigenous peoples to ancestral lands and natural resources found therein
is surely of more substantial primacy than the concessions that private businesses obtained from
previous governments without regard to indigenous rights. This tension-fraught situation must
be resolved through negotiations with the participation of all interested parties, and the full
consent of the indigenous peoples, as well as in the courts, if future conflict is to be avoided and
indigenous peoples rights are to be truly protected.
E. Indigenous customary law
24.
In cases of conflicting interests regarding claims within ancestral domains, IPRA
stipulates that indigenous customary laws, traditions and practices should apply first, and that
any doubt or ambiguity in the application and interpretation of laws shall be resolved in favour
of the indigenous peoples.12 Indigenous organizations have complained to the Special
Rapporteur that legal practitioners and judges are not usually inclined to refer to indigenous
customary law, perhaps because the national legal system has not contemplated its incorporation.
The Special Rapporteur considers that this gap in the protection of the rights of indigenous
peoples must be filled and should be addressed consistently by the national judiciary and the
Administration.
25.
The Special Rapporteur welcomes the initiative of the Philippine Supreme Court to train
judges in the rights of indigenous peoples recognized in IPRA, and encourages the Philippine
judiciary to adequately address the issue of indigenous customary law in the application and
interpretation of law, leading, hopefully, to a shift in the mindset of legal practitioners, including
judges and lawyers, in such a way that they recognize indigenous customary law as part of the
national legal system, as laid out in IPRA.
F. Indigenous knowledge systems and practices
26.
As many Philippine indigenous peoples recognize the importance of their traditional
knowledge systems and practices in order to preserve cultural diversity, IPRA specifically
provides protection for indigenous community intellectual property rights and indigenous
knowledge systems. In this regard, the Special Rapporteur welcomes the fact that NCIP has
accorded a high priority to the preservation of indigenous knowledge systems and practices in its
upcoming work programme.
27.
According to chapter VI, section 34, of IPRA, indigenous peoples are entitled to the
recognition of the full ownership, control and protection of their cultural and intellectual rights.
They shall also have the right to special measures to control, develop and protect their sciences,
technologies and cultural manifestations, including human and other genetic resources, seeds,
traditional medicines and health practices, vital medicinal plants, animals and minerals,
indigenous knowledge systems and practices, knowledge of the properties of fauna and flora,
oral traditions, literature, designs, and visual and performing arts.