“The PTFoMS is indeed a welcome development.”
The House of Representatives overwhelmingly approved on final reading a measure providing a free and culture-sensitive system of civil registration for indigenous peoples (IPs).
With 162 affirmative votes, the Lower House passed on third reading House Bill No. 7849, or the proposed “Indigenous Peoples Civil Registration System (ICPRS) Act.”
The bill aims to collect, update, and create a database of the members of the IPs and indigenous cultural communities (ICCs). It also seeks to provide a civil registration system that is responsive to the culture, customs, and traditions of the ICCs and IPs.
Under the bill, IPs shall be exempted from paying all fees in connection with the recording of birth, marriage, and death at the Local Civil Registry Office, and such exemption shall extend to any fine or fee for late registration.
The bill also exempts ICCs and IPs from the payment of notarial fees and documentary stamp tax in cases where the recording of the birth, marriage, or death requires the execution of affidavits or sworn statements and similar documents.
The proposed civil registration system for IPs shall recognize and respect their system of naming their members; the conclusive legal effect of their tribal authorities and elders in officiating and/or dissolving marriages; their elders, tribal doctors, or midwives as reportorial authorities in cases of birth and death of a member of the IPs or ICCs.
“Members of ICCs and IPs are discouraged to register birth, marriage, and death events primarily because of financial burden.”
ANAC-IP party-list Rep. Jose Panganiban Jr., author of the bill, said members of ICCs and IPs are discouraged to register birth, marriage, and death events primarily because of financial burden.
Panganiban noted that the lack of a culturally-sensitive system of civil registration led to non-registration of IPs.
“No data is available on the ethno-linguistics origin of the country’s populace since almost 60 percent of the 22 million members of ICCs and IPs are not registered with the civil registration agency.”
“Because of the non-registration of their civil status, members of ICCs and IPs are often neglected in the delivery of basic social services from the government,” the legislator said.
The lawmaker said no data is available on the ethno-linguistics origin of the country’s populace since almost 60 percent of the 22 million members of ICCs and IPs are not registered with the civil registration agency.
The Philippine Statistics Authority earlier expressed support for the enactment into law of the bills, noting that it is a step forward in “helping the ICCs and IPs maintain their cultural integrity.”