The Hundred
Islands National Park (Pangasinan: Kapulo-puloan or Taytay-Bakes)
is a national park in
the Republic of the
Philippines. The protected area is located in the city of Alaminos, in the province of Pangasinan in northern Philippines. The islands, totaling 124 at low tide and 123 at high tide,
are scattered in Lingayen Gulf covering
an area of 16.76 square kilometres (6.47 sq mi). Only three of them
have been developed for tourism: Governor Island, Quezon Island, and Children's
Island. The Lucap wharf in Alaminos, the entrance to the National Park, is
about 240 kilometres (150 mi) north of Manila, the capital
of the Philippines.
The islands are believed to be about two million years old.
They are actually ancient coralsthat extend well inland, in an area previously comprising the
seabed of an ancient sea. The lowering of the sea level have exposed them to
the surface. The peculiar "mushroom-like" shapes of some of the
islands were caused by the eroding action of the
ocean waves
The
national park was created by Presidential Proclamation No. 667, covering an
area of 16.76 square kilometres (6.47 sq mi) and signed by
President Manuel L. Quezon on
January 18, 1940, for the benefit and enjoyment of the people of the
Philippines and known as the Hundred Islands National Park (HINP).
The Republic Act No. 3655 signed on June 22, 1962, created the Hundred Islands
Conservation and Development Authority (HICDA), for the conservation,
development and management of HINP. The park including Lucap Bay was
transferred from HICDA to the Philippine Tourism Authority (PTA) by virtue of
Section 35 of Presidential Decree No. 564.
On
April 27, 1982 under Proclamation No. 2183, the national park including Lucap
Bay and its foreshore areas, beginning from Sitio Telbang to the east to Sitio
Recudo to the west, were declared as a Tourist Zone and Marine Reserve under
the control and administration of the PTA. Subsequently under the Presidential
Proclamation No. 2237 enacted on November 6, 1982, the parcels of land reserve
for the Marine Fisheries Multi-Purpose Farm (created under Proclamation No.
1282 of June 21, 1974) were withdrawn and were also placed under the control
and supervision of the Tourism Authority for development purposes.
The
Executive Order No. 436 signed by President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo on June 21, 2005 transferred the
administration, management, maintenance and operation of the whole Hundred
Islands National Park (HINP), including all the activities, facilities and
improvements thereafter, from the Philippine Tourism Authority (PTA) to the
city government of Alaminos, Pangasinan in pursuit of Republic Act No. 7160,
otherwise known as the Local Government Code of 1991, which encouraged the
transfer of power and authority from the national government to local
government units, in line with the government’s devolution program mandated by
the Constitution.
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