Sultan Kudarat, Maguindanao

Sultan Kudarat
Municipality

Map of Maguindanao showing the location of Sultan Kudarat
Sultan Kudarat

Location within the Philippines

Coordinates: 07°14′N 124°15′E / 7.233°N 124.250°E / 7.233; 124.250Coordinates: 07°14′N 124°15′E / 7.233°N 124.250°E / 7.233; 124.250
Country  Philippines
Region Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM)
Province Maguindanao
Barangays 39
Government[1]
  Mayor Shameem B. Mastura
Area
  Total 712.91 km2 (275.26 sq mi)
Population (2010)
  Total 82,758
  Density 120/km2 (300/sq mi)
Time zone PST (UTC+8)
ZIP code 9605
Dialing code 64
Income class 1st

Sultan Kudarat (formerly Nuling) is a 1st class municipality in the province of Maguindanao, Philippines. According to the 2010 census, it has a population of about 82,758 people in 27,550 households.

Barangays

Sultan Kudarat is politically subdivided into 39 barangays.

  • Alamada
  • Banatin
  • Banubo
  • Bulalo
  • Bulibod
  • Calsada
  • Crossing Simuay
  • Dalumangcob (Pob.)
  • Damaniog
  • Darapanan
  • Gang
  • Inawan
  • Kabuntalan
  • Kakar
  • Kapimpilan
  • Katamlangan (Matampay)
  • Katidtuan
  • Katuli
  • Ladia
  • Limbo
  • Maidapa
  • Makaguiling
  • Matengen
  • Mulaug
  • Nalinan
  • Nara
  • Nekitan
  • Olas
  • Panatan
  • Pigcalagan
  • Pigkelegan (Ibotegen)
  • Pinaring
  • Pingping
  • Raguisi
  • Rebuken
  • Salimbao
  • Sambolawan
  • Senditan
  • Ungap

History

Sultan Kudarat town was founded as a municipality by the name Nuling in August 18, 1947, by Executive Orver No. 82 signed by President Manuel Roxas. The town had its present name after it became the capital of the newly carved province of Maguindanao in 1975.

The town was part of the province of Shariff Kabunsuan from October 2006 until its nullification by the Supreme Court in July 2008.

The original seat of the Sultanate of Maguindanao was located at the mouth of the Maguindanao river (now Matampay) but later transferred to the nearby sitio at the bank of the Nuling Creek of Barangay Salimbao of this Municipality.

Sultan Mastura Kudarat, a royal lineage of the hero soldier Sultan Dipatuan Kudaratullah was appointed by American Governor Carpenter as President of the Municipal District of Nuling. The former, however, tactfully declined said and after and instead, designated his son, Datu Mamadra Mastura for the position, who served from 1922 to 1923. He was succeeded by the following executives:

1924 to 1926, Datu Lembak Mastura;
1927 to 1934, Datu Baraguir Mamadra;
1935 to 1945, Datu Baraguir Mamadra, first elected Municipal district Mayor of Nuling under the Philippine Commonwealth with Barangay Salimbao as the seat of the Government of Nuling;
1945 to 1946, Datu Dagadas Taha, appointed by President Sergio Osmena through the recommendation of Former Congressman Salipada K. Pendatun of Cotabato Province.
1946, Datu Abas Mastura;
1946, Datu Ali Compania;
1947 to 1951, Datu Mokamad Mamadra, first elected Mayor of the newly created regular Municipality of Nuling;
1951 to 1955, Datu Osmena Mamadra;
1956 to July 1977, Hadji Datu Sanggacala Mamadra Baraguir, first elected Municipal Mayor of the newly named Sultan Kudarat Municipality (formerly Nuling).
Almost ten (10) years later, after the creation of the regular Municipality of Nuling on August 18, 1947, the late President Carlos P. Garcia, aware on the development of the town, issued Executive Order No. 267 fixing the seat of the Municipal Government of Sultan Kudarat to Barangay Dalumangcob of the town.
July 1977 to January 30, 1980, Datu Tucao O. Mastura, CPA, appointed by the President of the Philippines, Ferdinand E. Marcos;

On the same year, following the assumption of Mayor Mastura, late President Ferdinand E. Marcos, issued Presidential Decree No. 1170, transferring the seat of Government of the Province of Maguindanao from the Municipality of Maganoy to the Municipality of Sultan Kudarat on July 11, 1977;

January 30, 1980 to June 30, 1998, Datu Tucao O. Mastura, CPA, elected on January 30, 1980 by landslide votes of the people;
July 1, 1998 to June 30, 2001, Bai Shajida Mastura-Bandila, first woman elected Municipal Mayor;

In a plebiscite conducted on March 15, 2003, the electorates of this Municipality unanimously voted in favor of the creation of a new Municipality in the name of Sultan Mastura, being a son of Sultan Dipatuan Kudaratullah, better known as Sultan Kudarat. The New Municipality of Sultan Mastura has absorbed 13 barangays from the former leaving on 39 for its mother Municipality.. July 1, 2001 to June 30, 2004, Datu Tucao O. Mastura, CPA, once again elected as Municipal Mayor unopposed; July 1, 2004 to June 30, 2007, Datu Tucao O. Mastura, CPA, elected again as Municipal Mayor; July 1, 2007 to present, Bai Shajida Mastuar-Bandila, again elected as Municipal Mayor of the Municipality of Sultan Kudarat, Shariff Kabunsuan, while his father, former Mayor Datu Tucao O. Mastura, CPA, run for the position of Governor of the newly created Shariff Kabunsuan Province. July 1, 2010 Datu Tucao O. Mastura, CPA returned as the Municipal Mayor of the municipality with his daughter, former mayor Bai Shajida Biruar Mastura as his Vice Mayor. July 1, 2013 Datu Shameem B. Mastura, grandson of the Datu Tucao O. Mastura, CPA assumed as newly elected mayor of the municipality of Sultan Kuidarat, Maguindanao. He is the youngest mayor at the age of 23 in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM. He is ranked as the third youngest mayor in the Philippine History at the age of 23 with Benigno S. Aquino as second at the age of 22 in Tarlac and the first Jono Humamoy at the age of 21 of Inabanga, Bohol in 2007 and perhaps even in the Philippine Political History. Presently, Sultan Kudarat has a total land area of 71,151 hectares and an unofficial Population Census Result of 152,667 and a 24,651 households as of August 1, 2007.

Demographics

Population census of Sultan Kudarat
YearPop.±% p.a.
1990 72,331    
1995 76,125+0.96%
2000 94,861+4.83%
2007 121,324+3.45%
2010 181,417+15.77%
Source: National Statistics Office[2]

Poverty Incidence

Presently, the LGU has a poverty incidence of 31.5% or there are about 57,147 of the 181,419 population who are living below the ARMM’s poverty threshold of 75,000 or an annual per capita income of P10,714 for the family size of 7. This poverty incidence is 1.4% lower than the National average of 32.9%.

Social Services

Education and Literacy

About 79.2 percent of the municipality’s school age population are literate, that is able to read and write, based on the 1995 census. The data likewise shows that 43% are in elementary level and 26% are in high school level. College undergraduate shared with 5.4%, and 2.4% are college graduate.

Health

There is one (1) government hospital in the town, the Cotabato Sanitarium, but it caters only to specific health needs. There are about 26 Barangay Health Centers and 10 health personnel, composed of 1 medical doctor, 1 dental doctor, 6 midwives, 1 nurse and 1 sanitary inspector, serving the 39 barangays of the municipality. The health personnel are being augmented by 8 health workers and 39 trained hilots.

Economy

Though Sultan Kudarat hosts seventy percent of the agro-industries of the Province of Shariff Kabunsuan, its main economy is derived from the agriculture sector.

Agriculture

Farming

The municipality has 23,152.263 hectares of agricultural lands. While based on the year 2005 MAO’s report, only 10,035 hectares of which or forty percent (49%) have been productively used, reflecting a yield of 121.4, 13,282 and 7,820 metric tons for copra, rice and corn respectively, earning a gross income of P169,279,300.00 for the year 2005. Its High Value Commercial crops have so far covered 273 hectares and shared a total yield of 536 metric tons that earned P9, 357,000.00. YEAR 2010 CROP PRODUCTION

CROPS PLANTED AREA PLANTED IN HA. Ave. Yield/crop/ha (in Metric Tons) Remarks Rice 12,000 3.5 Mostly upland rice Corn 10,000 2.5 Coconut intercropped with corn and other crops 12,000 2 (for coconut) 2,5 (for other crops) Mango 2,000 3 Banana 5,000 5 TOTAL 41,000 18.2

Fishing

The town possesses vast fishing grounds, the Maguindanao and Matampay Rivers, Illana Bay, lakes and its 1,393.4 hectares fishpond have been the major source of fish that supplies the fish requirements of the municipality and its neighboring towns. However, development programs have to be introduced to fully develop its potentials. The fish production reported is only 167,300 kilograms for the year 2005 which is not enough to supply the municipality’s fish requirement of 3.9 million kilograms.

Livestock and Poultry

In 2005, the Municipality of Sultan Kudarat has a total livestock population of 10,997 heads. The livestock species that are popularly raised in the municipality are carabao, cattle, and goat, probably because the town is thickly populated by the Islam believers. Its poultry population have totaled to 24,693 heads. The present livestock and poultry production of the municipality is not sufficient to supply the meat requirements of the municipality for it can only provide a total of 234,691 kilograms for the year 2005 which is very far behind the town’s food requirements of about 3.7 million kilograms.

YEAR 2010 LIVESTOCK PRODUCTION Livestock Number of Heads Percent to Total 1. Carabao 3,120 17.4 2. Cattle 4,387 24.4 3. Goat 8,775 48.9 4. Swine 960 5.3 5. Sheep 136 .75 6. Horse 53 .29 7. Others 500 2.7 T O T A L 17,931 100%

YEAR 2010 POULTRY PRODUCTION

Livestock Number of Heads Percent (%) to Total

1. Chicken 31,287 36.1 2. Ducks 38,732 44.7 3. Turkeys 6,751 7.79 4. Geese 9,873 11.39 T O T A L 86,643 100.00% Source: DAF-ARMM, Sultan Kudarat, Maguindanao

See also

References

  1. "Official City/Municipal 2013 Election Results". Intramuros, Manila, Philippines: Commission on Elections (COMELEC). 1 July 2013. Retrieved 5 September 2013.
  2. "Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay: as of May 1, 2010". 2010 Census of Population and Housing. National Statistics Office. Retrieved 6 October 2013.

External links

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