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Cagayan de Oro

Cagayan de Oro (CDO), officially the City of Cagayan de Oro (Cebuano: Dakbayan sa Cagayan de Oro; Maranao: Bandar a Cagayan de Oro; Filipino: Lungsod ng Cagayan de Oro), is a 1st class highly urbanized city in the region of Northern Mindanao, Philippines. It is the capital of the province of Misamis Oriental where it is geographically situated but governed administratively independent from the provincial government. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 728,402 people.[6] Cagayan de Oro also serves as the regional center and business hub of Northern Mindanao, and part of the growing Metropolitan Cagayan de Oro area, which includes the city of El Salvador, the towns of Opol, Alubijid, Laguindingan, Gitagum, Lugait, Naawan, Initao, Libertad and Manticao at the western side, and the towns of Tagoloan, Villanueva, Jasaan, Claveria and Balingasag at the eastern side.

Cagayan de Oro
Skyline of Cagayan de Oro
Etymology: Cagayan de Misamis
Nicknames: 
  • City of Golden Friendship[1]
  • Whitewater Rafting Capital of the Philippines[2]
  • City of Gold[3]
Anthem: "Cagayan de Oro March"
Map of Northern Mindanao with Cagayan de Oro highlighted
OpenStreetMap
Cagayan de Oro
Location within the Philippines
Coordinates: 8°29′N 124°39′E / 8.48°N 124.65°E / 8.48; 124.65
CountryPhilippines
RegionNorthern Mindanao
ProvinceMisamis Oriental (geographically only)
District1st and 2nd districts
Settlement re-established1626
Town1871
CityhoodJune 15, 1950
Highly urbanized cityNovember 22, 1983
Barangays80 (see Barangays)
Government
[4]
 • TypeSangguniang Panlungsod
 • MayorRolando A. Uy (NUP)
 • Vice MayorJocelyn B. Rodriguez (CDP)
 • Representatives
 • City Council
Members
 • Electorate372,293 voters (2022)
Area
 • City412.80 km2 (159.38 sq mi)
Elevation
428 m (1,404 ft)
Highest elevation
2,892 m (9,488 ft)
Lowest elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Population
 (2020 census)[6]
 • City728,402
 • Rank10th
 • Density1,800/km2 (4,600/sq mi)
 • Metro
1,687,159
 • Households
190,225
Demonym(s)Cagayanons; Kagay-anons
Economy
 • Gross domestic product₱261.7 billion (2022)[7]
$4.62 billion (2022)[8]
 • Income class1st city income class
 • Poverty incidence
6.80
% (2021)[9]
 • Revenue₱ 4,239 million (2020)
 • Assets₱ 11,848 million (2020)
 • Expenditure₱ 3,855 million (2020)
 • Liabilities₱ 3,244 million (2020)
Service provider
 • ElectricityCagayan Electric Power and Light Company (CEPALCO)
 • WaterCagayan de Oro Water District (COWD)
Time zoneUTC+08:00 (PST)
ZIP code
9000
PSGC
104305000
IDD:area code+63 (0)88
Native languagesCebuano, Tagalog
AbbreviationsCdeO, CDO, CDOC, Cag. de Oro
Websitecagayandeoro.gov.ph

Cagayan de Oro is located along the north central coast of Mindanao island facing Macajalar Bay and is bordered by the municipalities of Opol to the west, Tagoloan to the east, and the provinces of Bukidnon and Lanao del Norte to the south of the city. According to the 2020 census, the city has a population of 728,402, making it the 10th most populous city in the Philippines.[10]

Cagayan de Oro is also famous for its white water rafting or kayaking adventures, one of the tourism activities being promoted along the Cagayan de Oro River.[11][12][13]

Etymology edit

The name Cagayan de Oro (lit. River of Gold)[14] can be traced back to the arrival of the Spanish Augustinian Recollect friars in 1622, the area around Himologan (now Huluga), was already known as "Cagayán". Early Spanish written documents in the 16th century already referred to the place as "Cagayán". Variations of this word—karayan, kayan, kahayan, kayayan, kagayan and kalayan—all also mean river.

The region of Northern Mindanao, which included Cagayan de Oro, was granted as encomienda to a certain Don Juan Griego on January 25, 1571. It was then former Vice President of the Philippines Emmanuel Peláez who appended "de Oro" to Cagayan.

The name "Cagayan" is shared by other places in the Philippines; these include the province of Cagayan in Cagayan Valley, northern Luzon–in which is said to have similar reference with Cagayan de Oro as they refer to their respective rivers with the same name (one being the longest in the Philippines), the Cagayan Islands in the northern Sulu Sea, and the former Cagayan de Sulu, currently named Mapun, an island in Tawi-Tawi.

History edit

Classical period edit

The Cagayan de Oro area was continuously inhabited by Late Neolithic to Iron Age Austronesian cultures. The oldest human remains discovered was from the Huluga Caves, once used as a burial place by the natives. A skullcap sent to the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in 1977 was dated to be from between 350 and 377 AD.

The caves have yielded numerous artifacts, but most areas have been badly damaged by guano collectors and amateur treasure hunters. Associated with the cave is the Huluga Open Site, believed to be the site of the primary pre-colonial settlement in the region identified as "Himologan" by the first Spanish missionaries.[15][16][17] The site is located about eight kilometers from present-day Cagayan de Oro.

The discovery of a grave site in 2009 uncovered remains of Song Dynasty (960–1279 AD) celadon ware and Sukhothai period (1238–1347 AD) Sangkhalok ceramic ware, in addition to body ornaments and stone tools. It indicates that the region was part of the ancient maritime trading network of Southeast Asia. Skulls recovered from the sites show that native Kagay-anons practiced artificial cranial deformation since childhood as a mark of social status, similar to skulls from archeological sites in neighboring Butuan.[18]

The Huluga Open Site was extensively damaged in 2001 to give way to a bridge project by the local administration. It was the source of controversy when a team from the University of the Philippines-Archaeological Studies Program dismissed the archeological importance of the site by declaring it as a "camp-like area" and not a settlement and thus not worthy of heritage protection under the laws. It was alleged by local conservationists that the UP-ASP team were influenced by the local government so the bridge project could continue. The site is still not protected and continues to be quarried, despite protests by local historians and archeologists.[17][19][20][21]

Colonial period edit

Spanish period edit

The Himologan settlement was still occupied by the time the Europeans made contact. In 1622, two Spanish Augustinian Recollect missionaries reached the settlement and described it as being inhabited by a mixed stock descended from highlander Bukidnon Lumad and sea-faring Visayans ("Dumagat"). They described the men of the settlement as being tattooed like other Visayans and the women as being ornamented with intricate jewelry, some of which were golden. They also identified them as animists, practicing traditional anitism, though they paid tribute to Muhammad Kudarat, the sultan of the Islamized Sultanate of Maguindanao to the south.[15]

In 1626, Fray Agustín de San Pedro persuaded the chief of Himologan, Datu Salangsang, to transfer his settlement down the Cagayan River, to the present-day Gaston Park. De San Pedro later fortified the new settlement against Sultan Kudarat's raiders.

In 1738, Spanish dominance was felt in Cagayan de Oro. When Misamis gained the status of province in 1818, one of its four districts was the Partidos de Cagayan. In 1871, the "Partidos" became a town and was made a permanent capital of Misamis.

On February 27, 1872, Governor-General Carlos María de La Torre issued a decree declaring Cagayan the permanent capital of Segundo Distrito de Misamis. During this era, the name of the town was known as Cagayan de Misamis.

In 1883, the town became a seat of the Spanish government in Mindanao for the provinces of Misamis Oriental, Misamis Occidental, Bukidnon and Lanao del Norte.

The Spanish authorities surrendered to Misamis governor Jose Roa and municipal mayor Toribio Chavez, both appointees of President Emilio Aguinaldo. With the Fiesta Nacional of January 10–11, 1899, their independence was celebrated as the Philippine flag was raised for the second time in Mindanao.[22] At that time, the town joined the Aguinaldo government in the second time it was declared.

American period edit

 
The American forces attacking Makahambus, circa 1900s.
 
Aerial view of Cagayan de Misamis, 1925

Spain's cession of the Philippines to the United States through a peace treaty in 1898 mainly caused opposition from residents of then Cagayan de Misamis. Their involvement in the Philippine–American War was prompted by the presence of the Americans, who had invaded the municipality on March 31, 1900, and whom they fought against thrice since then.[22]

Resistance fighters lost in the early battles. On April 7, Gen. Nicolas Capistrano[23] led an attack in the town center, on the garrison of the U.S. 40th Infantry Regiment under Col. Edward Godwin, but were repulsed with heavy losses. On May 14, the positions of the 1st Company of El Mindanao Battalon in Agusan Hill was attacked by a military unit under Col. Walter Elliot, with 38 members including their commander, Capt. Vicente Roa, killed.[22]

On June 4, the said battalion, under Col. Apolinar Velez and Lt. Cruz Taal, repulsed the U.S. 35th Regiment during the Battle of Makahambus Hill; marking the Americans' first defeat in the war.[22]

After the troubled years, peace finally brought back the economic activities to normality under the guidance of the United States. Consequently, from a purely farming-fishing area, Cagayan de Oro emerged into a booming commerce and trade center, attracting migrants from Luzon and Visayas to settle in the area.

Americans gave the Philippines its independence on July 4, 1946.[24]

Japanese period and second American period edit

On May 3, 1942, American and Philippine forces fought heroically against invading Japanese forces from Panay. Unable to resist the overwhelming and the better supplied Japanese, the allied forces retreated to more defensive positions outside the city. The Japanese burned most of the city and took up residence at the Ateneo de Cagayan University, now Xavier University Grade School and used the ferry crossing near San Agustin Church. In addition, the Japanese also established at least three (likely more) "comfort stations" in the city, where enslaved local girls and teenagers were forced by Japanese soldiers into sexual slavery, which included routine gang-rapes and murders.[25][26][27]

The Japanese army implemented a scorch-earth policy. Filipino and American guerrilla forces fought back during this occupation and American planes bombed both the university and San Agustin church on October 10, 1944. The Japanese were never able to successfully move outside the city for any length of time due to the constant pressure and attacks from the Philippine resistant movement. Combined American and Free Philippine forces landed in Cagayan de Oro on May 10, 1945, three years and 7 days after the Japanese occupation.

During this period the Japanese committed many atrocities against the local population of Cagayan de Oro, as they did throughout the Philippines. Colonel Fumio Suzuki and two hundred of his men escaped capture during the liberation of the city and withdrew into the mountainous jungle. They were caught two years later; only 38 survived by cannibalizing the Higaonon tribal people. At least 70 people were eaten.

A Cagayanon, the physician Antonio Julian Montalvan, was a member of an espionage team working for the return of Gen. Douglas MacArthur to the Philippines. Later, he became part of a Manila spy network. He was captured, tortured and decapitated by the Japanese.

Former municipalities as oldest barangays edit

Iponan, Gusa, and Agusan, the city's oldest barangays,[28] were once municipalities during the colonial period.[29][30]

Iponan and Agusan, along with Bayug, Gompot (Balingasag), and Tagoloan, were among the visitas established by the Recollect missionaries in Cagaiang (city's former name) in 1674.[28] The two were under Partido de Cagayan as the then-undivided Misamis was partitioned into four partidos in 1818.[28]

Iponan was made into a separate parish in 1833. The three became visitas of then Cagayan de Misamis, which became the new provincial capital in 1871.[28]

Gusa was established as a barrio in 1771, and shortly, became a municipality.[30] Original settlers were Bukidnons, as well as few Manobos and Moros,[30] who came from barrio Lapasan and town of Cagayan;[31] but the increase of immigrants later resulted in all of the natives leaving the area.[30] At the time of the American occupation, during the Philippine–American War, in 1901, Gen. Nicolas Capistrano chose to meet there twice with the American military officials for a peace conference, held in Julian Gevero's residence, eventually ending the year-long war.[28] However, due to decrease of population following the evacuation of residents during the war, and the town's short distance from Cagayan,[31] Gusa was reverted to a barrio,[31] being part of Agusan.[29]

Agusan became one of the ten barrios of Cagayan in 1844. It was the starting point for those traveling to Bukidnon until the late 1920s. On May 14, 1900, the 1st Company of the Mindanao Battalion perished in a battle against the Americans on the hills near the river. On May 10, 1945, the beaches of Agusan and Bugo were the landing sites of the soldiers of the United States Army's 40th Division, which joined with that of the 31st Division in Bukidnon where they finally defeated the Japanese in a battle.[28]

Iponan (spelled "Yponan" in Spanish colonial records), originally called Kalumpang, was the place where there were streams meeting at one point to form Iponan River which, according to a report of British explorer Thomas Forrest, was considered as among the Mindanao's seven rivers abundant with gold; with a sitio, known for its gold mines, frequently raided by Moros during the Spanish occupation.[28]

Through Act No. 951, issued by the Philippine Commission on October 21, 1903, which reduced the number of municipalities in Misamis from 24 to 10, the territories of Barrio Gusa, along with the towns of Iponan, Opol, Salvador, and Alubijid, joined with Cagayan; while the rest of Agusan joined with Tagoloan.[29] Agusan, later a barrio, along with Bogo and Alae, were transferred from Tagoloan to the newly-converted Cagayan de Oro City in 1950.[32]

Postwar era edit

In 1948, the barrios of El Salvador and Molugan with their sitios known as Sala, Sambulawan, Sinaloc, Lagtang, Talaba, Kalabaylabay and Hinigdaan were separated from Cagayan de Oro to form the town of El Salvador.[33]

In 1949, a delegation headed by Cagayan de Misamis mayor Maximo Y. Suniel travelled to Manila to persuade the Philippine Congress to enact a legislative act supporting the creation of the City of Cagayan.[34]

In 1950, the barrios of Opol, Igpit, and Lower Iponan (now Barangay Barra) were separated from Cagayan de Oro to form the town of Opol.[35]

On June 15, 1950, President Elpidio Quirino signed Republic Act No. 521, which granted the status of a chartered city to the Municipality of Cagayan de Misamis.[32] This was made possible through the efforts of then Cagayan de Oro Congressman Emmanuel Pelaez.[36] Suniel was the last municipal mayor of Cagayan de Misamis and the first city mayor of Cagayan de Oro.[37]

Martial law era edit

During the martial law era, Cagayan de Oro was not spared from military bombings and the usage of brutal mechanisms against dissenters of the Marcos regime. By the time martial law ended, more than a thousand people from the city had been tortured, raped, electrocuted, or salvaged.[38] This included public school teacher Nicanor Gonzales Jr., who was detained for seven months and heavily tortured, leaving an abnormal growth on his skull.[39] He was eventually honored in 2015 by having his name inscribed at the Philippines' Bantayog ng mga Bayani, which honors the martyrs and heroes who resisted the authoritarian regime.[40]

Cagayan de Oro did not take these human rights abuses of the Marcos dictatorship lightly, and the city came to have a reputation as one of the centers of political opposition in the Philippines.[38]

Cagayan de Oro was declared a highly urbanized city by the Ministry of Local Government on November 22, 1983. In 1986, the city participated in the People Power Revolution through rallies in the streets of the city. When the revolution succeeded and ousted Marcos from power in Manila, the city was among those who supported the installation of Corazon Aquino as president.

Recent history edit

On 4 October 1990, the city was seized by a rebel army led by dissident RAM officer Alexander Noble and civilian supporters of the Mindanao Independence Movement led by Reuben Canoy, who marched across the city and took over the regional military garrison at Camp Edilberto Evangelista as part of an attempted coup against President Corazon Aquino. However, Noble's forces failed to gain further support and were isolated by government forces, culminating in Noble's surrender and Canoy's arrest on 6 October.[41][42]

In 1992, the National Museum of the Philippines recognized the archaeological value of Huluga when it gave the Open Site and caves separate accession numbers. In 1999, however, mayor Vicente Y. Emano conceived the plan to bulldoze Huluga to give way to a road-and-bridge project. The project was stopped in 2001, but was eventually continued in 2002. The construction destroyed at least 60% of the archaeological site's open area, where the majority of artifacts can be found. Protests against the heritage destruction was made by cultural experts, but nothing happened with their plea.

In 2003, the Heritage Conservation Advocates (HCA) went to the open area of Huluga for a scientific surface investigation and managed to find earthenware, Chinese pottery sherds, obsidian flakes, animal bones, an ancient Spanish coin, and a whale harpoon similar to those being used in Lomblen Island, Indonesia. The newly discovered artifacts proved that there are still many artifacts that can be found in the area. This caused the HCA to file a case against Emano and the contractor, UKC Builders, before the Environmental Management Bureau (EMB). However, the construction continued and was inaugurated in September 2003 by Emano.

A day later, president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo made a speech in UNESCO about her administration's gains in cultural conservation. In January 2004, the city council enacted an ordinance that authorized Emano to sign a contract with the Archaeological Studies Program (ASP) of the University of the Philippines to do salvage archaeology in Huluga and vicinities. The program did not make cooperative linkages with existing archeological programs from Xavier University. The ASP declared that the site was an ancient camp, not a settlement, due to their findings in the destroyed archaeological site. The report did not consider the findings of Xavier University. The issue later climbed into the Philippine Senate, where Loren Legarda issued a resolution for investigation of the matter, but the investigation was never approved by the other members of the Senate. The artifacts found in the Huluga Caves and its destroyed open site from 1992 to 2003 are housed in Xavier University, Capitol University, and the University of the Philippines.[citation needed]

Notable calamities edit

 
Aftermath of Tropical Storm Sendong (Washi)

On the evening of December 16–17, 2011, Tropical Storm Sendong (international name Washi) caused widespread flash flooding in Northern Mindanao. In Cagayan de Oro, hundreds living near the banks of the Cagayan de Oro River were killed, with hundreds still missing.

Officials said that despite government warning, some people did not evacuate. Five people were killed in a landslide, while others died in the flash floods which occurred overnight, following 10 hours of rain, compounded by overflowing rivers and tributaries. Most of the victims had been sleeping.

In some areas, up to 20 centimeters of rain fell in 24 hours. More than 2,000 were rescued, according to the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), and at least 20,000 people were staying in 10 evacuation centers in Cagayan de Oro. Officials were also investigating reports that an entire village was swept away.[43] The confirmed death toll from the disaster is 1,268.[44]

In January 2017, Cagayan de Oro, along with other parts of Visayas and Mindanao, was impacted by a combination of a low-pressure area and the tail-end of a cold front. The heavy rain inundated many streets, stranding many commuters.[45] At the University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines (USTP), about 900–1,000 students were trapped as most of their campus was flooded. The students were forced to climb to the upper floors of the school's buildings and wait until rescue arrived.[46] The city's shopping malls on Claro M. Recto Avenue were also severely affected, with Limketkai Center completely inundated by the floodwaters. A basement parking area of a mall at the corner of Corrales St. was covered with water, while another one near Bitan-ag Creek was flooded as well, even though the area was elevated.[47]

On December 21, 2017, Typhoon Vinta (international name Tembin) impacted most of Mindanao. It made its landfall in the Davao Region. Three bridges were closed due to rising water levels in Cagayan de Oro, where 1,719 individuals were forced to evacuate. Roughly 30,000 people were either stranded in ports or stayed in evacuation centers while 22,000 people moved to higher grounds due to heavy flooding.

Geography edit

 
NASA—satellite image captured of Macajalar Bay and the metropolitan area.

Cagayan de Oro is located along the north central coast of Mindanao, the second-largest island in the Philippine archipelago.

The southern part of the city is bordered by the provinces of Bukidnon and Lanao del Norte. The municipality of Opol borders the city on the west and Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental to the east. To the north lies Macajalar Bay facing the Bohol Sea.

Its total land area is 488.86 km2 representing 13.9 percent of the entire Misamis Oriental province. It includes 25 kilometers of coastline and a harbor, Macajalar Bay. Approximately 44.7 percent of Cagayan de Oro is classified as agricultural land, while 38.4 percent is classified as open spaces.[48]

Barangays edit

Cagayan de Oro is politically subdivided into 80 barangays. Each barangay consists of puroks while some have sitios.

The city is frequently categorized and referenced according to geographic factors: the 1st District (west of the Cagayan River) consisting of 24 barangays which are mostly suburban, and the 2nd District (east of the river), made up of 56 barangays, including city proper barangays numbering from 1–40.

Climate edit

Under the Köppen climate classification system, Cagayan de Oro has a tropical monsoon climate (Am) with an annual average temperature of 28 °C. In June 1998, the city recorded its highest temperature to date of 39 °C.

Cagayan de Oro does not receive an even amount of rainfall throughout the year. The driest months are March and April while August and September are the wettest months. The rainy or wet season lasts from June until November with the relatively drier seasons lasting from December until May. The city lies outside the typhoon belt but is affected by the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone.

Climate data for Cagayan de Oro (Lumbia Airport) 1991–2020, extremes 1979–2020
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 36.2
(97.2)
36.0
(96.8)
37.6
(99.7)
37.0
(98.6)
38.2
(100.8)
38.4
(101.1)
36.2
(97.2)
37.8
(100.0)
36.7
(98.1)
35.2
(95.4)
34.7
(94.5)
34.4
(93.9)
38.4
(101.1)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 29.8
(85.6)
30.3
(86.5)
31.4
(88.5)
32.6
(90.7)
33.0
(91.4)
32.1
(89.8)
31.7
(89.1)
32.2
(90.0)
32.1
(89.8)
31.5
(88.7)
31.1
(88.0)
30.4
(86.7)
31.5
(88.7)
Daily mean °C (°F) 25.8
(78.4)
26.0
(78.8)
26.7
(80.1)
27.6
(81.7)
28.1
(82.6)
27.5
(81.5)
27.2
(81.0)
27.4
(81.3)
27.3
(81.1)
27.0
(80.6)
26.7
(80.1)
26.3
(79.3)
27.0
(80.6)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 21.7
(71.1)
21.6
(70.9)
21.9
(71.4)
22.7
(72.9)
23.3
(73.9)
22.9
(73.2)
22.6
(72.7)
22.6
(72.7)
22.5
(72.5)
22.4
(72.3)
22.2
(72.0)
22.1
(71.8)
22.4
(72.3)
Record low °C (°F) 16.1
(61.0)
17.1
(62.8)
17.1
(62.8)
18.0
(64.4)
20.7
(69.3)
20.0
(68.0)
20.0
(68.0)
19.4
(66.9)
19.0
(66.2)
19.0
(66.2)
18.0
(64.4)
17.8
(64.0)
16.1
(61.0)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 97.6
(3.84)
85.3
(3.36)
57.6
(2.27)
62.1
(2.44)
128.9
(5.07)
220.1
(8.67)
247.3
(9.74)
197.4
(7.77)
220.8
(8.69)
191.6
(7.54)
127.1
(5.00)
137.5
(5.41)
1,773.3
(69.81)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.1 mm) 10 8 6 6 11 16 17 14 15 14 10 9 136
Average relative humidity (%) 85 84 81 79 80 83 84 82 83 84 84 85 83
Source: PAGASA[49][50]

Demographics edit

Population census of Cagayan de Oro
YearPop.±% p.a.
1903 10,937—    
1918 28,062+6.48%
1939 53,194+3.09%
1948 54,293+0.23%
1960 68,274+1.93%
1970 128,319+6.51%
1975 165,220+5.20%
1980 227,312+6.59%
1990 339,598+4.10%
1995 428,314+4.44%
2000 461,877+1.63%
2010 602,088+2.69%
2015 675,950+2.23%
2020 728,402+1.48%
Source: Philippine Statistics Authority[10][51][52][53]

According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 728,402 people, making it the 10th most populous city in the Philippines.[10]

About 44% of the household population in Cagayan de Oro classified themselves as Bisaya people, 22.15% as Cebuano, 4.38% as Boholano, while 28.07% as other ethnic groups, including those indigenous people from neighboring towns and provinces such as Higaonon, Subanen and Manobo; Muslim ethnolinguistic groups such as Maranaos, Maguindanaons and Tausugs; and migrants from Luzon and their descendants such as Tagalogs, Kapampangans, Bicolanos and Ilocanos[54](as of 2000 census).[55][56]

Religion edit

Roman Catholicism edit

Roman Catholicism is the city's dominant religion, represented by almost 70 percent of the population. It is administered by the Archdiocese of Cagayan de Oro, which comprises the three civil provinces of Misamis Oriental, Bukidnon, and Camiguin in Northern Mindanao, as well as the entire Caraga region. It is a metropolitan seat on the island of Mindanao.

The current Archbishop of Cagayan de Oro is the Most Reverend José Araneta Cabantan, S.S.J.V., D.D.,[57] who was installed on August 28, 2020. His seat is located at the Saint Augustine Metropolitan Cathedral.

Black Nazarene shrine edit

In 2009, the Minor Basilica of the Black Nazarene in Quiapo, Manila decided to move the replica statue of the Black Nazarene to the Archdiocesan Shrine of the Black Nazarene (Jesus Nazareno Parish Church), located along Claro M. Recto Avenue. This was so that Black Nazarene devotees from Mindanao do not have to travel to Quiapo for their annual pilgrimage. To this day, it hosts the largest traslación parade in all of Mindanao.

In September 2018, the Jesus Nazareno Parish Church underwent year-long physical renovations to make its façade look more like the very basilica in Quiapo itself.[58][59][60]

Protestant Christianity and Independent Christian denominations edit

Protestant missionary activity in the city started in 1916, although it has grown in numbers over recent decades. One of the known Protestant groups in the city is Pentecostalism, which dramatically increased with 2.8 percent of the total population. About 20 churches have settled in the metropolitan area. Celebration International Church has one of the highest member attendances with a record of 735 members.

In addition, three main Pentecostal mother churches are situated in the suburban area and few in the metropolitan areas. Meanwhile, Adventists, Latter-day Saints, Lutherans, and Methodists have lately grown in numbers within the suburban areas.

Other Christian churches with significant number of adherents include the Iglesia Filipina Independiente, the Iglesia ni Cristo, the United Church of Christ in the Philippines, Christ's Commission Fellowship, Victory Christian Fellowship, Baptists, Reformed churches, and the Jesus Miracle Crusade.

Islam edit

Islam is practiced mainly by Maranao settlers and the Balik Islam ("reverts") in Cagayan de Oro. Majority of the Muslim population consists of immigrants from nearby Iligan and Marawi, where they travel to work, engage in business, and study. It has increased over the years due to conflicts in the Bangsamoro region, most recently the Marawi siege that started on May 23, 2017. Additionally, the city is also home to other sizeable Muslim minorities such as Maguindanaons and Tausugs and Muslim foreign nationals such as Arabs, Pakistanis and Indonesians.

There are several large mosques and about 50 small mosques that can be found in the city, as well as Muslim prayer rooms or musallas in some schools, malls, ports of entry, Halal restaurants, and government buildings. Masjid Oro Jammah, located in the corner of Aguinaldo and Domingo Velez streets, is the oldest mosque in the city, founded in 1930. Masjid Sharif Alawi in Barangay Balulang is the largest mosque in Northern Mindanao, with over 3,200 square meters in land area, which also includes a madrasa and community center.

During the Eid holidays, the Pelaéz Sports Complex is a known place for hosting the annual Salatul Eid.

Other religions edit

Buddhism and Taoism are practiced by majority of local Chinese. Some are even members of the local chapter of the Bell Church in Barangay Macasandig. Sikhism and Hinduism are practiced by many Indian residents in city. A Sikh gurdwara, the Guru Nanak Indian Temple, is also located in Barangay Macasandig.

Languages edit

Among Cagayanons, the Cebuano language is primarily spoken. Tagalog serves as a secondary language of the city's population. English is mainly used for business and in local academe. Maranao is widely spoken by the city's Muslim community, the majority of which is composed of ethnic Maranaos. Subanen, Binukid, Higaonon, Maguindanaon, Tausug, Hiligaynon, Ilocano and Kapampangan are also spoken to varying degrees by their respective ethnic communities within the city. Philippine Hokkien is also used by the local Chinese Filipino community. Indians and their Filipino-born descendants varyingly speak several Indian languages, mainly Hindi and Punjabi, in addition to Cebuano and Tagalog.[56]

Economy edit

 
Cagayan de Oro skyline 2021

Poverty Incidence of Cagayan de Oro

5
10
15
20
25
30
2006
19.40
2009
22.75
2012
7.73
2015
8.86
2018
9.07
2021
6.80

Source: Philippine Statistics Authority[61][62][63][64][65][66][67][68]

Cagayan de Oro is the regional center and logistics and business hub of Northern Mindanao.[69] The city's economy is largely based on industry, commerce, trade, service and tourism. Investment in Cagayan de Oro City for the first six months of 2012 reached 7.4 billion pesos outpacing the local government's expectation of to nearly 100 percent. Investments in the city are dominated by malls, high-rise hotels and condominiums and convention centers. The net income for 2012 pegged at 2,041,036,807.89 billion pesos.

It noted the United Nations cited Cagayan de Oro City in 2014 as "emerging city of tomorrow," owing to its strong fundamentals that help strengthen its position as an emerging business leader in Mindanao.

FWD Life Philippines President and CEO Peter Grimes said that Cagayan de Oro City is emerging as the economic and financial center of Mindanao due to the city's conducive peace and order condition, its stable power supply, its readily available and well-trained human resource, government efficiency and appropriate infrastructure.[70]

Cagayan de Oro is home of the multi-billion peso fuel import facility of Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corporation, dubbed as the North Mindanao Import Facility (NMIF).[71]

In 2018, during the 6th Regional Competitiveness Summit organized by the Department of Trade and Industry, Cagayan de Oro was named as the country's "Top 5 Most Competitive City" in the highly urbanized cities category, notching five ranks higher as compared to its overall ranking last year outranking the country's top financial center, Makati, which ranked sixth.[72]

 
International hotel chain Tune Hotels along CM Recto Avenue

Big industries and homegrown industries edit

Cagayan de Oro is the home of multinational companies, like Del Monte, Nestle, Liwayway Marketing Corporation (goes by a more well-known name, Oishi), Unipace Corporation (a multi-national company carrying the Gaisano Group), Philip Morris Fortune Tobacco Inc. (PMFTC), Madison Shopping and Supervalue, Inc. (runs all SM Malls and Savemore Supermarkets and also into heavy manufacturing and distribution).

Bank industry edit

Cagayan de Oro, as the regional economic center of Northern Mindanao, houses the Cagayan de Oro Branch of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (Central Bank of the Philippines). As of December 2019, at least 143 banks are operating in the city.

Retail industry edit

Limketkai Center which has two shopping malls (Limketkai M & Robinsons CDO Mall) host many flagship tenants which include two supermarket branches.

Business process outsourcing edit

Business process outsourcing (BPO) in Cagayan de Oro is booming due to ample supply of human capital supported by available health, research, educational, and modern telecommunication facilities. The increase of BPO companies in the city has led to new buildings and zones dedicated for contact centers which are all PEZA registered.

Cooperative business edit

Cagayan de Oro is home to cooperatives that provide employment, economic assistance, and considered one of the prime drivers of the city's economy. The extension office of Cooperative Development Authority, located in the city as the center of Northern Mindanao (Region X), provides technical advisory services, regulatory services, and online application processing.

The big names of Cooperatives located in Cagayan de Oro are:

  • Philippine Federation of Credit Cooperatives Mindanao League – a federation of cooperatives in the Philippines
  • MASS-SPECC Cooperative Development Center – a federation of cooperatives in the Philippines
  • First Community Cooperative (FICCO – formerly Ateneo Community Credit Union) – a billionaire cooperative covering the entire of Mindanao
  • Oro Integrated Cooperative – consisting of more than 100,000 strong members of farmers, fisher folk, women, workers, vendors, drivers, government employees scattered in Cagayan de Oro and the provinces of Misamis Oriental, Bukidnon and Tagbilaran City who are engaged in small and micro enterprises
  • ACDI Multipurpose Cooperative – preferred brand of financial services in the Armed Forces of the Philippines
  • Asian Business Cabletow Cooperative Academy (ABCCA) – provides access to and quality of education for the less-privileged students
  • CFI Community Cooperative
  • Coop-Life Mutual Benefit Services (CLIMBS Life and General Insurance Cooperative) – owned by over 2000 cooperatives in the Philippines since 1971
  • Oro Savings & Sharing Cooperative
  • Cooperative Bank of Misamis Oriental – with 268 cooperatives and Samahang Nayon as member-incorporators

Government edit

 
City Hall
 
The seal of Cagayan de Oro when it attained its cityhood in 1950 and was replaced in 1976. The 1976 seal was revised in 1990 to reflect the status of the city as a highly urbanized city independent of the province, but it was later replaced on the 50th anniversary of cityhood in 2000 with a newer seal. In 2014, the 1990 seal was readopted contrary to recommendations of local historians to readopt the 1950 seal which was recognized as the seal of the city by NHCP. The non-registration of the 1990 seal to NHCP left its legality open to question.

Elected and appointed public officials have governed Cagayan de Oro since June 15, 1950, with a strong mayor-council government. The city political government is composed of the mayor, vice mayor, two congressional districts representatives, sixteen councilors, one Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) Federation representative and an Association of Barangay Captains (ABC) representative. Each official is elected publicly to a three-year terms.

The following are the current city officials of Cagayan de Oro:[73]

  1. 1st Legislative district: Rep. Lordan G. Suan (Padayon Pilipino)
  2. 2nd Legislative district: Rep. Rufus B. Rodriguez (CDP)

Barangays and legislative districts edit

 
Map of the barangays of Cagayan de Oro

Cagayan de Oro is politically subdivided into 80 barangays. These are grouped into two congressional districts, 24 barangays in the 1st district (West) and 56 barangays in the 2nd district (East), with the Cagayan de Oro River as the natural boundary. The city has a 57 urbanized barangays and 23 rural barangays all in all.

District Sub-District
(# of Barangays)
Population
(as of 2010)
Barangays
1st Non-Poblacion (24) 290,913
2nd Non-Poblacion (16) 311,176
Poblacion (40)

Culture and arts edit

There are several notable events in the city. Each barangay or barrio has its own feast locally known as Fiesta (or festivals) honoring their patron saints after achieving recognition in their own rights.

 
During the Higalaay (Kagay-an Festival) 2014

The Higalaay Festival (formerly the Kagay-an Festival, then the Higalaay Kagay-an Festival) is a week-long celebration in honor of Cagayan de Oro's patron saint St. Augustine held every August.

Highlights of the Higalaay Festival are the Kahimunan Trade Fair, which features the native products of the city and province, particularly agricultural, Miss Cagayan de Oro, Folkloric Street Dancing Competition featuring colorful attires and cultural dances of the Higaonon tribes, Higalas Parade of Cagayan de Oro Icons and Floats, Halad sa Lambagohan, PE Rhythmic Dance Competition, Kalo Festival and Kumbira, a culinary show and exhibit that started in 1996 by Kagay-anons hoteliers and restaurants. It has since evolved over the years and now hosts a culinary competition among students and professionals from all over Mindanao.[74] The competition is divided into students and professionals where hotel and restaurant management schools and professional chefs compete against each other in their respective categories. There are also cultural shows, competitions and celebrity concerts. In more recent years, some of these competitions have been replaced with new ones, such as the Folkloric Street Dancing Competition, which was replaced by the Cagayan de Oro Carnival Parade in 2014.[75]

The annual religious tradition of the Feast of the Black Nazarene in Cagayan de Oro City is held every January 9 by having a procession called "Traslacion" in which hundreds of thousands of devotees participate. Cagayan de Oro is one of only three sites in the country to have this 'Traslacion'.

"Himugso", which means birth, is a week-long celebration of Cagayan de Oro's Charter Day and Philippine Independence Day. Cagayan de Oro's cityhood was established on June 15, 1950. Independence Day is the national commemoration of the Philippine Declaration of Independence from Spain on June 12, 1898. Both Charter Day and Independence day are non-working holidays and a roster of special activities is lined up annually to mark the dual special occasion.

RODELSA Hall, operated by Liceo de Cagayan University, serves as a center for the performing arts. Concerts of many genres have been performed at RODELSA. Cine Europa (films) featuring European Union's cultures which include Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Romania were shown at RODELSA.

Xavier Center for Culture and the Arts (XCCA), part of Xavier University - Ateneo de Cagayan, commissions and hosts culture and arts programs (Filipino and foreign, classical and contemporary).

In addition, the city is also the birthplace of Kadaiyahan festival,[76] which claimed to be the first Mindanao-wide Pride March. Mindanao Pride, an emerging social movement that advocates for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+) rights and welfare in the island's regions. Kadaiyahan is the Visayan word for diversity and the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and intersex (LGBTQI) community. The LGBTQI are at the forefront of fighting for acceptance, not just tolerance in Philippine society.[77]

Cuisine edit

Cagayan de Oro food cultures include a variety of world cuisines influenced by the city's immigrant history. Western and Austronesian immigrants have made the city famous for pastel bread, chicharrón and Hamon de Cagayan. Some mobile food vendors licensed by the city sell street food like kwek-kwek, fish balls, tempura and proven and grilled meat.

Cagayan de Oro has local, national, and foreign owned restaurants (Chinese and Korean cuisines), eateries, fast-foods, snack bars, bakeshops, and coffee shops that sprout all over the city.

Sports edit

Cagayan de Oro is the home of the Cagayan de Oro Stars and Cagayan de Oro Rapids basketball teams. This major teams of the city is member community of Mindanao Visayas Basketball Association, an amateur commercial basketball league in southern Philippines sanctioned by the country's National Sports Association for basketball, the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas (SBP). It is also the home of "Holcim MoneyGram-Misamis Oriental" and "Holcim Pryce Pharma", which commencing the Misamis Oriental province. Aside from basketball, Cagayan de Oro is known for its oldest lawn tennis clubs like the "Golden Friendship Tennis Club". In addition, the city is ornamented with amateur volleyball teams like the Xavier University Volleyball Team.

The city was known for its leading sport, chess, one of the most common recreations by continuing championships in Mindanao since the 1990s. White water rafting and kayaking have annual sport events through the Cagayan River.

Sport venues include one of the biggest sports complex in Mindanao the Pelaez Memorial Sports Center, Xavier University-Ateneo de Cagayan Gymnasium, Liceo Civic Center, University of Science and Technology in Southern Philippine Gymnasium and others, a sports and entertainment complex that also hosts concerts. The Pelaez Memorial Sports Center serves as the home complex of Misamis Oriental sports teams.

Cagayan de Oro's new indoor sport is go-karting. The Speed Master Go Kart Race Track at SM City Carpark Building was the first race track in the city and in Mindanao. F1 Go Karts will be the second facility of its kind in the city and the first to use electric cars.

Cagayan de Oro is home to Pueblo de Oro Golf and Country Club, the cities only championship golf course. The Robert Trent Jones Jr. design stretches out to 7,000 yards from the championship tees, but has numerous tees for all skill levels. PDOGCC has also hosted premier professional golf events, most recently the 2019 ICTSI Pueblo de Oro Championship on the Philippines Golf Tour.

Infrastructure edit

Transportation edit

 
Sayre Highway in upland Barangay Puerto connecting the city to the province of Bukidnon

As the gateway to Northern Mindanao and the rest of Mindanao, Cagayan de Oro is accessible via land, air and water transportation. Main public transportation systems within the city are metered taxis, jeepneys with fixed routes, and motorelas within the city. There have also been new additions of transportation such as trisikads(pedicabs), which can transport people within close ranges at an affordable rate (roughly 14 PHP or $0.14). Vans have also been a new mode of transport which can take people outside of the city towards places like the Laguindingan airport, and other further places. In some areas of the city there are motorcycles that could take you to the much harder to get parts such as the mountainous areas.

Ports edit

 
Port of Cagayan de Oro, one of the busiest ports in Mindanao[78]

The Port of Cagayan de Oro in Macabalan is located near the estuary of the Cagayan de Oro River. It has an anchorage depth of 18 meters (59 ft) and is around 400 meters (1,300 ft) from the shoreline. It has four large gantry cranes and the biggest international and domestic seaport in Mindanao.[79][better source needed] It handled 1.399 million metric tons (1,377,000 long tons; 1,542,000 short tons) of cargoes during the first quarter of 2016 to rank 3rd in the country after Manila's North Harbor with 5.577 million metric tons (5,489,000 long tons; 6,148,000 short tons) and Manila International Container Terminal (MICT) with 3.746 million metric tons (3,687,000 long tons; 4,129,000 short tons). The Port of Cagayan de Oro increased its volume of cargoes by 9.7% from 2015. This is according to data from the Philippine Ports Authority (PPA).

The Port of Cagayan de Oro (Macabalan Port) serves regular trips to and from cities of Manila, Cebu City, Tagbilaran, Bacolod, Dumaguete, Iloilo City and Jagna, Bohol.

General Milling and Del Monte Philippines also operate their own port facilities within Cagayan de Oro. The $85 million located in nearby town Tagoloan 17 kilometers (11 mi) from Cagayan de Oro serves the PHIVIDEC Industrial Estate. This city's sub-port connects Mindanao to the ports of major cities in Visayas, Batangas, Metro Manila and the rest of the world.

Airport edit

 
Laguindingan Airport

Cagayan de Oro's Laguindingan Airport (CGY), declared recently as the 7th hub of Cebu Pacific Airlines, handles domestic flights to and from Manila, Cebu City, Iloilo City, Davao City, Bacolod, Zamboanga City, Dumaguete, Tagbilaran and Clark in Angeles, Pampanga. It will serve international flights in the future. It sits on a 4.17 square kilometers (1.61 sq mi) site in Barangay Moog, Laguindingan, some 46 kilometers (29 mi) northwest of Cagayan de Oro.[80] The airport was inaugurated on January 11, 2006, by then President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, who advocated the idea of an international airport along the Cagayan de Oro-Iligan Corridor,[81] and was officially opened on June 15, 2013.

Laguindingan International Airport is accessible by various modes of transportation provided by several transport operators from CDO and vice versa. These are ALPHAT Airport metered yellow taxi, regular metered taxi, and several shuttle express vans that run on an hourly basis (Magnum Express with its terminal at Limketkai Center, LAX Shuttle with its terminal at Ayala Centrio, Odyssey Airport Express with its terminal at SM CDO Downtown Premier, CAGATRANSCO, Glorymer Transport, Donsals Express, JTS, The Lord's Transport Services, Europcar, Super 5, CDOTRANSCO, Numano Express). All have booths near the parking area at Laguindingan Airport.

In 2019, the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP) has granted Original Proponent Status (OPS) to Aboitiz InfraCapital, Inc. for its unsolicited proposal for the upgrade, expansion, operations, and maintenance of the Laguindingan Airport in Misamis Oriental. The 42.7 billion project involves capacity augmentation through expansion or construction of new passenger terminals, installation of required equipment, and enhancement and development of airside facilities.[82]

Bus terminals edit

There are two bus terminals in the city: The Eastbound Integrated Bus Terminal also known as Market City and The Westbound Integrate Bus and Jeepney Terminal.

The Eastbound integrated Bus Terminal (Agora) also known as Market City offers regular landtrips to and from eastern municipalities of Misamis Oriental or eastern part of Mindanao including Balingoan and Gingoog, Carmen, Nasipit, Butuan (change buses travel to Surigao City), Bukidnon including Central or Southern portion of Mindanao such as Malaybalay and Valencia, Davao City, Kabacan, Tacurong and General Santos.

The Westbound Integrated Bus and Jeepney Terminal also has regular land trips to and from western municipalities of Misamis Oriental or Western part of Mindanao including El Salvador and Laguindingan, Iligan, Marawi, Tangub, Ozamiz, Dapitan, Dipolog, Cotabato City and the rest of Zamboanga Peninsula including Pagadian and Zamboanga City.

Public utilities edit

Water services are provided by the Cagayan de Oro Water District (COWD), the first water district established in the entire Philippines. The Bulk Water Supply, a supply agreement between COWD and the contractor, has a total production capacity of 198,262 cubic metres per day, and comes from treated water from Cagayan de Oro river, the main water source of the city.

Electricity in the city is provided mainly by Cagayan Electric Power and Light Company (CEPALCO) and partly by Misamis Oriental 1st Rural Electric Service Cooperative (MORESCO-1). Cagayan Electric Power and Light Company (CEPALCO). CEPALCO, which began operations in 1952, covers almost all of Cagayan de Oro and the Municipalities of Tagoloan, Villanueva and Jasaan, all in the Province of Misamis Oriental, including the 3,000-hectare PHIVIDEC Industrial Estate and caters to more than 100,000 consumers. The company's distribution system network includes 138,000 volt, 69,000 volt, 34,500 volt and 13,800 volt systems. CEPALCO's power supply is mainly coming from embedded power generators, namely: 165MW-Coal Power Plant of Minergy Power Corporation in Balingasag, 46MW-Diesel Power Plants of Minergy in Tablon, 8MW-Cabulig Hydro Electric Power Plant in Claveria, 7MW-Bubunawan Hydro Power Plant in Baungon-Libona, Bukidnon, 12.5MW Kirahon Solar Power Plant in Villanueva. CEPALCO is also operating the Developing World's first and largest (at the time of its inauguration in 2004) on-grid solar photovoltaic power plant. The 1-megawatt polycrystalline silicon-based photovoltaic (PV) plant in Barangay Indahag of this city is connected with the distribution network of CEPALCO. It is the biggest solar power plant connected to the power grid in Southeast Asia.[83] Misamis Oriental −1 Rural Electric Service Cooperative (MORESCO-1) whose office is located in Laguindingan covers remote parts of Cagayan de Oro. These are barangays Canitoan, Pagatpat, San Simon, and Baikingon.

Telecommunications are provided by PLDT, Philcom, Misortel, Globe, Smart, and Sun.

Law and order edit

 
Insignia of PNP Cagayan de Oro City Police Office

Cagayan de Oro is the regional base of the Philippine Air Force, Philippine Army, and Philippine National Police in Northern Mindanao. Lumbia Airport is currently used as an air base, operating service equipment such as OV-10 Bronco aircraft, UH-1 Huey, and MD-520MG Defender helicopters. The 15th Air Strike Wing from Sangley Point, Cavite will be moved to Lumbia Airport.

The Philippine Army operates the largest military camp in Mindanao located in Barangay Patag with an area of 129 hectares. Camp Evangelista is home to the 4th infantry division of the Philippine Army. The camp's external jurisdiction covers the Northern Mindanao and Caraga regions. Minor military camps are also located in Barangay Lumbia and Upper Puerto.

The Philippine National Police (PNP) operates its Regional Headquarters at Camp Alagar in Barangay Lapasan. Camp Alagar has jurisdiction over the entirety of Northern Mindanao, namely the provinces of Bukidnon, Camiguin, Lanao del Norte, Misamis Occidental and Misamis Oriental including its major cities; Cagayan de Oro and Iligan.[84] The PNP and AFP, with the help of Cagayan de Oro's local government unit formed a new integrated security force named Task Force Oro.

Cagayan de Oro upgraded its emergency services on October 30, 2017. Dialing the 911 will immediately link the call to CDRRMC, utilizing computer-aided emergency response. The city patterned its improved emergency response program after Davao City's central 911 emergency call.[citation needed]

The Judiciary's Court of Appeals holds office in Cagayan de Oro. The Court of Appeals of the Philippines is the Philippines' second-highest judicial court. Cagayan de Oro's Court of Appeals has 3 divisions covering all of Mindanao.

Health edit

Cagayan de Oro has a hospital bed-to-population ratio of 1:474 as of 2003. The Justiniano R. Borja General Hospital (a.k.a. City Hospital), the Camp Evangelista Station Hospital (Phil. Army), and Northern Mindanao Medical Center (formerly Provincial Hospital) are the three government-run hospitals.

Capitol University Medical City, Polymedic General Hospital, Polymedic Medical Plaza, Maria Reyna–Xavier University Hospital, Cagayan de Oro Medical Center, Madonna and Child Hospital, Sabal Hospital, Puerto Community Hospital, and Maternity-Children's Hospital and Puericulture Center (formerly Oro Doctor's Hospital) are privately owned.

A special medical facility for drug-abuse treatment and rehabilitation is the Department of Health-Treatment and Rehabilitation Center-Cagayan de Oro located at Upper Puerto, Barangay Puerto.

Many of these government-owned and privately owned hospital facilities have undergone expansion, renovation and modernization.

Education edit

 
Lourdes College Inc.

The city has five major private universities/colleges: Xavier University – Ateneo de Cagayan, Capitol University, Liceo de Cagayan University, Lourdes College, and Cagayan de Oro College. The University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines is the only state university in the city.[85] Other higher education institutions include Southern Philippines College, Pilgrim Christian College, St. Mary's Academy of Carmen run by the RVM Sisters, Informatics College Mindanao and STI College – Cagayan de Oro with Senior High School programs. There are also a number of foreign schools in the city with study programs.

Notable public and private elementary and high schools include Cagayan de Oro National High School, Bulua National High School, Misamis Oriental General Comprehensive High School, Gusa Regional Science High School - X, City Central School, St. Mary's School, Corpus Christi School, The Abba's Orchard Montessori School, Merry Child School, International School, Marymount Academy, Vineyard International Polytechnic College, and Montessori de Oro. There are also schools in Cagayan de Oro that use the Accelerated Christian Education system. Two of these schools include Cavite Bible Baptist Academy-CDO branch, and Shekinah Glory Christian Academy. There are two Chinese schools in the city: Kong Hua School (Roman Catholic) and Oro Christian Grace School (an Evangelical Christian school). There are two international schools run by Koreans, namely: Nanuri International School and Immanuel Mission International School.

Notable personalities edit

 
Miss Universe 2015 Pia Wurtzbach

Sister cities edit

Cagayan de Oro currently has six local and five international sister cities, as classified by the city government.

Local edit

International edit

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  •   Geographic data related to Cagayan de Oro at OpenStreetMap
  • Official website
  • Philippine Standard Geographic Code

cagayan, this, article, about, city, other, uses, cagayan, disambiguation, officially, city, cebuano, dakbayan, maranao, bandar, filipino, lungsod, class, highly, urbanized, city, region, northern, mindanao, philippines, capital, province, misamis, oriental, w. This article is about the city For other uses see Cagayan disambiguation Cagayan de Oro CDO officially the City of Cagayan de Oro Cebuano Dakbayan sa Cagayan de Oro Maranao Bandar a Cagayan de Oro Filipino Lungsod ng Cagayan de Oro is a 1st class highly urbanized city in the region of Northern Mindanao Philippines It is the capital of the province of Misamis Oriental where it is geographically situated but governed administratively independent from the provincial government According to the 2020 census it has a population of 728 402 people 6 Cagayan de Oro also serves as the regional center and business hub of Northern Mindanao and part of the growing Metropolitan Cagayan de Oro area which includes the city of El Salvador the towns of Opol Alubijid Laguindingan Gitagum Lugait Naawan Initao Libertad and Manticao at the western side and the towns of Tagoloan Villanueva Jasaan Claveria and Balingasag at the eastern side Cagayan de OroHighly urbanized citySkyline of Cagayan de OroFlagSealEtymology Cagayan de MisamisNicknames City of Golden Friendship 1 Whitewater Rafting Capital of the Philippines 2 City of Gold 3 Anthem Cagayan de Oro March source source source Map of Northern Mindanao with Cagayan de Oro highlightedOpenStreetMapCagayan de OroLocation within the PhilippinesCoordinates 8 29 N 124 39 E 8 48 N 124 65 E 8 48 124 65CountryPhilippinesRegionNorthern MindanaoProvinceMisamis Oriental geographically only District1st and 2nd districtsSettlement re established1626Town1871CityhoodJune 15 1950Highly urbanized cityNovember 22 1983Barangays80 see Barangays Government 4 TypeSangguniang Panlungsod MayorRolando A Uy NUP Vice MayorJocelyn B Rodriguez CDP RepresentativesList 1st LegDistLordan G Suan Padayon 2nd LegDistRufus B Rodriguez CDP City CouncilMembers 1st DistrictAgapito Eriberto G SuanRoger G AbadayJay R PascualImee Rose Moreno LapuzRomeo V CalizoGeorge Gualberto S GokingJose Pepe Abbu Jr Malvern A Esparcia2nd DistrictYevonna Yacine B EmanoMaria Lourdes S GaaneJoyleen Mercedes L BalabaJames K Judith IIIan Mark Q NacayaEdgar S CabanlasChristian Rustico M AchasSuzette M Daba Electorate372 293 voters 2022 Area 5 City412 80 km2 159 38 sq mi Elevation428 m 1 404 ft Highest elevation2 892 m 9 488 ft Lowest elevation0 m 0 ft Population 2020 census 6 City728 402 Rank10th Density1 800 km2 4 600 sq mi Metro1 687 159 Households190 225Demonym s Cagayanons Kagay anonsEconomy Gross domestic product 261 7 billion 2022 7 4 62 billion 2022 8 Income class1st city income class Poverty incidence6 80 2021 9 Revenue 4 239 million 2020 Assets 11 848 million 2020 Expenditure 3 855 million 2020 Liabilities 3 244 million 2020 Service provider ElectricityCagayan Electric Power and Light Company CEPALCO WaterCagayan de Oro Water District COWD Time zoneUTC 08 00 PST ZIP code9000PSGC104305000IDD area code 63 0 88Native languagesCebuano TagalogAbbreviationsCdeO CDO CDOC Cag de OroWebsitecagayandeoro wbr gov wbr ph Cagayan de Oro is located along the north central coast of Mindanao island facing Macajalar Bay and is bordered by the municipalities of Opol to the west Tagoloan to the east and the provinces of Bukidnon and Lanao del Norte to the south of the city According to the 2020 census the city has a population of 728 402 making it the 10th most populous city in the Philippines 10 Cagayan de Oro is also famous for its white water rafting or kayaking adventures one of the tourism activities being promoted along the Cagayan de Oro River 11 12 13 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Classical period 2 2 Colonial period 2 2 1 Spanish period 2 2 2 American period 2 2 3 Japanese period and second American period 2 3 Former municipalities as oldest barangays 2 4 Postwar era 2 5 Martial law era 2 6 Recent history 2 7 Notable calamities 3 Geography 3 1 Barangays 3 2 Climate 4 Demographics 4 1 Religion 4 1 1 Roman Catholicism 4 1 1 1 Black Nazarene shrine 4 1 2 Protestant Christianity and Independent Christian denominations 4 1 3 Islam 4 1 4 Other religions 4 2 Languages 5 Economy 5 1 Big industries and homegrown industries 5 2 Bank industry 5 3 Retail industry 5 4 Business process outsourcing 5 5 Cooperative business 6 Government 6 1 Barangays and legislative districts 7 Culture and arts 7 1 Cuisine 7 2 Sports 8 Infrastructure 8 1 Transportation 8 1 1 Ports 8 1 2 Airport 8 1 3 Bus terminals 8 2 Public utilities 9 Law and order 10 Health 11 Education 12 Notable personalities 13 Sister cities 13 1 Local 13 2 International 14 Gallery 15 See also 16 References 17 External linksEtymology editThe name Cagayan de Oro lit River of Gold 14 can be traced back to the arrival of the Spanish Augustinian Recollect friars in 1622 the area around Himologan now Huluga was already known as Cagayan Early Spanish written documents in the 16th century already referred to the place as Cagayan Variations of this word karayan kayan kahayan kayayan kagayan and kalayan all also mean river The region of Northern Mindanao which included Cagayan de Oro was granted as encomienda to a certain Don Juan Griego on January 25 1571 It was then former Vice President of the Philippines Emmanuel Pelaez who appended de Oro to Cagayan The name Cagayan is shared by other places in the Philippines these include the province of Cagayan in Cagayan Valley northern Luzon in which is said to have similar reference with Cagayan de Oro as they refer to their respective rivers with the same name one being the longest in the Philippines the Cagayan Islands in the northern Sulu Sea and the former Cagayan de Sulu currently named Mapun an island in Tawi Tawi History editClassical period edit The Cagayan de Oro area was continuously inhabited by Late Neolithic to Iron Age Austronesian cultures The oldest human remains discovered was from the Huluga Caves once used as a burial place by the natives A skullcap sent to the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in 1977 was dated to be from between 350 and 377 AD The caves have yielded numerous artifacts but most areas have been badly damaged by guano collectors and amateur treasure hunters Associated with the cave is the Huluga Open Site believed to be the site of the primary pre colonial settlement in the region identified as Himologan by the first Spanish missionaries 15 16 17 The site is located about eight kilometers from present day Cagayan de Oro The discovery of a grave site in 2009 uncovered remains of Song Dynasty 960 1279 AD celadon ware and Sukhothai period 1238 1347 AD Sangkhalok ceramic ware in addition to body ornaments and stone tools It indicates that the region was part of the ancient maritime trading network of Southeast Asia Skulls recovered from the sites show that native Kagay anons practiced artificial cranial deformation since childhood as a mark of social status similar to skulls from archeological sites in neighboring Butuan 18 The Huluga Open Site was extensively damaged in 2001 to give way to a bridge project by the local administration It was the source of controversy when a team from the University of the Philippines Archaeological Studies Program dismissed the archeological importance of the site by declaring it as a camp like area and not a settlement and thus not worthy of heritage protection under the laws It was alleged by local conservationists that the UP ASP team were influenced by the local government so the bridge project could continue The site is still not protected and continues to be quarried despite protests by local historians and archeologists 17 19 20 21 Colonial period edit Spanish period edit The Himologan settlement was still occupied by the time the Europeans made contact In 1622 two Spanish Augustinian Recollect missionaries reached the settlement and described it as being inhabited by a mixed stock descended from highlander Bukidnon Lumad and sea faring Visayans Dumagat They described the men of the settlement as being tattooed like other Visayans and the women as being ornamented with intricate jewelry some of which were golden They also identified them as animists practicing traditional anitism though they paid tribute to Muhammad Kudarat the sultan of the Islamized Sultanate of Maguindanao to the south 15 In 1626 Fray Agustin de San Pedro persuaded the chief of Himologan Datu Salangsang to transfer his settlement down the Cagayan River to the present day Gaston Park De San Pedro later fortified the new settlement against Sultan Kudarat s raiders In 1738 Spanish dominance was felt in Cagayan de Oro When Misamis gained the status of province in 1818 one of its four districts was the Partidos de Cagayan In 1871 the Partidos became a town and was made a permanent capital of Misamis On February 27 1872 Governor General Carlos Maria de La Torre issued a decree declaring Cagayan the permanent capital of Segundo Distrito de Misamis During this era the name of the town was known as Cagayan de Misamis In 1883 the town became a seat of the Spanish government in Mindanao for the provinces of Misamis Oriental Misamis Occidental Bukidnon and Lanao del Norte The Spanish authorities surrendered to Misamis governor Jose Roa and municipal mayor Toribio Chavez both appointees of President Emilio Aguinaldo With the Fiesta Nacional of January 10 11 1899 their independence was celebrated as the Philippine flag was raised for the second time in Mindanao 22 At that time the town joined the Aguinaldo government in the second time it was declared American period edit nbsp The American forces attacking Makahambus circa 1900s nbsp Aerial view of Cagayan de Misamis 1925 Spain s cession of the Philippines to the United States through a peace treaty in 1898 mainly caused opposition from residents of then Cagayan de Misamis Their involvement in the Philippine American War was prompted by the presence of the Americans who had invaded the municipality on March 31 1900 and whom they fought against thrice since then 22 Resistance fighters lost in the early battles On April 7 Gen Nicolas Capistrano 23 led an attack in the town center on the garrison of the U S 40th Infantry Regiment under Col Edward Godwin but were repulsed with heavy losses On May 14 the positions of the 1st Company of El Mindanao Battalon in Agusan Hill was attacked by a military unit under Col Walter Elliot with 38 members including their commander Capt Vicente Roa killed 22 On June 4 the said battalion under Col Apolinar Velez and Lt Cruz Taal repulsed the U S 35th Regiment during the Battle of Makahambus Hill marking the Americans first defeat in the war 22 After the troubled years peace finally brought back the economic activities to normality under the guidance of the United States Consequently from a purely farming fishing area Cagayan de Oro emerged into a booming commerce and trade center attracting migrants from Luzon and Visayas to settle in the area Americans gave the Philippines its independence on July 4 1946 24 Japanese period and second American period edit On May 3 1942 American and Philippine forces fought heroically against invading Japanese forces from Panay Unable to resist the overwhelming and the better supplied Japanese the allied forces retreated to more defensive positions outside the city The Japanese burned most of the city and took up residence at the Ateneo de Cagayan University now Xavier University Grade School and used the ferry crossing near San Agustin Church In addition the Japanese also established at least three likely more comfort stations in the city where enslaved local girls and teenagers were forced by Japanese soldiers into sexual slavery which included routine gang rapes and murders 25 26 27 The Japanese army implemented a scorch earth policy Filipino and American guerrilla forces fought back during this occupation and American planes bombed both the university and San Agustin church on October 10 1944 The Japanese were never able to successfully move outside the city for any length of time due to the constant pressure and attacks from the Philippine resistant movement Combined American and Free Philippine forces landed in Cagayan de Oro on May 10 1945 three years and 7 days after the Japanese occupation During this period the Japanese committed many atrocities against the local population of Cagayan de Oro as they did throughout the Philippines Colonel Fumio Suzuki and two hundred of his men escaped capture during the liberation of the city and withdrew into the mountainous jungle They were caught two years later only 38 survived by cannibalizing the Higaonon tribal people At least 70 people were eaten A Cagayanon the physician Antonio Julian Montalvan was a member of an espionage team working for the return of Gen Douglas MacArthur to the Philippines Later he became part of a Manila spy network He was captured tortured and decapitated by the Japanese Former municipalities as oldest barangays edit Iponan Gusa and Agusan the city s oldest barangays 28 were once municipalities during the colonial period 29 30 Iponan and Agusan along with Bayug Gompot Balingasag and Tagoloan were among the visitas established by the Recollect missionaries in Cagaiang city s former name in 1674 28 The two were under Partido de Cagayan as the then undivided Misamis was partitioned into four partidos in 1818 28 Iponan was made into a separate parish in 1833 The three became visitas of then Cagayan de Misamis which became the new provincial capital in 1871 28 Gusa was established as a barrio in 1771 and shortly became a municipality 30 Original settlers were Bukidnons as well as few Manobos and Moros 30 who came from barrio Lapasan and town of Cagayan 31 but the increase of immigrants later resulted in all of the natives leaving the area 30 At the time of the American occupation during the Philippine American War in 1901 Gen Nicolas Capistrano chose to meet there twice with the American military officials for a peace conference held in Julian Gevero s residence eventually ending the year long war 28 However due to decrease of population following the evacuation of residents during the war and the town s short distance from Cagayan 31 Gusa was reverted to a barrio 31 being part of Agusan 29 Agusan became one of the ten barrios of Cagayan in 1844 It was the starting point for those traveling to Bukidnon until the late 1920s On May 14 1900 the 1st Company of the Mindanao Battalion perished in a battle against the Americans on the hills near the river On May 10 1945 the beaches of Agusan and Bugo were the landing sites of the soldiers of the United States Army s 40th Division which joined with that of the 31st Division in Bukidnon where they finally defeated the Japanese in a battle 28 Iponan spelled Yponan in Spanish colonial records originally called Kalumpang was the place where there were streams meeting at one point to form Iponan River which according to a report of British explorer Thomas Forrest was considered as among the Mindanao s seven rivers abundant with gold with a sitio known for its gold mines frequently raided by Moros during the Spanish occupation 28 Through Act No 951 issued by the Philippine Commission on October 21 1903 which reduced the number of municipalities in Misamis from 24 to 10 the territories of Barrio Gusa along with the towns of Iponan Opol Salvador and Alubijid joined with Cagayan while the rest of Agusan joined with Tagoloan 29 Agusan later a barrio along with Bogo and Alae were transferred from Tagoloan to the newly converted Cagayan de Oro City in 1950 32 Postwar era edit In 1948 the barrios of El Salvador and Molugan with their sitios known as Sala Sambulawan Sinaloc Lagtang Talaba Kalabaylabay and Hinigdaan were separated from Cagayan de Oro to form the town of El Salvador 33 In 1949 a delegation headed by Cagayan de Misamis mayor Maximo Y Suniel travelled to Manila to persuade the Philippine Congress to enact a legislative act supporting the creation of the City of Cagayan 34 In 1950 the barrios of Opol Igpit and Lower Iponan now Barangay Barra were separated from Cagayan de Oro to form the town of Opol 35 On June 15 1950 President Elpidio Quirino signed Republic Act No 521 which granted the status of a chartered city to the Municipality of Cagayan de Misamis 32 This was made possible through the efforts of then Cagayan de Oro Congressman Emmanuel Pelaez 36 Suniel was the last municipal mayor of Cagayan de Misamis and the first city mayor of Cagayan de Oro 37 Martial law era edit See also Martial law under Ferdinand Marcos During the martial law era Cagayan de Oro was not spared from military bombings and the usage of brutal mechanisms against dissenters of the Marcos regime By the time martial law ended more than a thousand people from the city had been tortured raped electrocuted or salvaged 38 This included public school teacher Nicanor Gonzales Jr who was detained for seven months and heavily tortured leaving an abnormal growth on his skull 39 He was eventually honored in 2015 by having his name inscribed at the Philippines Bantayog ng mga Bayani which honors the martyrs and heroes who resisted the authoritarian regime 40 Cagayan de Oro did not take these human rights abuses of the Marcos dictatorship lightly and the city came to have a reputation as one of the centers of political opposition in the Philippines 38 Cagayan de Oro was declared a highly urbanized city by the Ministry of Local Government on November 22 1983 In 1986 the city participated in the People Power Revolution through rallies in the streets of the city When the revolution succeeded and ousted Marcos from power in Manila the city was among those who supported the installation of Corazon Aquino as president Recent history edit On 4 October 1990 the city was seized by a rebel army led by dissident RAM officer Alexander Noble and civilian supporters of the Mindanao Independence Movement led by Reuben Canoy who marched across the city and took over the regional military garrison at Camp Edilberto Evangelista as part of an attempted coup against President Corazon Aquino However Noble s forces failed to gain further support and were isolated by government forces culminating in Noble s surrender and Canoy s arrest on 6 October 41 42 In 1992 the National Museum of the Philippines recognized the archaeological value of Huluga when it gave the Open Site and caves separate accession numbers In 1999 however mayor Vicente Y Emano conceived the plan to bulldoze Huluga to give way to a road and bridge project The project was stopped in 2001 but was eventually continued in 2002 The construction destroyed at least 60 of the archaeological site s open area where the majority of artifacts can be found Protests against the heritage destruction was made by cultural experts but nothing happened with their plea In 2003 the Heritage Conservation Advocates HCA went to the open area of Huluga for a scientific surface investigation and managed to find earthenware Chinese pottery sherds obsidian flakes animal bones an ancient Spanish coin and a whale harpoon similar to those being used in Lomblen Island Indonesia The newly discovered artifacts proved that there are still many artifacts that can be found in the area This caused the HCA to file a case against Emano and the contractor UKC Builders before the Environmental Management Bureau EMB However the construction continued and was inaugurated in September 2003 by Emano A day later president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo made a speech in UNESCO about her administration s gains in cultural conservation In January 2004 the city council enacted an ordinance that authorized Emano to sign a contract with the Archaeological Studies Program ASP of the University of the Philippines to do salvage archaeology in Huluga and vicinities The program did not make cooperative linkages with existing archeological programs from Xavier University The ASP declared that the site was an ancient camp not a settlement due to their findings in the destroyed archaeological site The report did not consider the findings of Xavier University The issue later climbed into the Philippine Senate where Loren Legarda issued a resolution for investigation of the matter but the investigation was never approved by the other members of the Senate The artifacts found in the Huluga Caves and its destroyed open site from 1992 to 2003 are housed in Xavier University Capitol University and the University of the Philippines citation needed Notable calamities edit nbsp Aftermath of Tropical Storm Sendong Washi On the evening of December 16 17 2011 Tropical Storm Sendong international name Washi caused widespread flash flooding in Northern Mindanao In Cagayan de Oro hundreds living near the banks of the Cagayan de Oro River were killed with hundreds still missing Officials said that despite government warning some people did not evacuate Five people were killed in a landslide while others died in the flash floods which occurred overnight following 10 hours of rain compounded by overflowing rivers and tributaries Most of the victims had been sleeping In some areas up to 20 centimeters of rain fell in 24 hours More than 2 000 were rescued according to the Armed Forces of the Philippines AFP and at least 20 000 people were staying in 10 evacuation centers in Cagayan de Oro Officials were also investigating reports that an entire village was swept away 43 The confirmed death toll from the disaster is 1 268 44 In January 2017 Cagayan de Oro along with other parts of Visayas and Mindanao was impacted by a combination of a low pressure area and the tail end of a cold front The heavy rain inundated many streets stranding many commuters 45 At the University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines USTP about 900 1 000 students were trapped as most of their campus was flooded The students were forced to climb to the upper floors of the school s buildings and wait until rescue arrived 46 The city s shopping malls on Claro M Recto Avenue were also severely affected with Limketkai Center completely inundated by the floodwaters A basement parking area of a mall at the corner of Corrales St was covered with water while another one near Bitan ag Creek was flooded as well even though the area was elevated 47 On December 21 2017 Typhoon Vinta international name Tembin impacted most of Mindanao It made its landfall in the Davao Region Three bridges were closed due to rising water levels in Cagayan de Oro where 1 719 individuals were forced to evacuate Roughly 30 000 people were either stranded in ports or stayed in evacuation centers while 22 000 people moved to higher grounds due to heavy flooding Geography edit nbsp NASA satellite image captured of Macajalar Bay and the metropolitan area See also Metro Cagayan de Oro Cagayan de Oro is located along the north central coast of Mindanao the second largest island in the Philippine archipelago The southern part of the city is bordered by the provinces of Bukidnon and Lanao del Norte The municipality of Opol borders the city on the west and Tagoloan Misamis Oriental to the east To the north lies Macajalar Bay facing the Bohol Sea Its total land area is 488 86 km2 representing 13 9 percent of the entire Misamis Oriental province It includes 25 kilometers of coastline and a harbor Macajalar Bay Approximately 44 7 percent of Cagayan de Oro is classified as agricultural land while 38 4 percent is classified as open spaces 48 Barangays edit Cagayan de Oro is politically subdivided into 80 barangays Each barangay consists of puroks while some have sitios The city is frequently categorized and referenced according to geographic factors the 1st District west of the Cagayan River consisting of 24 barangays which are mostly suburban and the 2nd District east of the river made up of 56 barangays including city proper barangays numbering from 1 40 Climate edit Under the Koppen climate classification system Cagayan de Oro has a tropical monsoon climate Am with an annual average temperature of 28 C In June 1998 the city recorded its highest temperature to date of 39 C Cagayan de Oro does not receive an even amount of rainfall throughout the year The driest months are March and April while August and September are the wettest months The rainy or wet season lasts from June until November with the relatively drier seasons lasting from December until May The city lies outside the typhoon belt but is affected by the Inter Tropical Convergence Zone Climate data for Cagayan de Oro Lumbia Airport 1991 2020 extremes 1979 2020 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Record high C F 36 2 97 2 36 0 96 8 37 6 99 7 37 0 98 6 38 2 100 8 38 4 101 1 36 2 97 2 37 8 100 0 36 7 98 1 35 2 95 4 34 7 94 5 34 4 93 9 38 4 101 1 Mean daily maximum C F 29 8 85 6 30 3 86 5 31 4 88 5 32 6 90 7 33 0 91 4 32 1 89 8 31 7 89 1 32 2 90 0 32 1 89 8 31 5 88 7 31 1 88 0 30 4 86 7 31 5 88 7 Daily mean C F 25 8 78 4 26 0 78 8 26 7 80 1 27 6 81 7 28 1 82 6 27 5 81 5 27 2 81 0 27 4 81 3 27 3 81 1 27 0 80 6 26 7 80 1 26 3 79 3 27 0 80 6 Mean daily minimum C F 21 7 71 1 21 6 70 9 21 9 71 4 22 7 72 9 23 3 73 9 22 9 73 2 22 6 72 7 22 6 72 7 22 5 72 5 22 4 72 3 22 2 72 0 22 1 71 8 22 4 72 3 Record low C F 16 1 61 0 17 1 62 8 17 1 62 8 18 0 64 4 20 7 69 3 20 0 68 0 20 0 68 0 19 4 66 9 19 0 66 2 19 0 66 2 18 0 64 4 17 8 64 0 16 1 61 0 Average rainfall mm inches 97 6 3 84 85 3 3 36 57 6 2 27 62 1 2 44 128 9 5 07 220 1 8 67 247 3 9 74 197 4 7 77 220 8 8 69 191 6 7 54 127 1 5 00 137 5 5 41 1 773 3 69 81 Average rainy days 0 1 mm 10 8 6 6 11 16 17 14 15 14 10 9 136 Average relative humidity 85 84 81 79 80 83 84 82 83 84 84 85 83 Source PAGASA 49 50 Demographics editPopulation census of Cagayan de OroYearPop p a 190310 937 191828 062 6 48 193953 194 3 09 194854 293 0 23 196068 274 1 93 1970128 319 6 51 1975165 220 5 20 1980227 312 6 59 1990339 598 4 10 1995428 314 4 44 2000461 877 1 63 2010602 088 2 69 2015675 950 2 23 2020728 402 1 48 Source Philippine Statistics Authority 10 51 52 53 According to the 2020 census it has a population of 728 402 people making it the 10th most populous city in the Philippines 10 About 44 of the household population in Cagayan de Oro classified themselves as Bisaya people 22 15 as Cebuano 4 38 as Boholano while 28 07 as other ethnic groups including those indigenous people from neighboring towns and provinces such as Higaonon Subanen and Manobo Muslim ethnolinguistic groups such as Maranaos Maguindanaons and Tausugs and migrants from Luzon and their descendants such as Tagalogs Kapampangans Bicolanos and Ilocanos 54 as of 2000 census 55 56 Religion edit Roman Catholicism edit Main article Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cagayan de Oro Roman Catholicism is the city s dominant religion represented by almost 70 percent of the population It is administered by the Archdiocese of Cagayan de Oro which comprises the three civil provinces of Misamis Oriental Bukidnon and Camiguin in Northern Mindanao as well as the entire Caraga region It is a metropolitan seat on the island of Mindanao The current Archbishop of Cagayan de Oro is the Most Reverend Jose Araneta Cabantan S S J V D D 57 who was installed on August 28 2020 His seat is located at the Saint Augustine Metropolitan Cathedral Black Nazarene shrine edit In 2009 the Minor Basilica of the Black Nazarene in Quiapo Manila decided to move the replica statue of the Black Nazarene to the Archdiocesan Shrine of the Black Nazarene Jesus Nazareno Parish Church located along Claro M Recto Avenue This was so that Black Nazarene devotees from Mindanao do not have to travel to Quiapo for their annual pilgrimage To this day it hosts the largest traslacion parade in all of Mindanao In September 2018 the Jesus Nazareno Parish Church underwent year long physical renovations to make its facade look more like the very basilica in Quiapo itself 58 59 60 Protestant Christianity and Independent Christian denominations edit Protestant missionary activity in the city started in 1916 although it has grown in numbers over recent decades One of the known Protestant groups in the city is Pentecostalism which dramatically increased with 2 8 percent of the total population About 20 churches have settled in the metropolitan area Celebration International Church has one of the highest member attendances with a record of 735 members In addition three main Pentecostal mother churches are situated in the suburban area and few in the metropolitan areas Meanwhile Adventists Latter day Saints Lutherans and Methodists have lately grown in numbers within the suburban areas Other Christian churches with significant number of adherents include the Iglesia Filipina Independiente the Iglesia ni Cristo the United Church of Christ in the Philippines Christ s Commission Fellowship Victory Christian Fellowship Baptists Reformed churches and the Jesus Miracle Crusade Islam edit Islam is practiced mainly by Maranao settlers and the Balik Islam reverts in Cagayan de Oro Majority of the Muslim population consists of immigrants from nearby Iligan and Marawi where they travel to work engage in business and study It has increased over the years due to conflicts in the Bangsamoro region most recently the Marawi siege that started on May 23 2017 Additionally the city is also home to other sizeable Muslim minorities such as Maguindanaons and Tausugs and Muslim foreign nationals such as Arabs Pakistanis and Indonesians There are several large mosques and about 50 small mosques that can be found in the city as well as Muslim prayer rooms or musallas in some schools malls ports of entry Halal restaurants and government buildings Masjid Oro Jammah located in the corner of Aguinaldo and Domingo Velez streets is the oldest mosque in the city founded in 1930 Masjid Sharif Alawi in Barangay Balulang is the largest mosque in Northern Mindanao with over 3 200 square meters in land area which also includes a madrasa and community center During the Eid holidays the Pelaez Sports Complex is a known place for hosting the annual Salatul Eid Other religions edit Buddhism and Taoism are practiced by majority of local Chinese Some are even members of the local chapter of the Bell Church in Barangay Macasandig Sikhism and Hinduism are practiced by many Indian residents in city A Sikh gurdwara the Guru Nanak Indian Temple is also located in Barangay Macasandig Languages edit Among Cagayanons the Cebuano language is primarily spoken Tagalog serves as a secondary language of the city s population English is mainly used for business and in local academe Maranao is widely spoken by the city s Muslim community the majority of which is composed of ethnic Maranaos Subanen Binukid Higaonon Maguindanaon Tausug Hiligaynon Ilocano and Kapampangan are also spoken to varying degrees by their respective ethnic communities within the city Philippine Hokkien is also used by the local Chinese Filipino community Indians and their Filipino born descendants varyingly speak several Indian languages mainly Hindi and Punjabi in addition to Cebuano and Tagalog 56 Economy edit nbsp Cagayan de Oro skyline 2021 See also Economy of the Philippines Poverty Incidence of Cagayan de Oro 5 10 15 20 25 30 2006 19 40 2009 22 75 2012 7 73 2015 8 86 2018 9 07 2021 6 80 Source Philippine Statistics Authority 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 Cagayan de Oro is the regional center and logistics and business hub of Northern Mindanao 69 The city s economy is largely based on industry commerce trade service and tourism Investment in Cagayan de Oro City for the first six months of 2012 reached 7 4 billion pesos outpacing the local government s expectation of to nearly 100 percent Investments in the city are dominated by malls high rise hotels and condominiums and convention centers The net income for 2012 pegged at 2 041 036 807 89 billion pesos It noted the United Nations cited Cagayan de Oro City in 2014 as emerging city of tomorrow owing to its strong fundamentals that help strengthen its position as an emerging business leader in Mindanao FWD Life Philippines President and CEO Peter Grimes said that Cagayan de Oro City is emerging as the economic and financial center of Mindanao due to the city s conducive peace and order condition its stable power supply its readily available and well trained human resource government efficiency and appropriate infrastructure 70 Cagayan de Oro is home of the multi billion peso fuel import facility of Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corporation dubbed as the North Mindanao Import Facility NMIF 71 In 2018 during the 6th Regional Competitiveness Summit organized by the Department of Trade and Industry Cagayan de Oro was named as the country s Top 5 Most Competitive City in the highly urbanized cities category notching five ranks higher as compared to its overall ranking last year outranking the country s top financial center Makati which ranked sixth 72 nbsp International hotel chain Tune Hotels along CM Recto Avenue Big industries and homegrown industries edit Cagayan de Oro is the home of multinational companies like Del Monte Nestle Liwayway Marketing Corporation goes by a more well known name Oishi Unipace Corporation a multi national company carrying the Gaisano Group Philip Morris Fortune Tobacco Inc PMFTC Madison Shopping and Supervalue Inc runs all SM Malls and Savemore Supermarkets and also into heavy manufacturing and distribution Bank industry edit Cagayan de Oro as the regional economic center of Northern Mindanao houses the Cagayan de Oro Branch of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Central Bank of the Philippines As of December 2019 at least 143 banks are operating in the city Retail industry edit See also List of shopping malls in the Philippines Northern Mindanao Limketkai Center which has two shopping malls Limketkai M amp Robinsons CDO Mall host many flagship tenants which include two supermarket branches Business process outsourcing edit Business process outsourcing BPO in Cagayan de Oro is booming due to ample supply of human capital supported by available health research educational and modern telecommunication facilities The increase of BPO companies in the city has led to new buildings and zones dedicated for contact centers which are all PEZA registered Cooperative business edit Cagayan de Oro is home to cooperatives that provide employment economic assistance and considered one of the prime drivers of the city s economy The extension office of Cooperative Development Authority located in the city as the center of Northern Mindanao Region X provides technical advisory services regulatory services and online application processing The big names of Cooperatives located in Cagayan de Oro are Philippine Federation of Credit Cooperatives Mindanao League a federation of cooperatives in the Philippines MASS SPECC Cooperative Development Center a federation of cooperatives in the Philippines First Community Cooperative FICCO formerly Ateneo Community Credit Union a billionaire cooperative covering the entire of Mindanao Oro Integrated Cooperative consisting of more than 100 000 strong members of farmers fisher folk women workers vendors drivers government employees scattered in Cagayan de Oro and the provinces of Misamis Oriental Bukidnon and Tagbilaran City who are engaged in small and micro enterprises ACDI Multipurpose Cooperative preferred brand of financial services in the Armed Forces of the Philippines Asian Business Cabletow Cooperative Academy ABCCA provides access to and quality of education for the less privileged students CFI Community Cooperative Coop Life Mutual Benefit Services CLIMBS Life and General Insurance Cooperative owned by over 2000 cooperatives in the Philippines since 1971 Oro Savings amp Sharing Cooperative Cooperative Bank of Misamis Oriental with 268 cooperatives and Samahang Nayon as member incorporatorsGovernment editSee also Mayor of Cagayan de Oro nbsp City Hall nbsp The seal of Cagayan de Oro when it attained its cityhood in 1950 and was replaced in 1976 The 1976 seal was revised in 1990 to reflect the status of the city as a highly urbanized city independent of the province but it was later replaced on the 50th anniversary of cityhood in 2000 with a newer seal In 2014 the 1990 seal was readopted contrary to recommendations of local historians to readopt the 1950 seal which was recognized as the seal of the city by NHCP The non registration of the 1990 seal to NHCP left its legality open to question Elected and appointed public officials have governed Cagayan de Oro since June 15 1950 with a strong mayor council government The city political government is composed of the mayor vice mayor two congressional districts representatives sixteen councilors one Sangguniang Kabataan SK Federation representative and an Association of Barangay Captains ABC representative Each official is elected publicly to a three year terms The following are the current city officials of Cagayan de Oro 73 House of Representatives 1st Legislative district Rep Lordan G Suan Padayon Pilipino 2nd Legislative district Rep Rufus B Rodriguez CDP Mayor Rolando A Uy NUP Vice Mayor Jocelyn B Rodriguez CDP Barangays and legislative districts edit Main article Legislative districts of Cagayan de Oro nbsp Map of the barangays of Cagayan de Oro Cagayan de Oro is politically subdivided into 80 barangays These are grouped into two congressional districts 24 barangays in the 1st district West and 56 barangays in the 2nd district East with the Cagayan de Oro River as the natural boundary The city has a 57 urbanized barangays and 23 rural barangays all in all District Sub District of Barangays Population as of 2010 Barangays 1st Non Poblacion 24 290 913 Baikingon Balulang Bayabas Bayanga Besigan Bonbon Bulua Canito an Carmen Dansolihon Iponan Kauswagan Lumbia Mambuaya Pagalungan Pagatpat Patag Pigsag an San Simon Taglimao Tagpangi Tignapoloan Tuburan Tumpagon 2nd Non Poblacion 16 311 176 Agusan Balubal Bugo Camaman an Consolacion Cugman F S Catanico Gusa Indahag Lapasan Macabalan Macasandig Nazareth Puerto Puntod Tablon Poblacion 40 Barangay 1 Barangay 2 Barangay 3 Barangay 4 Barangay 5 Barangay 6 Barangay 7 Barangay 8 Barangay 9 Barangay 10 Barangay 11 Barangay 12 Barangay 13 Barangay 14 Barangay 15 Barangay 16 Barangay 17 Barangay 18 Barangay 19 Barangay 20 Barangay 21 Barangay 22 Barangay 23 Barangay 24 Barangay 25 Barangay 26 Barangay 27 Barangay 28 Barangay 29 Barangay 30 Barangay 31 Barangay 32 Barangay 33 Barangay 34 Barangay 35 Barangay 36 Barangay 37 Barangay 38 Barangay 39 Barangay 40Culture and arts editThere are several notable events in the city Each barangay or barrio has its own feast locally known as Fiesta or festivals honoring their patron saints after achieving recognition in their own rights nbsp During the Higalaay Kagay an Festival 2014 The Higalaay Festival formerly the Kagay an Festival then the Higalaay Kagay an Festival is a week long celebration in honor of Cagayan de Oro s patron saint St Augustine held every August Highlights of the Higalaay Festival are the Kahimunan Trade Fair which features the native products of the city and province particularly agricultural Miss Cagayan de Oro Folkloric Street Dancing Competition featuring colorful attires and cultural dances of the Higaonon tribes Higalas Parade of Cagayan de Oro Icons and Floats Halad sa Lambagohan PE Rhythmic Dance Competition Kalo Festival and Kumbira a culinary show and exhibit that started in 1996 by Kagay anons hoteliers and restaurants It has since evolved over the years and now hosts a culinary competition among students and professionals from all over Mindanao 74 The competition is divided into students and professionals where hotel and restaurant management schools and professional chefs compete against each other in their respective categories There are also cultural shows competitions and celebrity concerts In more recent years some of these competitions have been replaced with new ones such as the Folkloric Street Dancing Competition which was replaced by the Cagayan de Oro Carnival Parade in 2014 75 The annual religious tradition of the Feast of the Black Nazarene in Cagayan de Oro City is held every January 9 by having a procession called Traslacion in which hundreds of thousands of devotees participate Cagayan de Oro is one of only three sites in the country to have this Traslacion Himugso which means birth is a week long celebration of Cagayan de Oro s Charter Day and Philippine Independence Day Cagayan de Oro s cityhood was established on June 15 1950 Independence Day is the national commemoration of the Philippine Declaration of Independence from Spain on June 12 1898 Both Charter Day and Independence day are non working holidays and a roster of special activities is lined up annually to mark the dual special occasion RODELSA Hall operated by Liceo de Cagayan University serves as a center for the performing arts Concerts of many genres have been performed at RODELSA Cine Europa films featuring European Union s cultures which include Austria Belgium Bulgaria Czech Republic Denmark Finland France Germany Hungary Italy Netherlands Norway Poland Romania were shown at RODELSA Xavier Center for Culture and the Arts XCCA part of Xavier University Ateneo de Cagayan commissions and hosts culture and arts programs Filipino and foreign classical and contemporary In addition the city is also the birthplace of Kadaiyahan festival 76 which claimed to be the first Mindanao wide Pride March Mindanao Pride an emerging social movement that advocates for lesbian gay bisexual transgender and queer LGBTQ rights and welfare in the island s regions Kadaiyahan is the Visayan word for diversity and the lesbian gay bisexual transgender queer and intersex LGBTQI community The LGBTQI are at the forefront of fighting for acceptance not just tolerance in Philippine society 77 Cuisine edit See also Philippine cuisine Cagayan de Oro food cultures include a variety of world cuisines influenced by the city s immigrant history Western and Austronesian immigrants have made the city famous for pastel bread chicharron and Hamon de Cagayan Some mobile food vendors licensed by the city sell street food like kwek kwek fish balls tempura and proven and grilled meat Cagayan de Oro has local national and foreign owned restaurants Chinese and Korean cuisines eateries fast foods snack bars bakeshops and coffee shops that sprout all over the city Sports edit Main article Sports in the Philippines Cagayan de Oro is the home of the Cagayan de Oro Stars and Cagayan de Oro Rapids basketball teams This major teams of the city is member community of Mindanao Visayas Basketball Association an amateur commercial basketball league in southern Philippines sanctioned by the country s National Sports Association for basketball the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas SBP It is also the home of Holcim MoneyGram Misamis Oriental and Holcim Pryce Pharma which commencing the Misamis Oriental province Aside from basketball Cagayan de Oro is known for its oldest lawn tennis clubs like the Golden Friendship Tennis Club In addition the city is ornamented with amateur volleyball teams like the Xavier University Volleyball Team The city was known for its leading sport chess one of the most common recreations by continuing championships in Mindanao since the 1990s White water rafting and kayaking have annual sport events through the Cagayan River Sport venues include one of the biggest sports complex in Mindanao the Pelaez Memorial Sports Center Xavier University Ateneo de Cagayan Gymnasium Liceo Civic Center University of Science and Technology in Southern Philippine Gymnasium and others a sports and entertainment complex that also hosts concerts The Pelaez Memorial Sports Center serves as the home complex of Misamis Oriental sports teams Cagayan de Oro s new indoor sport is go karting The Speed Master Go Kart Race Track at SM City Carpark Building was the first race track in the city and in Mindanao F1 Go Karts will be the second facility of its kind in the city and the first to use electric cars Cagayan de Oro is home to Pueblo de Oro Golf and Country Club the cities only championship golf course The Robert Trent Jones Jr design stretches out to 7 000 yards from the championship tees but has numerous tees for all skill levels PDOGCC has also hosted premier professional golf events most recently the 2019 ICTSI Pueblo de Oro Championship on the Philippines Golf Tour Infrastructure editTransportation edit nbsp Sayre Highway in upland Barangay Puerto connecting the city to the province of Bukidnon As the gateway to Northern Mindanao and the rest of Mindanao Cagayan de Oro is accessible via land air and water transportation Main public transportation systems within the city are metered taxis jeepneys with fixed routes and motorelas within the city There have also been new additions of transportation such as trisikads pedicabs which can transport people within close ranges at an affordable rate roughly 14 PHP or 0 14 Vans have also been a new mode of transport which can take people outside of the city towards places like the Laguindingan airport and other further places In some areas of the city there are motorcycles that could take you to the much harder to get parts such as the mountainous areas Ports edit nbsp Port of Cagayan de Oro one of the busiest ports in Mindanao 78 The Port of Cagayan de Oro in Macabalan is located near the estuary of the Cagayan de Oro River It has an anchorage depth of 18 meters 59 ft and is around 400 meters 1 300 ft from the shoreline It has four large gantry cranes and the biggest international and domestic seaport in Mindanao 79 better source needed It handled 1 399 million metric tons 1 377 000 long tons 1 542 000 short tons of cargoes during the first quarter of 2016 to rank 3rd in the country after Manila s North Harbor with 5 577 million metric tons 5 489 000 long tons 6 148 000 short tons and Manila International Container Terminal MICT with 3 746 million metric tons 3 687 000 long tons 4 129 000 short tons The Port of Cagayan de Oro increased its volume of cargoes by 9 7 from 2015 This is according to data from the Philippine Ports Authority PPA The Port of Cagayan de Oro Macabalan Port serves regular trips to and from cities of Manila Cebu City Tagbilaran Bacolod Dumaguete Iloilo City and Jagna Bohol General Milling and Del Monte Philippines also operate their own port facilities within Cagayan de Oro The 85 million Mindanao International Container Port located in nearby town Tagoloan 17 kilometers 11 mi from Cagayan de Oro serves the PHIVIDEC Industrial Estate This city s sub port connects Mindanao to the ports of major cities in Visayas Batangas Metro Manila and the rest of the world Airport edit nbsp Laguindingan Airport Cagayan de Oro s Laguindingan Airport CGY declared recently as the 7th hub of Cebu Pacific Airlines handles domestic flights to and from Manila Cebu City Iloilo City Davao City Bacolod Zamboanga City Dumaguete Tagbilaran and Clark in Angeles Pampanga It will serve international flights in the future It sits on a 4 17 square kilometers 1 61 sq mi site in Barangay Moog Laguindingan some 46 kilometers 29 mi northwest of Cagayan de Oro 80 The airport was inaugurated on January 11 2006 by then President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo who advocated the idea of an international airport along the Cagayan de Oro Iligan Corridor 81 and was officially opened on June 15 2013 Laguindingan International Airport is accessible by various modes of transportation provided by several transport operators from CDO and vice versa These are ALPHAT Airport metered yellow taxi regular metered taxi and several shuttle express vans that run on an hourly basis Magnum Express with its terminal at Limketkai Center LAX Shuttle with its terminal at Ayala Centrio Odyssey Airport Express with its terminal at SM CDO Downtown Premier CAGATRANSCO Glorymer Transport Donsals Express JTS The Lord s Transport Services Europcar Super 5 CDOTRANSCO Numano Express All have booths near the parking area at Laguindingan Airport In 2019 the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines CAAP has granted Original Proponent Status OPS to Aboitiz InfraCapital Inc for its unsolicited proposal for the upgrade expansion operations and maintenance of the Laguindingan Airport in Misamis Oriental The 42 7 billion project involves capacity augmentation through expansion or construction of new passenger terminals installation of required equipment and enhancement and development of airside facilities 82 Bus terminals edit There are two bus terminals in the city The Eastbound Integrated Bus Terminal also known as Market City and The Westbound Integrate Bus and Jeepney Terminal The Eastbound integrated Bus Terminal Agora also known as Market City offers regular landtrips to and from eastern municipalities of Misamis Oriental or eastern part of Mindanao including Balingoan and Gingoog Carmen Nasipit Butuan change buses travel to Surigao City Bukidnon including Central or Southern portion of Mindanao such as Malaybalay and Valencia Davao City Kabacan Tacurong and General Santos The Westbound Integrated Bus and Jeepney Terminal also has regular land trips to and from western municipalities of Misamis Oriental or Western part of Mindanao including El Salvador and Laguindingan Iligan Marawi Tangub Ozamiz Dapitan Dipolog Cotabato City and the rest of Zamboanga Peninsula including Pagadian and Zamboanga City Public utilities edit Water services are provided by the Cagayan de Oro Water District COWD the first water district established in the entire Philippines The Bulk Water Supply a supply agreement between COWD and the contractor has a total production capacity of 198 262 cubic metres per day and comes from treated water from Cagayan de Oro river the main water source of the city Electricity in the city is provided mainly by Cagayan Electric Power and Light Company CEPALCO and partly by Misamis Oriental 1st Rural Electric Service Cooperative MORESCO 1 Cagayan Electric Power and Light Company CEPALCO CEPALCO which began operations in 1952 covers almost all of Cagayan de Oro and the Municipalities of Tagoloan Villanueva and Jasaan all in the Province of Misamis Oriental including the 3 000 hectare PHIVIDEC Industrial Estate and caters to more than 100 000 consumers The company s distribution system network includes 138 000 volt 69 000 volt 34 500 volt and 13 800 volt systems CEPALCO s power supply is mainly coming from embedded power generators namely 165MW Coal Power Plant of Minergy Power Corporation in Balingasag 46MW Diesel Power Plants of Minergy in Tablon 8MW Cabulig Hydro Electric Power Plant in Claveria 7MW Bubunawan Hydro Power Plant in Baungon Libona Bukidnon 12 5MW Kirahon Solar Power Plant in Villanueva CEPALCO is also operating the Developing World s first and largest at the time of its inauguration in 2004 on grid solar photovoltaic power plant The 1 megawatt polycrystalline silicon based photovoltaic PV plant in Barangay Indahag of this city is connected with the distribution network of CEPALCO It is the biggest solar power plant connected to the power grid in Southeast Asia 83 Misamis Oriental 1 Rural Electric Service Cooperative MORESCO 1 whose office is located in Laguindingan covers remote parts of Cagayan de Oro These are barangays Canitoan Pagatpat San Simon and Baikingon Telecommunications are provided by PLDT Philcom Misortel Globe Smart and Sun Law and order edit nbsp Insignia of PNP Cagayan de Oro City Police Office Cagayan de Oro is the regional base of the Philippine Air Force Philippine Army and Philippine National Police in Northern Mindanao Lumbia Airport is currently used as an air base operating service equipment such as OV 10 Bronco aircraft UH 1 Huey and MD 520MG Defender helicopters The 15th Air Strike Wing from Sangley Point Cavite will be moved to Lumbia Airport The Philippine Army operates the largest military camp in Mindanao located in Barangay Patag with an area of 129 hectares Camp Evangelista is home to the 4th infantry division of the Philippine Army The camp s external jurisdiction covers the Northern Mindanao and Caraga regions Minor military camps are also located in Barangay Lumbia and Upper Puerto The Philippine National Police PNP operates its Regional Headquarters at Camp Alagar in Barangay Lapasan Camp Alagar has jurisdiction over the entirety of Northern Mindanao namely the provinces of Bukidnon Camiguin Lanao del Norte Misamis Occidental and Misamis Oriental including its major cities Cagayan de Oro and Iligan 84 The PNP and AFP with the help of Cagayan de Oro s local government unit formed a new integrated security force named Task Force Oro Cagayan de Oro upgraded its emergency services on October 30 2017 Dialing the 911 will immediately link the call to CDRRMC utilizing computer aided emergency response The city patterned its improved emergency response program after Davao City s central 911 emergency call citation needed The Judiciary s Court of Appeals holds office in Cagayan de Oro The Court of Appeals of the Philippines is the Philippines second highest judicial court Cagayan de Oro s Court of Appeals has 3 divisions covering all of Mindanao Health editCagayan de Oro has a hospital bed to population ratio of 1 474 as of 2003 The Justiniano R Borja General Hospital a k a City Hospital the Camp Evangelista Station Hospital Phil Army and Northern Mindanao Medical Center formerly Provincial Hospital are the three government run hospitals Capitol University Medical City Polymedic General Hospital Polymedic Medical Plaza Maria Reyna Xavier University Hospital Cagayan de Oro Medical Center Madonna and Child Hospital Sabal Hospital Puerto Community Hospital and Maternity Children s Hospital and Puericulture Center formerly Oro Doctor s Hospital are privately owned A special medical facility for drug abuse treatment and rehabilitation is the Department of Health Treatment and Rehabilitation Center Cagayan de Oro located at Upper Puerto Barangay Puerto Many of these government owned and privately owned hospital facilities have undergone expansion renovation and modernization Education editMain article List of schools in Cagayan de Oro nbsp Lourdes College Inc The city has five major private universities colleges Xavier University Ateneo de Cagayan Capitol University Liceo de Cagayan University Lourdes College and Cagayan de Oro College The University of Science and Technology of Southern Philippines is the only state university in the city 85 Other higher education institutions include Southern Philippines College Pilgrim Christian College St Mary s Academy of Carmen run by the RVM Sisters Informatics College Mindanao and STI College Cagayan de Oro with Senior High School programs There are also a number of foreign schools in the city with study programs Notable public and private elementary and high schools include Cagayan de Oro National High School Bulua National High School Misamis Oriental General Comprehensive High School Gusa Regional Science High School X City Central School St Mary s School Corpus Christi School The Abba s Orchard Montessori School Merry Child School International School Marymount Academy Vineyard International Polytechnic College and Montessori de Oro There are also schools in Cagayan de Oro that use the Accelerated Christian Education system Two of these schools include Cavite Bible Baptist Academy CDO branch and Shekinah Glory Christian Academy There are two Chinese schools in the city Kong Hua School Roman Catholic and Oro Christian Grace School an Evangelical Christian school There are two international schools run by Koreans namely Nanuri International School and Immanuel Mission International School Notable personalities edit nbsp Miss Universe 2015 Pia Wurtzbach Ivana Alawi actress Chanda Romero actress Rufus Rodriguez congressman Martin Andanar Secretary of the Presidential Communications Operations Office under President Rodrigo Duterte Mark Bautista singer songwriter theater actor Sheree Bautista member of Viva Hot Babes Nicolas Capistrano lawyer statesman and revolutionary general who fought against Americans in Cagayan de Misamis the city s former name during Philippine American War notably the battles of Cagayan de Misamis Agusan Hill and Macahambus Hill all in 1900 He entered politics as a 2nd district congressman of then undivided Misamis Province 1909 1912 and a senator of newly established 11th district shared with Jose Clarin making him one of the most prominent figures in what is now Cagayan de Oro Maymay Entrata Pinoy Big Brother Lucky 7 Big Winner Poy Erram PBA player NLEX Road Warriors Jio Jalalon PBA player Star Hotshots Pete Lacaba poet writer and journalist Emmanuel Lacaba poet writer and activist Carlo Lastimosa PBA player NLEX Road Warriors Jojo Lastimosa retired PBA Player Maria Isabel Lopez Binibining Pilipinas Universe Milan Melindo professional boxer Antonio Julian Montalvan physician spy personal surgeon of Col Wendell Fertig of the 10th Military District during World War 2 executed by the Japanese at Fort Santiago in Manila in 1944 together with Jose Ozamiz Ciso Morales professional boxer Jose Montalvan World War II military officer Rey Nambatac PBA player Rain or Shine Carlo Paalam Olympic medalist boxer Albert Pagara professional boxer Jason Pagara professional boxer Philip Paniamogan PBA player NLEX Road Warriors Aquilino Nene Pimentel Jr former Senate President and former city mayor Aquilino Koko Pimentel III Senate President under President Rodrigo Duterte Nene s son Maricar Reyes actress Mariano Velez boxer Pia Wurtzbach Miss Universe Philippines 2015 Miss Universe 2015 Jonaxx author Arthur Nery singer songwriter Leo Soriano former bishop of the United Methodist Church in the Philippines from 2000 to 2012 Nikki de Moura Brazilian Filipino model beauty pageant titleholderSister cities editSee also List of sister cities in the Philippines Cagayan de Oro currently has six local and five international sister cities as classified by the city government Local edit Quezon City 86 Surigao City 1984 Batac 2023 Iligan Imus Cavite 2019 87 Zamboanga City 2023 88 International edit nbsp Lawndale California United States 1986 89 90 nbsp Tainan City Taiwan 2005 91 nbsp Harbin Heilongjiang China 2007 92 nbsp Norfolk Virginia United States 2008 93 nbsp Gwangyang Jeollanam do South Korea n a 94 Gallery edit nbsp North Concourse Limketkai Mall nbsp CM Recto Flyover nbsp Whitewater rafting or kayaking adventures in the Cagayan de Oro River nbsp A Tribute monument to the slain members of the press nbsp CM Recto Avenue with Centrio Mall at the background nbsp Photo taken from Uptown CDO nbsp New Dawn Hotel Plus Building nbsp Cagayan de Oro City as seen from Upper PuertoSee also edit nbsp Philippines portal List of renamed cities and municipalities in the Philippines List of tallest buildings in Cagayan de OroReferences edit Cagayan de Oro The City with Golden Opportunities Philippine Statistics Authority Archived from the original on August 1 2017 Retrieved April 15 2019 Whitewater Rafting Adventure City Government of Cagayan de Oro Archived from the original on August 5 2018 Retrieved April 15 2019 Daily Mindanao Goldstar January 10 2019 Brightest prospects for the City of Gold Mindanao Gold Star Daily Archived from the original on April 15 2019 Retrieved April 15 2019 City of Cagayan de Oro DILG 2015 Census of Population Report No 3 Population Land Area and Population Density PDF Philippine Statistics Authority Quezon City Philippines August 2016 ISSN 0117 1453 Archived PDF from the original on May 25 2021 Retrieved July 16 2021 a b Census of Population 2020 Region X Northern Mindanao Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved July 8 2021 All Provinces and HUCs in Northern Mindanao Continue to Expand in 2022 City of Cagayan de Oro Records the Fastest Growth with 9 4 Percent Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved December 9 2023 PH 56 598 per dollar per International Monetary Fund on Representative Exchange Rates for Selected Currencies for December 2022 IMF Retrieved December 9 2023 PSA Releases the 2021 City and Municipal Level Poverty Estimates Philippine Statistics Authority April 2 2024 Retrieved April 28 2024 a b c Census of Population 2015 Region X Northern Mindanao Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved June 20 2016 Cagayan de Oro s White Water Rafting Philippine Postal Corporation June 18 2012 Archived from the original on July 29 2012 Retrieved September 13 2012 Cagayan De Oro Travel Guide Archived October 2 2011 at the Wayback Machine GMA goes whitewater rafting in Cagayan de Oro and looks forward to mountain climbing Philippines Gov Ph News Elizaga Elson T Reid Lawrence A The Meaning of Cagayan elson elizaga net Retrieved December 7 2019 a b Montalvan Antonio J II October 16 2009 History of Cagayan de Oro Heritage Conservation Advocates p 2 Retrieved September 13 2012 Dizon Eusebio Z Pawlik Alfred F September 2010 The lower Palaeolithic record in the Philippines Quaternary International 223 224 444 450 Bibcode 2010QuInt 223 444D doi 10 1016 j quaint 2009 10 002 a b Ostique Lourd Huluga Chronology Heritage Conservation Advocates Museo de Oro Xavier University Retrieved December 30 2018 Montalvan Antonio J II New Archaeological Site Discovered in Cagayan de Oro Heritage Conservation Advocates Retrieved December 30 2018 Elizaga Elson Dr Erlinda M Burton Mindanao Goldstar Daily No October 15 2018 Retrieved December 30 2018 Gomez Herbie S July 5 2003 Builders Archaelogists Clash in Cagayan de Oro Development vs Cultural Heritage Bulatlat Retrieved December 30 2018 Hernandez Vito 2011 Using International Heritage Charters in Philippine Cultural Resource Management In Miksic John N Goh Geok Yian O Connor Sue eds Rethinking Cultural Resource Management in Southeast Asia Preservation Development and Neglect Anthem Press p 181 ISBN 978 0 85728 389 4 a b c d Philippine American War Sites to Visit in Cagayan de Oro Metro Cagayan de Oro August 7 2023 Retrieved March 16 2024 Unsung Heroes of the Philippine Revolution Ang mga Pilipino sa Ating Kasaysayan a Centennial Resource Book MSC Institute of Technology Retrieved September 13 2012 Berlow Alan July 4 1996 The Independence Day That Wasn t Philippine Centennial Series Philippine History Group of Los Angeles Archived from the original on August 28 2012 Retrieved September 13 2012 Philippine Survivor Recounts Her Struggle As A Comfort Woman For Wartime Japan NPR org NPR Retrieved August 15 2021 The Other Empire Literary Views of Japan from the Philippines Singapore and Malaysia The University of the Philippines Press 2008 ISBN 978 971 542 562 9 Retrieved August 15 2021 Women made to be Comfort Women Philippines a b c d e f g Our three oldest barangays SunStar Philippines November 3 2013 Retrieved March 15 2024 a b c Act No 951 Legislative Digital Resources Senate of the Philippines October 21 1903 Retrieved March 11 2024 a b c d Obuga Roberto n d History and cultural life of the Barrio page 1 of 4 PDF Retrieved March 15 2024 via TechnoAklatan National Library of the Philippines a b c Obuga Roberto n d History and cultural life of the Barrio page 2 of 4 PDF Retrieved March 15 2024 via TechnoAklatan National Library of the Philippines a b The 2nd Congress of the Philippines June 15 1950 R A No 521 Cagayan de Oro City Charter Philippine Law Info Archived from the original on August 1 2012 Retrieved September 13 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link The 1st Congress of the Philippines June 15 1948 R A No 268 An Act Creating the Municipality of El Salvador Province of Misamis Oriental Philippine Law Info Archived from the original on March 24 2012 Retrieved April 8 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link The Philippine Economy Bulletin National Economic Council 1966 p 27 Retrieved December 25 2023 The 2nd Congress of the Philippines June 15 1950 R A No 524 An Act Creating the Municipality of Opol Province of Misamis Oriental Philippine Law Info Archived from the original on April 6 2012 Retrieved April 9 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Roa A Paulita June 15 2012 The City of Cagayan de Oro SunStar Cagayan de Oro Archived from the original on June 21 2017 Retrieved September 13 2012 Higalas parade kicks off Last of four parts SunStar Publishing Inc September 11 2013 Retrieved December 25 2023 a b Historical Background cagayandeoro gov ph City Government of Cagayan De Oro Archived from the original on March 9 2014 Retrieved September 21 2020 Martyrs amp Heroes Nicanor Gonzales Bantayog ng mga Bayani June 10 2023 Retrieved December 19 2023 Gamil Jaymee T December 2 2015 15 new martyrs honored in Bantayog ng mga Bayani Retrieved December 22 2023 Aquino orders court martial of rebel leader UPI October 6 1990 Retrieved June 27 2023 Former assemblyman and mayor Reuben Canoy dies at 93 MindaNews July 6 2022 Retrieved June 27 2023 Ressa Maria December 19 2011 Storm death toll tops 650 in Philippines hundreds missing Asia CNN Retrieved September 13 2012 Death toll from Typhoon Bopha tops 1 000 in the Philippines CNN com CNN December 16 2012 Retrieved August 6 2015 Lagsa Bobby Thousands stranded as flash floods hit Cagayan de Oro Rappler Retrieved January 19 2017 4 dead 1 missing thousands displaced in Oro flood SunStar Cagayan de Oro Retrieved January 19 2017 Jerusalem JIgger Saliring Alwen Viguella Abigail Heavy rains cause worst flooding in Oro since Sendong SunStar Cagayan de Oro Retrieved January 19 2017 The Official Website of Cagayan de Oro City The City Government of Cagayan de Oro City Retrieved September 13 2012 Cagayan de Oro Davao del Sur Climatological Normal Values PDF Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration Archived from the original PDF on March 2 2022 Retrieved June 10 2022 Cagayan de Oro Davao del Sur Climatological Extremes PDF Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration Archived from the original PDF on March 7 2022 Retrieved June 10 2022 Census of Population and Housing 2010 Region X Northern Mindanao PDF Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay National Statistics Office Retrieved June 29 2016 Censuses of Population 1903 2007 Region X Northern Mindanao Table 1 Population Enumerated in Various Censuses by Province Highly Urbanized City 1903 to 2007 National Statistics Office a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Province of Misamis Oriental Municipality Population Data Local Water Utilities Administration Research Division Retrieved December 17 2016 The Most Frequently Asked Questions About Cagayan De Oro City BestPubCrawl com August 12 2023 Retrieved September 11 2023 Cagayan de Oro City Population growth rate declined to 1 63 percent Philippine Statistics Authority September 17 2002 Archived from the original on February 21 2012 Retrieved September 13 2012 a b https psa gov ph system files main publication Cagayan 2520de 2520oro 2520city pdf New appointment for Archdiocese of Cagayan de Oro Philippines Vatican News June 23 2020 Retrieved June 23 2020 Nazareno Parish Church to undergo facade renovation CDODev com September 10 2018 Retrieved September 3 2021 Nazareno Parish Church s new facade now emerging CDODev com April 13 2019 Retrieved September 3 2021 RANDOM SHOTS Nazareno Church lights up new facade CDODev com September 24 2019 Retrieved September 3 2021 Poverty incidence PI Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved December 28 2020 Estimation of Local Poverty in the Philippines PDF Philippine Statistics Authority November 29 2005 2003 City and Municipal Level Poverty Estimates PDF Philippine Statistics Authority March 23 2009 City and Municipal Level Poverty Estimates 2006 and 2009 PDF Philippine Statistics Authority August 3 2012 2012 Municipal and City Level Poverty Estimates PDF Philippine Statistics Authority May 31 2016 Municipal and City Level Small Area Poverty Estimates 2009 2012 and 2015 Philippine Statistics Authority July 10 2019 PSA Releases the 2018 Municipal and City Level Poverty Estimates Philippine Statistics Authority December 15 2021 Retrieved January 22 2022 PSA Releases the 2021 City and Municipal Level Poverty Estimates Philippine Statistics Authority April 2 2024 Retrieved April 28 2024 Cagayan de Oro Philippine Airlines Retrieved September 13 2012 Foreign insurer picks CdO as business hub in Mindanao Butch Enerio BusinessMirror March 8 2016 Fuel import facility in Mindanao Pilipinas Shell News Philippine Information Agency Officials in Cagayan de Oro City Elizaga Archived from the original on November 2 2012 Retrieved September 13 2012 Kagay an Festival CDO Guide Your Online Guide to Cagayan de Oro Archived from the original on October 22 2012 Retrieved September 13 2012 Cagayan de Oro Carnival Parade ACadeO What To Do in Cagayan de Oro August 25 2015 Retrieved November 3 2015 Pride March set to step in Oro SunStar October 22 2018 Mindanao Pride March Kadaiyahan festival celebrates diversity calls for equality December 10 2018 Port of Cagayan de Oro Philippine Ports Authority Archived from the original on July 28 2010 Retrieved September 13 2012 P250 M rehab for Mindanao s biggest port completed Philippine Daily Inquirer Archived from the original on October 15 2007 Rodriguez Ma Cecilia July 22 2007 Waiting for the flight from Laguindingan Philippine Daily Inquirer Archived from the original on September 26 2013 Retrieved September 13 2012 Cabahug Aguhob Rutchie December 14 2009 Pres Arroyo inaugurates 17 000th km milestone FMR Philippine Information Agency Press release Archived from the original on September 29 2013 Retrieved September 13 2012 Aboitiz gets original proponent status for Laguindingan Airport March 4 2019 CEPALCO S 1MWP Photovoltaic Power Plant Cagayan Electric Power and Light Company Archived from the original on September 1 2012 Retrieved September 13 2012 Philippine National Police pnp gov ph Archived from the original on July 12 2017 Retrieved August 2 2022 The 14th Congress of the Philippines January 7 2009 R A No 9519 Mindanao University of Science and Technology Charter Philippine Law Info Archived from the original on May 31 2012 Retrieved September 13 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Sister Cities Local Government of Quezon City Retrieved August 22 2016 Cagayan de Oro Imus City sign sisterhood pact October 17 2019 CDO ZAMBO SISTER PACT TO FOCUS ON TRAFFIC ROAD SAFETY Cagayan De Oro Information November 9 2023 Retrieved November 9 2023 South Bay Facts Los Angeles Times July 31 1986 Retrieved September 13 2012 Minutes of the Lawndale City Council Regular Meeting PDF City Government of Lawndale City December 19 2011 p 8 Archived from the original PDF on August 29 2012 Retrieved September 13 2012 Fuentes Ian A CdeO To Get 5 Fire Trucks Donation From Tainan www cagayandeoro gov ph Archived August 3 2013 at the Wayback Machine Jaraula Attends Int l Trade Fair in Harbin www cagayandeoro gov ph Archived August 3 2013 at the Wayback Machine Elson T Elizaga Neglecting Our Ancient City Letter Requiroso Lorebeth C October 5 2012 Cagayan De Oro City adopts Gwangyang Korea as sister city Philippine Information Agency Archived from the original on November 2 2012 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cagayan de Oro nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Cagayan de Oro nbsp Geographic data related to Cagayan de Oro at OpenStreetMap Official website Philippine Standard Geographic Code LGU Performance Management System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cagayan de Oro amp oldid 1223799437, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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