Masinloc MPS WCPD

Masinloc MPS WCPD PNP Women and Children Protection Desk

13/12/2021

Alam mo ba na ang pananakit o pagbabanta para kontrolin ang aksyon o desisyon ng isang babae ay isang uri ng pang-aabuso?


https://pcw.gov.ph/vaw-faqs/

05/12/2021
05/12/2021
26/11/2021

We are Going FB LIVE! on November 26, 2021 1:30 PM. Don't Miss!! With your host today Sannah and Gio!





Philippine National Police

05/11/2021

Happy National Children's Month!
Si Aleng Pulis ang katuwang ninyo sa pagkamit ng New Normal na Walang Iwanan! Sama-sama tayo! Karapatan ng bawat bata ating tutukan!

28/09/2021

Aleng Pulis invites you to the Launching of PNP-Child Protection Policy!

Live via Zoom and WCPC page on September 29, 2021 @2:00 PM

See You there !

(https://www.facebook.com/wcpc.didmpnp)

24/09/2021

The Philippine Commission on Women (PCW) welcomes and lauds proposed legislative measures protecting women’s and children’s rights in both Houses of Congress, especially on raising the age of sexual consent in r**e cases and prohibiting child, early, and forced marriages (CEFM), and hopes for the passage of bills adopting divorce in the Philippines.

On September 21, 2021, the Senate passed Senate Bill No. 2332 on the amendments to the Anti-Rape Law, including increasing the age for determining statutory r**e and other acts of sexual abuse and exploitation to protect children. The House of Representatives approved the corresponding Bill in December last year.

The PCW actively lobbied for the strengthening of the provisions of Republic 8353 or the Anti-Rape Law under its Women’s Priority Legislative Agenda for the 18th Congress, a set of proposed legislations that seeks to amend or repeal the discriminatory provisions of existing laws and pushes for the formulation and adoption of new laws that promote, protect, and fulfill women’s rights and empowerment.

In 2020, the House Committee on Women and Gender Equality (CWGE), chaired by Rep. Maria Lourdes Acosta-Alba, approved the bill on the proposed amendments to the Anti-Rape Law, which was thereafter approved by the lower house in the same year.

Senate Bill No. 2332, on the other hand, adopted the recommendation to increase the age of statutory r**e from under 12 years old to under 16 years old. This Bill has passed the second reading in the Senate and is hoped to be approved on the third reading.

Statutory r**e refers to sexual relations involving a person below the legal age of sexual consent and it is penalized because persons of this age are deemed too young to decide for themselves in terms of engaging in sexual in*******se. The existing law, RA 8353, sets this age at below 12 years old, the lowest age of sexual consent in Southeast Asia. Thus, any sexual in*******se with a minor below the age of 12 is automatically regarded as r**e, even if the minor consented to it. However, the current law considers a child aged 12 years old or above as mature enough to give sexual consent.

PCW Executive Director Atty. Kristine Rosary E. Yuzon-Chaves is hopeful that lawmakers can see the urgency and the importance of protecting children, especially because the current provision on the age of sexual development makes them vulnerable to sexual predators.

“With the existing law, some children aged 13 years old and above are subjected to interrogations to prove in court that they did not consent to the sexual in*******se. Children who are asked to relive the experience are left traumatized, confused and conflicted as to their own experience, and worse, they begin to blame themselves. PCW is very thankful for women and children’s rights champions in Congress, such as Rep. Maria Lourdes Acosta-Alba, who advocate for their protection through the passage of laws or its amendments, such as the amendment of RA 8353”, Yuzon-Chaves said.

The PCW is also earnestly pushing for the enactment of the bill prohibiting child marriage, another legislation meant to protect children. It is the stand of children’s rights advocates that early child marriage has adverse physical, psychological, and emotional effects and will curtail the development and attainment of a child’s full potential, among others. While this is not part of the WPLA, PCW actively coordinated with Congress and the Office of the President to fast-track its passage. Last year, the Senate passed the consolidated bill on this, while in September this year, the House of Representatives approved the legislation on 3rd reading and currently the legislation is for the action of the Bicameral Conference Committee.

Senate Bill 1373, which was approved by the Senate, defines child marriage as “any marriage entered into where one or both parties are children (persons below 18 years old), and solemnized in civil or church proceedings, or in any recognized traditional, cultural or customary manner.” If enacted into law, a person who causes, fixes, facilitates, or arranges a child marriage shall suffer the penalty of prision mayor in its medium period and a fine of not less than PHP40,000. It also imposes a heavier penalty if the perpetrator is an ascendant, step-parent, or guardian of the minor and punishes individuals who officiate such marriage.

The PCW also hopes that advocates of women’s rights in the legislative body can rally behind the bills adopting divorce in the Family Code. This has already hurdled the committee level at the lower house while bills on the same are still pending at the Senate’s Committee on Women, Children, Family Relations, and Gender Equality. Under our policy recommendations, divorce shall be allowed based on grounds for legal separation under the Family Code, allow divorced spouses to remarry, and grant women the right to initiate divorce on the same terms as men.

The 2017 National Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS) results showed that one in four married women has experienced physical, sexual, or emotional violence by a current or most recent husband/partner. Domestic violence can also affect the children who witness the violence which could result to aggressiveness, hyperarousal, anti-social behaviors, fearfulness, withdrawn behaviors, avoidant/inhibited behaviors, and developmental regression.

“While the PCW recognizes the sanctity of marriage as enshrined in the 1987 Constitution, we also acknowledge the realities on the ground, with some women being trapped in abusive and dysfunctional marriages which are already beyond repair. By integrating absolute divorce in the Family Code, we can give these women a legal remedy to free themselves from abuse,” Atty. Yuzon-Chaves shared.

Yuzon-Chaves further said, “PCW shares the views of Senator Christopher “Bong” Go that the adoption of divorce in the Philippines is not meant to make divorce easily attainable in the Philippines. By proposing the adoption of divorce, it is not envisioned that spouses are given the option to sever the marriage ties “just because.” Divorce is proposed to be granted on specific grounds provided under the law and is meant to help spouses trapped in abusive marriages.”

The Philippines is the only State in the world apart from the Vatican without a generally applicable divorce law.

Given the limited rigid grounds to dissolve the marriage (physical abuse, regardless of how repetitive, is not even a ground for annulment) that can be availed of, spouses are forced to remain together, which is detrimental not only to their well-being but also those of their children. Moreover, these actions can also be lengthy and expensive, which is a difficult burden to bear especially for women who do not have the financial resources to initiate legal action.

The PCW encourages lawmakers to consider divorce and enable victims of domestic abuse, mostly women, to pursue healing and second chances in life.

Read the full statement here: https://pcw.gov.ph/pcw-lauds-all-initiatives-to-pass-laws-amending-r**e-by-raising-the-age-of-sexual-consent-prohibiting-child-marriage-and-hopes-for-the-passage-of-a-law-adopting-divorce/

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