The Star Malaysia

Cracking down on sexual predators

A Philippine couple hope to plug a legal loophole often exploited by sex offenders with the proposal of a new Bill to raise the age of sexual consent from 12 to 16.

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In most countries, having sex with a 12-year-old child would have qualified as statutory rape. Not so in the Philippine­s, where 12 is considered the age of sexual consent, the lowest in South-East Asia.

That might soon change, with the passage of a Bill that seeks to raise the age of sexual consent in the Philippine­s from 12 to 16.

House Bill No. 4160 authors Majority Leader Martin Romualdez and his wife Yedda Marie, chair of the House children’s welfare committee, said Congress must do more to protect children from predators who take advantage of infirmitie­s in the law.

“The establishm­ent of a minimum age of sexual consent is a critical component in shielding children from sexual violence,” the Romualdeze­s said in an explanator­y note to the Bill, which proposes amendments to the Revised Penal Code, as amended by the Anti-Rape Law of 1997, and the Special Protection of Children against Abuse, Exploitati­on and Discrimina­tion Act.

“Children below such an age are without the power to resist and to give their genuine and fully informed consent to any sexual activity,” the couple added.

In a statement, Tingog Sinirangan Rep Yedda Marie lamented that the current age of sexual consent was “too low”.

“Twelve-year-olds (have) barely gone through puberty but the law assumes they are old enough to give sexual consent. This is why rapists can easily get away. We must put a stop to this,” she said.

HB 4160 also amends the wording in current laws to reflect the reality that men and boys may also fall victim to rape or sexual abuse.

“When a boy is raped, the law sees it only as sexual assault,” Romualdez said.

As it is, sexual abuse against boys “has a much lesser penalty,” he said.

“This is unfair especially when data suggests that boys are more vulnerable than girls in school, the community and in the workplace.

There must be equality,” Romualdez added.

A 2016 National Baseline Study on Violence Against Children in the Philippine­s by the Council for the Welfare of Children and Unicef showed that severe sexual violence against boys at 4.1% was significan­tly higher than that among girls, at 2.3%.

The Romualdeze­s agreed that the delivery of justice and care for victims of sexual abuse in the Philippine­s should be improved, and that increasing the age of sexual consent to establish statutory rape would be a big step in the right direction. — Philippine Daily Inquirer/ANN

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