‘No personal interest in bill’
Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez on Tuesday said his controversial proposal to pass a law allowing dissolution of marriage was not motivated by personal marital woes, as he belonged to the ethnic Manobo tribe that allowed him to have multiple wives. “I’m a member of a tribe in Mindanao where we are allowed multiple marriages,” he said over radio.
Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez on Tuesday said that his controversial proposal to pass a law allowing dissolution of marriage was not motivated by personal marital woes, as he belonged to an ethnic group that allowed him to have multiple wives.
“I’m a member of a tribe in Mindanao where we are allowed multiple marriages,” he told a dzBB radio interview.
Alvarez, who admitted in March to having an extramarital affair and being estranged from his wife, said he was a member of the Manobo tribe, an ethnic group protected by Republic Act No. 8371, or the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act.
That law is silent on marriage, though it provides for the “protection of indigenous culture, traditions and institutions.”
Alvarez said the reason he proposed the law on dissolution of marriage was that he wished to address the grievances of couples in unhappy marriages.
“[The process of] annulment is very adversarial. It is very costly and it takes a long time. In hearings, you need to complain about the other party. For me, why do you need to make it so hard on the person?” he said.
In March, Alvarez was forced to confess he had a girlfriend after news reports suggested that the charges he had filed against fellow Davao del Norte Rep. Antonio Floirendo had been triggered by animosity between Floirendo’s common-law wife and Alvarez’s girlfriend.
The two erstwhile close friends had a falling out soon after rumors circulated that Floirendo was orchestrating a plot to unseat the Speaker.
Alvarez filed a graft case against Floirendo and sought a congressional investigation of alleged conflict of interest in the latter’s lease of government land for his banana company, Tagum Agricultural Development Corp.
Asked about the objections of the Church to his bill, Alvarez said: “I will invoke the separation of Church and State.”
“The problem is we put so much stock in theocracy; we didn’t look at the issues,” he said.
He said the same was true of his other proposal—protecting civil union, including of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender partners.
“We have no law to protect the relationship of these couples. I think the government should not close its eyes on these cases. We need to give them protection and not be discriminatory,” Alvarez said.
Under his proposal, partners in civil union shall “have the right to support each other, adopt children, inherit and take out an insurance policy [in which your partner is your beneficiary].”
To critics, Alvarez said: “If they believe in what we call social justice, they should understand our other brothers and sisters, who are going through hardships.”
“We all live our lives to achieve happiness, not to make it hard on ourselves. Help the government address these pains,” he said.