Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Gender equality exists in PMA cadetship, military career

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BAGUIO CITY — Gender is not an issue in training cadets at the Philippine Military Academy (PMA) and in becoming a soldier.

PMA Superinten­dent LTGen. Donato San Juan has assured this, ahead of Sunday’s PMA graduation rites, where four women cadets will be on the top 10 of the graduating class of 282 cadets, including 75 women cadets.

“We have had many women cadets since 1997 and they have proven themselves in the frontline service as soldiers,” San Juan said, answering queries as to whether women in the military are effective.

“It is no longer a question at this time whether they are capable of performing the duties of male officers in the frontline. They are doing that already,” he pointed out, saying women soldiers are given the same functions as their male counterpar­ts.

“Many of the tactical officers, female tactical officers, assigned here can attest to that--that they are assigned the same as their male counterpar­ts,” he said.

The PMA opened its doors to women cadets who reported as plebes on April 1, 1993 and graduated with the class of 1997. In 1999, PMA recorded the first female cadet to graduate at the top of her class, Ensign Arlene Dela Cruz, raising women’s status in the maledomina­ted institutio­n.

San Juan said the training for both male and female cadets is equal and both are made to perform academical­ly, and physically, including their co-curricular activities sanctioned by the institutio­n.

The class of 2018 also marked a historical record in the academy with the most number of females graduates -- 75 out of 282.

In 2017, there were 66 female graduates with 34 of them joining the Philippine Army, 16 to the Air Force, and 16 to the Navy.

Of the 75 female cadets graduating on Sunday, March 18, there are 38 joining the Army, 19 with the Philippine Air Force, and 18 with the Philippine Navy.

“We continue to maintain the regulation­s of having 20 percent of the cadet population to be female. As of today, we have that percentage,” the officer cited.

He added females have a high probabilit­y of graduating, which could be attributed to their being perseverin­g and studious, aside from wanting to prove that they could survive a career dominated by men.

He assured that the academy is continuous­ly recruiting females to join the academy to maintain the 20-percent rate.

Cadet First Class (C1CL) Micah Quiambao Reynaldo, who is finishing number 10 in the graduating class this year and a native of Bamban Tarlac, entered PMA when she was in second-year college taking up Bachelor of Science in Psychology.

“The academy is never wrong in choosing us and giving us the opportunit­y,” she said, referring to the chance to be a PMA cadet and join the ranks of distinguis­hed men in the military service.

“Being a cadet in a military institutio­n is never easy,” Reynaldo shared. “But here in the academy, we are surrounded by good mentors and good people who keep on motivating and supporting us in whatever activity we have.”

She added opportunit­ies are all available for males and females, thus, women like here are included in the top 10.

Aside from Reynaldo, also making it in the top10 are C1CL Leonor Andrea Cariño, number 4; and C1CL Jezaira Laquinon Buenaventu­ra, number 6.

“The greatest hurdle (to a cadet) is to prove ourselves and that the academy is never wrong in choosing us or giving the opportunit­y for females to be members of the military,” she stressed.

 ??  ?? BAGUIO. The Philippine Military Academy (PMA) this year produced three women soldiers in the top 10 of the graduating class of 282, including a lady cadet awarded with the Athletic Saber. The top graduates were presented to the media in a press...
BAGUIO. The Philippine Military Academy (PMA) this year produced three women soldiers in the top 10 of the graduating class of 282, including a lady cadet awarded with the Athletic Saber. The top graduates were presented to the media in a press...

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