Sun.Star Cebu

LOWERING AGE OF CRIMINAL LIABILITY SHOULD BE STUDIED FURTHER: SALIMBANGO­N

- EOB/RVC

Rep. Benhur Salimbango­n (Cebu, fourth district) says he may move to call experts from the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t to the House hearing on House Bill 2. He said the lowering of the minimum age of criminal liability from 15 to nine years old must be studied carefully. While he is supporting the bill, Salimbango­n said it should only be limited to drug cases, since reports say that drug syndicates are using children in the illegal drug trade.

The bill lowering the minimum age of criminal responsibi­lity from 15 years old to nine years old must be studied carefully to determine if there is a need to approve it.

This was the opinion of Rep. Benhur Salimbagon (Cebu, fourth district) who supports the House Bill (HB) 002.

The bill, drafted by Rep. Fredenil Castro (Capiz) and co-authored by House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez and several members of the House, introduces amendments to the Juvenile Justice and Welfare Act (RA 9344), already previously amended by Republic Act 10630.

The current minimum age is 15 years old.

Salimbango­n said that he may move to call experts from the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) to attend the congressio­nal hearings to provide inputs on whether there is a need to approve the bill.

While he is supporting the bill, Salimbango­n, however, said that it should only be limited on drug cases, amid report that drug syndicates are using children in the illegal trade.

However, lawyer Joan Saniel Amit of the Children’s Legal Bureau (CLB) said that children who are used in the illegal operations of drug syndicates should be considered victims.

Amit said that the CLB will urge congressme­n, especially those from Cebu, to oppose HB 002 because the minimum age of 15 of criminal responsibi­lity is the one acceptable under internatio­nal standards.

Cebu City North District Con- gressman Raul del Mar said that he is against the bill because it will not prevent the criminal syndicates from using the children.

Instead of putting the blame to the children, del Mar said that higher penalties must be imposed on criminal syndicates, or all adults who will use minors in criminal activities.

Del Mar believes that an effective guidance program for children must be taught to the parents at home and teachers in schools and other agencies.

The Cebu City legislator­s also said see the need to put up more centers that will help children to reform, instead of putting them in jail.

“Youth centers must be establishe­d for the reformatio­n of children in conflict with the law instead of confinemen­t in jails, which adversely affects their physical, mental and psychologi­cal well-being that may harm their overall developmen­t,” he told Sunstar Cebu.

Rep. Raymond Democrito Mendoza of the partylist’s Trade Union Congress of the Philippine­s said that he will also oppose the bill because children as young as nine years old are not yet mature to decide to commit a crime.

He said that the children should be protected from any abuse.

Early this month, several groups, including the CLB, United Nations Internatio­nal Children Emergency Fund (Unicef ) and the Child Rights Network conducted a forum against the passage of HB 002 at the Cebu Provincial Capitol Social Hall in Cebu City.

The groups also launched an online signature campaign opposing the bill. They want to get as many signatures as they could gather in a bid to stop such proposed measure from becoming into a law.

They believed that the proposed measure will never deter the exploitati­on of children by criminal syndicates.

They said that the children are not criminals.

The House Justice Sub-Committee on Correction­al Reforms is currently deliberati­ng at least six bills seeking to amend the Juvenile Justice and Welfare Act of 2006, including HB 002, which was the first such measure filed during the 17th Congress.

While the bill acknowledg­ed that the Juvenile Justice and Welfare Act of 2006 was “laudable” in its main purpose to protect the youth, it failed to deter criminals from using children in crimes, such as drug traffickin­g and robbery.

Apart from the DSWD, the Commission on Human Rights, various child rights advocates, and even some congressme­n are opposing the approval of the bill. /

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines