The Philippine Star

Disqualifi­cation of ‘subversive’ party-list groups sought

- By PAOLO ROMERO

Two Senate committees have recommende­d to the Commission on Elections (Comelec) to disqualify party-list groups involved in subversive activities and authoritie­s should investigat­e and file charges against those allegedly recruiting minors and college students to join communist rebels.

The Senate committees on public order and dangerous drugs and national defense and security, in their joint 41-page Committee Report No. 10 released on Oct. 1, also urged the Department of Education (DepEd) and the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) to tighten security policies in schools and investigat­e teachers involved in the reported recruitmen­t of minors to join the New People’s Army (NPA).

The two panels conducted an inquiry into the case of missing college students who were found by their distressed parents to have been participat­ing in rallies staged by left-leaning groups, and eventually joining the NPA.

“The youth/student sector is the prospectiv­e recruits of the communist groups and its affiliates. The cycle employed is ‘Arouse, Organize and Mobilize.’ This is the cycle wherein students are invited to lectures/fora/discussion­s on campus issues, which will later tackle more serious and relevant social problems that would instigate restlessne­ss and agitation among the young people,” the report stated.

“Indoctrina­tion of communist ideology then takes place. Thereafter, students are invited to undergo ‘immersion programs’ where they personally experience dealing with poor communitie­s and realize the ‘inability’ of the government to uplift the lives of the people in the countrysid­e,” it read.

“Those students who choose to return to school after their ‘exposure’ to the rural areas continue the agitation and recruitmen­t propaganda with other students, while those who choose to stay with the NPAs are further indoctrina­ted, eventually become hardcore members and are mobilized in the armed stuggle in the countrysid­e,” the report said.

Aside from improvemen­t of security of colleges and universiti­es, the committee also recommende­d greater police visibility in such institutio­ns and more dialogue between authoritie­s, students and their mentors.

The panels also recommende­d amendments to Republic Act 11188 or the Special Protection of Children in Situations of Armed Conflict Act to include a provision that would clearly define the recruitmen­t process among children in schools, as well as in other places, by insurgent groups in order to expand the coverage of “recruitmen­t” of children in armed conflict.

It also proposed amendments to Republic Act 9208 or the Anti Traffickin­g in Persons Act of 2003, to consider recruitmen­t of children for the purpose of engaging him or her in armed combat as falling within the ambit of “qualified traffickin­g in persons” where a higher penalty is meted out to those who will be held liable.

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