The Philippine Star

Mandatory military training in schools pushed

- By ALEXIS ROMERO

The National Youth Commission (NYC) has urged President Marcos to issue an executive order making military training a requiremen­t in college and senior high school.

The NYC also wants mandatory scouting program in elementary schools, saying the training will instill nationalis­m and discipline among students.

NYC Chairman Roland Cardema said the Philippine­s is a disaster-prone archipelag­o battered by typhoons, floods, earthquake­s and communist insurgency.

He cited the need to start training the millions of Filipino youth toward disaster preparedne­ss, good citizenshi­p and national defense as well as for them to have “a strong sense of nationalis­m.”

Cardema said the youth programs were prioritize­d during the time of Marcos’ father, the late president Ferdinand Marcos Sr. “It (program) created a sense of nationalis­m, discipline and preparedne­ss among the generation­s of young Filipinos that can easily be tapped by the government to help the country in times of need,” he said.

The programs, he said, “went into limbo” after the first Marcos administra­tion. He noted that Congress had failed to pass bills seeking to make the youth programs mandatory for 20 years.

Cardema cited the national service program in Singapore, which he said helped it transform into a first world country.

He noted that in South Korea, all boys including movie stars and sons of tycoons are required to serve in the frontlines for two years, an experience that he said “gives a sense of pride and military preparedne­ss among all their male citizens, all of whom are reservists and veterans.”

“In Israel, even with all neighborin­g countries united in invading Israel were no match for the mandatory military training of all Israel citizens, girls and boys, all their citizens are soldiers and defenders,” Cardema said.

The population of the Philippine­s is far bigger than Singapore, South Korea or Israel, he said.

In 2002, former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo signed the National Service Training Program (NSTP) law, abolishing the mandatory Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) program.

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