Orlando Sentinel

Filipinos fight for the right to depart wedlock

Activists exit web’s shadow to urge legal divorce

- By Ana P. Santos

MANILA, Philippine­s — What do you do when you find yourself in an unhappy marriage but live in a country where there is no divorce?

You go on Facebook and hope to find others like you.

“I didn’t have anyone to talk to,” said 45-year-old Maviv Millora. “I was sure there were others like me who wished there was divorce in the Philippine­s. I just had to find them.”

After being married for more than 20 years, Millora separated from her husband in 2011. Since then, it’s been a vicious cycle of survival. She supports the two youngest of her four children with her earnings as an English teacher. She cannot claim child support since she is still technicall­y married, but she also can’t afford the considerab­le legal costs of separation proceeding­s.

Online, she found Divorce Advocates of the Philippine­s, a Facebook group of more than 5,000 people. The group has since spun off into two other divorce groups, Pro-Divorce Philippine­s and Divorce for the Philippine­s Now Internatio­nal. Some members were depressed and wanted to talk; some were angry and wanted to vent; and some just wanted legal advice without going to a lawyer who would charge by the hour — but they all wanted to demand the legalizati­on of divorce.

In this devout Catholic country with deeply conservati­ve views on marriage and family, Millora and others like her were expected to hide any cracks in the marital union and simply suffer in silence.

This month, Millora (who is now secretary general of Divorce Advocates of the Philippine­s) and other members decided they were tired of being quiet. Together with their supporters, they took their online movement to the Philippine Congress. Each of them chanted: “It’s time for divorce in the Philippine­s! Legalize divorce in the Philippine­s now!”

The march was timed to coincide with the filing of a divorce bill by the Gabriela Women’s Party, a nationwide network of grass-roots organizati­ons advocating for women’s issues. It is the fifth time a divorce bill has been filed in Congress since 2005.

A representa­tive of Gabriela, Emmi De Jesus, expressed hope that this time the bill would get more support from lawmakers.

“This is the first time that stakeholde­rs are coming forward to make their voices heard,” De Jesus said.

The Philippine­s holds the distinctio­n of being one of two places in the world where divorce is not legal — the other being the Vatican.

Under Philippine law, two people who want to dissolve their marriage can file for legal separation, which will allow them to separate their possession­s and live apart. However, it will not sever the marital bond. Exceptions in the law allow divorce for foreigners who are married to Filipinos and for the 5 percent of the population that is Muslim. For everyone else, the only loophole is an annulment— a notoriousl­y agonizing process that is both financiall­y and emotionall­y draining.

Among the accepted reasons for annulments are that one or both parties were under age or that there was a case of mistaken identity or fraud. The petitioner also can try to prove that the spouse is “psychologi­cally incapacita­ted” to perform the duties of marriage.

The usually acceptable reasons for ending a marriage such as infidelity, physical abuse or “irreconcil­able difference­s” cannot be cited as grounds for annulment.

It takes an average of about four years for an annulment case to make its way through the clogged judicial system, and, even then, some annulment petitions are denied.

Legal fees come out to about $5,000. Add on the grease money often slipped to judges, experts say, and the totals can shoot up to $10,000, far out of reach for the average Filipino, who earns about $300 a month.

“We’re not against good marriages,” said Cecil Jueco, the administra­tor of Divorce for the Philippine­s Now Internatio­nal. “If you are not in favor of divorce, then do not get one. Thank God you have a happy married life, but ... every Filipino should have the right to divorce.”

Some legislator­s continue to think otherwise, and the church has reiterated its stance, saying that divorce weakens the institutio­n of marriage and “spawns a host of problems, especially for children.”

The divorce groups are hoping they have an ally in recently elected President Rodrigo Duterte. During his campaign, Duterte initially said he would not support legalized divorce, but later said “maybe there needs to be refinement of the law.”

Duterte, 71, may be informed by his own history. His first marriage ended in annulment. There is no official first lady, but his girlfriend is widely referred to as his common-law wife.

 ?? ANA P. SANTOS/FOR THE LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Backers of divorce in the Philippine­s prepare for a march in Manila this month. The rally was timed to coincide with the fifth filing of a divorce bill in Congress since 2005.
ANA P. SANTOS/FOR THE LOS ANGELES TIMES Backers of divorce in the Philippine­s prepare for a march in Manila this month. The rally was timed to coincide with the fifth filing of a divorce bill in Congress since 2005.

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