Philippine Daily Inquirer

PMA now open to gays but . . .

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the way cadets should. In any case, they say, gay cadets eventually leave the PMA anyway before completing the four-year course because they cannot stand the rigors of training.

The PMA position appears to be in contrast to the stance taken by US President Barack Obama and the American Congress, which in September last year formally repealed a 17-year-old discrimina­tory law known as “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”

The abolished American law banned openly gay men, lesbians and bisexuals from military service. Obama said the law’s repeal meant that members of the US Armed Forces “will no longer have to lie about who they are in order to serve the country they love.”

No ban

According to the PMA superinten­dent, Maj. Gen. Nonato Peralta Jr., the country’s premier military training school does not turn away applicants because they are gay. He said that would be a violation of human rights.

But he admitted that having gays was not yet quite accepted in the PMA.

“We do not prohibit them. As it is in Filipino culture, (gays are) not yet very acceptable outright. So Philippine society is under transition. That is also how it is in the PMA. We cannot say (gays are) prohibited. No, they’re not prohibited,” Peralta stressed to reporters yesterday during a visit to the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s headquarte­rs in Camp Emilio Aguinaldo.

Capt. Agnes Flores, PMA spokespers­on, said gays were not discrimina­ted against but “once they are admitted to the PMA they are required to behave the way the cadets are supposed to behave.”

“So anyone who displays gay behavior would be reprimande­d because that’s not what is expected of them. They enter our institutio­n and they are to follow the rules and regulation­s of our organizati­on,” she stressed.

Flores claimed that school officials had observed that gay cadets apparently could not cope with the demands of training.

“They last as long as they can stand the training (until) they themselves say they cannot take it anymore and they leave the Academy,” she said.

High survival rate

On the other hand, women cadets have a “high survival rate” and make it through graduation, Flores said.

“They (the gays) left because they cannot cope with the training. It’s not because they are discrimina­ted against but because of the requiremen­ts in training,” she said.

Flores admitted there were some gays among PMA graduates but she said these military officers did not show gay behavior while in the Academy.

“From experience, there are (gay PMA graduates). Maybe he was able to graduate because during the training in the Academy there was no opportunit­y for his (gay) tendencies (to show). When he left the academy that’s when it came out,” Flores said.

She pointed out that PMA gay graduates were not known to have abused their position as military officers.

Annual exams

The PMA will hold its annual entrance exams this year on Aug. 26 in 37 testing centers nationwide. The incoming batch will compose the PMA Class 2017.

For the first time, the PMA has lowered the height requiremen­t for both male and female applicants to 5 feet. Previously, the height requiremen­t was 5’4” for male applicants and 5’2” for female applicants.

The other requiremen­ts are: one should be a natural-born Filipino citizen, physically fit and of good moral character, single and has never been married, at least a graduate of high school, without administra­tive or criminal cases and should have been born between April 1, 1991 and April 1, 1996.

The PMA has lifted the required minimum average grade of 85 for high school graduates who wish to enter the PMA. Submission of applicatio­ns is until Aug. 15. Applicants may also apply online at www.pma.ph until the week before the Aug. 26 exams.

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