Philippine Daily Inquirer

Senators assured: ‘Quickie’ splits barred in divorce bill

- By DJ Yap and Julie M. Aurelio @Team_Inquirer

“Quickie,” or “express” divorces, are not allowed in the absolute divorce bill, Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman clarified on Friday, after several senators expressed reservatio­ns about the measure.

“The absolute divorce bill does not allow ‘drive through,’ ‘no-contest’ or ‘quickie’ divorces,” Lagman said, adding that there were provisions in the bill that would prevent collusion between married couples as well as coercion by one of the parties.

On Wednesday, the House committee on population and family relations approved the bill by a unanimous vote.

It could be tabled for plenary debate next week and passed on third reading before the congressio­nal break in March, Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez said.

Officials of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippine­s (CBCP) expressed disappoint­ment over the House of Representa­tives’ approval of a bill that would legalize divorce in the country, calling it “antimarria­ge and antifamily.”

Pastoral statement

The absolute divorce bill does not allow ‘drive through,’ ‘no-contest’ or ‘quickie’ divorces Edcel Lagman Albay representa­tive

“By passing this measure, Congress betrays its mandate to protect our country’s legally and morally declared social and inviolable institutio­ns,” Fr. Jerome Secillano, executive secretary of the CBCP’s permanent committee on public affairs, said in his Facebook account.

Also on Friday, Lipa Archbishop Gilbert Garcera issued a pastoral statement criticizin­g the approval of the divorce bill and stressing the “sanctity and dignity of marriage as a sacrament ... as enshrined in the 1987 Constituti­on.”

“Let not Congress lay waste to these victories with a divorce bill,” said Garcera, the chair of the CBCP’s Episcopal Commission on Family and Life.

Lagman, who headed a House subcommitt­ee that drafted a substitute version of the bill, allayed the fears of several lawmakers who said they did not want to see “drivethrou­gh,” or “quickie divorces,” as in the United States.

Limited grounds

“The bill unequivoca­lly provides that ‘no decree of absolute divorce shall be based on a stipulatio­n of facts or confession of judgment,’ which is a prohibitio­n on a no-contest divorce,” the Albay representa­tive said in a statement.

Lagman said the bill would authorize the Office of the Public Prosecutor to conduct investigat­ions to determine whether there was collusion between the spouses.

Steep penalties of five years’ imprisonme­nt and a P200,000 fine could be imposed on a spouse who coerces the other into filing a petition for divorce, as well as on colluding spouses, he said.

Under the measure, spouses may secure a divorce “under limited grounds and well-defined judicial procedures to terminate a continuing dysfunctio­n of a long broken marriage.”

The bill seeks to allow couples separated for at least five years to file for absolute divorce, except if the separation is due to overseas employment, or if both spouses are residing in separate distant regions.

Other valid reasons for a di- vorce in the pending measure are psychologi­cal incapacity, gender reassignme­nt surgery, and irreconcil­able marital conflicts resulting in the breakdown of the marriage beyond repair.

The Philippine­s is the only state in the world, aside from the Vatican, where divorce is not allowed.

“The Catholic Church is all for the protection of rights especially of the aggrieved parties in marriage. But protection of rights should go hand in hand with upholding our cherished institutio­ns like marriage,” Secillano said.

‘Project of Satan’

“While divorce may indeed vindicate the rights of women, as congressme­n believed, it is unfortunat­ely to the detriment of marriage and family as sacred institutio­ns that should otherwise be protected by the state,” he added.

Sorsogon Bishop Arturo Bastes urged the clergy to “rally against this law by showing the disastrous effect of divorce that destroys the family, the basic unit of society, and the domestic Church.”

“The destructio­n of families by divorce is indeed a project of Satan,” said Bastes, who chairs the CBCP’s Episcopal Commission on Mission.

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