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Saturday, November 23, 2024

House tackles bills favoring return of mandatory ROTC

The mandatory Reserved Officers Training Corps (ROTC) may be enforced anew among college and university students.

This as two House committees concerned with education agreed to consolidate 27 bills seeking the repeal of the National Service Training Program (NSTP) in favor of the Citizens’ Training Service Program (CSTP) which calls for the re-implementation of the ROTC.

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The two panels on Tuesday approved a motion to reconcile House Bill 6486, which seeks mandatory CSTP and repeal of the NSTP, with 26 other bills calling for the mandatory ROTC.

NO TO ROTC. Students hold a protest rally at the gate of the Polytechnic University of the Philippines in Sta. Mesa Manila against the looming re-imposition of the mandatory Reserved Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) now under deliberations in Congress. The students reiterate their call for a 100-percent ‘safe, accessible, and quality resumption of face-to-face classes’ instead of the ROTC revival. Danny Pata

The ROTC was abolished in 2001 following the death of cadet Mark Welson Chua of the University of Santo Tomas.

The motion by Bukidnon Rep. Laarni Roque also sought to make House Bill 6486, authored by Speaker Martin Romualdez, as the mother bill.

House Bill 6486 provides that the government could boost the capacity of the people to mobilize and perform their constitutional duty to render personal military or civil service in times of calamities and disasters, national or local emergencies, rebellion, invasion, or war by the establishment of a unified, comprehensive and holistic national citizens service training and mobilization system.

The training and mobilization setup includes a “mandatory national citizens service training program to equip and organize the youth, with necessary, essential, practical and pragmatic knowledge and skills for civic duty, emergency and disaster response and preparedness, in the current framework of law enforcement, peace and order, territorial defense and national disaster risk reduction and management, for mobilization for military and civil services that produces reservists for the National Service Reserve Corps (NSRC) and AFP Citizen Armed Force (AFP Reserve Force), an optional Reserve Officers’ Training Corps Program for higher education students designed to produce officers for the Citizen Armed Force and Regular Force of the Armed Forces of the Philippines; and a feasible, realistic and operational National Service Reservist and Citizen Soldier mobilization program through the National Service Reserve Corps and the AFP Reserve Force.”

“In the implementation of the national citizens service training and mobilization system, strict monitoring, evaluation and accountability will be observed to prevent all forms of abuses, corruption, hazing, torture, data privacy rights violation, and all forms of violation of human rights,” Bill 6486 stated.

“Any incident or report of abuses, corruption, hazing, torture, data privacy rights violation or any form of violation of human rights violation will be immediately investigated, addressed and the maximum penalty imposed on any proven perpetrator or violator.”

Baguio Rep. Mark Go, chairman of the House Committee on Higher and Technical Education, expressed support for the bill, saying Chua’s death was not a reason to leave the NSTP law untouched.

“We need to move forward. We need to protect our nation and fight for it. We need to train our youth in disaster response,” Go said.

“You need to expand your knowledge. You can’t just focus on one aspect on what you can contribute,” he added.

But for Kabataan party-list Rep. Raoul Manuel, repealing the NSTP “will deprive the students of their constitutional right to freedom to choose on how they could be of service to their country.” He also feared it would pave the way for the return of mandatory ROTC.

“According to the Constitution, the government can require citizens to serve the country, but they have an option for either a military or civil service. The youth is not dodging responsibility here. We are not picking the easy way here. We want to render service to our nation wholeheartedly,” Manuel said.

“But if it is working for institution which has a culture of impunity…look at Mark Welson Chua, napatay siya dahil sa pagsasalita (ng mga abuso sa ROTC). Hangga’t mayroong kultura ng impunity, kahit full mandatory o partial ROTC ang programa, hindi po natin sinasangayunan,” he added.

Chua was killed after he exposed the alleged abuses of ROTC officials in the UST to The Varsitarian, the university’s official student publication.

UST Central Student Council president Nathan Agustin agreed with Manuel, saying that their opposition to repealing the NSTP does not only stems from Chua’s death, but also its possible impacts on the existing NSTP program.

“Most of what have been mentioned relate to our fear, but we register our objection not only because of the past, but also because of our concern on what would happen to the other NSTP programs such as LTS (Literacy Training Service) and CWTS (Civic Welfare Training Service) na nakakatulong sa mga komunidad na nangangailangan [which help communities in need]. We could lose focus on these initiatives and be overwhelmed with other provisions of the bill,” Agustin pointed out.

“This brings us to  another point: the students having the freedom of choice in rendering service. We believe the NCST will deprive the students of the freedom of choice,” he added.

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