

Child Rights Network calls on Senate: Expedite passage of bill increasing the age to determine statutory rape
May 18, 2021 – As Congress resumes its plenary sessions, child rights advocates under the umbrella group Child Rights Network (CRN) called on the Senate to expedite the proceedings for pending bills that seek to increase the age for determining the commission of statutory rape from below 12 to below 16.
Last December 1, the House of Representatives approved on third and final reading HB 7836 or the End Child Rape Bill, with 207 votes in favor and 3 against. In the Senate, several counterpart measures have already passed at the committee level. However, the Senate plenary has yet to tackle the consolidated version of the pending bills. The Senate Justice Committee has yet to conclude its deliberations on the said bills.
“There are only a few session days left before Congress adjourns. Yet, we think there is enough time for our esteemed senators to study the proposed bill expeditiously, and internalize the voluminous studies, evidence-based reports, and community-level consultations that served as basis for drafting this bill. We call on our senators, particularly Sen. Richard Gordon of the Justice Committee, to prioritize this bill,” CRN Convenor Romeo Dongeto said.
In the version passed by the House of Representatives, which has undergone consultations with advocates, survivors, and family court judges, the following salient provisions were included:
- Increasing the age to determine statutory rape from below 12 to below 16
- Equalizing the protection for victims of rape, whether a boy or a girl
- Adopting the “close in age exemption,” which serves to reduce or eliminate the penalty of the crime in cases where the couple's age difference is minor
- Removing the “marriage as forgiveness” exemption where the perpetrator is freed of legal responsibility if the perpetrator marries the person he raped.
“Every single day that the passage of this important bill is delayed is another day of exposing Filipino children to the dangers of the archaic provisions of the Revised Penal Code on statutory rape. Child rights advocates all throughout the nation are willing to extend our help, support, and expertise to our senators to speed up deliberating the pending bills,” he added.
Mr. Dongeto pointed out that there is wide support for the proposed bill, with an online petition at Change.org (bit.ly/ENDChildRape) already garnering almost 150,000 signatures.
“It is high time for the Philippines to leave the archaic age limit in determining statutory rape. Before HB 7836, the age to determine statutory rape in the country was the lowest in Asia and one of the lowest in the world at 12, only bested by Nigeria at age 11. We hope that before Congress adjourns, this bill can be passed and signed into law for us to provide better access to justice for child rape victims,” Mr. Dongeto concluded. ###
About Child Rights Network
Child Rights Network is the largest alliance of organizations and agencies pushing for children’s rights legislation in the Philippines. www.childrightsnetwork.ph
Media Contact:
Richard Dy at crnphilippines@gmail.com