Philippine News Digest 66

January 01 - 12, 2004
Contents:
Child
rights group seeks alternative to jails for kids
World
celebrates Global March Against Child Labor
HIV/AIDS
epidemic continues to spread
Child rights group seeks
alternative to jails for kids
The Coalition to Stop Child Detention Through Restorative Justice composed
of 25 organizations and concerned individuals nationwide presented an
appeal January 7 by concerned citizens to Justice Acting Secretary Ma.
Merceditas N. Gutierrez to children upon arrest to the custody of social
workers or responsible community members rather than hauling them off to
jail to suffer from dehumanization and trauma. They cited statistics from
the Department of Social welfare and Development to underscore the
increasing number of jailed kids. During the first quarter of 2003 alone,
4,544 kids consisting of 4,103 boys and 441 girls from all over the
country have been jailed. Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP)
statistics also shows that 2,039 kids have been imprisoned as of September
2003—including 473 who have been charged with theft and 384 others with
robbery. The following day, around 100 members of the coalition marched to
Mendiola Bridge near the Presidential Palace in Manila to ask the
President to stop this serious form of human rights violation
characterized by the torture, rape, tattooing and subjection of children
to indignities and to strictly enforce the law pertaining to the rights of
these children.
World celebrates Global March Against
Child Labor
Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo signed into law Republic Act
9231 otherwise known as the anti-child labor law December 19, 2003 making
the country first in the international community to pass a statute based
on the philosophy of the ILO Convention No. 182 on the Worst Forms of
Child Labor. The new law increased the penalty on employing a child to P1
million and imprisonment of not more than 20 years. While the law is
considered a big success in the campaign against child labor, child rights
advocates expressed concern over its implementation since many
well-meaning laws remain un-implemented and/or violated by government
officials themselves. The Philippine Commission on Human Rights recently
revealed that the Philippine National Police topped the list of agencies
in terms of human rights violations. On January 17, the world will
celebrate the sixth anniversary of the Global March Against Child Labor.
In the Philippines, there are more than four million child laborers, an
increase by 11 percent compared to the 3.7 child laborers in 1996,
according to the National Statistics Office.
HIV/AIDS epidemic continues to spread
Five million people were infected with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus
(HIV), the virus that causes AIDS, in 2003 bringing the total number of
people living with HIV/AIDS to 40 million. Of these, almost three million
are below 15 years of age. 21.8 million people have died of AIDS since the
disease was discovered leaving more than 14 million children orphaned.
Sub-Saharan Africa still tops the list of regions in the world in terms of
the number of people living with HIV/AIDS with 25-28.2 million, followed
by South and Southeast Asia with 4.6-8.2 million and Latin America with
1.3-1.9 million.
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