A top official of the Philippine Military Academy (PMA) said the recent decision of the Supreme Court (SC) upholding the dismissal of cadet first-class Alvin Jeff Cudia because of grave violation of the Academy’s age-old honor code has strengthened the institution’s standards for due process and academic freedom.
At the same time,
the decision will pave the way for initial reforms of the code for the benefit
of present and future batches of cadets who wish to become future military
officers.
PMA Superintendent
Lt. Gen. Oscar Lopez said part of the initial reforms in the Academy’s honor
code for cadets is the appointment of cadet advisers to the cadets who are
being heard by the honor committee for violations of the code to guide them in
defending themselves before their fellow cadets.
“The SC decision
has strengthened the existence of the Academy’s honor code and has contributed
in enhancing the implementation of the code to the cadets who are future
military leaders. We are elated that we were upheld for our minimum compliance
to the doctrine of due process which has been an integral part of the code and
the process of hearing the cases of violations of the cadets by the honor
committee,” Lopez said.
He explained the
appointment of members of the Academy’s honor committee and the way the honor
committee conducts its hearings on erring cadets and the rendering of decisions
are purely matters among the cadets which serves as a training ground for them
to be self-reliant, trustworthy and independent-minded-leaders.
He said among the
common violations of the cadets that are subjected to hearings of the honor
committee are cheating, lying and stealing which the PMA strictly prohibits.
But Lopez said
that most of those who are subjected to hearings by the honor committee opt to
leave the Academy instead of undergoing the rigid process so as not to burden
themselves.
The PMA official
said the SC ruling on the celebrated Cudia case vindicated the members of the
honor committee and even the Academy from suspicion of having committed grave
abuses in the enforcement of their decision, which dismissed Cudia from the
Academy with barely less than a month prior to last year’s graduation rites.
Lopez said the
Academy is set to release Cudia’s academic documents with the annotation that
he was separated.
He explained that
Cudia’s academic documents has already been available since last year but with
the annotations that he was on indefinite leave considering the cases that he
filed with the different agencies and the courts contrary to allegations that
the Academy withheld the documents.
“It’s time for
the Academy to move on. It’s also time for Cudia to move on now that the High
Court has rendered its decision and has made the issue part of jurisprudence,”
Lopez said.
He said the
Academy’s honor code serves as the guidepost for the cadets in their actions
while inside the institution so that they will be trained and developed into
responsible and dedicated military officers who do not lie, do not cheat and do
not steal considering that they should always do the honourable thing.
Cudia was
dismissed from the Academy for allegedly lying after he came in late for two
minutes in a class because he was asked to do some work by his professor.
http://manilastandardtoday.com/2015/03/14/pma-to-revise-honor-code-after-sc-ruling-on-cudia/
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