From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Nov 30): House bills seek revival of compulsory military training for college
students
With tensions mounting over regional territorial disputes, some lawmakers
have revived proposals to make the Reserve Officers Training Corps mandatory
again for college students, so that the country would have a pool of capable
officers to provide military service should the need arise.
The House Committee on National Defense and Security is scheduled to tackle
the proposal during the first week of December, but the matter could turn out to
be a contentious one as a counter-proposal to abolish the ROTC is also to be
taken up.
The ROTC program was made optional with the passage of the National Service
Training Program (NSTP) Act of 2001. This came amid intensified calls for the
abolition of the ROTC following the killing of student Mark Welson Chua, who had
exposed corruption in the program.
There are at least four bills seeking to reinstate mandatory ROTC for
students in colleges and universities.
One of the authors, Cavite Representative Francis Gerard Abaya, said in the
introduction to his bill that the constitutional provision allowing the
government to call upon the people to defend the state and require them to
render military or civil service has become more true and timely because of
recent events in which the country may have to defend its territory from
incursions by foreign powers.
But Abaya said this mandate has become hard to implement because the ROTC
program was no longer mandatory. There are few students enrolled in the ROTC
program, he said.
Because of this, the country may not have enough able people to call upon
when it needs to defend itself, he warned.
“At the rate that the number of college students under the NSTP prefer other
forms of civic duty over ROTC, it is not unimaginable that our country will not
have sufficient reserve officers to call to render military services when
warranted by national circumstances, whether as response to any national
security threat or national emergency,” he said in his explanatory note to the
bill.
Abaya’s bill states that mandatory ROTC should be part of the curriculum of
all baccalaureate courses as well as two-year vocational or technical courses,
and would be a requirement before graduation for all male students in public and
private colleges and universities.
A similar bill was authored by Muntinlupa Rep. Rodolfo Biazon, a former Armed
Forces chief, who said that with ROTC being optional, the recruitment and
development of a military reserve component has been adversely affected.
Citing experts, Biazon said the concept of a citizen armed force as
envisioned by the Constitution would not be realized if the status quo
continued. His measure, though, seeks mandatory ROTC only for students of state
colleges and universities.
“Since the state subsidizes the education of these students, it is but proper
that it should be able to primarily depend on them for its defense,” he said.
But clashing with the mandatory ROTC bills is the measure filed by Kabataan
Rep. Terry Ridon, who said the program has no place in civilian educational
institutions.
Ridon’s bill seeks to abolish the ROTC altogether and expand the social and
civic service programs under the NSTP.
In his explanatory note, he said the ROTC “was proven irrelevant in fostering
discipline, social responsibility, and patriotism in the youth.”
Instead, he said, it bred corruption, bribery, physical and verbal violence,
and other abuses, and became a burden to students.
He also said that while the people are duty bound to defend the state,
“providing military training, institutional or material support, should not be
the responsibility of civilian educational institutions.”
The ROTC would be inconsistent with international humanitarian law and the
law protecting children from abuse, exploitation and discrimination, he added.
Ridon also contended that the military culture propagated by the ROTC program
clashes with academic freedom, since military training imposes strict obedience
to authority and the chain of command.
“Schools are places for opening minds to new ideas, critical and independent
thinking,” he said.
According to him, the ROTC program has also bred machismo and sexism, and
imposes unnecessary reverence for the military culture.
Given this, it’s the civic component of the NSTP that should be expanded,
Ridon said.
“What we need as a nation today is not an army of young men and women trained
in the ways of the military, but an army of volunteers and advocates ready to
serve and uphold the needs of their communities and the nation as a whole,” he
said.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/537809/house-bills-seek-revival-of-compulsory-military-training-for-college-students
The Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) and its associated front organizations will move quickly to generate opposition/protests to the reintroduction of mandatory ROTC training into the Philippine education system.
ReplyDeleteThere are several reasons why the commies oppose ROTC. First, the program has the potential to provide recruits/manpower for the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP). Anything that potentially might strengthen the Philippine military must be opposed.
Secondly, the program also has the potential to educate/indoctrinate young students in the military's anti-communist world view. The resurrection of the ROTC program will mean that the AFP and CPP will be attempting to recruit from the same pool of young men. From the commie perspective it is infinitely better to be able to indoctrinate and recruit on Philippine campuses without any competition from the military.
Note that Kabataan is a CPP-affiliated party-list political party and that Rep. Terry Ridon is a long-time CPP activist. He has risen through the ranks since he first became associated with the Student Christian Movement of the Philippines (SCMP), a CPP-associated student group, back in 2004. He later briefly participated in peasant organizing in Nasugbu, Batangas and in Victoria,Laguna under NNARA Youth, a CPP-linked youth peasant group. From 2009-2011 he served as chairman of the radical CPP-student front, the League of Filipino Students (LFS). He managed to graduate law school and passed the bar in 2012. Ridon subsequently became the president and first nominee of Kabataan Partylist and was elected to the Philippine House of Representatives.