Understanding young people and fighting social evil

Understanding young people and fighting social evil
Children in urban poor communities are always vulnerable to abuse. Photo: UCAN/Angie de Silva

The condition of many hundreds of thousands of young people in the Philippines today is a sorry and pain-filled situation of neglect, and physical, emotional, verbal, psychological and sexual abuse. They are a lost generation as broken homes proliferate and hundreds of thousands of couples live together without the commitment of marriage, child protection and child support. 

Teenagers and adults have children and abandon them. Men and women go their own ways and leave the children with ageing grandparents unable to cope with emotionally disturbed and parentless teenagers.

The abandoned young people are without money, are hungry, need support, friendship, care and the chance of a normal life. They join street gangs to survive. Politicians condemn them as youth with criminal minds. They feel unwanted, rejected and without any positive future. They seem to have been abandoned by both Church and government.

Alice is the victim of broken home. She and her mother were abandoned by her father when she was 14-years-old. He showed up again and took her to live with him in Subic. There, he sexually abused her. When she could take it no longer, she found no welcome or assistance in the Church or with any government agency, but she bravely got help and protection from a friend and was brought to a charitable child protection shelter. 

She later filed charges against her biological father.

Alice is one of hundreds of thousands of children sexually abused daily. An estimated 100,000 girls are trafficked into the sex industry annually according to Unicef. Since the pandemic hit the Philippines, much of the evil business has gone online. There, the children are sold like commodities to sex customers and delivered to their hotel rooms or apartments for rape as regular as a pizza delivery. 

That’s how corrupt this country has become, a playground for online pedophiles sending money for sex from abroad. Local pedophiles are having a continual “fiesta of child abuse.” 

In reality, the children cannot freely give consent at a young age but Philippine law still allows sex with a child as young as 12-years-old, one of the lowest ages of consent in the world. In Japan, it is 13-years-old. 

The machismo culture has a motto: “Get them young.” The children are sometimes supplied by parents and frequently abused by their biological fathers or the live-in partners of the mothers. They are then farmed out to others to abuse. You may not know it but child abuse is as common and as frequent as riding a bus.

The abusers can claim consent and they will be legally covered. 

In reality, the children cannot freely give consent at a young age but Philippine law still allows sex with a child as young as 12-years-old, one of the lowest ages of consent in the world. In Japan, it is 13-years-old. 

The accused use this provision of the penal code as a defense if ever they are charged in court, which is rare and unusual. Parents can pressure the child to say she “loves the older man.” That provision of the penal code is one reason for the proliferation of child sexual abuse and human trafficking of children. 

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As we celebrate the 500 years of Christianity in the Philippines. The Chaplaincy to Filipino Migrants organises an on-line talk every Tuesday at 9.00pm. You can join us at:

https://www.Facebook.com/CFM-Gifted-to-give-101039001847033


Hopefully, the Senate will speedily approve the bill that will change the law and it will change the age of consent to 16 years of age.

One in every four boys and girls are victims of sexual abuse by biological fathers, live-in partners, grandfathers, relatives, clergy and local pedophiles. Some parents and relatives sexually abuse their young children online to earn money. 

Every five minutes, a woman or child is raped, according to the research done by Centre for Women’s Resources. The degradation and abuse is so pervasive in society that boys from seven- to 10-years-old are influenced and have been caught having raped five- and six-year old girls. 

for leaving home and living on the streets and stealing to survive. When they have been abused, kicked and beaten and rejected by their unloving parents, where else can they go and survive when all they have is a t-shirt and shorts? 

They have been influenced by the child sexual abuse material allowed on the servers of the Internet Service Providers [ISPs] and viewed on cellphones and the Internet.

What kind of society has the Philippines become? Certainly, not a more virtuous, innocent and morally strong one. A serious negative and corrupt influence has eroded the higher moral values that once infused a culture formed by the gospel values of Christianity. What was once a faith that was socially active has radically changed. It is now more a faith without action. One that is dead in many ways.

The institutional Church seems to have abandoned its duty to protect and stand for human rights and children’s and family rights and dignity. Many bishops and conservative priests are silent about clerical child sexual abuse, abuse in the family and society, the spread of sex hotels and trafficking of children and youth. They ignore the plight of young people jailed in sub-human conditions, tortured and abused behind bars.

Those true Christians, priests, bishops and laypeople that are living out the social message of Jesus of Nazareth with the true spirit of the gospel are being harassed, threatened, jailed and killed.

The government has, for the past many years, descended into a quagmire of corruption and moral degradation, killing suspects with impunity and violating human rights. Too many local governments have supported the sex industry by issuing licenses and permits to bars and clubs and sex hotels, allowing the human trafficking and child abuse to continue and spread.

Children and young people need a vigorous defense from the abuse they suffer. It is all too easy to blame them for leaving home and living on the streets and stealing to survive. When they have been abused, kicked and beaten and rejected by their unloving parents, where else can they go and survive when all they have is a t-shirt and shorts? 

They need to be welcomed, understood, sheltered, affirmed and given a chance to find a life when they have no loving, caring family. That is the one thing that we all desire above all else. It is our duty to give them that chance.

We are called to speak out to protect children from abuse and take a stand and live out the moral values of the gospel, the sacredness of life and the wellbeing, human rights and dignity of the people, and speak and rally against moral evil in society.

Father Shay Cullen




Father Shay Cullen
www.preda.org

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