skip to content

Criminalizing Children in Jails

 Criminalizing Children in Jails
Fr. Shay Cullen
7 July 2017

If you are able to visit the child detention centers in Metro Manila and other places in the Philippines, you will see the gaunt young faces of bored, frightened, malnourished 10- to 16-year old boys and girls looking out sadly depressed through steel bars. They are prisoners. It is the local government’s only response and they ignore the law that says the children in conflict with the law must have diversion, no jail and punishment and instead have restorative justice. This is supposed to end punitive justice.

The rule of law however is not always implemented in the Philippines and local governments send children in conflict with the law to jails instead of providing them with decent homes. It is not the end of brutal punishment, it is the beginning. The children are punished with severe detention in decrepit conditions in overcrowded jail cells where they suffer neglect, deprivation, hunger and abuse from the bigger older inmates and sometimes the guards. Some children, especially the girls but the small boys also, endure sexual abuse, rape and beatings.

This mentality of neglect comes from a corrupt government who has no understanding, concern or compassion for the impoverished street children who steal to survive or are used by adult criminals to commit crimes. The adult criminals are not punished, just the children.

The law known as Republic Act 10630, which amended the Juvenile Justice and Welfare Law or RA 9344, declares that any child under the age of 15 years who commits a serious crime. . . “ shall be deemed a neglected child under Presidential Decree No. 603, as amended and the child shall be mandatorily placed in a special facility within the youth care facility or Bahay Pag-asa called Intensive Juvenile Intervention and Support Center. Moreover, repeat offenders, or children who have committed crimes more than three times, would also be considered as neglected children and, as such, must undergo intervention programs supervised by the local social welfare and development officers. The law would impose the maximum penalty for those who exploit children such as syndicates, for the commission of criminal offenses.”

None of the children in these jails, called youth centers, or Bahay Pagasa (ironically House of Hope) have been convicted of any crime. The law is supposed to see that they are not charged in court as an alleged criminal if they are below 15 years of age. The law says they ought to be in a home if they have been accused with some wrongdoing however small or big it may be.

The Congress is now finished debating the merits of amending the law and while some are for declaring that children ought to be tried as criminals at nine years old, this has been softened to make it 12 years old. This compromise change is being challenged and opposed by Unicef , the Juvenile Justice Welfare Council and many NGOs and professional psychologists who have all made their submissions to the congressional technical working group. The Senate, supposedly wiser and more learned, has not proposed a corresponding bill of its own. Only a few hard-hearted senators who see children as criminals are proposing a corresponding law.

The present practice of jailing the children under 15 years of age and above by each local government unit instead of providing a decent caring home for children in trouble is detrimental to the welfare of the children, violates their human rights and causes life-long damage.

Developmental psychologist Dr. Liane Pena Alampay, associate professor at the Department of Psychology in the Ateneo de Manila University says that “this causes young children to see themselves as criminals and to grow up with a warped and changed understanding of themselves,…putting children behind bars [sets] them on a lifelong negative trajectory.”

If there is to be any amendment to the present law that is deemed by many in the Philippines and in the international community as a good positive law, it ought to mandate that the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) be the agency that will set up and manage the children’s homes in the country. This will relieve the local government of the obligation to do it. A large increase in its budget is needed for the management and administration of the homes and for the training of professional staff, therapists and counselors and skilled vocational training specialists is needed.

But immediate arrangements ought to be made whereby local governments have to be persuaded to enter into a legal agreement with the DSWD to turn over responsibility for the local Bahay Pagasa to them or to a competent NGO. The local government will fund it but the DSWD or the NGO will manage the diversion programs and accommodation for the children in existing youth centers.

The national government should allocate funds to the DSWD or to the NGO for the renting of alternative houses for the care and training of the children. Community-based programs with skilled community workers must be developed also so the children are helped in the families and communities and not jailed.

The terrible abusive condition of the hundreds of jailed children, the daily violation of their rights under the constitution and violations of the child protection law is an affront to human dignity and an insult to the national pride. The way we treat our children is a reflection of the Philippines as a nation and it’s not looking very good right now.

[email protected]
www.preda.org

Facebook
WhatsApp
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Picture of Fr. Shay Cullen
Fr. Shay Cullen

Read more articles written by Fr. Shay Cullen

View All Posts >
About the Founder
Profile photo of Fr Shay Cullen
Fr. Shay Cullen

Shay Cullen is a Missionary priest from Ireland, a member of the Missionary Society of St. Columban and Founder and President of Preda Foundation since 1975.

Share this post
Facebook
Pinterest
WhatsApp
LinkedIn
Twitter