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Saturday, February 22, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 135
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By Jovee Marie N. Dela Cruz
APPY marriages should not be threatened by the legalization of divorce, insists one of the principal authors of the proposal to institute absolute divorce and the dissolution of marriage in the Philippines. Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman said divorce is an exception for irremediably broken and lost marriages. “Divorce is not for everybody. The institution of absolute divorce and dissolution of marriage is
definitely not for couples in harmonious, happy and vibrant marital relationships, which accounts for the overwhelming majority of Filipino unions,” the lawmaker said. “It is for the exceptional cases when the marital bond is irreme-
SKYPIXEL | DREAMSTIME.COM
‘TIL DEATH (OR DIVORCE) DO US PART’
A COMMITTEE-LEVEL APPROVAL OF A PROPOSAL TO LEGALIZE THE DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN PHL HAS ONCE AGAIN SENT HOUSE MEMBERS INTO FRENZIED DEBATES.
diably damaged because marriage is still a human institution, which could collapse and wither due to human frailty and mortal limitations,” Lagman added. Despite the legalization of divorce, he said the state has a continuing mandate to protect marriages. In the Philippines, no less than the 1987 Constitution recognizes the Filipino family as the foundation of the nation, the basic social unit. It mandates the government to strengthen the Filipino family’s solidarity and actively promote its total development.
“It will not destroy marriage and the family as revered institutions. A divorce law cannot undo centuries of dearly held Filipino customs and traditions honoring and celebrating marriage and the family. Marriage and the family are and will still be at the heart of the Filipino way of life. Divorce will not destroy marriages because there is no more marriage or happy union to speak of when couples reach the difficult decision to seek divorce,” Lagman said.
Women’s clamor
GABRIELA party list, for its part,
said a law legalizing divorce is needed in response to the clamor of women trapped in abusive relationships and “the need for the government to provide another option for irreparable marriages, in recognition of this reality.” In the last Congress, the House of Representatives overwhelmingly approved on third and final reading a long-awaited bill legalizing divorce in the Philippines—the last remaining country, besides the Vatican, where couples do not have the right to absolute divorce. Last week, the House Committee on Population and Family
Relations approved the consolidated bill on absolute divorce. Speaker Alan Peter Cayetano has already signified that although he personally does not believe divorce to be the solution to troubled marriages, he will allow free and open debate on the divorce bills and reiterated his call to House members to “act depending on our conscience.”
No quickie
LAGMAN asserted that, “drivethrough” or “quickie divorces” are prohibited because “no decree of Continued on a2
Coronavirus outcomes range from pandemic to a new flu, experts say
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By Robert Langreth and Michelle Cortez Bloomberg News
T’S already spread wider than SARS in 2003. It may not sweep the globe as swine flu did in 2009, but is more dangerous. It doesn’t kill at anywhere near the terrifying pace of Ebola in 2014, but it can be passed through the air. Even as the number of new coronavirus cases in China appears to ebb, experts say they’re preparing for a future with a disease that past pandemics have only hinted at. China’s lockdown of Hubei province, where the outbreak began, gave the world several weeks to throw up its defenses, global health officials said Tuesday. But it hasn’t stopped the virus, with new cases popping up around
the globe, potentially seeding a pandemic to come. “Every virus is different,” said University of Michigan medical historian Howard Markel, who has studied influenza epidemics. “If anything the study of past epidemics has taught me is that anyone who predicts the future based on that is either a fool or lying because we don’t know.” The virus has brought together elements that scare public health
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 50.6220
THIS undated electron microscope image made available by the US National Institutes of Health in February 2020 shows the Novel Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, yellow, emerging from the surface of cells, blue/pink, cultured in the lab. Also known as 2019-nCoV, the virus causes COVID-19. The sample was isolated from a patient in the US. NIAID-RML VIA AP
experts as well as average citizens. In less than three months, it’s infected tens of thousands of people. Humans have never faced it, leaving their immune systems vulnerable. And there are no vaccines to prevent 2019nCoV, as the virus is called, or to treat the disease it causes, Covid-2019. One certainty is that new cases will continue to emerge. On Saturday, an American passenger from a cruise ship that docked in Cambodia tested positive for the virus. It raised new worries that disembarked passengers from the boat, previously thought to be virus-free, would seed new pockets of disease. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said last week that it will begin screening patients with flu symptoms for 2019-nCoV in five major US cities. The effort is meant to detect whether the virus has slipped into the US despite robust travel screening and quarantines that have caught the less-than-20 American cases identified so far. Continued on a2
n JAPAN 0.4515 n UK 65.2163 n HK 6.5067 n CHINA 7.2080 n SINGAPORE 36.1431 n AUSTRALIA 33.4865 n EU 54.6060 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.4967
Source: BSP (February 21, 2020)