Pamantayang Oras ng Pilipinas:

Sunday, June 8, 2025 - 8:14 PM

  1. Bahay
  2. Payo sa Patakaran
  3. Human Rights Advisory on the Accepted and Noted Recommendations by the Philippines During the Third…

Pahayag ni CHR Executive Director, Atty Jacqueline Ann De Guia, na tinatanggap ang suporta ng House Speaker para sa legislative agenda para sa kababaihan

The Commission on Human Rights (CHR) welcomes the expression of support from the leadership of the House of Representative (HOR) for women solons and their legislative agenda.

In his message during the organizational meeting of the Association of Women Legislators Foundation, Inc. (AWLFI), House Speaker Martin Romualdez vowed to be consultative and collaborative with the women legislators in championing the agenda of women and to eliminate gender gaps.

The AWLFI is permanent bloc composed of all women legislators in lower house of Congress. They seek to ensure that the legislative agenda envisioned to strengthen the position of women and the welfare of children is deliberated and acted upon in the HOR.

Matched with AWLFI’s commitment, CHR is hopeful that the supportive remarks of the HOR leadership will translate to the expeditious passage of key bills that promote the empowerment of women, as well as other vulnerable sectors.

At the same time, CHR, as part of its legislative agenda in forwarding the elimination of all forms of discrimination against women, proposes, among others, amending provisions of the Family Code that perpetuate the unequal status of spouses under Articles 14, 19, 96, 124, 211, and 225; revision of the Revised Penal Code on Adultery and Concubinage; amending the Space Spaces Act to provide penal provisions for persons committing gender-based sexual harassment in the workplace; and amendment of the Anti-Rape Law to specify lack of consent as the defining element in the crime of rape, and not “tenacious resistance” to the sexual act, as well as the repeal of the Forgiveness Clause.

CHR is also pushing for the passage of new pieces of legislation forwarding gender empowerment and women’s rights, such as the decriminalisation of abortion; the SOGIE Equality Bill; added protection for women and children receiving abusive conduct or violence online or electronic violence against women; and a law that would allow women and girls to access needed information and services of sexual and reproductive health rights without the need for third-party consent.

As Gender Ombud, CHR is always ready and willing to work with both the HOR and the Senate in pursuing human rights and gender-responsive laws. Gender and women’s concerns often combine, overlap, or intersect with other human rights concerns. CHR looks forward to working with lawmakers, including AWLFI, in realising our role as an advisor and partner of government in crafting responsive laws that best respond to the lived realities of the weak, disadvantaged, and marginalised sectors in the country. ###

Kaugnay na Post

Iba pang mga Kwento

The Commission on Human Rights (CHR) denounces the separate killings of Mohammad Usman Alamada and Elvin Moires on 15 September 2024. As the country’s national human rights institution, the Commission has initiated an investigation to determine the circumstances surrounding these

The Commission on Human Rights of the Philippines (CHRP) is alarmed by the blatant killings, violent dispersals, and other gross human rights violations being committed by the Myanmar military government against its people. As a National Human Rights Institution (NHRI),

Cagayan Valley experienced historic flooding due to the onslaught of typhoon Ulysses. In particular, almost the entire provinces of Cagayan and Isabela were submerged in water as the Cagayan River swelled due to consecutive typhoons compounded by the torrential release

Kinikilala ng Commission on Human Rights (CHR) ang pagpapalabas ng warrant of arrest laban kay dating Pangulong Rodrigo R. Duterte ng International Criminal Court (ICC), gaya ng iniulat ng International Criminal Police Organization o INTERPOL. Alinsunod sa mandato nito sa Konstitusyon, ang CHR

“Martial law could crush our bodies; it could break our minds; but it could not conquer our spirit. It may silence our voices and seal our eyes, but it cannot kill our hope nor obliterate our vision.” Gaya ng paniniwala

Pahayag ng Commission on Human Rights na nagrerekomenda para sa pagpapatuloy ng UN Joint Programme, na binibigyang pansin ang mahahalagang epekto nito sa sitwasyon ng karapatang pantao sa Pilipinas Ang Commission on Human Rights (CHR) ay nagtatala ng mga natamo ng United