DOJ backs Senate bills banning hazing, making it a crime | Inquirer News

DOJ backs Senate bills banning hazing, making it a crime

/ 02:04 AM February 22, 2016

THE DEPARTMENT of Justice (DOJ) has asserted that hazing should be banned as an initiation rite in all fraternities, sororities and other organizations in the country.

In a legal position submitted to the Senate, Justice Undersecretary Zabedin Azis said the DOJ supported moves in Congress to strengthen the Anti-Hazing Law due to numerous deaths among neophytes.

“We reiterate our suggestion to consider hazing… as including infliction of physical and psychological harm to neophytes [and] as a prohibited act,” Azis said.

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“The present law merely regulates hazing and does not make the act criminal,” he added.

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Several proposals in the Senate seek to regulate hazing and other initiation rites. One is a bill by Sen. Tito Sotto, which imposes the maximum penalty of life imprisonment when hazing is committed under the influence of illegal drugs or liquor.

Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago’s bill penalizes any person present during a hazing but who fails to report it to authorities. Sen. Gregorio Honasan’s bill mandates school authorities to monitor fraternities and penalize hazing.

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Sen. Cynthia Villar’s bill provides that written parental consent must be obtained by a person aged 21 and below before he can be a member of a fraternity, that two advisers be present during the initiation, that a medical practitioner be on standby, and that neophytes must have a medical checkup before initiation.

“Congress [has] the power to define crimes and provide for their punishment,” Azis said. Jerome Aning

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TAGS: Crime, hazing, Nation, News

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