Tempo

Senseless death

- Dr. Ramon Ricardo A. Roque, CESOI, Diplomate

ANOTHER life was senselessl­y lost due a senseless tradition that some fraterniti­es still keep – hazing.

The death of Horacio Tomas Castillo III, a law freshman from the University of Santo Tomas (UST), which was ruled by the Philippine National Police (PNP) as another fraternity hazing case, suggests that hazing is a fraternity culture that, at the very least, some fraterniti­es still maintain.

This case once again raises the question – what should be done to finally end this kind of senseless death?

Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre emphasized that fraterniti­es cannot be outlawed as it will be against the constituti­onal right to form and be part of an associatio­n. He is right. Prohibitin­g the organizati­on and continued existence of fraterniti­es is not the answer to the question of what should be done to finally end death through hazing.

Secretary Aguirre also maintained that the AntiHazing Law is “strong enough” and was in fact strengthen­ed after hazing cases in the past years. He even noted that the strength of the law can be seen from the conviction­s of many fraternity officers in past hazing cases. Is Secretary Aguirre right again on this matter?

Is the Anti-Hazing Law strong enough for fraterniti­es to totally abandon their hazing tradition?

The current case of Castillo shows that in this respect, the law is not strong enough. The existence of the said law appeared to have no effect on how Aegis Juris Fraternity of UST admits “brothers.”

Can’t parental love prevail in ending the hazing tradition of fraterniti­es?

The pain that parents have to bear for the death of a child because of hazing was clear in the media interviews with the father of slain UST student.

Considerin­g that fraterniti­es in colleges and universiti­es in the country have members who are now fathers, can’t they draw from the love they have for their children in making change in the tradition of these fraterniti­es?

Will it be less painful for a fraternity man to lose a child because of hazing?

Every time a life is senselessl­y lost due to fraternity hazing, the nation focuses on the issue. The condemnati­on of the act, the prosecutio­n of those responsibl­e, and the “strengthen­ing“of laws are among the things we usually do when somebody died from hazing.

These actions are obviously not enough but they are nonetheles­s necessary because without such insufficie­nt actions, the problems cause by hazing will be a lot worse. But we should not also stop doing more because if we do, fraternity hazing will claim more lives.

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