PHILIPPINE CONSTITUTON
THE PRESENT CONSTITUTION OF THE PHILIPPINES:
Approved by the 1986 Constitutional Commission on October 12, 1986,
the 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines was presented to
President Corazon C. Aquino on October 15, 1986. It was ratified on February 2,
1987 by a plebiscite. It was proclaimed in force on February 11, 1987.
THE 1987 CONSTITUTION
THE CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES
PREAMBLE
We, the sovereign Filipino people,
imploring the aid of Almighty God, in order to build a just and humane society
and establish a Government that shall embody our ideals and aspirations,
promote the common good, conserve and develop our patrimony, and secure to
ourselves and our posterity the blessings of independence and democracy under
the rule of law and a regime of truth, justice, freedom, love, equality, and
peace, do ordain and promulgate this Constitution.
ARTICLE I: National Territory
The national territory comprises the Philippine archipelago, with
all the islands and waters embraced therein, and
all other territories over which the Philippines has sovereignty or
jurisdiction, consisting of its terrestrial, fluvial, and aerial domains,
including its territorial sea, the seabed, the subsoil, the insular shelves,
and other submarine areas. The waters around, between, and connecting the
islands of the archipelago, regardless of their breadth and dimensions, form
part of the internal waters of the Philippines.
ARTICLE II: Declaration of Principles and State Policies
Principles
SECTION 1. The Philippines is a democratic and republican State.
Sovereignty resides in the people and all government authority emanates from
them.
SECTION 2. The Philippines renounces war as an instrument of
national policy, adopts the generally accepted principles of international law
as part of the law of the land and adheres to the policy of peace, equality,
justice, freedom, cooperation, and amity with all nations.
SECTION 3. Civilian authority is, at all times, supreme over the
military. The Armed Forces of the Philippines is the protector of the people
and the State. Its goal is to secure the sovereignty of the State and the
integrity of the national territory.
SECTION 4. The prime duty of the Government is to serve and protect
the people. The Government may call upon the people to defend the State and, in
the fulfillment thereof, all citizens may be required, under conditions
provided by law, to render personal military or civil service.
SECTION 5. The maintenance of peace and order, the protection of
life, liberty, and property, and the promotion of the general welfare are
essential for the enjoyment by all the people of the blessings of democracy.
SECTION 6. The separation of Church and State shall be inviolable.
State Policies
SECTION 7. The State shall pursue an independent foreign policy. In
its relations with other states the paramount consideration shall be national
sovereignty, territorial integrity, national interest, and the right to
self-determination.
SECTION 8. The Philippines, consistent with the national interest,
adopts and pursues a policy of freedom from nuclear weapons in its territory.
SECTION 9. The State shall promote a just and dynamic social order
that will ensure the prosperity and independence of the nation and free the
people from poverty through policies that provide adequate social services,
promote full employment, a rising standard of living, and an improved quality
of life for all.
SECTION 10. The State shall promote social justice in all phases of
national development.
SECTION 11. The State values the dignity of every human person and
guarantees full respect for human rights.
SECTION 12. The State recognizes the sanctity of family life and
shall protect and strengthen the family as a basic autonomous social
institution. It shall equally protect the life of the mother and the life of
the unborn from conception. The natural and primary right and duty of parents
in the rearing of the youth for civic efficiency and the development of moral
character shall receive the support of the Government.
SECTION 13. The State recognizes the vital role of the youth in
nation-building and shall promote and protect their physical, moral, spiritual,
intellectual, and social well-being. It shall inculcate in the youth patriotism
and nationalism, and encourage their involvement in public and civic affairs.
SECTION 14. The State recognizes the role of women in
nation-building, and shall ensure the fundamental equality before the law of women
and men.
SECTION 15. The State shall protect and promote the right to health
of the people and instill health consciousness among them.
SECTION 16. The State shall protect and advance the right of the
people to a balanced and healthful ecology in accord with the rhythm and
harmony of nature.
SECTION 17. The State shall give priority to education, science and
technology, arts, culture, and sports to foster patriotism and nationalism,
accelerate social progress, and promote total human liberation and development.
SECTION 18. The State affirms labor as a primary social economic
force. It shall protect the rights of workers and promote their welfare.
SECTION 19. The State shall develop a self-reliant and independent
national economy effectively controlled by Filipinos.
SECTION 20. The State recognizes the indispensable role of the
private sector, encourages private enterprise, and provides incentives to
needed investments.
SECTION 21. The State shall promote comprehensive rural development
and agrarian reform.
SECTION 22. The State recognizes and promotes the rights of
indigenous cultural communities within the framework of national unity and
development.
SECTION 23. The State shall encourage non-governmental,
community-based, or sectoral organizations that promote the welfare of the
nation.
SECTION 24. The State recognizes the vital role of communication and
information in nation-building.
SECTION 25. The State shall ensure the autonomy of local
governments.
SECTION 26. The State shall guarantee equal access to opportunities
for public service, and prohibit political dynasties as may be defined by law.
SECTION 27. The State shall maintain
honesty and integrity in the public service and take positive and effective
measures against graft and corruption.
SECTION 28. Subject to reasonable conditions prescribed by law, the
State adopts and implements a policy of full public disclosure of all its
transactions involving public interest.
ARTICLE III: Bill of Rights
SECTION 1. No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property
without due process of law, nor shall any person be denied the equal protection
of the laws.
SECTION 2. The right of the people to be secure in their persons,
houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures of
whatever nature and for any purpose shall be inviolable, and no search warrant
or warrant of arrest shall issue except upon probable cause to be determined
personally by the judge after examination under oath or affirmation of the
complainant and the witnesses he may produce, and particularly describing the
place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.
SECTION 3. (1) The privacy of communication and correspondence shall
be inviolable except upon lawful order of the court, or when public safety or
order requires otherwise as prescribed by law.
(2) Any evidence obtained in violation of this or the preceding
section shall be inadmissible for any purpose in any proceeding.
SECTION 4. No law shall be passed abridging the freedom of speech,
of expression, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to
assemble and petition the government for redress of grievances.
SECTION 5. No law shall be made respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. The free exercise and
enjoyment of religious profession and worship, without discrimination or
preference, shall forever be allowed. No religious test shall be required for
the exercise of civil or political rights.
SECTION 6. The liberty of abode and of changing the same within the
limits prescribed by law shall not be impaired except upon lawful order of the
court. Neither shall the right to travel be impaired except in the interest of
national security, public safety, or public health, as may be provided by law.
SECTION 7. The right of the people to information on matters of
public concern shall be recognized. Access to official records, and to
documents, and papers pertaining to official acts, transactions, or decisions,
as well as to government research data used as basis for policy development,
shall be afforded the citizen, subject to such limitations as may be provided
by law.
SECTION 8. The right of the people, including those employed in the
public and private sectors, to form unions, associations, or societies for purposes
not contrary to law shall not be abridged.
SECTION 9. Private property shall not be taken for public use
without just compensation.
SECTION 10. No law impairing the obligation of contracts shall be
passed.
SECTION 11. Free access to the courts and quasi-judicial bodies and
adequate legal assistance shall not be denied to any person by reason of
poverty.
SECTION 12. (1) Any person under investigation for the commission of
an offense shall have the right to be informed of his right to remain silent
and to have competent and independent counsel preferably of his own choice. If
the person cannot afford the services of counsel, he must be provided with one.
These rights cannot be waived except in writing and in the presence of counsel.
(2) No torture, force, violence, threat, intimidation, or any other
means which vitiate the free will shall be used against him. Secret detention
places, solitary, incommunicado, or other similar forms of detention are
prohibited.
(3) Any confession or admission obtained in violation of this or
Section 17 hereof shall be inadmissible in evidence against him.
(4) The law shall provide for penal and civil sanctions for
violations of this section as well as compensation to and rehabilitation of
victims of torture or similar practices, and their families.
SECTION 13. All persons, except those charged with offenses
punishable by reclusion perpetua when evidence of guilt is strong, shall,
before conviction, be bailable by sufficient sureties, or be released on
recognizance as may be provided by law. The right to bail shall not be impaired
even when the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus is suspended. Excessive
bail shall not be required.
SECTION 14. (1) No person shall be held to answer for a criminal
offense without due process of law.
(2) In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall be presumed
innocent until the contrary is proved, and shall enjoy the right to be heard by
himself and counsel, to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation
against him, to have a speedy, impartial, and public trial, to meet the
witnesses face to face, and to have compulsory process to secure the attendance
of witnesses and the production of evidence in his behalf. However, after
arraignment, trial may proceed notwithstanding the absence of the accused
provided that he has been duly notified and his failure to appear is
unjustifiable.
SECTION 15. The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be
suspended except in cases of invasion or rebellion when the public safety
requires it.
SECTION 16. All persons shall have the right to a speedy disposition
of their cases before all judicial, quasi-judicial, or administrative bodies.
SECTION 17. No person shall be compelled to be a witness against
himself.
SECTION 18. (1) No person shall be detained solely by reason of his
political beliefs and aspirations.
(2) No involuntary servitude in any form shall exist except as a
punishment for a crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted.
SECTION 19. (1) Excessive fines shall not be imposed, nor cruel,
degrading or inhuman punishment inflicted. Neither shall death penalty be
imposed, unless, for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes, the Congress
hereafter provides for it. Any death penalty already imposed shall be reduced
to reclusion perpetua.
(2) The employment of physical, psychological, or degrading
punishment against any prisoner or detainee or the use of substandard or
inadequate penal facilities under subhuman conditions shall be dealt with by
law.
SECTION 20. No person shall be imprisoned for debt or non-payment of
a poll tax.
SECTION 21. No person shall be twice put in jeopardy of punishment for the same
offense. If an act is punished by a law and an ordinance, conviction or acquittal
under either shall constitute a bar to another prosecution for the same act.
SECTION 22. No ex post facto law or bill of attainder shall be
enacted.
ARTICLE IV: Citizenship
SECTION 1. The following are citizens of the Philippines:
(1) Those who are citizens of the Philippines at the time of the
adoption of this Constitution;
(2) Those whose fathers or mothers are citizens of the Philippines;
(3) Those born before January 17, 1973, of Filipino mothers, who
elect Philippine citizenship upon reaching the age of majority; and
(4) Those who are naturalized in accordance with law.
SECTION 2. Natural-born citizens are those who are citizens of the
Philippines from birth without having to perform any act to acquire or perfect
their Philippine citizenship. Those who elect Philippine citizenship in
accordance with paragraph (3), Section 1 hereof shall be deemed natural-born
citizens.
SECTION 3. Philippine citizenship may be lost or reacquired in the
manner provided by law.
SECTION 4. Citizens of the Philippines who marry aliens shall retain their
citizenship, unless by their act or omission they are deemed, under the law, to
have renounced it.
SECTION 5. Dual allegiance of citizens is inimical to the national
interest and shall be dealt with by law.
ARTICLE V: Suffrage
SECTION 1. Suffrage may be exercised by all citizens of the
Philippines not otherwise disqualified by law, who are at least eighteen years
of age, and who shall have resided in the Philippines for at least one year and
in the place wherein they propose to vote for at least six months immediately
preceding the election. No literacy, property, or other substantive requirement
shall be imposed on the exercise of suffrage.
SECTION 2. The Congress shall provide a system for securing the
secrecy and sanctity of the ballot as well as a
system for absentee voting by qualified Filipinos abroad.
The Congress shall also design a procedure for the disabled and the
illiterates to vote without the assistance of other persons. Until then, they
shall be allowed to vote under existing laws and such rules as the Commission
on Elections may promulgate to protect the secrecy of the ballot.
ARTICLE VI: The Legislative Department
SECTION 1. The legislative power shall be vested in the Congress of
the Philippines which shall consist of a Senate and a House of Representatives,
except to the extent reserved to the people by the provision on initiative and
referendum.
SECTION 2. The Senate shall be composed of twenty-four Senators who
shall be elected at large by the qualified voters of the Philippines, as may be
provided by law.
SECTION 3. No person shall be a Senator unless he is a natural-born
citizen of the Philippines, and, on the day of the election, is at least
thirty-five years of age, able to read and write, a registered voter, and a
resident of the Philippines for not less than two years immediately preceding
the day of the election.
SECTION 4. The term of office of the Senators shall be six years and
shall commence, unless otherwise provided by law, at noon on the thirtieth day
of June next following their election.
No Senator shall serve for more than two consecutive terms.
Voluntary renunciation of the office for any length of time shall not be
considered as an interruption in the continuity of his service for the full
term for which he was elected.
SECTION 5. (1) The House of Representatives shall be composed of not
more than two hundred and fifty members, unless otherwise fixed by law, who
shall be elected from legislative districts apportioned among the provinces,
cities, and the Metropolitan Manila area in accordance with the number of their
respective inhabitants, and on the basis of a uniform and progressive ratio,
and those who, as provided by law, shall be elected through a party-list system
of registered national, regional, and sectoral parties or organizations.
(2) The party-list representatives shall constitute twenty per
centum of the total number of representatives including those under the party
list. For three consecutive terms after the ratification of this Constitution,
one-half of the seats allocated to party-list representatives shall be filled,
as provided by law, by selection or election from the labor, peasant, urban
poor, indigenous cultural communities, women, youth, and such other sectors as may
be provided by law, except the religious sector.
(3) Each legislative district shall comprise, as far as practicable,
contiguous, compact and adjacent territory. Each city with a population of at
least two hundred fifty thousand, or each province, shall have at least one
representative.
(4) Within three years following the return of every census, the
Congress shall make a reapportionment of legislative districts based on the
standards provided in this section.
SECTION 6. No person shall be a Member of the House of
Representatives unless he is a natural-born citizen of the Philippines and, on
the day of the election, is at least twenty-five years of age, able to read and
write, and, except the party-list representatives, a registered voter in the
district in which he shall be elected, and a resident thereof for a period of
not less than one year immediately preceding the day of the election.
SECTION 7. The Members of the House of Representatives shall be
elected for a term of three years which shall begin, unless otherwise provided
by law, at noon on the thirtieth day of June next following their election.
No member of the House of Representatives shall serve for more than
three consecutive terms. Voluntary renunciation of the office for any length of
time shall not be considered as an interruption in the continuity of his
service for the full term for which he was elected.
SECTION 8. Unless otherwise provided by law, the regular election of
the Senators and the Members of the House of Representatives shall be held on
the second Monday of May.
SECTION 9. In case of vacancy in the Senate or in the House of
Representatives, a special election may be called to fill such vacancy in the
manner prescribed by law, but the Senator or Member of the House of
Representatives thus elected shall serve only for the unexpired term.
SECTION 10. The salaries of Senators and Members of the House of
Representatives shall be determined by law. No increase in said compensation
shall take effect until after the expiration of the full term of all the
Members of the Senate and the House of Representatives approving such increase.
SECTION 11. A Senator or Member of the House of Representatives
shall, in all offenses punishable by not more than six years imprisonment, be
privileged from arrest while the Congress is in session. No Member shall be
questioned nor be held liable in any other place for any speech or debate in
the Congress or in any committee thereof.
SECTION 12. All Members of the Senate and the House of
Representatives shall, upon assumption of office, make a full disclosure of
their financial and business interests. They shall notify the House concerned
of a potential conflict of interest that may arise from the filing of a
proposed legislation of which they are authors.
SECTION 13. No Senator or Member of the House of Representatives may
hold any other office or employment in the Government, or any subdivision,
agency, or instrumentality thereof, including government-owned or controlled
corporations or their subsidiaries, during his term without forfeiting his
seat. Neither shall he be appointed to any office which may have been created
or the emoluments thereof increased during the term for which he was elected.
SECTION 14. No Senator or Member of the House of Representatives may
personally appear as counsel before any court of justice or before the
Electoral Tribunals, or quasi-judicial and other administrative bodies. Neither
shall he, directly or indirectly, be interested financially in any contract
with, or in any franchise or special privilege granted by the Government, or
any subdivision, agency, or instrumentality thereof, including any
government-owned or controlled corporation, or its subsidiary, during his term
of office. He shall not intervene in any matter before any office of the
Government for his pecuniary benefit or where he may be called upon to act on
account of his office.
SECTION 15. The Congress shall convene once every year on the fourth
Monday of July for its regular session, unless a different date is fixed by
law, and shall continue to be in session for such number of days as it may
determine until thirty days before the opening of its next regular session,
exclusive of Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays. The President may call a
special session at any time.
SECTION 16. (1) The Senate shall elect its President and the House
of Representatives its Speaker, by a majority vote of all its respective
Members.
Each House shall choose such other officers as it may deem
necessary.
(2) A majority of each House shall constitute a quorum to do
business, but a smaller number may adjourn from day to day and may compel the
attendance of absent Members in such manner, and under such penalties, as such
House may provide.
(3) Each House may determine the rules of its proceedings, punish
its Members for disorderly behavior, and, with the concurrence of two-thirds of
all its Members, suspend or expel a Member. A penalty of suspension, when
imposed, shall not exceed sixty days.
(4) Each House shall keep a Journal of its proceedings, and from
time to time publish the same, excepting such parts as may, in its judgment,
affect national security; and the yeas and nays on any question shall, at the
request of one-fifth of the Members present, be entered in the Journal.
Each House shall also keep a Record of its proceedings.
(5) Neither House during the sessions of the Congress shall, without
the consent of the other, adjourn for more than three days, nor to any other
place than that in which the two Houses shall be sitting.
SECTION 17. The Senate and the House of Representatives shall each
have an Electoral Tribunal which shall be the sole judge of all contests
relating to the election, returns, and qualifications of their respective
Members. Each Electoral Tribunal shall be composed of nine Members, three of
whom shall be Justices of the Supreme Court to be designated by the Chief
Justice, and the remaining six shall be Members of the Senate or the House of
Representatives, as the case may be, who shall be chosen on the basis of proportional
representation from the political parties and the parties or organizations
registered under the party-list system represented therein. The senior Justice
in the Electoral Tribunal shall be its Chairman.
SECTION 18. There shall be a Commission on Appointments consisting
of the President of the Senate, as ex officio Chairman, twelve Senators and
twelve Members of the House of Representatives, elected by each House on the
basis of proportional representation from the political parties and parties or organizations
registered under the party-list system represented therein. The Chairman of the
Commission shall not vote, except in case of a tie. The Commission shall act on
all appointments submitted to it within thirty session days of the Congress
from their submission. The Commission shall rule by a majority vote of all the
Members.
SECTION 19. The Electoral Tribunals and the Commission on
Appointments shall be constituted within thirty days after the Senate and the
House of Representatives shall have been organized with the election of the
President and the Speaker. The Commission on Appointments shall meet only while
the Congress is in session, at the call of its Chairman or a majority of all
its Members, to discharge such powers and functions as are herein conferred
upon it.
SECTION 20. The records and books of accounts of the Congress shall
be preserved and be open to the public in accordance with law, and such books
shall be audited by the Commission on Audit which shall publish annually an
itemized list of amounts paid to and expenses incurred for each Member.
SECTION 21. The Senate or the House of Representatives or any of its
respective committees may conduct inquiries in aid of legislation in accordance
with its duly published rules of procedure. The rights of persons appearing in
or affected by such inquiries shall be respected.
SECTION 22. The heads of departments may upon their own initiative,
with the consent of the President, or upon the request of either House, as the
rules of each House shall provide, appear before and be heard by such House on
any matter pertaining to their departments. Written questions shall be
submitted to the President of the Senate or the Speaker of the House of
Representatives at least three days before their scheduled appearance.
Interpellations shall not be limited to written questions, but may cover
matters related thereto. When the security of the State or the public interest
so requires and the President so states in writing, the appearance shall be
conducted in executive session.
SECTION 23. (1) The Congress, by a vote of two-thirds of both Houses
in joint session assembled, voting separately, shall have the sole power to
declare the existence of a state of war.
(2) In times of war or other national emergency, the Congress may,
by law, authorize the President, for a limited period and subject to such
restrictions as it may prescribe, to exercise powers necessary and proper to
carry out a declared national policy. Unless sooner withdrawn by resolution of
the Congress, such powers shall cease upon the next adjournment thereof.
SECTION 24. All appropriation, revenue or tariff bills, bills
authorizing increase of the public debt, bills of local application, and
private bills shall originate exclusively in the House of Representatives, but
the Senate may propose or concur with amendments.
SECTION 25. (1) The Congress may not increase the appropriations
recommended by the President for the operation of the Government as specified
in the budget. The form, content, and manner of preparation of the budget shall
be prescribed by law.
(2) No provision or enactment shall be embraced in the general
appropriations bill unless it relates specifically to some particular
appropriation therein. Any such provision or enactment shall be limited in its
operation to the appropriation to which it relates.
(3) The procedure in approving appropriations for the Congress shall
strictly follow the procedure for approving appropriations for other
departments and agencies.
(4) A special appropriations bill shall specify the purpose for
which it is intended, and shall be supported by funds actually available as
certified by the National Treasurer, or to be raised by a corresponding revenue
proposed therein.
(5) No law shall be passed authorizing any transfer of
appropriations; however, the President, the President of the Senate, the
Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court, and the heads of Constitutional Commissions may, by law, be authorized
to augment any item in the general appropriations law for their respective
offices from savings in other items of their respective appropriations.
(6) Discretionary funds appropriated for particular officials shall
be disbursed only for public purposes to be supported by appropriate vouchers
and subject to such guidelines as may be prescribed by law.
(7) If, by the end of any fiscal year, the Congress shall have
failed to pass the general appropriations bill for the ensuing fiscal year, the
general appropriations law for the preceding fiscal year shall be deemed
reenacted and shall remain in force and effect until the general appropriations
bill is passed by the Congress.
SECTION 26. (1) Every bill passed by the Congress shall embrace only
one subject which shall be expressed in the title thereof.
(2) No bill passed by either House shall become a law unless it has
passed three readings on separate days, and printed copies thereof in its final
form have been distributed to its Members three days before its passage, except
when the President certifies to the necessity of its immediate enactment to
meet a public calamity or emergency. Upon the last reading of a bill, no
amendment thereto shall be allowed, and the vote thereon shall be taken
immediately thereafter, and the yeas and nays entered in the Journal.
SECTION 27. (1) Every bill passed by the Congress shall, before it
becomes a law, be presented to the President. If he approves the same, he shall
sign it; otherwise, he shall veto it and return the same with his objections to
the House where it originated, which shall enter the objections at large in its
Journal and proceed to reconsider it. If, after such reconsideration,
two-thirds of all the Members of such House shall agree to pass the bill, it
shall be sent, together with the objections, to the other House by which it
shall likewise be reconsidered, and if approved by two-thirds of all the
Members of that House, it shall become a law. In all such cases, the votes of
each House shall be determined by yeas or nays, and the names of the Members
voting for or against shall be entered in its Journal. The President shall
communicate his veto of any bill to the House where it originated within thirty
days after the date of receipt thereof; otherwise, it shall become a law as if he
had signed it.
(2) The President shall have the power to veto any particular item
or items in an appropriation, revenue, or tariff bill, but the veto shall not
affect the item or items to which he does not object.
SECTION 28. (1) The rule of taxation shall be uniform and equitable.
The Congress shall evolve a progressive system of taxation.
(2) The Congress may, by law, authorize the President to fix within
specified limits, and subject to such limitations and restrictions as it may
impose, tariff rates, import and export quotas, tonnage and wharfage dues, and
other duties or imposts within the framework of the national development
program of the Government.
(3) Charitable institutions, churches and parsonages or convents
appurtenant thereto, mosques, non-profit cemeteries, and all lands, buildings,
and improvements, actually, directly, and exclusively used for religious,
charitable, or educational purposes shall be exempt from taxation.
(4) No law granting any tax exemption shall be passed without the
concurrence of a majority of all the Members of the Congress.
SECTION 29. (1) No money shall be paid out of the Treasury except in
pursuance of an appropriation made by law.
(2) No public money or property shall be appropriated, applied,
paid, or employed, directly or indirectly, for the use, benefit, or support of
any sect, church, denomination, sectarian institution, or system of religion,
or of any priest, preacher, minister, or other religious teacher, or dignitary
as such, except when such priest, preacher, minister, or dignitary is assigned
to the armed forces, or to any penal institution, or government orphanage or
leprosarium.
(3) All money collected on any tax levied for a special purpose
shall be treated as a special fund and paid out for such purpose only. If the
purpose for which a special fund was created has been fulfilled or abandoned,
the balance, if any, shall be transferred to the general funds of the
Government.
SECTION 30. No law shall be passed increasing the appellate
jurisdiction of the Supreme Court as provided in this Constitution without its
advice and concurrence.
SECTION 31. No law granting a title of royalty or nobility shall be
enacted.
SECTION 32. The Congress shall, as early as possible, provide for a
system of initiative and referendum, and the exceptions therefrom, whereby the
people can directly propose and enact laws or approve or reject any act or law or part thereof passed by the
Congress or local legislative body after the registration of a petition
therefor signed by at least ten per centum of the total number of registered
voters, of which every legislative district must be represented by at least
three per centum of the registered voters thereof.
ARTICLE VII: Executive Department
SECTION 1. The executive power shall be vested in the President of
the Philippines.
SECTION 2. No person may be elected President unless he is a
natural-born citizen of the Philippines, a registered voter, able to read and
write, at least forty years of age on the day of the election, and a resident of
the Philippines for at least ten years immediately preceding such election.
SECTION 3. There shall be a Vice-President who shall have the same
qualifications and term of office and be elected with and in the same manner as
the President. He may be removed from office in the same manner as the
President.
The Vice-President may be appointed as a Member of the Cabinet. Such
appointment requires no confirmation.
SECTION 4. The President and the Vice-President shall be elected by
direct vote of the people for a term of six years which shall begin at noon on
the thirtieth day of June next following the day of the election and shall end
at noon of the same date six years thereafter. The President shall not be
eligible for any reelection. No person who has succeeded as President and has
served as such for more than four years shall be qualified for election to the
same office at any time.
No Vice-President shall serve for more than two consecutive terms.
Voluntary renunciation of the office for any length of time shall not be
considered as an interruption in the continuity of the service for the full
term for which he was elected.
Unless otherwise provided by law, the regular election for President
and Vice-President shall be held on the second Monday of May.
The returns of every election for President and Vice-President, duly
certified by the board of canvassers of each province or city, shall be
transmitted to the Congress, directed to the President of the Senate. Upon
receipt of the certificates of canvass, the President of the Senate shall, not
later than thirty days after the day of the election, open all certificates in
the presence of the Senate and the House of Representatives in joint public
session, and the Congress, upon determination of the authenticity and due
execution thereof in the manner provided by law, canvass the votes.
The person having the highest number of votes shall be proclaimed
elected, but in case two or more shall have an equal and highest number of
votes, one of them shall forthwith be chosen by the vote of a majority of all
the Members of both Houses of the Congress, voting separately.
The Congress shall promulgate its rules for the canvassing of the
certificates.
The Supreme Court, sitting en banc, shall be the sole judge of all
contests relating to the election, returns, and qualifications of the President
or Vice- President, and may promulgate its rules for the purpose.
SECTION 5. Before they enter on the execution of their office, the
President, the Vice-President, or the Acting President shall take the following
oath or affirmation:
“I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully and
conscientiously fulfill my duties as President (or Vice-President or Acting
President) of the Philippines, preserve and defend its Constitution, execute
its laws, do justice to every man, and consecrate myself to the service of the
Nation. So help me God.” (In case of affirmation, last sentence will be
omitted.)
SECTION 6. The President shall have an official residence. The
salaries of the President and Vice-President shall be determined by law and
shall not be decreased during their tenure. No increase in said compensation
shall take effect until after the expiration of the term of the incumbent
during which such increase was approved. They shall not receive during their
tenure any other emolument from the Government or any other source.
SECTION 7. The President-elect and the Vice-President-elect shall
assume office at the beginning of their terms.
If the President-elect fails to qualify, the Vice-President-elect
shall act as President until the President-elect shall have qualified.
If a President shall not have been chosen, the Vice-President-elect
shall act as President until a President shall have been chosen and qualified.
If at the beginning of the term of the President, the
President-elect shall have died or shall have become permanently disabled, the
Vice-President-elect shall become President.
Where no President and Vice-President shall have been chosen or
shall have qualified, or where both shall have died or become permanently
disabled, the President of the Senate or, in case of his inability, the Speaker
of the House of Representatives shall act as President until a President or a
Vice-President shall have been chosen and qualified.
The Congress shall, by law, provide for the manner in which one who
is to act as President shall be selected until a President or a Vice-President
shall have qualified, in case of death, permanent disability, or inability of
the officials mentioned in the next preceding paragraph.
SECTION 8. In case of death, permanent disability, removal from
office, or resignation of the President, the Vice-President shall become the
President to serve the unexpired term. In case of death, permanent disability,
removal from office, or resignation of both the President and Vice-President,
the President of the Senate or, in case of his inability, the Speaker of the
House of Representatives, shall then act as President until the President or
Vice-President shall have been elected and qualified.
The Congress shall, by law, provide who shall serve as President in
case of death, permanent disability, or resignation of the Acting President. He
shall serve until the President or the Vice-President shall have been elected
and qualified, and be subject to the same restrictions of powers and
disqualifications as the Acting President.
SECTION 9. Whenever there is a vacancy in the Office of the
Vice-President during the term for which he was elected, the President shall
nominate a Vice-President from among the Members of the Senate and the House of
Representatives who shall assume office upon confirmation by a majority vote of
all the Members of both Houses of the Congress, voting separately.
SECTION 10. The Congress shall, at ten o’clock in the morning of the
third day after the vacancy in the offices of the President and Vice-President
occurs, convene in accordance with its rules without need of a call and within
seven days enact a law calling for a special election to elect a President and
a Vice-President to be held not earlier than forty-five days nor later than
sixty days from the time of such call. The bill calling such special election
shall be deemed certified under paragraph 2, Section 26, Article VI of this
Constitution and shall become law upon its approval on third reading by the
Congress. Appropriations for the special election shall be charged against any
current appropriations and shall be exempt from the requirements of paragraph
4, Section 25, Article VI of this Constitution. The convening of the Congress
cannot be suspended nor the special election postponed. No special election
shall be called if the vacancy occurs within eighteen months before the date of
the next presidential election.
SECTION 11. Whenever the President transmits to the President of the
Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives his written declaration
that he is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office, and until
he transmits to them a written declaration to the contrary, such powers and
duties shall be discharged by the Vice-President as Acting President.
Whenever a majority of all the Members of the Cabinet transmit to
the President of the Senate and to the Speaker of the House of Representatives
their written declaration that the President is unable to discharge the powers
and duties of his office, the Vice-President shall immediately assume the
powers and duties of the office as Acting President.
Thereafter, when the President transmits to the President of the
Senate and to the Speaker of the House of Representatives his written
declaration that no inability exists, he shall reassume the powers and duties
of his office. Meanwhile, should a majority of all the Members of the Cabinet
transmit within five days to the President of the Senate and to the Speaker of
the House of Representatives their written declaration that the President is
unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office, the Congress shall
decide the issue. For that purpose, the Congress shall convene, if it is not in
session, within forty-eight hours, in accordance with its rules and without
need of call.
If the Congress, within ten days after receipt of the last written
declaration, or, if not in session, within twelve days after it is required to
assemble, determines by a two-thirds vote of both Houses, voting separately,
that the President is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office,
the Vice-President shall act as the President; otherwise, the President shall
continue exercising the powers and duties of his office.
SECTION 12. In case of serious illness of the President, the public
shall be informed of the state of his health. The Members of the Cabinet in
charge of national security and foreign relations and the Chief of Staff of the
Armed Forces of the Philippines, shall not be denied access to the President
during such illness.
SECTION 13. The President, Vice-President, the Members of the
Cabinet, and their deputies or assistants shall not, unless otherwise provided
in this Constitution, hold any other office or employment during their tenure.
They shall not, during said tenure, directly or indirectly, practice any other
profession, participate in any business, or be financially interested in any
contract with, or in any franchise, or special privilege granted by the
Government or any subdivision, agency, or instrumentality thereof, including
government-owned or controlled corporations or their subsidiaries. They shall
strictly avoid conflict of interest in the conduct of their office.
The spouse and relatives by consanguinity or affinity within the
fourth civil degree of the President shall not during his tenure be appointed
as members of the Constitutional Commissions, or the Office of the Ombudsman,
or as Secretaries, Undersecretaries, chairmen or heads of bureaus or offices,
including government-owned or controlled corporations and their subsidiaries.
SECTION 14. Appointments extended by an Acting President shall
remain effective, unless revoked by the elected President within ninety days
from his assumption or reassumption of office.
SECTION 15. Two months immediately before the next presidential
elections and up to the end of his term, a President or Acting President shall
not make appointments, except temporary appointments to executive positions
when continued vacancies therein will prejudice public service or endanger
public safety.
SECTION 16. The President shall nominate and, with the consent of
the Commission on Appointments, appoint the heads of the executive departments,
ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, or officers of the armed
forces from the rank of colonel or naval captain, and other officers whose
appointments are vested in him in this Constitution. He shall also appoint all
other officers of the Government whose appointments are not otherwise provided
for by law, and those whom he may be authorized by law to appoint. The Congress
may, by law, vest the appointment of other officers lower in rank in the
President alone, in the courts, or in the heads of departments, agencies,
commissions, or boards.
The President shall have the power to make appointments during the
recess of the Congress, whether voluntary or compulsory, but such appointments
shall be effective only until after disapproval by the Commission on
Appointments or until the next adjournment of the Congress.
SECTION 17. The President shall have control of all the executive
departments, bureaus, and offices. He shall ensure that the laws be faithfully
executed.
SECTION 18. The President shall be the Commander-in-Chief of all
armed forces of the Philippines and whenever it becomes necessary, he may call
out such armed forces to prevent or suppress lawless violence, invasion or
rebellion. In case of invasion or rebellion, when the public safety requires
it, he may, for a period not exceeding sixty days, suspend the privilege of the
writ of habeas corpus or place the Philippines or any part thereof under
martial law. Within forty-eight hours from the proclamation of martial law or
the suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, the President
shall submit a report in person or in writing to the Congress. The Congress,
voting jointly, by a vote of at least a majority of all its Members in regular
or special session, may revoke such proclamation or suspension, which
revocation shall not be set aside by the President. Upon the initiative of the
President, the Congress may, in the same manner, extend such proclamation or
suspension for a period to be determined by the Congress, if the invasion or
rebellion shall persist and public safety requires it.
The Congress, if not in session, shall, within twenty-four hours
following such proclamation or suspension, convene in accordance with its rules
without any need of a call.
The Supreme Court may review, in an appropriate proceeding filed by
any citizen, the sufficiency of the factual basis of the proclamation of
martial law or the suspension of the privilege of the writ or the extension
thereof, and must promulgate its decision thereon within thirty days from its
filing.
A state of martial law does not suspend the operation of the
Constitution, nor supplant the functioning of the civil courts or legislative
assemblies, nor authorize the conferment of jurisdiction on military courts and
agencies over civilians where civil courts are able to function, nor
automatically suspend the privilege of the writ.
The suspension of the privilege of the writ shall apply only to
persons judicially charged for rebellion or offenses inherent in or directly
connected with the invasion.
During the suspension of the privilege of the writ, any person thus
arrested or detained shall be judicially charged within three days, otherwise
he shall be released.
SECTION 19. Except in cases of impeachment, or as otherwise provided
in this Constitution, the President may grant reprieves, commutations and
pardons, and remit fines and forfeitures, after conviction by final judgment.
He shall also have the power to grant amnesty with the concurrence
of a majority of all the Members of the Congress.
SECTION 20. The President may contract or guarantee foreign loans on
behalf of the Republic of the Philippines with the prior concurrence of the
Monetary Board, and subject to such limitations as may be provided by law. The
Monetary Board shall, within thirty days from the end of every quarter of the
calendar year, submit to the Congress a complete report of its decisions on
applications for loans to be contracted or guaranteed by the Government or
government-owned and controlled corporations which would have the effect of
increasing the foreign debt, and containing other matters as may be provided by
law.
SECTION 21. No treaty or international agreement shall be valid and
effective unless concurred in by at least two-thirds of all the Members of the
Senate.
SECTION 22. The President shall submit to the Congress within thirty
days from the opening of every regular session, as the basis of the general
appropriations bill, a budget of expenditures and sources of financing, including receipts from existing and
proposed revenue measures.
SECTION 23. The President shall address the Congress at the opening
of its regular session. He may also appear before it at any other time.
ARTICLE VIII: Judicial Department
SECTION 1. The judicial power shall be vested in one Supreme Court
and in such lower courts as may be established by law.
Judicial power includes the duty of the courts of justice to settle
actual controversies involving rights which are legally demandable and
enforceable, and to determine whether or not there has been a grave abuse of
discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction on the part of any
branch or instrumentality of the Government.
SECTION 2. The Congress shall have the power to define, prescribe,
and apportion the jurisdiction of various courts but may not deprive the
Supreme Court of its jurisdiction over cases enumerated in Section 5 hereof.
No law shall be passed reorganizing the Judiciary when it undermines
the security of tenure of its Members.
SECTION 3. The Judiciary shall enjoy fiscal autonomy. Appropriations
for the Judiciary may not be reduced by the legislature below the amount
appropriated for the previous year and, after approval, shall be automatically
and regularly released.
SECTION 4. (1) The Supreme Court shall be composed of a Chief
Justice and fourteen Associate Justices. It may sit en banc or in its
discretion, in divisions of three, five, or seven Members. Any vacancy shall be
filled within ninety days from the occurrence thereof.
(2) All cases involving the constitutionality of a treaty,
international or executive agreement, or law, which shall be heard by the
Supreme Court en banc, and all other cases which under the Rules of Court are
required to be heard en banc, including those involving the constitutionality,
application, or operation of presidential decrees, proclamations, orders,
instructions, ordinances, and other regulations, shall be decided with the
concurrence of a majority of the Members who actually took part in the
deliberations on the issues in the case and voted thereon.
(3) Cases or matters heard by a division shall be decided or
resolved with the concurrence of a majority of the Members who actually took
part in the deliberations on the issues in the case and voted thereon, and in
no case, without the concurrence of at least three of such Members. When the
required number is not obtained, the case shall be decided en banc: Provided,
that no doctrine or principle of law laid down by the court in a decision
rendered en banc or in division may be modified or reversed except by the court
sitting en banc.
SECTION 5. The Supreme Court shall have the following powers:
(1) Exercise original jurisdiction over cases affecting ambassadors,
other public ministers and consuls, and over petitions for certiorari,
prohibition, mandamus, quo warranto, and habeas corpus.
(2) Review, revise, reverse, modify, or affirm on appeal or certiorari,
as the law or the Rules of Court may provide, final judgments and orders of
lower courts in:
(a) All cases in which the constitutionality or validity of any
treaty, international or executive agreement, law, presidential decree,
proclamation, order, instruction, ordinance, or regulation is in question.
(b) All cases involving the legality of any tax, impost, assessment,
or toll, or any penalty imposed in relation thereto.
(c) All cases in which the jurisdiction of any lower court is in
issue.
(d) All criminal cases in which the penalty imposed is reclusion
perpetua or higher.
(e) All cases in which only an error or question of law is involved.
(3) Assign temporarily judges of lower courts to other stations as
public interest may require. Such temporary assignment shall not exceed six
months without the consent of the judge concerned.
(4) Order a change of venue or place of trial to avoid a miscarriage
of justice.
(5) Promulgate rules concerning the protection and enforcement of
constitutional rights, pleading, practice, and procedure in all courts, the
admission to the practice of law, the Integrated Bar, and legal assistance to
the underprivileged. Such rules shall provide a simplified and inexpensive
procedure for the speedy disposition of cases, shall be uniform for all courts
of the same grade, and shall not diminish, increase, or modify substantive
rights. Rules of procedure of special courts and quasi-judicial bodies shall
remain effective unless disapproved by the Supreme Court.
(6) Appoint all officials and employees of the Judiciary in
accordance with the Civil Service Law.
SECTION 6. The Supreme Court shall have administrative supervision
over all courts and the personnel thereof.
SECTION 7. (1) No person shall be appointed Member of the Supreme
Court or any lower collegiate court unless he is a natural-born citizen of the
Philippines. A Member of the Supreme Court must be at least forty years of age,
and must have been for fifteen years or more a judge of a lower court or
engaged in the practice of law in the Philippines.
(2) The Congress shall prescribe the qualifications of judges of
lower courts, but no person may be appointed judge thereof unless he is a
citizen of the Philippines and a member of the Philippine Bar.
(3) A Member of the Judiciary must be a person of proven competence,
integrity, probity, and independence.
SECTION 8. (1) A Judicial and Bar Council is hereby created under
the supervision of the Supreme Court composed of the Chief Justice as ex
officio Chairman, the Secretary of Justice, and a representative of the
Congress as ex officio Members, a representative of the Integrated Bar, a
professor of law, a retired Member of the Supreme Court, and a representative
of the private sector.
(2) The regular Members of the Council shall be appointed by the
President for a term of four years with the consent of the Commission on
Appointments. Of the Members first appointed, the representative of the
Integrated Bar shall serve for four years, the professor of law for three
years, the retired Justice for two years, and the representative of the private
sector for one year.
(3) The Clerk of the Supreme Court shall be the Secretary ex officio
of the Council and shall keep a record of its proceedings.
(4) The regular Members of the Council shall receive such emoluments
as may be determined by the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court shall provide in
its annual budget the appropriations for the Council.
(5) The Council shall have the principal function of recommending
appointees to the Judiciary. It may exercise such other functions and duties as
the Supreme Court may assign to it.
SECTION 9. The Members of the Supreme Court and judges of lower
courts shall be appointed by the President from a list of at least three
nominees prepared by the Judicial and Bar Council for every vacancy. Such
appointments need no confirmation.
For the lower courts, the President shall issue the appointments
within ninety days from the submission of the list.
SECTION 10. The salary of the Chief Justice and of the Associate
Justices of the Supreme Court, and of judges of lower courts shall be fixed by
law. During their continuance in office, their salary shall not be decreased.
SECTION 11. The Members of the Supreme Court and judges of lower
courts shall hold office during good behavior until they reached the age of
seventy years or become incapacitated to discharge the duties of their office.
The Supreme Court en banc shall have the power to discipline judges of lower
courts, or order their dismissal by a vote of a majority of the Members who
actually took part in the deliberations on the issues in the case and voted
thereon.
SECTION 12. The Members of the Supreme Court and of other courts
established by law shall not be designated to any agency performing
quasi-judicial or administrative functions.
SECTION 13. The conclusions of the Supreme Court in any case
submitted to it for decision en banc or in division shall be reached in
consultation before the case is assigned to a Member for the writing of the
opinion of the Court. A certification to this effect signed by the Chief
Justice shall be issued and a copy thereof attached to the record of the case
and served upon the parties. Any Member who took no part, or dissented, or
abstained from a decision or resolution must state the reason therefor. The
same requirements shall be observed by all lower collegiate courts.
SECTION 14. No decision shall be rendered by any court without
expressing therein clearly and distinctly the facts and the law on which it is
based.
No petition for review or motion for reconsideration of a decision
of the court shall be refused due course or denied without stating the legal
basis therefor.
SECTION 15. (1) All cases or matters filed after the effectivity of
this Constitution must be decided or resolved within twenty-four months from
date of submission for the Supreme Court, and, unless reduced by the Supreme
Court, twelve months for all lower collegiate courts, and three months for all
other lower courts.
(2) A case or matter shall be deemed submitted for decision or
resolution upon the filing of the last pending, brief, or memorandum required
by the Rules of Court or by the court itself.
(3) Upon the expiration of the corresponding period, a certification
to this effect signed by the Chief Justice or the presiding judge shall
forthwith be issued and a copy thereof attached to the record of the case or
matter, and served upon the parties. The certification shall state why a
decision or resolution has not been rendered or issued within said period.
(4) Despite the expiration of the applicable mandatory period, the
court, without prejudice to such responsibility as may have been incurred in
consequence thereof, shall decide or resolve the case or matter submitted
thereto for determination, without further delay.
SECTION 16. The Supreme Court shall, within thirty days from the
opening of each regular session of the Congress, submit to the President and
the Congress an annual report on the operations and activities of the
Judiciary.
ARTICLE IX: Constitutional Commissions
A. Common Provisions
SECTION 1. The Constitutional Commissions, which shall be
independent, are the Civil Service Commission, the Commission on Elections, and
the Commission on Audit.
SECTION 2. No Member of a Constitutional Commission shall, during
his tenure, hold any other office or employment. Neither shall he engage in the
practice of any profession or in the active management or control of any
business which in any way be affected by the functions of his office, nor shall
he be financially interested, directly or indirectly, in any contract with, or
in any franchise or privilege granted by the Government, any of its
subdivisions, agencies, or instrumentalities, including government-owned or
controlled corporations or their subsidiaries.
SECTION 3. The salary of the Chairman and the Commissioners shall be
fixed by law and shall not be decreased during their tenure.
SECTION 4. The Constitutional Commissions shall appoint their
officials and employees in accordance with law.
SECTION 5. The Commission shall enjoy fiscal autonomy. Their
approved annual appropriations shall be automatically and regularly released.
SECTION 6. Each Commission en banc may promulgate its own rules
concerning pleadings and practice before it or before any of its offices. Such
rules however shall not diminish, increase, or modify substantive rights.
SECTION 7. Each Commission shall decide by a majority vote of all
its Members any case or matter brought before it within sixty days from the
date of its submission for decision or resolution. A case or matter is deemed
submitted for decision or resolution upon the filing of the last pleading,
brief, or memorandum required by the rules of the Commission or by the
Commission itself. Unless otherwise provided by this Constitution or by law,
any decision, order, or ruling of each Commission may be brought to the Supreme
Court on certiorari by the aggrieved party within thirty days from receipt of a
copy thereof.
SECTION 8. Each Commission shall perform such other functions as may
be provided by law.
B. The Civil Service Commission
SECTION 1. (1) The Civil Service shall be administered by the Civil
Service Commission composed of a Chairman and two Commissioners who shall be
natural-born citizens of the Philippines and, at the time of their appointment,
at least thirty-five years of age, with proven capacity for public
administration, and must not have been candidates for any elective position in
the elections immediately preceding their appointment.
(2) The Chairman and the Commissioners shall be appointed by the
President with the consent of the Commission on Appointments for a term of
seven years without reappointment. Of those first appointed, the Chairman shall
hold office for seven years, a Commissioner for five years, and another
Commissioner for three years, without reappointment. Appointment to any vacancy
shall be only for the unexpired term of the predecessor. In no case shall any
Member be appointed or designated in a temporary or acting capacity.
SECTION 2. (1) The civil service embraces all branches,
subdivisions, instrumentalities, and agencies of the Government, including
government-owned or controlled corporations with original charters.
(2) Appointments in the civil service shall be made only according
to merit and fitness to be determined, as far as practicable, and, except to
positions which are policy-determining, primarily confidential, or highly
technical, by competitive examination.
(3) No officer or employee of the civil service shall be removed or
suspended except for cause provided by law.
(4) No officer or employee in the civil service shall engage,
directly or indirectly, in any electioneering or partisan political campaign.
(5) The right to self-organization shall not be denied to government
employees.
(6) Temporary employees of the Government shall be given such
protection as may be provided by law.
SECTION 3. The Civil Service Commission, as the central personnel
agency of the Government, shall establish a career service and adopt measures
to promote morale, efficiency, integrity, responsiveness, progressiveness, and
courtesy in the civil service. It shall strengthen the merit and rewards
system, integrate all human resources development programs for all levels and
ranks, and institutionalize a management climate conducive to public
accountability. It shall submit to the President and the Congress an annual
report on its personnel programs.
SECTION 4. All public officers and employees shall take an oath or
affirmation to uphold and defend this Constitution.
SECTION 5. The Congress shall provide for the standardization of
compensation of government officials and employees, including those in
government-owned or controlled corporations with original charters, taking into
account the nature of the responsibilities pertaining to, and the
qualifications required for their positions.
SECTION 6. No candidate who has lost in any election shall, within
one year after such election, be appointed to any office in the Government or
any government-owned or controlled corporations or in any of their
subsidiaries.
SECTION 7. No elective official shall be eligible for appointment or
designation in any capacity to any public office or position during his tenure.
Unless otherwise allowed by law or by the primary functions of his
position, no appointive official shall hold any other office or employment in
the Government or any subdivision, agency or instrumentality thereof, including
government-owned or controlled corporations or their subsidiaries.
SECTION 8. No elective or appointive public officer or employee
shall receive additional, double, or indirect compensation, unless specifically
authorized by law, nor accept without the consent of the Congress, any present,
emolument, office, or title of any kind from any foreign government.
Pensions or gratuities shall not be considered as additional,
double, or indirect compensation.
C. The Commission on Elections
SECTION 1. (1) There shall be a Commission on Elections composed of
a Chairman and six Commissioners who shall be natural-born citizens of the
Philippines and, at the time of their appointment, at least thirty-five years
of age, holders of a college degree, and must not have been candidates for any
elective position in the immediately preceding elections. However, a majority thereof,
including the Chairman, shall be Members of the Philippine Bar who have been
engaged in the practice of law for at least ten years.
(2) The Chairman and the Commissioners shall be appointed by the
President with the consent of the Commission on Appointments for a term of
seven years without reappointment. Of those first appointed, three Members
shall hold office for seven years, two Members for five years, and the last
Members for three years, without reappointment. Appointment to any vacancy shall
be only for the unexpired term of the predecessor. In no case shall any Member
be appointed or designated in a temporary or acting capacity.
SECTION 2. The Commission on Elections shall exercise the following
powers and functions:
(1) Enforce and administer all laws and regulations relative to the
conduct of an election, plebiscite, initiative, referendum, and recall.
(2) Exercise exclusive original jurisdiction over all contests
relating to the elections, returns, and qualifications of all elective regional,
provincial, and city officials, and appellate jurisdiction over all contests
involving elective municipal officials decided by trial courts of general
jurisdiction, or involving elective barangay officials decided by trial courts
of limited jurisdiction.
Decisions, final orders, or rulings of the Commission on election
contests involving elective municipal and barangay offices shall be final,
executory, and not appealable.
(3) Decide, except those involving the right to vote, all questions
affecting elections, including determination of the number and location of
polling places, appointment of election officials and inspectors, and
registration of voters.
(4) Deputize, with the concurrence of the President, law enforcement
agencies and instrumentalities of the Government, including the Armed Forces of
the Philippines, for the exclusive purpose of ensuring free, orderly, honest,
peaceful, and credible elections.
(5) Register, after sufficient publication, political parties,
organizations, or coalitions which, in addition to other requirements, must
present their platform or program of government; and accredit citizens’ arms of
the Commission on Elections. Religious denominations and sects shall not be
registered. Those which seek to achieve their goals through violence or
unlawful means, or refuse to uphold and adhere to this Constitution, or which
are supported by any foreign government shall likewise be refused registration.
Financial contributions from foreign governments and their agencies
to political parties, organizations, coalitions, or candidates related to
elections constitute interference in national affairs, and, when accepted,
shall be an additional ground for the cancellation of their registration with
the Commission, in addition to other penalties that may be prescribed by law.
(6) File, upon a verified complaint, or on its own initiative,
petitions in court for inclusion or exclusion of voters; investigate and, where
appropriate, prosecute cases of violations of election laws, including acts or
omissions constituting election frauds, offenses, and malpractices.
(7) Recommend to the Congress effective measures to minimize
election spending, including limitation of places where propaganda materials
shall be posted, and to prevent and penalize all forms of election frauds,
offenses, malpractices, and nuisance candidacies.
(8) Recommend to the President the removal of any officer or
employee it has deputized, or the imposition of any other disciplinary action,
for violation or disregard of, or disobedience to its directive, order, or
decision.
(9) Submit to the President and the Congress a comprehensive report
on the conduct of each election, plebiscite, initiative, referendum, or recall.
SECTION 3. The Commission on Elections may sit en banc or in two
divisions, and shall promulgate its rules of procedure in order to expedite
disposition of election cases, including pre-proclamation controversies. All
such election cases shall be heard and decided in division, provided that
motions for reconsideration of decisions shall be decided by the Commission en
banc.
SECTION 4. The Commission may, during the election period, supervise
or regulate the enjoyment or utilization of all franchises or permits for the
operation of transportation and other public utilities, media of communication
or information, all grants, special privileges, or concessions granted by the
Government or any subdivision, agency, or instrumentality thereof, including
any government-owned or controlled corporation or its subsidiary. Such supervision
or regulation shall aim to ensure equal opportunity, time, and space, and the
right to reply, including reasonable, equal rates therefor, for public
information campaigns and forums among candidates in connection with the
objective of holding free, orderly, honest, peaceful, and credible elections.
SECTION 5. No pardon, amnesty, parole, or suspension of sentence for
violation of election laws, rules, and regulations shall be granted by the
President without the favorable recommendation of the Commission.
SECTION 6. A free and open party system shall be allowed to evolve
according to the free choice of the people, subject to the provisions of this
Article.
SECTION 7. No votes cast in favor of a political party,
organization, or coalition shall be valid, except for those registered under
the party-list system as provided in this Constitution.
SECTION 8. Political parties, or organizations or coalitions
registered under the party-list system, shall not be represented in the voters’
registration boards, boards of election inspectors, boards of canvassers, or
other similar bodies. However, they shall be entitled to appoint poll watchers
in accordance with law.
SECTION 9. Unless otherwise fixed by the Commission in special
cases, the election period shall commence ninety days before the day of the
election and shall end thirty days after.
SECTION 10. Bona fide candidates for any public office shall be free
from any form of harassment and discrimination.
SECTION 11. Funds certified by the Commission as necessary to defray
the expenses for holding regular and special elections, plebiscites,
initiatives, referenda, and recalls, shall be provided in the regular or
special appropriations and, once approved, shall be released automatically upon
certification by the Chairman of the Commission.
D. Commission on Audit
SECTION 1. (1) There shall be a Commission on Audit composed of a
Chairman and two Commissioners, who shall be natural-born citizens of the
Philippines and, at the time of their appointment, at least thirty-five years
of age, certified public accountants with not less than ten years of auditing
experience, or members of the Philippine Bar who have been engaged in the
practice of law for at least ten years, and must not have been candidates for
any elective position in the elections immediately preceding their appointment.
At no time shall all Members of the Commission belong to the same profession.
(2) The Chairman and the Commissioners shall be appointed by the
President with the consent of the Commission on Appointments for a term of
seven years without reappointment. Of those first appointed, the Chairman shall
hold office for seven years, one Commissioner for five years, and the other
Commissioner for three years, without reappointment. Appointment to any vacancy
shall be only for the unexpired portion of the term of the predecessor. In no
case shall any Member be appointed or designated in a temporary or acting
capacity.
SECTION 2. (1) The Commission on Audit shall have the power,
authority, and duty to examine, audit, and settle all accounts pertaining to
the revenue and receipts of, and expenditures or uses of funds and property,
owned or held in trust by, or pertaining to, the Government, or any of its
subdivisions, agencies, or instrumentalities, including government-owned or
controlled corporations with original charters, and on a post-audit basis: (a)
constitutional bodies, commissions and offices that have been granted fiscal
autonomy under this Constitution; (b) autonomous state colleges and universities;
(c) other government-owned or controlled corporations and their subsidiaries;
and (d) such non-governmental entities receiving subsidy or equity, directly or
indirectly, from or through the Government, which are required by law or the
granting institution to submit to such audit as a condition of subsidy or
equity. However, where the internal control system of the audited agencies is
inadequate, the Commission may adopt such measures, including temporary or
special pre-audit, as are necessary and appropriate to correct the
deficiencies. It shall keep the general accounts of the Government and, for
such period as may be provided by law, preserve the vouchers and other
supporting papers pertaining thereto.
(2) The Commission shall have exclusive authority, subject to the
limitations in this Article, to define the scope of its audit and examination,
establish the techniques and methods required therefor, and promulgate
accounting and auditing rules and regulations, including those for the
prevention and disallowance of irregular, unnecessary, excessive, extravagant,
or unconscionable expenditures, or uses of government funds and properties.
SECTION 3. No law shall be passed exempting any entity of the
Government or its subsidiary in any guise whatever, or any investment of public
funds, from the jurisdiction of the Commission on Audit.
SECTION 4. The Commission shall submit to the President and the
Congress, within the time fixed by law, an annual report covering the financial
condition and operation of the Government, its subdivisions, agencies, and instrumentalities, including government-owned
or controlled corporations, and non-governmental entities subject to its audit,
and recommend measures necessary to improve their effectiveness and efficiency.
It shall submit such other reports as may be required by law.
ARTICLE X: Local Government
General Provisions
SECTION 1. The territorial and political subdivisions of the
Republic of the Philippines are the provinces, cities, municipalities, and
barangays. There shall be autonomous regions in Muslim Mindanao and the
Cordilleras as hereinafter provided.
SECTION 2. The territorial and political subdivisions shall enjoy
local autonomy.
SECTION 3. The Congress shall enact a local government code which
shall provide for a more responsive and accountable local government structure
instituted through a system of decentralization with effective mechanisms of
recall, initiative, and referendum, allocate among the different local
government units their powers, responsibilities, and resources, and provide for
the qualifications, election, appointment and removal, term, salaries, powers
and functions and duties of local officials, and all other matters relating to
the organization and operation of the local units.
SECTION 4. The President of the Philippines shall exercise general
supervision over local governments. Provinces with respect to component cities
and municipalities, and cities and municipalities with respect to component
barangays shall ensure that the acts of their component units are within the
scope of their prescribed powers and functions.
SECTION 5. Each local government unit shall have the power to create
its own sources of revenues and to levy taxes, fees, and charges subject to
such guidelines and limitations as the Congress may provide, consistent with
the basic policy of local autonomy. Such taxes, fees, and charges shall accrue
exclusively to the local governments.
SECTION 6. Local government units shall have a just share, as
determined by law, in the national taxes which shall be automatically released
to them.
SECTION 7. Local governments shall be entitled to an equitable share
in the proceeds of the utilization and development of the national wealth
within their respective areas, in the manner provided by law, including sharing
the same with the inhabitants by way of direct benefits.
SECTION 8. The term of office of elective local officials, except
barangay officials, which shall be determined by law, shall be three years and
no such official shall serve for more than three consecutive terms. Voluntary
renunciation of the office for any length of time shall not be considered as an
interruption in the continuity of his service for the full term for which he
was elected.
SECTION 9. Legislative bodies of local governments shall have
sectoral representation as may be prescribed by law.
SECTION 10. No province, city, municipality, or barangay may be
created, divided, merged, abolished, or its boundary substantially altered,
except in accordance with the criteria established in the Local Government Code
and subject to approval by a majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite in the
political units directly affected.
SECTION 11. The Congress may, by law, create special metropolitan
political subdivisions, subject to a plebiscite as set forth in Section 10
hereof. The component cities and municipalities shall retain their basic
autonomy and shall be entitled to their own local executives and legislative
assemblies. The jurisdiction of the metropolitan authority that will hereby be
created shall be limited to basic services requiring coordination.
SECTION 12. Cities that are highly urbanized, as determined by law,
and component cities whose charters prohibit their voters from voting for
provincial elective officials, shall be independent of the province. The voters
of component cities within a province, whose charters contain no such
prohibition, shall not be deprived of their right to vote for elective
provincial officials.
SECTION 13. Local government units may group themselves, consolidate
or coordinate their efforts, services, and resources for purposes commonly
beneficial to them in accordance with law.
SECTION 14. The President shall provide for regional development
councils or other similar bodies composed of local government officials,
regional heads of departments and other government offices, and representatives
from non-governmental organizations within the regions for purposes of
administrative decentralization to strengthen the autonomy of the units therein
and to accelerate the economic and social growth and development of the units
in the region.
Autonomous Region
SECTION 15. There shall be created autonomous regions in Muslim
Mindanao and in the Cordilleras consisting of provinces, cities,
municipalities, and geographical areas sharing common and distinctive
historical and cultural heritage, economic and social structures, and other
relevant characteristics within the framework of this Constitution and the
national sovereignty as well as territorial integrity of the Republic of the
Philippines.
SECTION 16. The President shall exercise general supervision over
autonomous regions to ensure that the laws are faithfully executed.
SECTION 17. All powers, functions, and responsibilities not granted
by this Constitution or by law to the autonomous regions shall be vested in the
National Government.
SECTION 18. The Congress shall enact an organic act for each
autonomous region with the assistance and participation of the regional
consultative commission composed of representatives appointed by the President
from a list of nominees from multisectoral bodies. The organic act shall define
the basic structure of government for the region consisting of the executive
department and legislative assembly, both of which shall be elective and
representative of the constituent political units. The organic acts shall
likewise provide for special courts with personal, family, and property law
jurisdiction consistent with the provisions of this Constitution and national
laws.
The creation of the autonomous region shall be effective when
approved by majority of the votes cast by the constituent units in a plebiscite
called for the purpose, provided that only provinces, cities, and geographic
areas voting favorably in such plebiscite shall be included in the autonomous
region.
SECTION 19. The first Congress elected under this Constitution
shall, within eighteen months from the time of organization of both Houses,
pass the organic acts for the autonomous regions in Muslim Mindanao and the
Cordilleras.
SECTION 20. Within its territorial jurisdiction and subject to the
provisions of this Constitution and national laws, the organic act of
autonomous regions shall provide for legislative powers over:
(1) Administrative organization;
(2) Creation of sources of revenues;
(3) Ancestral domain and natural resources;
(4) Personal, family, and property relations;
(5) Regional urban and rural planning development;
(6) Economic, social, and tourism development;
(7) Educational policies;
(8) Preservation and development of the cultural heritage; and
(9) Such other matters as may be authorized by law for the promotion
of the general welfare of the people of the region.
SECTION 21. The preservation of peace and
order within the regions shall be the responsibility of the local police
agencies which shall be organized, maintained, supervised, and utilized in
accordance with applicable laws. The defense and security of the regions shall
be the responsibility of the National Government.
ARTICLE XI: Accountability of Public Officers
SECTION 1. Public office is a public trust. Public officers and
employees must at all times be accountable to the people, serve them with
utmost responsibility, integrity, loyalty, and efficiency, act with patriotism
and justice, and lead modest lives.
SECTION 2. The President, the Vice-President, the Members of the
Supreme Court, the Members of the Constitutional Commissions, and the Ombudsman
may be removed from office, on impeachment for, and conviction of, culpable
violation of the Constitution, treason, bribery, graft and corruption, other
high crimes, or betrayal of public trust. All other public officers and
employees may be removed from office as provided by law, but not by
impeachment.
SECTION 3. (1) The House of Representatives shall have the exclusive
power to initiate all cases of impeachment.
(2) A verified complaint for impeachment may be filed by any Member
of the House of Representatives or by any citizen upon a resolution of
endorsement by any Member thereof, which shall be included in the Order of
Business within ten session days, and referred to the proper Committee within
three session days thereafter. The Committee, after hearing, and by a majority
vote of all its Members, shall submit its report to the House within sixty
session days from such referral, together with the corresponding resolution.
The resolution shall be calendared for consideration by the House within ten
session days from receipt thereof.
(3) A vote of at least one-third of all the Members of the House
shall be necessary either to affirm a favorable resolution with the Articles of
Impeachment of the Committee, or override its contrary resolution. The vote of
each Member shall be recorded.
(4) In case the verified complaint or resolution of impeachment is
filed by at least one-third of all the Members of the House, the same shall
constitute the Articles of Impeachment, and trial by the Senate shall forthwith
proceed.
(5) No impeachment proceedings shall be initiated against the same
official more than once within a period of one year.
(6) The Senate shall have the sole power to try and decide all cases
of impeachment. When sitting for that purpose, the Senators shall be on oath or
affirmation. When the President of the Philippines is on trial, the Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court shall preside, but shall not vote. No person shall
be convicted without the concurrence of two-thirds of all the Members of the
Senate.
(7) Judgment in cases of impeachment shall not extend further than
removal from office and disqualification to hold any office under the Republic
of the Philippines, but the party convicted shall nevertheless be liable and
subject to prosecution, trial, and punishment according to law.
(8) The Congress shall promulgate its rules on impeachment to
effectively carry out the purpose of this section.
SECTION 4. The present anti-graft court known as the Sandiganbayan
shall continue to function and exercise its jurisdiction as now or hereafter
may be provided by law.
SECTION 5. There is hereby created the independent Office of the
Ombudsman, composed of the Ombudsman to be known as Tanodbayan, one overall
Deputy and at least one Deputy each for Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao. A
separate Deputy for the military establishment may likewise be appointed.
SECTION 6. The officials and employees of the Office of the
Ombudsman, other than the Deputies, shall be appointed by the Ombudsman
according to the Civil Service Law.
SECTION 7. The existing Tanodbayan shall hereafter be known as the
Office of the Special Prosecutor. It shall continue to function and exercise
its powers as now or hereafter may be provided by law, except those conferred
on the Office of the Ombudsman created under this Constitution.
SECTION 8. The Ombudsman and his Deputies shall be natural-born
citizens of the Philippines, and at the time of their appointment, at least
forty years old, of recognized probity and independence, and members of the
Philippine Bar, and must not have been candidates for any elective office in
the immediately preceding election. The Ombudsman must have for ten years or
more been a judge or engaged in the practice of law in the Philippines.
During their tenure, they shall be subject to the same
disqualifications and prohibitions as provided for in Section 2 of Article IX-A
of this Constitution.
SECTION 9. The Ombudsman and his Deputies shall be appointed by the
President from a list of at least six nominees prepared by the Judicial and Bar
Council, and from a list of three nominees for every vacancy thereafter. Such
appointments shall require no confirmation. All vacancies shall be filled
within three months after they occur.
SECTION 10. The Ombudsman and his Deputies shall have the rank of
Chairman and Members, respectively, of the Constitutional Commissions, and they
shall receive the same salary, which shall not be decreased during their term
of office.
SECTION 11. The Ombudsman and his Deputies shall serve for a term of
seven years without reappointment. They shall not be qualified to run for any
office in the election immediately succeeding their cessation from office.
SECTION 12. The Ombudsman and his Deputies, as protectors of the
people, shall act promptly on complaints filed in any form or manner against
public officials or employees of the Government, or any subdivision, agency or
instrumentality thereof, including government-owned or controlled corporations,
and shall, in appropriate cases, notify the complainants of the action taken
and the result thereof.
SECTION 13. The Office of the Ombudsman shall have the following
powers, functions, and duties:
(1) Investigate on its own, or on complaint by any person, any act
or omission of any public official, employee, office or agency, when such act
or omission appears to be illegal, unjust, improper, or inefficient.
(2) Direct, upon complaint or at its own instance, any public
official or employee of the Government, or any subdivision, agency or
instrumentality thereof, as well as of any government-owned or controlled
corporation with original charter, to perform and expedite any act or duty
required by law, or to stop, prevent, and correct any abuse or impropriety in
the performance of duties.
(3) Direct the officer concerned to take appropriate action against
a public official or employee at fault, and recommend his removal, suspension,
demotion, fine, censure, or prosecution, and ensure compliance therewith.
(4) Direct the officer concerned, in any appropriate case, and
subject to such limitations as may be provided by law, to furnish it with
copies of documents relating to contracts or transactions entered into by his
office involving the disbursement or use of public funds or properties, and
report any irregularity to the Commission on Audit for appropriate action.
(5) Request any government agency for assistance and information
necessary in the discharge of its responsibilities, and to examine, if
necessary, pertinent records and documents.
(6) Publicize matters covered by its investigation when
circumstances so warrant and with due prudence.
(7) Determine the causes of inefficiency, red tape, mismanagement,
fraud, and corruption in the Government and make recommendations for their
elimination and the observance of high standards of ethics and efficiency.
(8) Promulgate its rules of procedure and exercise such other powers
or perform such functions or duties as may be provided by law.
SECTION 14. The Office of the Ombudsman shall enjoy fiscal autonomy.
Its approved annual appropriations shall be automatically and regularly
released.
SECTION 15. The right of the State to recover properties unlawfully
acquired by public officials or employees, from them or from their nominees or
transferees, shall not be barred by prescription, laches, or estoppel.
SECTION 16. No loan, guaranty, or other form of financial
accommodation for any business purpose may be granted, directly or indirectly,
by any government-owned or controlled bank or financial institution to the
President, the Vice-President, the Members of the Cabinet, the Congress, the
Supreme Court, and the Constitutional Commissions, the Ombudsman, or to any
firm or entity in which they have controlling interest, during their tenure.
SECTION 17. A public officer or employee shall, upon assumption of
office and as often thereafter as may be required by law, submit a declaration under
oath of his assets, liabilities, and net worth. In the case of the President,
the Vice-President, the Members of the Cabinet, the Congress, the Supreme
Court, the Constitutional Commissions and other constitutional offices, and
officers of the armed forces with general or flag rank, the declaration shall
be disclosed to the public in the manner provided by law.
SECTION 18. Public officers and employees owe the State and this Constitution
allegiance at all times, and any public officer or employee who seeks to change
his citizenship or acquire the status of an immigrant of another country during
his tenure shall be dealt with by law.
ARTICLE XII: National Economy and Patrimony
SECTION 1. The goals of the national economy are a more equitable
distribution of opportunities, income, and wealth; a sustained increase in the
amount of goods and services produced by the nation for the benefit of the
people; and an expanding productivity as the key to raising the quality of life
for all, especially the underprivileged.
The State shall promote industrialization and full employment based
on sound agricultural development and agrarian reform, through industries that
make full and efficient use of human and natural resources, and which are
competitive in both domestic and foreign markets. However, the State shall
protect Filipino enterprises against unfair foreign competition and trade
practices.
In the pursuit of these goals, all sectors of the economy and all
regions of the country shall be given optimum opportunity to develop. Private
enterprises, including corporations, cooperatives, and similar collective
organizations, shall be encouraged to broaden the base of their ownership.
SECTION 2. All lands of the public domain, waters, minerals, coal,
petroleum, and other mineral oils, all forces of potential energy, fisheries,
forests or timber, wildlife, flora and fauna, and other natural resources are
owned by the State. With the exception of agricultural lands, all other natural
resources shall not be alienated. The exploration, development, and utilization
of natural resources shall be under the full control and supervision of the
State. The State may directly undertake such activities, or it may enter into
co-production, joint venture, or production-sharing agreements with Filipino
citizens, or corporations or associations at least sixty per centum of whose
capital is owned by such citizens. Such agreements may be for a period not
exceeding twenty-five years, renewable for not more than twenty-five years, and
under such terms and conditions as may be provided by law. In cases of water
rights for irrigation, water supply, fisheries, or industrial uses other than
the development of water power, beneficial use may be the measure and limit of
the grant.
The State shall protect the nation’s marine wealth in its
archipelagic waters, territorial sea, and exclusive economic zone, and reserve
its use and enjoyment exclusively to Filipino citizens.
The Congress may, by law, allow small-scale utilization of natural
resources by Filipino citizens, as well as cooperative fish farming, with
priority to subsistence fishermen and fishworkers in rivers, lakes, bays, and
lagoons.
The President may enter into agreements with foreign-owned
corporations involving either technical or financial assistance for large-scale
exploration, development, and utilization of minerals, petroleum, and other
mineral oils according to the general terms and conditions provided by law,
based on real contributions to the economic growth and general welfare of the
country. In such agreements, the State shall promote the development and use of
local scientific and technical resources.
The President shall notify the Congress of every contract entered
into in accordance with this provision, within thirty days from its execution.
SECTION 3. Lands of the public domain are classified into
agricultural, forest or timber, mineral lands, and national parks. Agricultural
lands of the public domain may be further classified by law according to the
uses which they may be devoted. Alienable lands of the public domain shall be
limited to agricultural lands. Private corporations or associations may not
hold such alienable lands of the public domain except by lease, for a period
not exceeding twenty-five years, renewable for not more than twenty-five years,
and not to exceed one thousand hectares in area. Citizens of the Philippines
may lease not more than five hundred hectares, or acquire not more than twelve
hectares thereof by purchase, homestead, or grant.
Taking into account the requirements of conservation, ecology, and
development, and subject to the requirements of agrarian reform, the Congress
shall determine, by law, the size of lands of the public domain which may be
acquired, developed, held, or leased and the conditions therefor.
SECTION 4. The Congress shall, as soon as possible, determine by law
the specific limits of forest lands and national parks, marking clearly their
boundaries on the ground. Thereafter, such forest lands and national parks
shall be conserved and may not be increased nor diminished, except by law. The
Congress shall provide, for such period as it may determine, measures to
prohibit logging in endangered forests and watershed areas.
SECTION 5. The State, subject to the provisions of this Constitution
and national development policies and programs, shall protect the rights of
indigenous cultural communities to their ancestral lands to ensure their
economic, social, and cultural well-being.
The Congress may provide for the applicability of customary laws
governing property rights or relations in determining the ownership and extent
of ancestral domain.
SECTION 6. The use of property bears a social function, and all
economic agents shall contribute to the common good. Individuals and private
groups, including corporations, cooperatives, and similar collective
organizations, shall have the right to own, establish, and operate economic
enterprises, subject to the duty of the State to promote distributive justice
and to intervene when the common good so demands.
SECTION 7. Save in cases of hereditary succession, no private lands
shall be transferred or conveyed except to individuals, corporations, or
associations qualified to acquire or hold lands of the public domain.
SECTION 8. Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 7 of this
Article, a natural-born citizen of the Philippines who has lost his Philippine
citizenship may be a transferee of private lands, subject to limitations
provided by law.
SECTION 9. The Congress may establish an independent economic and
planning agency headed by the President, which shall, after consultations with
the appropriate public agencies, various private sectors, and local government
units, recommend to Congress, and implement continuing integrated and
coordinated programs and policies for national development.
Until the Congress provides otherwise, the National Economic and
Development Authority shall function as the independent planning agency of the
government.
SECTION 10. The Congress shall, upon recommendation of the economic
and planning agency, when the national interest dictates, reserve to citizens
of the Philippines or to corporations or associations at least sixty per centum
of whose capital is owned by such citizens, or such higher percentage as
Congress may prescribe, certain areas of investments. The Congress shall enact
measures that will encourage the formation and operation of enterprises whose
capital is wholly owned by Filipinos.
In the grant of rights, privileges, and concessions covering the
national economy and patrimony, the State shall give preference to qualified
Filipinos.
The State shall regulate and exercise authority over foreign
investments within its national jurisdiction and in accordance with its
national goals and priorities.
SECTION 11. No franchise, certificate, or any other form of
authorization for the operation of a public utility shall be granted except to
citizens of the Philippines or to corporations or associations organized under
the laws of the Philippines at least sixty per centum of whose capital is owned
by such citizens, nor shall such franchise, certificate, or authorization be
exclusive in character or for a longer period than fifty years. Neither shall
any such franchise or right be granted except under the condition that it shall
be subject to amendment, alteration, or repeal by the Congress when the common
good so requires. The State shall encourage equity participation in public
utilities by the general public. The participation of foreign investors in the
governing body of any public utility enterprise shall be limited to their
proportionate share in its capital, and all the executive and managing officers
of such corporation or association must be citizens of the Philippines.
SECTION 12. The State shall promote the preferential use of Filipino
labor, domestic materials and locally produced goods, and adopt measures that
help make them competitive.
SECTION 13. The State shall pursue a trade policy that serves the
general welfare and utilizes all forms and arrangements of exchange on the
basis of equality and reciprocity.
SECTION 14. The sustained development of a reservoir of national
talents consisting of Filipino scientists, entrepreneurs, professionals,
managers, high-level technical manpower and skilled workers and craftsmen in all
fields shall be promoted by the State. The State shall encourage appropriate
technology and regulate its transfer for the national benefit.
The practice of all professions in the Philippines shall be limited
to Filipino citizens, save in cases prescribed by law.
SECTION 15. The Congress shall create an agency to promote the
viability and growth of cooperatives as instruments for social justice and
economic development.
SECTION 16. The Congress shall not, except by general law, provide
for the formation, organization, or regulation of private corporations.
Government-owned or controlled corporations may be created or established by
special charters in the interest of the common good and subject to the test of
economic viability.
SECTION 17. In times of national emergency, when the public interest
so requires, the State may, during the emergency and under reasonable terms
prescribed by it, temporarily take over or direct the operation of any
privately owned public utility or business affected with public interest.
SECTION 18. The State may, in the interest of national welfare or
defense, establish and operate vital industries and, upon payment of just
compensation, transfer to public ownership utilities and other private
enterprises to be operated by the Government.
SECTION 19. The State shall regulate or prohibit monopolies when the
public interest so requires. No combinations in restraint of trade or unfair
competition shall be allowed.
SECTION 20. The Congress shall establish an independent central monetary
authority, the members of whose governing board must be natural-born Filipino
citizens, of known probity, integrity, and patriotism, the majority of whom
shall come from the private sector. They shall also be subject to such other
qualifications and disabilities as may be prescribed by law. The authority
shall provide policy direction in the areas of money, banking, and credit. It
shall have supervision over the operations of banks and exercise such
regulatory powers as may be provided by law over the operations of finance
companies and other institutions performing similar functions.
Until the Congress otherwise provides, the Central Bank of the
Philippines, operating under existing laws, shall function as the central
monetary authority.
SECTION 21. Foreign loans may only be incurred in accordance with
law and the regulation of the monetary authority. Information on foreign loans
obtained or guaranteed by the Government shall be made available to the public.
SECTION 22. Acts which circumvent or negate any of the provisions of
this Article shall be considered inimical to the national interest and subject
to criminal and civil sanctions, as may be provided by law.
ARTICLE XIII: Social Justice and Human Rights
SECTION 1. The Congress shall give highest priority to the enactment
of measures that protect and enhance the right of all the people to human
dignity, reduce social, economic, and political inequalities, and remove
cultural inequities by equitably diffusing wealth and political power for the
common good.
To this end, the State shall regulate the acquisition, ownership,
use, and disposition of property and its increments.
SECTION 2. The promotion of social justice shall include the
commitment to create economic opportunities based on freedom of initiative and
self-reliance.
Labor
SECTION 3. The State shall afford full protection to labor, local
and overseas, organized and unorganized, and promote full employment and
equality of employment opportunities for all.
It shall guarantee the rights of all workers to self-organization,
collective bargaining and negotiations, and peaceful concerted activities,
including the right to strike in accordance with law. They shall be entitled to
security of tenure, humane conditions of work, and a living wage. They shall also
participate in policy and decision-making processes affecting their rights and
benefits as may be provided by law.
The State shall promote the principle of shared responsibility
between workers and employers and the preferential use of voluntary modes in
settling disputes, including conciliation, and shall enforce their mutual
compliance therewith to foster industrial peace.
The State shall regulate the relations between workers and
employers, recognizing the right of labor to its just share in the fruits of
production and the right of enterprises to reasonable returns on investments,
and to expansion and growth.
Agrarian and Natural Resources Reform
SECTION 4. The State shall, by law, undertake an agrarian reform
program founded on the right of farmers and regular farmworkers, who are
landless, to own directly or collectively the lands they till or, in the case
of other farmworkers, to receive a just share of the fruits thereof. To this
end, the State shall encourage and undertake the just distribution of all
agricultural lands, subject to such priorities and reasonable retention limits
as the Congress may prescribe, taking into account ecological, developmental,
or equity considerations, and subject to the payment of just compensation. In
determining retention limits, the State shall respect the right of small
landowners. The State shall further provide incentives for voluntary
land-sharing.
SECTION 5. The State shall recognize the right of farmers,
farmworkers, and landowners, as well as cooperatives, and other independent
farmers’ organizations to participate in the planning, organization, and
management of the program, and shall provide support to agriculture through
appropriate technology and research, and adequate financial, production,
marketing, and other support services.
SECTION 6. The State shall apply the principles of agrarian reform
or stewardship, whenever applicable in accordance with law, in the disposition
or utilization of other natural resources, including lands of the public domain
under lease or concession suitable to agriculture, subject to prior rights,
homestead rights of small settlers, and the rights of indigenous communities to
their ancestral lands.
The State may resettle landless farmers and farmworkers in its own
agricultural estates which shall be distributed to them in the manner provided
by law.
SECTION 7. The State shall protect the rights of subsistence
fishermen, especially of local communities, to the preferential use of local
marine and fishing resources, both inland and offshore. It shall provide
support to such fishermen through appropriate technology and research, adequate
financial, production, and marketing assistance, and other services. The State
shall also protect, develop, and conserve such resources. The protection shall
extend to offshore fishing grounds of subsistence fishermen against foreign
intrusion. Fishworkers shall receive a just share from their labor in the
utilization of marine and fishing resources.
SECTION 8. The State shall provide incentives to landowners to
invest the proceeds of the agrarian reform program to promote
industrialization, employment creation, and privatization of public sector
enterprises. Financial instruments used as payment for their lands shall be
honored as equity in enterprises of their choice.
Urban Land Reform and Housing
SECTION 9. The State shall, by law, and for the common good,
undertake, in cooperation with the public sector, a continuing program of urban
land reform and housing which will make available at affordable cost decent
housing and basic services to underprivileged and homeless citizens in urban
centers and resettlements areas. It shall also promote adequate employment
opportunities to such citizens. In the implementation of such program the State
shall respect the rights of small property owners.
SECTION 10. Urban or rural poor dwellers shall not be evicted nor
their dwellings demolished, except in accordance with law and in a just and
humane manner.
No resettlement of urban or rural dwellers shall be undertaken
without adequate consultation with them and the communities where they are to
be relocated.
Health
SECTION 11. The State shall adopt an integrated and comprehensive
approach to health development which shall endeavor to make essential goods,
health and other social services available to all the people at affordable
cost. There shall be priority for the needs of the underprivileged sick,
elderly, disabled, women, and children. The State shall endeavor to provide
free medical care to paupers.
SECTION 12. The State shall establish and maintain an effective food
and drug regulatory system and undertake appropriate health manpower
development and research, responsive to the country’s health needs and
problems.
SECTION 13. The State shall establish a special agency for disabled
persons for rehabilitation, self-development and self-reliance, and their
integration into the mainstream of society.
Women
SECTION 14. The State shall protect working women by providing safe
and healthful working conditions, taking into account their maternal functions,
and such facilities and opportunities that will enhance their welfare and
enable them to realize their full potential in the service of the nation.
Role and Rights of People’s Organizations
SECTION 15. The State shall respect the role of independent people’s
organizations to enable the people to pursue and protect, within the democratic
framework, their legitimate and collective interests and aspirations through
peaceful and lawful means.
People’s organizations are bona fide associations of citizens with
demonstrated capacity to promote the public interest and with identifiable
leadership, membership, and structure.
SECTION 16. The right of the people and their organizations to
effective and reasonable participation at all levels of social, political, and
economic decision-making shall not be abridged. The State shall, by law,
facilitate the establishment of adequate consultation mechanisms.
Human Rights
SECTION 17. (1) There is hereby created an independent office called
the Commission on Human Rights.
(2) The Commission shall be composed of a Chairman and four Members
who must be natural-born citizens of the Philippines and a majority of whom
shall be members of the Bar. The term of office and other qualifications and
disabilities of the Members of the Commission shall be provided by law.
(3) Until this Commission is constituted, the existing Presidential
Committee on Human Rights shall continue to exercise its present functions and
powers.
(4) The approved annual appropriations of the Commission shall be
automatically and regularly released.
SECTION 18. The Commission on Human Rights shall have the following
powers and functions:
(1) Investigate, on its own or on complaint by any party, all forms
of human rights violations involving civil and political rights;
(2) Adopt its operational guidelines and rules of procedure, and
cite for contempt for violations thereof in accordance with the Rules of Court;
(3) Provide appropriate legal measures for the protection of human
rights of all persons within the Philippines, as well as Filipinos residing
abroad, and provide for preventive measures and legal aid services to the
underprivileged whose human rights have been violated or need protection;
(4) Exercise visitorial powers over jails, prisons, or detention
facilities;
(5) Establish a continuing program of research, education, and
information to enhance respect for the primacy of human rights;
(6) Recommend to the Congress effective measures to promote human
rights and to provide for compensation to victims of violations of human
rights, or their families;
(7) Monitor the Philippine Government’s compliance with
international treaty obligations on human rights;
(8) Grant immunity from prosecution to any person whose testimony or
whose possession of documents or other evidence is necessary or convenient to
determine the truth in any investigation conducted by it or under its
authority;
(9) Request the assistance of any department, bureau, office, or
agency in the performance of its functions;
(10) Appoint its officers and employees in accordance with law; and
(11) Perform such other duties and
functions as may be provided by law.
SECTION 19. The Congress may provide for other cases of violations
of human rights that should fall within the authority of the Commission, taking
into account its recommendations.
ARTICLE XIV: Education, Science and Technology, Arts, Culture, and
Sports
Education
SECTION 1. The State shall protect and promote the right of all
citizens to quality education at all levels and shall take appropriate steps to
make such education accessible to all.
SECTION 2. The State shall:
(1) Establish, maintain, and support a complete, adequate, and
integrated system of education relevant to the needs of the people and society;
(2) Establish and maintain a system of free public education in the
elementary and high school levels. Without limiting the natural right of
parents to rear their children, elementary education is compulsory for all
children of school age;
(3) Establish and maintain a system of scholarship grants, student
loan programs, subsidies, and other incentives which shall be available to
deserving students in both public and private schools, especially to the
underprivileged;
(4) Encourage non-formal, informal, and indigenous learning systems,
as well as self-learning, independent, and out-of-school study programs
particularly those that respond to community needs; and
(5) Provide adult citizens, the disabled, and out-of-school youth
with training in civics, vocational efficiency, and other skills.
SECTION 3. (1) All educational institutions shall include the study
of the Constitution as part of the curricula.
(2) They shall inculcate patriotism and nationalism, foster love of
humanity, respect for human rights, appreciation of the role of national heroes
in the historical development of the country, teach the rights and duties of
citizenship, strengthen ethical and spiritual values, develop moral character
and personal discipline, encourage critical and creative thinking, broaden
scientific and technological knowledge, and promote vocational efficiency.
(3) At the option expressed in writing by the parents or guardians,
religion shall be allowed to be taught to their children or wards in public
elementary and high schools within the regular class hours by instructors
designated or approved by the religious authorities of the religion to which
the children or wards belong, without additional cost to the Government.
SECTION 4. (1) The State recognizes the complementary roles of
public and private institutions in the educational system and shall exercise
reasonable supervision and regulation of all educational institutions.
(2) Educational institutions, other than those established by
religious groups and mission boards, shall be owned solely by citizens of the
Philippines or corporations or associations at least sixty per centum of the
capital of which is owned by such citizens. The Congress may, however, require
increased Filipino equity participation in all educational institutions.
The control and administration of educational institutions shall be
vested in citizens of the Philippines.
No educational institution shall be established exclusively for
aliens and no group of aliens shall comprise more than one-third of the enrollment
in any school. The provisions of this subsection shall not apply to schools
established for foreign diplomatic personnel and their dependents and, unless
otherwise provided by law, for other foreign temporary residents.
(3) All revenues and assets of non-stock, non-profit educational
institutions used actually, directly, and exclusively for educational purposes
shall be exempt from taxes and duties. Upon the dissolution or cessation of the
corporate existence of such institutions, their assets shall be disposed of in
the manner provided by law.
Proprietary educational institutions, including those cooperatively
owned, may likewise be entitled to such exemptions subject to the limitations
provided by law including restrictions on dividends and provisions for
reinvestment.
(4) Subject to conditions prescribed by law, all grants, endowments,
donations, or contributions used actually, directly, and exclusively for
educational purposes shall be exempt from tax.
SECTION 5. (1) The State shall take into account regional and
sectoral needs and conditions and shall encourage local planning in the
development of educational policies and programs.
(2) Academic freedom shall be enjoyed in all institutions of higher
learning.
(3) Every citizen has a right to select a profession or course of
study, subject to fair, reasonable, and equitable admission and academic
requirements.
(4) The State shall enhance the right of teachers to professional
advancement. Non-teaching academic and non-academic personnel shall enjoy the
protection of the State.
(5) The State shall assign the highest budgetary priority to
education and ensure that teaching will attract and retain its rightful share
of the best available talents through adequate remuneration and other means of
job satisfaction and fulfillment.
Language
SECTION 6. The national language of the Philippines is Filipino. As
it evolves, it shall be further developed and enriched on the basis of existing
Philippine and other languages.
Subject to provisions of law and as the Congress may deem
appropriate, the Government shall take steps to initiate and sustain the use of
Filipino as a medium of official communication and as language of instruction
in the educational system.
SECTION 7. For purposes of communication and instruction, the
official languages of the Philippines are Filipino and, until otherwise
provided by law, English.
The regional languages are the auxiliary official languages in the
regions and shall serve as auxiliary media of instruction therein.
Spanish and Arabic shall be promoted on a voluntary and optional
basis.
SECTION 8. This Constitution shall be promulgated in Filipino and
English and shall be translated into major regional languages, Arabic, and
Spanish.
SECTION 9. The Congress shall establish a national language
commission composed of representatives of various regions and disciplines which
shall undertake, coordinate, and promote researches for the development,
propagation, and preservation of Filipino and other languages.
Science and Technology
SECTION 10. Science and technology are essential for national
development and progress. The State shall give priority to research and
development, invention, innovation, and their utilization; and to science and
technology education, training, and services. It shall support indigenous,
appropriate, and self-reliant scientific and technological capabilities, and
their application to the country’s productive systems and national life.
SECTION 11. The Congress may provide for incentives, including tax
deductions, to encourage private participation in programs of basic and applied
scientific research. Scholarships, grants-in-aid, or other forms of incentives
shall be provided to deserving science students, researchers, scientists,
inventors, technologists, and specially gifted citizens.
SECTION 12. The State shall regulate the transfer and promote the
adaptation of technology from all sources for the national benefit. It shall
encourage the widest participation of private groups, local governments, and
community-based organizations in the generation and utilization of science and
technology.
SECTION 13. The State shall protect and secure the exclusive rights
of scientists, inventors, artists, and other gifted citizens to their
intellectual property and creations, particularly when beneficial to the
people, for such period as may be provided by law.
Arts and Culture
SECTION 14. The State shall foster the preservation, enrichment, and
dynamic evolution of a Filipino national culture based on the principle of
unity in diversity in a climate of free artistic and intellectual expression.
SECTION 15. Arts and letters shall enjoy the patronage of the State.
The State shall conserve, promote, and popularize the nation’s historical and
cultural heritage and resources, as well as artistic creations.
SECTION 16. All the country’s artistic and historic wealth
constitutes the cultural treasure of the nation and shall be under the
protection of the State which may regulate its disposition.
SECTION 17. The State shall recognize, respect, and protect the
rights of indigenous cultural communities to preserve and develop their
cultures, traditions, and institutions. It shall consider these rights in the
formulation of national plans and policies.
SECTION 18. (1) The State shall ensure equal access to cultural
opportunities through the educational system, public or private cultural
entities, scholarships, grants and other incentives, and community cultural
centers, and other public venues.
(2) The State shall encourage and support researches and studies on
the arts and culture.
Sports
SECTION 19. (1) The State shall promote physical education and
encourage sports programs, league competitions, and amateur sports, including
training for international competitions, to foster self-discipline, teamwork,
and excellence for the development of a healthy and
alert citizenry.
(2) All educational institutions shall undertake regular sports
activities throughout the country in cooperation with athletic clubs and other
sectors.
ARTICLE XV: The Family
SECTION 1. The State recognizes the Filipino family as the
foundation of the nation. Accordingly, it shall strengthen its solidarity and
actively promote its total development.
SECTION 2. Marriage, as an inviolable social institution, is the
foundation of the family and shall be protected by the State.
SECTION 3. The State shall defend:
(1) The right of spouses to found a family in accordance with their
religious convictions and the demands of responsible parenthood;
(2) The right of children to assistance, including proper care and
nutrition, and special protection from all forms of neglect, abuse, cruelty,
exploitation, and other conditions prejudicial to their development;
(3) The right of the family to a family living wage and income; and
(4) The right of families or family associations to participate in
the planning and implementation of policies and
programs that affect them.
SECTION 4. The family has the duty to care for its elderly members
but the State may also do so through just programs of social security.
ARTICLE XVI: General Provisions
SECTION 1. The flag of the Philippines shall be red, white, and
blue, with a sun and three stars, as consecrated and honored by the people and
recognized by law.
SECTION 2. The Congress may, by law, adopt a new name for the country,
a national anthem, or a national seal, which shall all be truly reflective and
symbolic of the ideals, history, and traditions of the people. Such law shall
take effect only upon its ratification by the people in a national referendum.
SECTION 3. The State may not be sued without its consent.
SECTION 4. The Armed Forces of the Philippines shall be composed of
a citizen armed force which shall undergo military training and serve, as may
be provided by law. It shall keep a regular force necessary for the security of
the State.
SECTION 5. (1) All members of the armed forces shall take an oath or
affirmation to uphold and defend this Constitution.
(2) The State shall strengthen the patriotic spirit and nationalist
consciousness of the military, and respect for people’s rights in the
performance of their duty.
(3) Professionalism in the armed forces and adequate remuneration
and benefits of its members shall be a prime concern of the State. The armed
forces shall be insulated from partisan politics.
No member of the military shall engage directly or indirectly in any
partisan political activity, except to vote.
(4) No member of the armed forces in the active service shall, at
any time, be appointed or designated in any capacity to a civilian position in
the Government including government-owned or controlled corporations or any of
their subsidiaries.
(5) Laws on retirement of military officers shall not allow
extension of their service.
(6) The officers and men of the regular force of the armed forces
shall be recruited proportionately from all provinces and cities as far as
practicable.
(7) The tour of duty of the Chief of Staff of the armed forces shall
not exceed three years. However, in times of war or other national emergency
declared by the Congress, the President may extend such tour of duty.
SECTION 6. The State shall establish and maintain one police force,
which shall be national in scope and civilian in character, to be administered
and controlled by a national police commission. The authority of local
executives over the police units in their jurisdiction shall be provided by
law.
SECTION 7. The State shall provide immediate and adequate care,
benefits, and other forms of assistance to war veterans and veterans of
military campaigns, their surviving spouses and orphans. Funds shall be
provided therefor and due consideration shall be given them in the disposition
of agricultural lands of the public domain and, in appropriate cases, in the
utilization of natural resources.
SECTION 8. The State shall, from time to time, review to upgrade the
pensions and other benefits due to retirees of both the government and the
private sectors.
SECTION 9. The State shall protect consumers from trade malpractices
and from substandard or hazardous products.
SECTION 10. The State shall provide the policy environment for the
full development of Filipino capability and the emergence of communication
structures suitable to the needs and aspirations of the nation and the balanced
flow of information into, out of, and across the country, in accordance with a
policy that respects the freedom of speech and of the press.
SECTION 11. (1) The ownership and management of mass media shall be
limited to citizens of the Philippines, or to corporations, cooperatives or
associations, wholly-owned and managed by such citizens.
The Congress shall regulate or prohibit monopolies in commercial
mass media when the public interest so requires. No combinations in restraint
of trade or unfair competition therein shall be allowed.
(2) The advertising industry is impressed with public interest, and
shall be regulated by law for the protection of consumers and the promotion of
the general welfare.
Only Filipino citizens or corporations or associations at least
seventy per centum of the capital of which is owned by such citizens shall be
allowed to engage in the advertising industry.
The participation of foreign investors in the governing body of
entities in such industry shall be limited to their proportionate share in the
capital thereof, and all the executive and managing officers of such entities
must be citizens of the Philippines.
SECTION 12. The Congress may create a consultative body to advise
the President on policies affecting indigenous cultural communities, the
majority of the members of which shall come from such communities.
ARTICLE XVII: Amendments or Revisions
SECTION 1. Any amendment to, or revision of, this Constitution may
be proposed by:
(1) The Congress, upon a vote of three-fourths of all its Members;
or
(2) A constitutional convention.
SECTION 2. Amendments to this Constitution may likewise be directly
proposed by the people through initiative upon a petition of at least twelve
per centum of the total number of registered voters, of which every legislative
district must be represented by at least three per centum of the registered
voters therein. No amendment under this section shall be authorized within five
years following the ratification of this Constitution nor oftener than once
every five years thereafter.
The Congress shall provide for the implementation of the exercise of
this right.
SECTION 3. The Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of all its
Members, call a constitutional convention, or by a majority vote of all its
Members, submit to the electorate the question of calling such a convention.
SECTION 4. Any amendment to, or revision of, this Constitution under
Section 1 hereof shall be valid when ratified by a majority of the votes cast
in a plebiscite which shall be held not earlier than sixty days nor later than
ninety days after the approval of such amendment or revision.
Any amendment under Section 2 hereof
shall be valid when ratified by a majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite
which shall be held not earlier than sixty days nor later than ninety days
after the certification by the Commission on Elections of the sufficiency of
the petition.
ARTICLE XVIII
Transitory Provisions
SECTION 1. The first elections of Members of the Congress under this
Constitution shall be held on the second Monday of May, 1987.
The first local elections shall be held on a date to be determined
by the President, which may be simultaneous with the election of the Members of
the Congress. It shall include the election of all Members of the city or
municipal councils in the Metropolitan Manila area.
SECTION 2. The Senators, Members of the House of Representatives,
and the local officials first elected under this Constitution shall serve until
noon of June 30, 1992.
Of the Senators elected in the election of 1992, the first twelve
obtaining the highest number of votes shall serve for six years and the
remaining twelve for three years.
SECTION 3. All existing laws, decrees, executive orders,
proclamations, letters of instructions, and other executive issuances not
inconsistent with this Constitution shall remain operative until amended,
repealed, or revoked.
SECTION 4. All existing treaties or international agreements which
have not been ratified shall not be renewed or extended without the concurrence
of at least two-thirds of all the Members of the Senate.
SECTION 5. The six-year term of the incumbent President and
Vice-President elected in the February 7, 1986 election is, for purposes of
synchronization of elections, hereby extended to noon of June 30, 1992.
The first regular elections for the President and Vice-President
under this Constitution shall be held on the second Monday of May, 1992.
SECTION 6. The incumbent President shall continue to exercise
legislative powers until the first Congress is convened.
SECTION 7. Until a law is passed, the President may fill by
appointment from a list of nominees by the respective sectors the seats
reserved for sectoral representation in paragraph (2), Section 5 of Article VI
of this Constitution.
SECTION 8. Until otherwise provided by the Congress, the President
may constitute the Metropolitan Authority to be composed of the heads of all
local government units comprising the Metropolitan Manila area.
SECTION 9. A sub-province shall continue to exist and operate until
it is converted into a regular province or until its component municipalities
are reverted to the mother province.
SECTION 10. All courts existing at the time of the ratification of
this Constitution shall continue to exercise their jurisdiction, until
otherwise provided by law. The provisions of the existing Rules of Court,
judiciary acts, and procedural laws not inconsistent with this Constitution
shall remain operative unless amended or repealed by the Supreme Court or the
Congress.
SECTION 11. The incumbent Members of the Judiciary shall continue in
office until they reach the age of seventy years or become incapacitated to
discharge the duties of their office or are removed for cause.
SECTION 12. The Supreme Court shall, within one year after the
ratification of this Constitution, adopt a systematic plan to expedite the
decision or resolution of cases or matters pending in the Supreme Court or the
lower courts prior to the effectivity of this Constitution. A similar plan
shall be adopted for all special courts and quasi-judicial bodies.
SECTION 13. The legal effect of the lapse, before the ratification
of this Constitution, of the applicable period for the decision or resolution
of the cases or matters submitted for adjudication by the courts, shall be
determined by the Supreme Court as soon as practicable.
SECTION 14. The provisions of paragraphs (3) and (4), Section 15 of
Article VIII of this Constitution shall apply to cases or matters filed before
the ratification of this Constitution, when the applicable period lapses after
such ratification.
SECTION 15. The incumbent Members of the Civil Service Commission,
the Commission on Elections, and the Commission on Audit shall continue in
office for one year after the ratification of this Constitution, unless they
are sooner removed for cause or become incapacitated to discharge the duties of
their office or appointed to a new term thereunder. In no case shall any Member
serve longer than seven years including service before the ratification of this
Constitution.
SECTION 16. Career civil service employees separated from the
service not for cause but as a result of the reorganization pursuant to
Proclamation No. 3 dated March 25, 1986 and the reorganization following the
ratification of this Constitution shall be entitled to appropriate separation
pay and to retirement and other benefits accruing to them under the laws of
general application in force at the time of their separation. In lieu thereof,
at the option of the employees, they may be considered for employment in the
Government or in any of its subdivisions, instrumentalities, or agencies,
including government-owned or controlled corporations and their subsidiaries.
This provision also applies to career officers whose resignation, tendered in
line with the existing policy, had been accepted.
SECTION 17. Until the Congress provides otherwise, the President
shall receive an annual salary of three hundred thousand pesos; the
Vice-President, the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, and the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, two hundred forty
thousand pesos each; the Senators, the Members of the House of Representatives,
the Associate Justices of the Supreme Court, and the Chairmen of the
Constitutional Commissions, two hundred four thousand pesos each; and the Members
of the Constitutional Commissions, one hundred eighty thousand pesos each.
SECTION 18. At the earliest possible time, the Government shall
increase the salary scales of the other officials and employees of the National
Government.
SECTION 19. All properties, records, equipment, buildings,
facilities, and other assets of any office or body abolished or reorganized
under Proclamation No. 3 dated March 25, 1986 or this Constitution shall be
transferred to the office or body to which its powers, functions, and
responsibilities substantially pertain.
SECTION 20. The first Congress shall give priority to the
determination of the period for the full implementation of free public
secondary education.
SECTION 21. The Congress shall provide efficacious procedures and
adequate remedies for the reversion to the State of all lands of the public
domain and real rights connected therewith which were acquired in violation of
the Constitution or the public land laws, or through corrupt practices. No
transfer or disposition of such lands or real rights shall be allowed until
after the lapse of one year from the ratification of this Constitution.
SECTION 22. At the earliest possible time, the Government shall
expropriate idle or abandoned agricultural lands as may be defined by law, for
distribution to the beneficiaries of the agrarian reform program.
SECTION 23. Advertising entities affected by paragraph (2), Section
11 of Article XVI of this Constitution shall have five years from its
ratification to comply on a graduated and proportionate basis with the minimum
Filipino ownership requirement therein.
SECTION 24. Private armies and other armed groups not recognized by
duly constituted authority shall be dismantled. All paramilitary forces
including Civilian Home Defense Forces not consistent with the citizen armed
force established in this Constitution, shall be dissolved or, where
appropriate, converted into the regular force.
SECTION 25. After the expiration in 1991 of the Agreement between
the Republic of the Philippines and the United States of America concerning
Military Bases, foreign military bases, troops, or facilities shall not be
allowed in the Philippines except under a treaty duly concurred in by the
Senate and, when the Congress so requires, ratified by a majority of the votes
cast by the people in a national referendum held for that purpose, and
recognized as a treaty by the other contracting State.
SECTION 26. The authority to issue sequestration or freeze orders
under Proclamation No. 3 dated March 25, 1986 in relation to the recovery of
ill-gotten wealth shall remain operative for not more than eighteen months
after the ratification of this Constitution. However, in the national interest,
as certified by the President, the Congress may extend said period.
A sequestration or freeze order shall be issued only upon showing of
a prima facie case. The order and the list of the sequestered or frozen
properties shall forthwith be registered with the proper court. For orders
issued before the ratification of this Constitution, the corresponding judicial
action or proceeding shall be filed within six months from its ratification.
For those issued after such ratification, the judicial action or proceeding
shall be commenced within six months from the issuance thereof.
The sequestration or freeze order is deemed automatically lifted if
no judicial action or proceeding is commenced as herein provided.
SECTION 27. This Constitution shall take effect immediately upon its
ratification by a majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held for the
purpose and shall supersede all previous Constitutions.
Eighth Congress
Republic Act No. 6713
February 20, 1989
AN ACT ESTABLISHING A CODE OF
CONDUCT AND ETHICAL STANDARDS FOR PUBLIC OFFICIALS AND EMPLOYEES, TO UPHOLD THE
TIME-HONORED PRINCIPLE OF PUBLIC OFFICE BEING A PUBLIC TRUST, GRANTING
INCENTIVES AND REWARDS FOR EXEMPLARY SERVICE, ENUMERATING PROHIBITED ACTS AND
TRANSACTIONS AND PROVIDING PENALTIES FOR VIOLATIONS THEREOF AND FOR OTHER
PURPOSES
Be it enacted by the Senate and
House of Representatives of the Philippines in Congress assembled:
Section 1. Title. -
This Act shall be known as the "Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for
Public Officials and Employees."
Section 2. Declaration
of Policies. - It is the policy of the State to promote a high
standard of ethics in public service. Public officials and employees shall at
all times be accountable to the people and shall discharge their duties with
utmost responsibility, integrity, competence, and loyalty, act with patriotism
and justice, lead modest lives, and uphold public interest over personal
interest.
Section 3. Definition
of Terms. - As used in this Act, the term:
(a)
"Government" includes the National Government, the local governments,
and all other instrumentalities, agencies or branches of the Republic of the
Philippines including government-owned or controlled corporations, and their
subsidiaries.lawphi1.net
(b)
"Public Officials" includes elective and appointive officials and
employees, permanent or temporary, whether in the career or non-career service,
including military and police personnel, whether or not they receive
compensation, regardless of amount.
(c)
"Gift" refers to a thing or a right to dispose of gratuitously, or
any act or liberality, in favor of another who accepts it, and shall include a
simulated sale or an ostensibly onerous disposition thereof. It shall not
include an unsolicited gift of nominal or insignificant value not given in
anticipation of, or in exchange for, a favor from a public official or
employee.
(d)
"Receiving any gift" includes the act of accepting directly or
indirectly, a gift from a person other than a member of his family or relative
as defined in this Act, even on the occasion of a family celebration or national
festivity like Christmas, if the value of the gift is neither nominal nor
insignificant, or the gift is given in anticipation of, or in exchange for, a
favor.
(e)
"Loan" covers both simple loan and commodatum as well as guarantees,
financing arrangements or accommodations intended to ensure its approval.
(f)
"Substantial stockholder" means any person who owns, directly or
indirectly, shares of stock sufficient to elect a director of a corporation.
This term shall also apply to the parties to a voting trust.
(g)
"Family of public officials or employees" means their spouses and
unmarried children under eighteen (18) years of age.
(h)
"Person" includes natural and juridical persons unless the context
indicates otherwise.
(i)
"Conflict of interest" arises when a public official or employee is a
member of a board, an officer, or a substantial stockholder of a private
corporation or owner or has a substantial interest in a business, and the
interest of such corporation or business, or his rights or duties therein, may
be opposed to or affected by the faithful performance of official duty.
(j)
"Divestment" is the transfer of title or disposal of interest in
property by voluntarily, completely and actually depriving or dispossessing
oneself of his right or title to it in favor of a person or persons other than
his spouse and relatives as defined in this Act.
(k)
"Relatives" refers to any and all persons related to a public
official or employee within the fourth civil degree of consanguinity or
affinity, including bilas, inso and balae.
Section 4. Norms
of Conduct of Public Officials and Employees. - (A) Every public
official and employee shall observe the following as standards of personal
conduct in the discharge and execution of official duties:
(a)
Commitment to public interest. - Public officials and employees shall always
uphold the public interest over and above personal interest. All government
resources and powers of their respective offices must be employed and used
efficiently, effectively, honestly and economically, particularly to avoid
wastage in public funds and revenues.
(b)
Professionalism. - Public officials and employees shall perform and discharge
their duties with the highest degree of excellence, professionalism,
intelligence and skill. They shall enter public service with utmost devotion
and dedication to duty. They shall endeavor to discourage wrong perceptions of
their roles as dispensers or peddlers of undue patronage.
(c)
Justness and sincerity. - Public officials and employees shall remain true to
the people at all times. They must act with justness and sincerity and shall
not discriminate against anyone, especially the poor and the underprivileged.
They shall at all times respect the rights of others, and shall refrain from
doing acts contrary to law, good morals, good customs, public policy, public
order, public safety and public interest. They shall not dispense or extend
undue favors on account of their office to their relatives whether by
consanguinity or affinity except with respect to appointments of such relatives
to positions considered strictly confidential or as members of their personal
staff whose terms are coterminous with theirs.
(d)
Political neutrality. - Public officials and employees shall provide service to
everyone without unfair discrimination and regardless of party affiliation or
preference.
(e)
Responsiveness to the public. - Public officials and employees shall extend
prompt, courteous, and adequate service to the public. Unless otherwise
provided by law or when required by the public interest, public officials and
employees shall provide information of their policies and procedures in clear
and understandable language, ensure openness of information, public
consultations and hearings whenever appropriate, encourage suggestions,
simplify and systematize policy, rules and procedures, avoid red tape and
develop an understanding and appreciation of the socio-economic conditions
prevailing in the country, especially in the depressed rural and urban areas.
(f)
Nationalism and patriotism. - Public officials and employees shall at all times
be loyal to the Republic and to the Filipino people, promote the use of locally
produced goods, resources and technology and encourage appreciation and pride
of country and people. They shall endeavor to maintain and defend Philippine
sovereignty against foreign intrusion.
(g)
Commitment to democracy. - Public officials and employees shall commit
themselves to the democratic way of life and values, maintain the principle of
public accountability, and manifest by deeds the supremacy of civilian
authority over the military. They shall at all times uphold the Constitution
and put loyalty to country above loyalty to persons or party.
(h)
Simple living. - Public officials and employees and their families shall lead
modest lives appropriate to their positions and income. They shall not indulge
in extravagant or ostentatious display of wealth in any form.
(B) The
Civil Service Commission shall adopt positive measures to promote (1)
observance of these standards including the dissemination of information
programs and workshops authorizing merit increases beyond regular progression
steps, to a limited number of employees recognized by their office colleagues
to be outstanding in their observance of ethical standards; and (2) continuing
research and experimentation on measures which provide positive motivation to
public officials and employees in raising the general level of observance of
these standards.
Section 5. Duties
of Public Officials and Employees. - In the performance of their
duties, all public officials and employees are under obligation to:lawphi1.net
(a) Act
promptly on letters and requests. - All public officials and employees shall,
within fifteen (15) working days from receipt thereof, respond to letters,
telegrams or other means of communications sent by the public. The reply must
contain the action taken on the request.
(b)
Submit annual performance reports. - All heads or other responsible officers of
offices and agencies of the government and of government-owned or controlled
corporations shall, within forty-five (45) working days from the end of the
year, render a performance report of the agency or office or corporation
concerned. Such report shall be open and available to the public within regular
office hours.
(c)
Process documents and papers expeditiously. - All official papers and documents
must be processed and completed within a reasonable time from the preparation
thereof and must contain, as far as practicable, not more than three (3)
signatories therein. In the absence of duly authorized signatories, the
official next-in-rank or officer in charge shall sign for and in their behalf.
(d) Act
immediately on the public's personal transactions. - All public officials and
employees must attend to anyone who wants to avail himself of the services of
their offices and must, at all times, act promptly and expeditiously.
(e) Make
documents accessible to the public. - All public documents must be made
accessible to, and readily available for inspection by, the public within
reasonable working hours.
Section 6. System
of Incentives and Rewards. - A system of annual incentives and rewards
is hereby established in order to motivate and inspire public servants to
uphold the highest standards of ethics. For this purpose, a Committee on Awards
to Outstanding Public Officials and Employees is hereby created composed of the
following: the Ombudsman and Chairman of the Civil Service Commission as
Co-Chairmen, and the Chairman of the Commission on Audit, and two government
employees to be appointed by the President, as members.
It shall be the task of this Committee to conduct a
periodic, continuing review of the performance of public officials and
employees, in all the branches and agencies of Government and establish a
system of annual incentives and rewards to the end that due recognition is
given to public officials and employees of outstanding merit on the basis of
the standards set forth in this Act.
The conferment of awards shall take into account,
among other things, the following: the years of service and the quality and
consistency of performance, the obscurity of the position, the level of salary,
the unique and exemplary quality of a certain achievement, and the risks or
temptations inherent in the work. Incentives and rewards to government
officials and employees of the year to be announced in public ceremonies
honoring them may take the form of bonuses, citations, directorships in
government-owned or controlled corporations, local and foreign scholarship
grants, paid vacations and the like. They shall likewise be automatically
promoted to the next higher position with the commensurate salary suitable to
their qualifications. In case there is no next higher position or it is not
vacant, said position shall be included in the budget of the office in the next
General Appropriations Act. The Committee on Awards shall adopt its own rules
to govern the conduct of its activities.
Section 7. Prohibited
Acts and Transactions. - In addition to acts and omissions of public
officials and employees now prescribed in the Constitution and existing laws,
the following shall constitute prohibited acts and transactions of any public
official and employee and are hereby declared to be unlawful:
(a)
Financial and material interest. - Public officials and employees shall not,
directly or indirectly, have any financial or material interest in any
transaction requiring the approval of their office.
(b)
Outside employment and other activities related thereto. - Public officials and
employees during their incumbency shall not:
(1) Own,
control, manage or accept employment as officer, employee, consultant, counsel,
broker, agent, trustee or nominee in any private enterprise regulated,
supervised or licensed by their office unless expressly allowed by law;
(2)
Engage in the private practice of their profession unless authorized by the
Constitution or law, provided, that such practice will not conflict or tend to
conflict with their official functions; or
(3)
Recommend any person to any position in a private enterprise which has a
regular or pending official transaction with their office.
These
prohibitions shall continue to apply for a period of one (1) year after
resignation, retirement, or separation from public office, except in the case
of subparagraph (b) (2) above, but the professional concerned cannot practice
his profession in connection with any matter before the office he used to be
with, in which case the one-year prohibition shall likewise apply.
(c)
Disclosure and/or misuse of confidential information. - Public officials and
employees shall not use or divulge, confidential or classified information
officially known to them by reason of their office and not made available to
the public, either:
(1) To
further their private interests, or give undue advantage to anyone; or
(2) To
prejudice the public interest.
(d)
Solicitation or acceptance of gifts. - Public officials and employees shall not
solicit or accept, directly or indirectly, any gift, gratuity, favor, entertainment,
loan or anything of monetary value from any person in the course of their
official duties or in connection with any operation being regulated by, or any
transaction which may be affected by the functions of their office.
As to
gifts or grants from foreign governments, the Congress consents to:
(i) The
acceptance and retention by a public official or employee of a gift of nominal
value tendered and received as a souvenir or mark of courtesy;
(ii) The
acceptance by a public official or employee of a gift in the nature of a
scholarship or fellowship grant or medical treatment; or
(iii) The
acceptance by a public official or employee of travel grants or expenses for
travel taking place entirely outside the Philippine (such as allowances,
transportation, food, and lodging) of more than nominal value if such
acceptance is appropriate or consistent with the interests of the Philippines,
and permitted by the head of office, branch or agency to which he belongs.
The
Ombudsman shall prescribe such regulations as may be necessary to carry out the
purpose of this subsection, including pertinent reporting and disclosure
requirements.
Nothing
in this Act shall be construed to restrict or prohibit any educational,
scientific or cultural exchange programs subject to national security
requirements.
Section 8. Statements
and Disclosure. - Public officials and employees have an obligation to
accomplish and submit declarations under oath of, and the public has the right
to know, their assets, liabilities, net worth and financial and business
interests including those of their spouses and of unmarried children under
eighteen (18) years of age living in their households.
(A)
Statements of Assets and Liabilities and Financial Disclosure. - All public
officials and employees, except those who serve in an honorary capacity,
laborers and casual or temporary workers, shall file under oath their Statement
of Assets, Liabilities and Net Worth and a Disclosure of Business Interests and
Financial Connections and those of their spouses and unmarried children under
eighteen (18) years of age living in their households.
The two
documents shall contain information on the following:
(a) real
property, its improvements, acquisition costs, assessed value and current fair
market value;
(b)
personal property and acquisition cost;
(c) all
other assets such as investments, cash on hand or in banks, stocks, bonds, and
the like;
(d)
liabilities, and;
(e) all
business interests and financial connections.
The
documents must be filed:
(a)
within thirty (30) days after assumption of office;
(b) on or
before April 30, of every year thereafter; and
(c)
within thirty (30) days after separation from the service.
All
public officials and employees required under this section to file the
aforestated documents shall also execute, within thirty (30) days from the date
of their assumption of office, the necessary authority in favor of the
Ombudsman to obtain from all appropriate government agencies, including the
Bureau of Internal Revenue, such documents as may show their assets,
liabilities, net worth, and also their business interests and financial
connections in previous years, including, if possible, the year when they first
assumed any office in the Government.
Husband
and wife who are both public officials or employees may file the required
statements jointly or separately.
The
Statements of Assets, Liabilities and Net Worth and the Disclosure of Business
Interests and Financial Connections shall be filed by:
(1)
Constitutional and national elective officials, with the national office of the
Ombudsman;
(2)
Senators and Congressmen, with the Secretaries of the Senate and the House of
Representatives, respectively; Justices, with the Clerk of Court of the Supreme
Court; Judges, with the Court Administrator; and all national executive
officials with the Office of the President.
(3)
Regional and local officials and employees, with the Deputy Ombudsman in their
respective regions;
(4)
Officers of the armed forces from the rank of colonel or naval captain, with
the Office of the President, and those below said ranks, with the Deputy
Ombudsman in their respective regions; and
(5) All
other public officials and employees, defined in Republic Act No. 3019, as
amended, with the Civil Service Commission.
(B) Identification and disclosure of relatives. -
It shall be the duty of every public official or employee to identify and
disclose, to the best of his knowledge and information, his relatives in the
Government in the form, manner and frequency prescribed by the Civil Service
Commission.
(C) Accessibility of documents. - (1) Any and all
statements filed under this Act, shall be made available for inspection at
reasonable hours.
(2) Such
statements shall be made available for copying or reproduction after ten (10) working
days from the time they are filed as required by law.
(3) Any
person requesting a copy of a statement shall be required to pay a reasonable
fee to cover the cost of reproduction and mailing of such statement, as well as
the cost of certification.
(4) Any
statement filed under this Act shall be available to the public for a period of
ten (10) years after receipt of the statement. After such period, the statement
may be destroyed unless needed in an ongoing investigation.
(D) Prohibited acts. - It shall be unlawful for any
person to obtain or use any statement filed under this Act for:
(a) any
purpose contrary to morals or public policy; or
(b) any
commercial purpose other than by news and communications media for
dissemination to the general public.
Section 9. Divestment. -
A public official or employee shall avoid conflicts of interest at all times.
When a conflict of interest arises, he shall resign from his position in any
private business enterprise within thirty (30) days from his assumption of office
and/or divest himself of his shareholdings or interest within sixty (60) days
from such assumption.
The same rule shall apply where the public official
or employee is a partner in a partnership.
The requirement of divestment shall not apply to
those who serve the Government in an honorary capacity nor to laborers and
casual or temporary workers.
Section 10. Review
and Compliance Procedure. - (a) The designated Committees of both
Houses of the Congress shall establish procedures for the review of statements
to determine whether said statements which have been submitted on time, are
complete, and are in proper form. In the event a determination is made that a
statement is not so filed, the appropriate Committee shall so inform the
reporting individual and direct him to take the necessary corrective action.
(b) In
order to carry out their responsibilities under this Act, the designated
Committees of both Houses of Congress shall have the power within their
respective jurisdictions, to render any opinion interpreting this Act, in
writing, to persons covered by this Act, subject in each instance to the
approval by affirmative vote of the majority of the particular House concerned.
The
individual to whom an opinion is rendered, and any other individual involved in
a similar factual situation, and who, after issuance of the opinion acts in
good faith in accordance with it shall not be subject to any sanction provided
in this Act.
(c) The
heads of other offices shall perform the duties stated in subsections (a) and
(b) hereof insofar as their respective offices are concerned, subject to the
approval of the Secretary of Justice, in the case of the Executive Department
and the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, in the case of the Judicial
Department.
Section 11. Penalties. -
(a) Any public official or employee, regardless of whether or not he holds
office or employment in a casual, temporary, holdover, permanent or regular
capacity, committing any violation of this Act shall be punished with a fine
not exceeding the equivalent of six (6) months' salary or suspension not
exceeding one (1) year, or removal depending on the gravity of the offense
after due notice and hearing by the appropriate body or agency. If the
violation is punishable by a heavier penalty under another law, he shall be
prosecuted under the latter statute. Violations of Sections 7, 8 or 9 of this
Act shall be punishable with imprisonment not exceeding five (5) years, or a
fine not exceeding five thousand pesos (P5,000), or both, and, in the discretion
of the court of competent jurisdiction, disqualification to hold public office.
(b) Any
violation hereof proven in a proper administrative proceeding shall be
sufficient cause for removal or dismissal of a public official or employee,
even if no criminal prosecution is instituted against him.
(c)
Private individuals who participate in conspiracy as co-principals, accomplices
or accessories, with public officials or employees, in violation of this Act,
shall be subject to the same penal liabilities as the public officials or
employees and shall be tried jointly with them.
(d) The
official or employee concerned may bring an action against any person who
obtains or uses a report for any purpose prohibited by Section 8 (D) of this
Act. The Court in which such action is brought may assess against such person a
penalty in any amount not to exceed twenty-five thousand pesos (P25,000). If
another sanction hereunder or under any other law is heavier, the latter shall
apply.
Section 12. Promulgation
of Rules and Regulations, Administration and Enforcement of this Act. -
The Civil Service Commission shall have the primary responsibility for the
administration and enforcement of this Act. It shall transmit all cases for
prosecution arising from violations of this Act to the proper authorities for
appropriate action: Provided, however, That it may institute such
administrative actions and disciplinary measures as may be warranted in
accordance with law. Nothing in this provision shall be construed as a
deprivation of the right of each House of Congress to discipline its Members
for disorderly behavior.
The Civil Service Commission is hereby authorized
to promulgate rules and regulations necessary to carry out the provisions of
this Act, including guidelines for individuals who render free voluntary
service to the Government. The Ombudsman shall likewise take steps to protect
citizens who denounce acts or omissions of public officials and employees which
are in violation of this Act.
Section 13. Provisions
for More Stringent Standards. - Nothing in this Act shall be construed
to derogate from any law, or any regulation prescribed by any body or agency,
which provides for more stringent standards for its official and employees.
Section 14. Appropriations. -
The sum necessary for the effective implementation of this Act shall be taken
from the appropriations of the Civil Service Commission. Thereafter, such sum
as may be needed for its continued implementation shall be included in the
annual General Appropriations Act.
Section 15. Separability
Clause. - If any provision of this Act or the application of such
provision to any person or circumstance is declared invalid, the remainder of
the Act or the application of such provision to other persons or circumstances
shall not be affected by such declaration.
Section 16. Repealing
Clause. - All laws, decrees and orders or parts thereof inconsistent
herewith, are deemed repealed or modified accordingly, unless the same provide
for a heavier penalty.
Section 17. Effectivity. -
This Act shall take effect after thirty (30) days following the completion of
its publication in the Official Gazette or in two (2) national newspapers of
general circulation.
Approved, February 20, 1989.