House Deputy Minority Leader and ACT Teachers party-list Rep. Antonio Tinio has condemned Senator Robinhood Padilla’s proposal to lower the age of criminal responsibility from 15 to 10 years old as barbaric and fundamentally wrong. Tinio stressed that existing laws already provide adequate mechanisms to address offenses committed by minors without resorting to criminalization of children.
Under the Juvenile Justice and Welfare Act, children in conflict with the law undergo a diversion process and are referred to rehabilitation facilities such as Bahay Pag-asa rather than being imprisoned. The law recognizes that children require rehabilitation and support, not punishment. Padilla’s proposal would abandon this protective framework and convert children into criminals.
“The proposal to imprison 10-year-olds is barbaric. It represents the ultimate abdication of government responsibility,” Tinio said. “Rather than addressing the root causes of youth violence—chronic underfunding, severe shortages of guidance counselors, overcrowded classrooms, and inadequate psychosocial support—this proposal would criminalize vulnerable children instead of providing the care they desperately need.”
Tinio emphasized that lowering the criminal age would punish children who may themselves be victims of adult influence, exploitation, or circumstances beyond their control. The priority must be holding accountable the adults who exploit and influence children, not imprisoning the children themselves.
“Violence develops within social conditions marked by poverty, family distress, and the erosion of public services. The government created these conditions through decades of corruption and underfunding. Now it proposes to punish children instead of addressing its own failures,” Tinio said. “This is not justice. This is cruelty.”
“The proposal would also disproportionately affect poor and marginalized children, who are already targetted in the present criminal justice system. Wealthy children would escape through family resources; poor children would be imprisoned. Public schools already face shortages of 150,000 teachers and 160,000 classrooms nationwide, while thousands lack guidance counselors, nurses, and mental health professionals,” he added
“Ang pagbaba ng edad ng criminal responsibility sa 10 taong gulang ay hindi makatao at walang kaluluwa. Ito ay kriminalisasyon ng mga batang Pilipino dahil sa kabiguan ng pamahalaan. Hindi dapat ikulong ang mga bata dahil sa kapabayaan at kahirapan. Ang mga bata ay biktima, hindi kriminal,” said the teacher solon.
Tinio reiterated that existing juvenile justice laws already provide appropriate mechanisms for addressing offenses by minors but needs to be implemented properly. These laws prioritize rehabilitation and diversion, not incarceration. Padilla’s proposal would destroy this protective framework and convert the criminal justice system into a tool for punishing poverty and childhood vulnerability.
“Safe schools require social investment and genuine commitment to youth welfare, not barbaric criminalization of children. Congress must reject this proposal and instead increase education funding, hire more counselors and mental health professionals, and strengthen community support systems,” Tinio said.
“Ang mga bata ay nangangailangan ng pag-asa, edukasyon, at pag-aalaga—hindi ng kulungan. Ang accountability ay dapat sa mga matatanda na nang-aabuso at ginagamit ang mga bata, hindi sa mga bata mismo,” Tinio concluded. #
