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Something You NEED To Know / The Barangay System In The Philippines

πŸ“… 2021-05-14⏱ 19:59
πŸ“… 2021-05-14 Β |Β  ⏱️ 19:59 Β |Β  πŸ‘οΈ 39.7K views Β |Β  πŸ‘ 4.4K likes Β |Β  πŸ’¬ 1K comments

Pea interviews an actual barangay official named Seth to explain the Philippine barangay system β€” the smallest unit of local government that handles everything from neighborhood disputes to domestic violence protection orders. The interview reveals a system that functions as part local police, part couples counselor, and part neighborhood court, dealing with complaints ranging from gossip to stabbings at cockfights.

What a barangay is and its basic structure ​

  • The smallest local government unit in the Philippines, also called a barrio
  • Consists of at least 50 families in one neighborhood or territory
  • Governed by a barangay captain (chairman) who acts as liaison between national government and citizens
  • Each barangay has seven elected barangay officials (kagawads) β€” this structure is uniform across the Philippines
  • Seth's barangay covers more than 3,000 families, which Pea compares to a county or state in scale

Barangay police (tanods) ​

  • Each barangay has its own police force called barangay tanods
  • Seth's barangay has 13 tanods (12 plus a chief), but the number depends on each barangay's budget
  • Tanods are armed only with batons β€” no firearms, no gas, no knives
  • They do carry handcuffs
  • The Philippine National Police (PNP) has higher authority since they're under the city level; barangay police only handle their barangay's vicinity
  • Key advantage of calling barangay police over PNP: much faster response time, especially for non-critical situations

How barangay officials are elected ​

  • Elections use handwritten ballots β€” voters write their preferred candidate's name and drop it in a ballot box
  • For illiterate voters: a close family member assists them in writing/shading their ballot
  • Each candidate has an official "watcher" to observe the process for fairness
  • Vote buying is common and acknowledged β€” Seth admits it's illegal and not good practice but says "we can't deny that it happens"
  • Pea appreciates his honesty, noting that most government officials would flatly deny vote buying
  • Large families have a significant electoral advantage β€” a clan of 200 members gives their preferred candidate a built-in vote bloc

Most common complaints and disputes handled ​

  • Chismis (gossip) is the #1 complaint β€” Pea calls it "the national sport of the Philippines"
    • It is actually illegal in the Philippines to talk badly about your neighbor, call them names, or tarnish their image β€” even if it's your opinion and even if it's true
    • This extends to social media, where it's classified as cyberbullying
    • Barangay officials have to mediate these gossip disputes
  • Third-party relationship disputes
    • If someone has a third party in their relationship (cheating), the aggrieved party can bring it to the barangay
    • This applies regardless of marital status β€” even boyfriend/girlfriend situations
    • Barangay officials must dissolve any resulting commotion, including literal cat fights
    • Cat fights often happen when the women involved are drunk, particularly after drinking Philippine red wine
    • Seth says they sometimes need to call actual police for backup because they "can't handle anymore, especially if the girls are drunk"
  • Drunken brawls among men
    • Male fights are more dangerous because they involve machetes and other deadly weapons
    • This is described as common, especially during drinking sessions

Violence Against Women and Children (VAWC) and protection orders ​

  • The barangay handles VAWC cases and can issue Barangay Protection Orders (BPOs)
  • A battered wife can request a BPO from the barangay for her safety
  • The BPO requires the husband to stay at least 10 meters away from the wife's location
  • Pea finds 10 meters absurdly close compared to Western restraining orders (typically 500 feet)
  • Even if the husband stays beyond 10 meters, he can't harass the wife β€” verbal harassment from any distance still counts as "verbal violence"
  • Stealing roosters intended for cockfighting is a serious and common crime β€” fighting roosters are extremely valuable
  • Cockfighting with a permit in an official coliseum is legal; fighting without a permit or outside the coliseum is illegal and subject to police raids
  • Pea personally dislikes cockfighting

Seth's most dangerous call ​

  • A stabbing at a cockfight β€” a man lost a bet and got stabbed, then someone else retaliated
  • Cockfights produce not just dead roosters but dead people because emotions and gambling stakes run extremely high
  • He also mentions family disputes where a father attacked his own son with a machete during an argument
  • Pea reacts with shock: "that's really serious because it's like murder β€” well, it IS murder"

Child support disputes ​

  • Residents come to the barangay to request enforcement of child support from absent parents
  • This is listed among the regular responsibilities alongside peace and order

Pea's overall assessment ​

  • She expresses genuine appreciation for dedicated barangay officials who respond to emergencies and keep the peace
  • Acknowledges the enormous scope of responsibility β€” from gossip mediation to attempted murder β€” handled by officials armed with nothing more than batons

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