UK Sees Supply-Chain Gains as Philippines Joins CPTPP Accession Pipeline
The Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership is moving toward a new phase of expansion, with member economies agreeing to start preparatory discussions on potential...
Gokongwei to Take 15% Stake in PhilWeb With ₱2 Billion AI Push
PhilWeb Corp. secured a strategic equity investment of about ₱2.03 billion from businessman Lance Y. Gokongwei, giving the listed technology firm fresh capital to accelerate its expansion into...
Philippines Defies Panel Market Slowdown With 145% Jump in Solar Imports
Filipino households are rushing to install rooftop solar systems in response to some of Southeast Asia’s highest electricity prices, propelling the Philippines to the top of global spending on...
GSIS Under Veloso, Blancaflor Targets Faster Payouts After Magnitude 7.8 Quake
The Government Service Insurance System has set aside an initial ₱69.1 million in loss reserves to cover potential insurance claims from government properties damaged in the magnitude 7.8...
Non-Partisan Tax Formula to Drive Higher 2027 Funding for Philippine LGUs
Local governments in the Philippines are poised to receive a record P1.32 trillion from national tax collections in 2027, reinforcing President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.'s push to position...

Online Group Probed in Tacloban Shooting Fuels Calls for New Extremism Statute

05.07.2026


Philippine justice and legislative officials are pushing for a new law to confront what they describe as “nihilistic violent extremism,” or NVE, amid mounting concern over online grooming of children and a deadly school shooting in Tacloban City. Senate President Sherwin T. Gatchalian and the Department of Justice (DoJ) have both called for a dedicated legal framework targeting the exploitation of minors by groups that allegedly encourage them to commit violent acts.

In separate statements and briefings, officials said existing statutes on terrorism, obscenity and online sexual exploitation are not designed to fully capture the pattern of behavior they are seeing, particularly when children are groomed digitally to escalate from minor offenses to serious violence. Justice Undersecretary Nicholas Felix L. Ty said the Tacloban shooting, which left three students dead and injured around 20 others, is being examined as potentially part of an NVE pattern rather than a standalone case of bullying.

Ty described NVE as involving the manipulation of children or young adults to carry out crimes that may start with break-ins, self-harm or cruelty to animals and can culminate in mass casualty events. He said perpetrators often use the internet to exploit young people’s need for friendship and belonging, then pressure them to maintain those relationships by “doing all sorts of bad things.” A Senate inquiry into the Tacloban attack heard indications that an online extremist group based overseas, identified in one hearing as “764,” may have been involved in grooming minors to commit violence.

Gatchalian said he is open to working with the DoJ through the Senate Committee on Women, Children, Family Relations and Gender Equality to draft a law that explicitly defines NVE and addresses online grooming and so-called brainwashing of minors. He cited social media and online games as key channels allegedly used by groomers, recalling that a gaming platform was linked to a planned school attack in Laguna in early 2026. Ty, for his part, urged lawmakers in both chambers to prioritize a measure that would designate a lead agency, bolster child protection, enhance international coordination and adopt a whole-of-government or “whole-of-nation” approach, arguing that a comprehensive statute is needed when current laws’ specific legal elements do not neatly apply.