by abufarsi » Sun Mar 13, 2011 11:36 am
"So...how about it? Is a divorce possible in the Philippines? (surely it is and it does not have to be so pricey)"
Divorce is not an option at all. It simply does not exist in the Philippines. Not only that, as far as immigration goes, there is no way to "get around it".
In the Philippines marriage is defined as a stereotypical relationship between the couples, the community and the church. What Marriage is, the promise, the ongoing relationship, is defined by the state. Every party must be involved with a possible annulment. Up until just a few years ago there simply was no possibility of marital rape, as, the man had every right to sex from the woman. He could beat her with a staff no larger than his thumb, if he so desired.
Annulment does exist. And it is even more costly than he stated. Generally speaking lawyers are in their profession to make money. There is no set fee for services. It is the job of the lawyer to gauge the pocket book of his client and figure out a way to move, legally, that cash from his clients pocket into his. I have met perhaps 40 foreigners who went the annulment rout, some paid lawyers for 5 years tens of thousands of dollars, but I never met a guy who actually got that annulment. I have heard of them getting it though. Read it in the papers too.
Annulments are impossible without grounds. Abandonment (7 years), criminal abuse, insanity. previous marriages, are examples of accepted grounds. But nothing is automatic.
Yes, Filipinos are always "finding a way",some simply finish their lives without the protection of marriage, when the partnership of marriage fails to yield partnership ways. In my experience, fully 30% of couples over 50 live in such a manner.
To the question " where is your husband" they say "gone to Manila" and everybody knows this is Filipino divorce. Divorce in the Philippines is abandonment and shame. Not asking the judicial system for an equitable division of the assets and liabilities of the partnership. Child support is almost never paid. Houses can't be sold easily, by either party.
Also common in the Philippines are loveless marriages. Where parties play stereotypical rolls to extend the befits of marriage as they seem to regard doing without not a viable choice. These couples are easy to recognize, they never walk the streets hand in hand, they never shop together, they go to gatherings separately, and one person usually dominates the other financially or physically. It is viewed as shameful to not live with your mate. Separation is always viewed a failure in some way.
Changes are on the way though. I recently read that the family code is about to be amended to allow divorce. Even if this law is passed it will be years before it is available widely. I speculate it will never be cheap. I do know that if a Filipino marries a foreigner, and the foreigner divorces her (not the other way around) in another country, she is legally divorced in the Philippines, and so is the foreigner.
For the original poster, I suggest he moves to the Philippines. It will be mostly impossible for him to earn a living there anything like what he has earned in the USA. He will always be a "foreigner" even if he lives there 100 years. Perhaps he is retired. The other choice is to work in the USA and visit his "wife" when he can save up. This also is a difficult choice as it requires two homes, and the costs of maintaining such. The ticket price over and back is nothing compared to paying rent, utilities on houses you are not living in. Not to mention the loneliness of months and months away from your family. The heartache of troubles in the Philippines you can't solve when you must go to work in the morning, or the reverse finding you do not have a job after returning to your home country, but the bills are waiting.