If you "got a girl pregnant in Doha" and she is not your wife, there will be problems. No hospital will serve her without a marriage certificate and she is likely to be deported. This is my understanding of how it works here in Qatar.
There is no legal obligation to do so.
Article 1156 of the Philippines civil code defines the term obligation as a legal demand to give or act or not act. Article 1178 declares that unless otherwise stated, the rights obtained through an obligation can be transferred to another person.
No. In fact, homosexual activity is illegal in Qatar.
Not necessarily. Morals are, by definition, more subjective than the law. You may have a moral obligation to do something for which there is no legal punishment available at all. Maybe you have a moral obligation to give your children presents as your money may permit, but there is no legal obligation to give them more than the necessaries, even if you are filthy rich. In other cases you may have a moral obligation that merely creates a separate and distinct legal obligation. For example, you may have a moral obligation to perform services on a contract, but you cannot be physically forced to actually perform. The only "legal obligation" would be to pay for damages caused by your failure to perform, if any. Therefore, even if there is a legal obligation stemming from such a moral obligation ("you gave your word"), they are not the same obligation.
No, there is no legal recognition of such relationships in the Philippines.
This is when you are under a legal obligation to do or not to do an act. i.e. obligated by law.
As far as I know, there is no legal obligation. However, you have a moral obligation to find the owners, apologize to them, and offer to pay for the cat's burial/cremation. You'd have to be a pretty horrible person not to do that.
ilegal
one second old
Anything that you have to do by law. To drive a car, by law you must have a license. It is a legal obligation. You are legally obliged to have a driving license to drive a car.
what are the different kinds of obligation
In legal terms, an 'obligation' binds someone to perform or 'do' a certain thing. (e.g.: a contract forms on obligation on the part of the buyer and the seller to perform in certain ways. A court order will obligate someone to do or act in specific fashion.)