The Borneo Post

Philippine­s takes step back towards death penalty

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MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s campaign to bring back the death penalty for drug-related crimes has cleared a major hurdle, with supporters backing it in congress but critics denouncing the planned killings as ‘inhumane’.

The death penalty bill, along with a proposed measure to punish children as young as nine as adult criminals, are key planks of Duterte’s controvers­ial drug war that has already claimed more than 6,500 lives.

A majority of politician­s in the lower house of congress passed a second reading of the bill on Wednesday night, clearing one of the biggest obstacles in proponents’ plans to make the death penalty legal by May.

A third and final reading still needs to be held next week, although with no more debates both sides agree passage is a formality. Then the Senate, which is similarly dominated by Duterte’s allies, would pass a counterpar­t bill.

“We have hurdled the most difficult part,” congressma­n Reynaldo Umali, a sponsor of the bill, told AFP.

Opponents voiced anger the Philippine­s would bring back the death penalty, 11 years after it was revoked, highlighti­ng among many concerns a corrupt justice system that would lead to innocent people being executed.

“The decision is inhumane,

Let me reiterate this, criminals should be punished and victims should be aided, but the punishment should not be death. Due to our flawed and dysfunctio­nal criminal justice system, there is a great chance that innocent people may become victims of wrongful conviction­s. Father Jerome Secillano, Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippine­s executive secretary for public affairs

shameful and blatantly disrespect­ful,” Father Jerome Secillano, executive secretary for public affairs at the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippine­s, said in a statement sent to AFP.

“Let me reiterate this, criminals should be punished and victims should be aided, but the punishment should not be death. Due to our flawed and dysfunctio­nal criminal justice system, there is a great chance that innocent people may become victims of wrongful conviction­s.”

The Catholic Church, which counts 80 per cent of Filipinos as followers, had led the opposition to abolish the death penalty in 2006. Secillano and opposition lawmakers also criticised the tactics used to ensure the bill was passed, such as curtailing of debates and only allowing a vote by voice so lawmakers would not be specifical­ly identified as having supported it.

The speaker of the house also threatened to strip lawmakers of committee leadership positions if they voted against the bill.

“This is a chamber of puppets and bullies,” congressma­n Edcel Lagman, a longtime opponent of capital punishment, said after his efforts to block the bill were voted down.

The bill limits the death penalty to drug-related crimes. Possessing 500 grammes of marijuana, or 10 grammes of cocaine, heroin or ecstasy, would be crimes punishable by execution, as would manufactur­ing and selling drugs. People who commit serious crimes such as murder and rape while under the inf luence of drugs could also be executed.

However committing those crimes without being under the inf luence of drugs would only be punishable with jail terms. The bill allows for execution by hanging, firing squad or injection.

Duterte won presidenti­al elections last year after pledging an unpreceden­ted campaign to eradicate illegal drugs in society by killing tens of thousands of people.

Since he took office in May, police have reported killing more than 2,550 people in the drug crackdown, claiming all the deaths were in self defence, while more than 4,000 others have died in unexplaine­d circumstan­ces.

Rights groups and other critics have said Duterte is presiding over widespread human rights violations, with Amnesty Internatio­nal warning the killings could amount to a crime against humanity. — AFP

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 ??  ?? File photo shows a relative of a victim of extra-judicial killings in Duterte’s drug war arranging photograph­s of victims during a gathering on the grounds of a church in Manila. — AFP photo
File photo shows a relative of a victim of extra-judicial killings in Duterte’s drug war arranging photograph­s of victims during a gathering on the grounds of a church in Manila. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Rodrigo Duterte
Rodrigo Duterte

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