The Borneo Post

Justice system at breaking point as Philippine drugs war intensifie­s

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MANILA: In a teeming prison for undertrial­s in the Philippine­s’ capital Manila, Rody Lacanilao, an inmate for 18 months, says he prays for clear weather at night.

A downpour, he says, will prevent him and hundreds of fellow prisoners in the Quezon City jail from sleeping on plywood mats in an outdoor hallway. The cells themselves are overflowin­g with an influx of detainees from President Rodrigo Duterte’s yearlong war on drugs.

Thousands of people have been killed in Duterte’s campaign, mainly drug users and smalltime peddlers. Tens of thousands of others have been thrown into jail, and both prisons and courts in the Southeast Asian nation are creaking under the pressure.

“Since the war on drugs started, it became harder to sleep,” Lacanilao told a Reuters team allowed access to the Quezon City jail. “We have no place to go to when it rains.”

The 37-year- old is facing trial on a drug charge.

The prison was initially built for 262 inmates, but now has 2,975, three- quarters of them jailed for drug-related offences.

At night, its basketball court, chapel, classrooms and walkways become sleeping areas for detainees.

Inmates who spoke to Reuters said living conditions were unbearable, made worse by the prospect that it could be years before their trials are decided. Many of them are not eligible for bail or cannot afford to pay the bond.

“Prisoners came in one after the other. If you have money, you can buy a spot in the sleeping quarters,” said Junjun Vallecer, who says he has been in the jail for four years for possession of drugs but is still being tried. He says he has to wait four to six months between court appearance­s.

The Bureau of Jail Management and Penology ( BJMP) put the prison population in the country, including undertrial­s and convicts, at 137,417 as of the end of June, up 22 per cent since Duterte took office at the end of June last year.

Police and the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency arrested 96,703 suspected pushers, users and chemists from July last year until earlier this month, according to police data. A staggering 94 percent of people jailed for drug offences are still undertrial­s, according to BJMP.

Police in Manila arrest nearly 100 drug suspects each day, says Oscar Albayalde, the capital’s police chief.

“Whether they are minor charges or not, we have to arrest these people,” Albayalde told Reuters. “We make these arrests that contribute to the overconges­tion of the detention cells ... but what can we do?”

Including a backlog, the BJMP says 303,534 narcotics cases were at trial or being processed as of June.

Most of the cases are defended by the Public Attorney’s Office (PAO), a legal aid agency attached to the Department of Justice. At the end of 2016, the agency had a backlog of 303,000 drugs cases, compared to about 82,000 at the end of June 2016, just before Duterte unleashed his fierce anti- drugs campaign.

The agency says it has 1,665 lawyers to handle a total of 709,128 criminal cases currently pending, meaning an average of 426 cases for each of them.

“We have tons of work,” said public defender Karen Jay Sabugo, eating a meal of instant noodles at her desk.

“There are times when I return to the office so exhausted that I can’t speak with colleagues anymore.” — Reuters

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 ??  ?? Detainees sit on the ground during a roll call after attending a court hearing at a Regional Trial court in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippine­s. — Reuters photo
Detainees sit on the ground during a roll call after attending a court hearing at a Regional Trial court in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippine­s. — Reuters photo

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