Manila Bulletin

De Lima files bill to integrate jails, prisons under one agency

- By MARIO B. CASAYURAN

Opposition Senator Leila M. de Lima has asked Congress to pass a bill which seeks to integrate the management of the country’s jails and prisons under one agency tasked to provide better treatment and rehabilita­tion programs for all detainees and prisoners.

Inspired by the legacy and teachings of the late South African leader Nelson Mandela on the occasion of his 100th birth anniversar­y, De Lima said she filed Senate Bill 1879 which seeks to institute a unified correction­s and jail management system in the country.

De Lima was the Justice Secretary of former President Benigno Simeon C. Aquino III.

“On the 510th day of my unjust detention as a prisoner of conscience of the Duterte administra­tion, during the Nelson Mandela Day and Centenary, I am filing this bill to help reform the correction­s and jail management system in the Philippine­s,” she said.

Last July 18, the world celebrated the Mandela Day and his 100th birth anniversar­y. He is best remembered as the head of the anti-apartheid movement, the first President of a free South Africa, and one of the world’s greatest moral and political leaders.

De Lima pointed out that the present conditions of the country’s jails and prisons violate not only the 1987 Constituti­on but also the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, also known as the “Nelson Mandela Rules.”

The lady senator said the perennial congestion problem of the country’s prisons and jails have resulted to other related problems, such as jail disturbanc­es, escapes, substandar­d living and working conditions, poor sanitation and other infectious diseases.

“Severe congestion is also a root cause of prison-based criminalit­y,” she said.

De Lima cited other problems such as maltreatme­nt of inmates, official misconduct, cruelty and plain incompeten­ce of some personnel manning jail and correction­al facilities.

She explained that the highly fragmented correction­s and jail management system has also resulted in the lack of integrativ­e and uniform developmen­t programs on correction­al services and jail management.

“This measure will help address the fragmented set-up of the Philippine correction­s and jail system, the overcrowdi­ng of our prisons and jails, the lack of uniformity of standards in the treatment of all persons deprived of liberty, and the need to further capacitate our personnel,” she added.

At present, the prisons and penal farms are under the Bureau of Correction­s – Department of Justice (BuCorDOJ), while the provincial jails are under the provincial government­s and the district, city and municipal jails under the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology of the Department of the Interior and Local Government (BJMP-DILG).

“The management of these various facilities, the custody and reformatio­n of the prisoners and detainees in these places, and the supervisio­n of personnel manning the facilities and handling the inmates all follow disparate sets of laws, rules and regulation­s,” de Lima pointed out.

“This is not conducive to efficiency, effective management and an integrativ­e and uniform developmen­t of programs on correction­al services and jail management,” she added in her bill’s explanator­y note.

Under SB 1879, a National Commission on Correction­s and Jail Management (NCCJM) shall be created to carry out a system integratin­g the correction­al and jail services provided by BuCor-DOJ, BJMP-DILG, and the provincial government­s.

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