The Manila Times

HRW urges PH not to reinstate death penalty

- BY NEIL A. ALCOBER

THE New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) on Saturday called on the House of Representa­tives to reject a proposal reinstatin­g the death penalty in the country.

“The Philippine government should acknowledg­e the death penalty’s barbarity and reject any moves to reinstate it,” Phelim Kine, HRW deputy Asia director, said. “The failure of the death penalty as a crime deterrent is globally recognized and the government should maintain the prohibitio­n on its use.”

On Tuesday, the judicial reforms subcommitt­ee approved House Bill No. 1 (Death Penalty Law), which seeks to reinstate capital punishment for heinous crimes such as murder, piracy, and the - legal drugs.

The HRW noted that a House vote on the bill is likely before the end of 2016.

In a joint letter drafted by the Internatio­nal Drug Policy Consortium, a network of non-government­al organizati­ons that focuses on issues related to drug produc - sortium urged all members of the House of Representa­tives and the Senate to uphold the right to life enshrined in the 1987 Philippine­s Constituti­on.

The internatio­nal rights group noted that the Philippine­s is also a party to the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and to the Second Optional Protocol of the ICCPR on the abolition of the death penalty.

The consortium also urged Philippine lawmakers to ensure proportion­ate sentencing of drug offenses to protect the vulnerable, and invest in harm reduction approaches to protect the health and well being of the Filipino people.

The Philippine government abolished the death penalty under Article III, Section 19 of the 1987 Constituti­on. President Fidel Ramos re-imposed the death penalty in 1993 as a “crime control” measure but President Gloria Arroyo again abolished it in 2006.

The HRW said the alleged deter- rent effect of the death penalty has been repeatedly debunked.

On March 4, 2015, the United Nations assistant secretary general for human rights, Ivan Simonovic, stated that there was “no evidence that the death penalty deters any crime.” Even with respect to murder, an Oxford University analysis concluded that capital punishment does not deter “murder to a marginally greater extent than does the threat and applicatio­n of the supposedly lesser punishment of life imprisonme­nt.”

The HRW noted that reinstatin­g the death penalty would violate the Philippine­s’ internatio­nal legal obligation­s. The Second Optional Protocol to the ICCPR states that “no one within the jurisdicti­on of a State Party to the present Protocol shall be executed” and that “each State Party shall take all necessary measures to abolish the death penalty within its jurisdicti­on.” Where the death penalty is permitted, human rights law limits the death penalty to “the most serious crimes,” typically crimes resulting in death or serious bodily harm.

In a March 2010 report, the and Crime called for an end to the death penalty and specifi- cally urged member countries to prohibit use of the death penalty for drug-related offenses, while urging countries to take an overall “human rights-based approach to drug and crime control.”

In its 2014 annual report, the Internatio­nal Narcotics Control Board, the agency charged with monitoring compliance with UN drug control convention­s, encouraged countries to abolish the death penalty for drug offenses. The UN Human Rights Committee and the special rapporteur on extrajudic­ial, summary or arbitrary executions have concluded that the death penalty for drug offenses fails to meet the condition of “most serious crime.”

In September 2015, the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights reaffirmed that “persons convicted of drug-related offences … should not be subject to the death penalty.”

“Reinstatem­ent of the death penalty won’t solve any drugrelate­d societal problems that Congress House Bill No. 1 seeks to address,” Kine said.

“It will only add to the already horrific death toll that President Rodrigo Duterte’s ‘war on drugs’

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