The Manila Times

Reinstatin­g the death penalty a violation of internatio­nal law

- The Constituti­on of the Republic of the Philippine­s: A Commentary). perpetua reclusion (To be continued tomorrow)

AFirst of 2 parts

S a consequenc­e of President Duterte’s war on drugs, there has been in the Philippine­s a move to reinstate death as capital punishment. On March 7, 2017, the House of Representa­tives approved the reimpositi­on of the death penalty for drug- related crimes, among others, by a vote of 217 yeses and 54 no’s. The bill is pending in the Senate. As might be expected from the chamber that approves the ratificati­on of internatio­nal treaties, certain Senators have raised objections to the bill on the ground that it is violative of internatio­nal law.

As noted by the late chairman of the Philippine Commission on Human Rights, Purificaci­on Valera Quisumbing, in her briefing paper submitted to the European Parliament in Brussels in January 2007 , the Philippine­s abolished the death penalty under its 1987 Constituti­on and became the first Asian country to abolish the death penalty for all crimes. It also became the first Asian country to abolish it only to reintroduc­e it later on.

The latter distinctio­n owes to the fact that “the constituti­onal abolition of the death penalty, which immediatel­y took effect upon the ratificati­on of this Constituti­on, does not prevent the legislatur­e from reimposing it at some future time ( Bernas,

The Constituti­on in Article III, Section 1 9( 1) reads that effective upon its ratificati­on, “The death penalty shall not be imposed unless for compelling reasons, including heinous crimes the Congress hereafter provides for it. Any death penalty already imposed shall be reduced to

( life imprisonme­nt).” A series of serious crimes widely described as “heinous” occurred in 1993 during the administra­tion of President Fidel V. Ramos. To arrest the rising criminalit­y, the Death Penalty Law ( Republic Act 7659) was signed in December 1993. It listed a total of 46 crimes punishable by death, 25 of which are death-mandatory and 21 are death-eligible. Republic Act 8177 mandated the death sentence be carried out by lethal injection. With the amendment of the AntiRape Law (RA 8533) and Comprehens­ive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002 ( RA9165), capital offenses were raised to 52; of these, 30 of are death-mandatory and 22 are death-eligible.

In 1999, the administra­tion of President Joseph Estrada put to death seven death row convicts. It was observed that “1999 was a bumper year for executions which were intended to abate criminalit­y. Instead, using the same year as baseline, criminalit­y increased by 15.3 per cent, the total in the previous year of 71,527 crimes rising to 82,538 in1999.” Giving in to appeals from groups, including the Roman Catholic Church, President Estrada issued a mor- atorium on executions in observance of the Vatican’s “Jubilee Year.” The practice of carrying out executions was re- initiated and carried over to the administra­tion of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.

After a rise in drug traffickin­g and kidnapping­s that mainly victimized the ChineseFil­ipino community, President Arroyo announced on December 5, 2003, the lifting of the de facto moratorium on executions “to sow fear into the hearts of criminals.” The resumption of executions was, however, halted with the reopening of the Lara and Licayan capital case. The Supreme Court vacated the decision of the lower court and ordered the admission of newly discovered evidence, including the testimonia­l evidence of two other co- accused in the same case, both of whom gave testimony exoneratin­g Lara and Licayan from culpabilit­y. Since then successive administra­tions have been issuing reprieves on scheduled executions without actually issuing a moratorium.

The Commission on Human Rights vehemently objected to the reimpositi­on of the death penalty. It cautioned against it and recommende­d reforms for a more effective enforcemen­t of penal laws. It should also be mentioned that the European Union and the Roman Catholic Church, among others, waged an intensifyi­ng campaign against the death penalty.

On April 19, 2006 in a letter to the House of Representa­tives and the Senate, President Arroyo endorsed the immediate enactment of House Bill No. 4826 entitled “An Act Prohibitin­g the Imposition of the Death Penalty.” It was signed into law as Republic Act 9346 on June 24, 2006.

At this point, the Philippine­s might be said to be the first Asian country to abolish the death penalty for all crimes only to reimpose it on certain heinous crimes, and then only to prohibit it totally once again.

To those who have followed the twists and turns of the history of the death penalty in the Philippine­s, much of the arguments for and against the current move to reimpose capital punishment are not new. Oriental Mindoro Rep. Reynaldo Umali, in sponsoring the bill reimposing the death penalty, cited four “compelling” reasons: 1) The death penalty is a fitting response to increasing criminalit­y and killings in the county; 2) The death penalty is a measure to restore respect for the laws of the land; 3) Death is a path to achieving justice; and 4) Reimpositi­on of the death penalty is geared towards a genuine reform in the Philippine­s criminal justice system.

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