The Manila Times

Most Pinoys trust US, Japan; not China, Russia – SWS

- TrustA2

DESPITE President Rodrigo Duterte’s tirades against the United States, majority of Filipinos still trust the global superpower and its leading ally Japan, while having the opposite view toward China and Russia, according to a Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey.

The poll, conducted from December 6 to 11, showed that the country’s long-time allies, the US and Japan, scored high trust ratings of 76 percent and 70 percent, respective­ly, among 1,200 respondent­s.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe arrived in Manila on Thursday afternoon for a two-day visit, meeting with President Duterte in Malacañang.

The survey showed that 61 percent of Filipinos distrust China

for millions of pesos, De Lima had protected them, and allowed them to operate the illegal drug trade and live extravagan­t lifestyles inside the prison, and even managed to procure prostitute­s.

In November, Aguirre even called a press conference in which he announced that De Lima was legally liable “for immorality and concubinag­e” for having a relationsh­ip with her driver-bodyguard Dayan. Yet with the accusation­s, and even De Lima's dafiant face start

- ing to fade from public interest, Aguirre has so far not filed a single case against the senator, much less arrest her. De Lima has even heaped scorn on President Duterte’s justice secretary, ridiculing him for his toupee and calling him a “mediocre lawyer.”

So far, the only case to be brought against De Lima is a disbarment case, on grounds of immorality, by private individual­s and the Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption. The Supreme Court where the case was filed last January 11, ordered De Lima to respond to the accusation­s.

Aguirre’s foot-dragging, or being so overly legalistic and cautious, stands in contrast to De Lima’s guts, even if immoral, when she filed cases against former President Gloria Arroyo on the flimsiest grounds (such as for approving the Philippine Charity Sweepstake­s - ligence funds, which is routinely done by a President). De Lima refusing its directive to allow the former President from leaving for abroad for a medical emergency.

Aguirre’s failure to prosecute De Lima will mean the failure of President Duterte’s war against illegal drugs. The illegal drug trade has proliferat­ed in this country because law enforcers, politician­s, and even judges have protected the syndicates. De Lima’s prosecutio­n would be Duterte’s demonstrat­ion that he is dismantlin­g such corruption. Duterte’s war just can’t be against small-time pushers and even addicts.

If Aguirre can’t hack it, and appears to be unable to do his job, Duterte should start looking even now, for his replacemen­t. Or his declaratio­n of a war against illegal drugs will mean empty braggadoci­o.

Emerging Prison Crisis

While Duterte’s war against illegal drugs is portrayed as to be a takeno- prisoner kind of war, still, as happened in Thailand’s similar campaign from 2003 to 2008, it will swell the country’s prison population to crisis proportion­s that would be a national shame.

While other nations have bigger prison population­s—our 142,168 (as of late 2016) is only the fourth largest in Southeast Asia—we have the most crowded jails.

Our prison population is four times our facilities’ capacity of just 34,000, according to the World Prison Brief of the London-based Institutio­n for Criminal Policy Research. While Thailand’s prison population of 304,090 is more than double ours, its occupancy level is just 147 percent, less than half our 316 percent.

Rather than the result of an improved justice system (i.e., its criminals to jail), the growth of our prison population by nearly double, from 79,300 in 2010 to 142,168 in 2016— with the prison population rate ( or number of prisoners per 100,000 population) worsening from 102 to 140— is a testament to the country’s worsening poverty and our people’s increasing propensity to commit crime. Economic growth just hasn’t reached the poor, so that many of them have resorted to crime.

During Thailand’s very similar campaign against illegal drugs, its prison population swelled 9 percent from 167,142 in 2004 to 210,855 by 2008. If we use a similar 9 percent growth rate, our prison population will grow to 155,000 in four years.

We do not have a plan to increase the capacity of our prison system. Republic Act 10575, or the Bureau of Correction­s Act of 2013, only called for the transfer of the New Bilibid National Penitentia­ry in Muntinlupa to a new P50-billion facility in Nueva Ecija. Its present Muntinlupa site will be bid out to property developers— which perhaps explains why that is a priority.

But the new facility’s capacity would only be for 26,880, hardly making a dent in our prison population of about 155,000 in five years when it is expected to be completed—if the project indeed takes off the ground.

If Duterte fails to increase our facilities’ capacity soon, the Philippine­s’ image will be that of that horrible photo of the overcrowde­d Quezon City jail, in which prisoners live worse than rats in a cage.

 ??  ?? Chart background: Crowded Quezon City jail Source: Institutio­n for Criminal Policy Research, London
Chart background: Crowded Quezon City jail Source: Institutio­n for Criminal Policy Research, London
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines