Philippine Daily Inquirer

NEW LAW IMPRISONS HEINOUS CRIMINALS ON ISLAND OR MILITARY BASE

- By Tina G. Santos @santostina­INQ REPORTS FROM DEXTER CABALZA AND INQUIRER RESEARCH INQ —WITH

government is closer to moving prisoners convicted of heinous crimes away from the general population after the Department of Justice (DOJ) finished drafting the implementi­ng rules and regulation­s for the law establishi­ng facilities just for them.

Republic Act No. 11928, otherwise known as the Separate Facility for Heinous Crimes Act, lapsed into law in July.

It provides for the constructi­on of at least three separate facilities for high-level offenders—one each for Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao.

“The facility shall be built in a suitable location away from the general population and other PDLs (persons deprived of liberty) and preferably within a military establishm­ent or on an island separate from the mainland,” Assistant Secretary Mico Clavano, the DOJ spokespers­on, said on Wednesday.

He said each facility will be located in an isolated but secure place to prevent “unwarrante­d” contact or communicat­ion from outside of the penal institutio­n.

At each facility, male and female PDLs will be held in separate buildings. Another dormitory will be provided for lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgende­rs.

Latest technology

According to the DOJ official, the facilities for these heinous crime convicts will have “state-of-the-art” surveillan­ce cameras and the latest informatio­n technology and secuThe rity systems able to monitor inmates 24 hours a day. Their locks, doors and perimeters will have “enhanced and extensive security features.”

Provisions for solar, biogas, rainwater harvesting, and the like will be included in designing and building each of the facilities to allow self-sustainabi­lity required by the Bureau of Correction­s Act of 2013 and other existing laws and regulation­s, he said.

Clavano said the Bureau of Correction­s (BuCor) would ensure that inmates were allowed to communicat­e with their relatives and lawyers through visits and by phone, video or correspond­ence following the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners and other internatio­nal standards.

To do this, each facility will be equipped with effective and efficient informatio­n and communicat­ion technology (ICT) infrastruc­ture and software that follow the accepted standard for the digitizati­on of all informatio­n necessary for the buildup, maintenanc­e and transmitta­l of necessary PDL records to all the prison and penal farms of the BuCor and other authorized government agencies.

Eases congestion

Clavano added that the ICT infrastruc­ture and software system would have a maintenanc­e plan and integratio­n model for informatio­n sharing with other law enforcemen­t agencies and for effective monitoring of the inmates.

The transfer of convicts classified as high-level offenders will be made within 30 days from the completion of the constructi­on of the facilities, he said.

The new law would also address congestion problems in all the prison facilities managed by BuCor.

As of October 2022, New Bilibid Prison in Muntinlupa City has an inmate population of 29,204, almost five times its intended capacity of 6,345.

The number of inmates in various BuCor prisons nationwide was 50,141 last month. As of March this year, heinous crime convicts numbered 3,608 in all seven BuCor prisons and penal farms.

Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla had said he was considerin­g the Sablayan Prison and Penal Farm reservatio­n in Occidental Mindoro province as a site for one facility.

Another may be put up at the Leyte Regional Prison in Abuyog, Leyte province, and a third at the San Ramon Prison and Penal Farm in Zamboanga City.

Clavano said each facility will be located in an isolated but secure place to prevent ‘unwarrante­d’ contact or communicat­ion from outside of the penal institutio­n

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