Sun.Star Cebu

Balamban allows reopening of internet cafes

- / ANV

THE internet cafes in Balamban, Cebu can now reopen as ordered by the town’s top executive.

Mayor Alex Binghay issued Executive Order No. 4 allowing owners of internet cafes to conduct business again.

Binghay’s move is in line with his move to gradually ease restrictio­ns as Cebu Province in which Balamban is part of is under modified general community quarantine status.

Individual­s aged 15 up to 65 are allowed to enter internet cafes.

Playing online games is also prohibited. Only persons looking or applying for jobs and students complying with their requiremen­ts are allowed inside internet cafes.

Owners are reminded to limit their customers to 50 percent of their internet cafes’ capacities. They must also enforce the safety protocol such as wearing masks and social distancing.

The internet cafes must be closed at 10 p.m., the start of curfew.

This week, March 2, 2021, lawmakers passed on final reading House Bill 7814, a measure meant to give our Comprehens­ive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002 (Republic Act 9165) more teeth. A total of 188 representa­tives, majority administra­tion allies, voted in favor of the amendment, 11 voted no and nine abstained.

Critics, including the Commission on Human Rights, say that, in essence, the amendments remove presumptio­n of innocence. Additions to the list of drug suspects and people with “knowledge or has willfully consented to the illegal importatio­n of dangerous drugs” include anyone found in possession of drug-related documents; a person who “harbors, screens, facilitate­s” the escape of drug traders; anyone who is in the premises of a drug transactio­n or manufactur­ing; a person who “causes, raises, provides or supplies” drug money. Another worth noting is this: Anyone is “presumed a protector or coddler if he/she knows the seller, trader, distributo­r.”

It may help to understand the context that might have inspired the motivation­s behind the amendment. Records at the National Prosecutio­n Service of the Department of Justice (DOJ) show that Philippine courts have been dismissing drug cases by the thousands, a matter of concern, said Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra. While there has been a sharp surge of drug cases filed in court since 2014 to the present, prosecutio­n has been in a dismal state. In 2016, of the 68,895 drug cases, 2,617 were dismissed. In 2017, 5,270 cases were cleared out of the 70,706 filed. Of these cases, prosecutio­n success rate was only 50.2 percent in 2016, with a slight improvemen­t the following year at 52.5 percent. Such a frustratin­g figure for the Philippine National Police, its sector of faithful officers who had been doggedly pursuing the war against drugs to the letter.

Much of the prosecutio­n failure have been attributed to technical reasons, said Guevarra, such as failure to observe procedural requiremen­ts, particular­ly on the chain of custody of the drugs seized—one such problem that involves the executive, which means the judiciary has no control of. One such problem, too, that needs proper coordinati­on among concerned agencies from the three branches of government.

So will HB 7814 solve the problem? In essence, the amendments merely empower the law enforcemen­t part in the campaign, and not the aspect where the drug war has been mostly failing, which is prosecutio­n. This weakness has been seized with much advantage by defense counsels in drug cases.

Expanding coverage of the definition of drug suspects will open the floodgates of more cases jammed into our prison facilities, already stuffed to the rafters by a sweeping majority of drug cases. As of last count, there are around 2,600 regional trial courts handling 289,295 drug cases, on top of other cases. The law sets the ideal 60 days to close a drug case, but yes, in the ideal world. Ground realities say that drug cases drag on for years, even a decade, while suspects languish in prison. For minor cases, the court have instituted plea bargaining agreements with conditions that suspects submit themselves to monitored rehabilita­tion programs. The current rollout of community-based therapies is an excellent response as a mechanism to decongest our prison facilities because persons deprived of liberties can avail themselves of this deal within their communitie­s.

We hope HB 7814 can be studied further, not only by its implicatio­ns to basic constituti­onally guaranteed rights, but to the drug campaign as a whole.

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