First bill filed under
President Rodrigo Duterte seeks to reintroduce capital punishment for ‘heinous
crimes’
Local media
reported Wednesday that the bill proposes that those convicted of certain
“heinous crimes” be executed by legal injection, and was filed by Davao del
Norte Representative Pantaleon Alvarez -- Duterte’s choice for Speaker of the
House of Representatives -- and Representative Fredenil Castro of central Capiz
province.
“Philippine society is left with no
option but to deal with certain grievous offenders in a manner commensurate to
the gravity, perversity, atrociousness and repugnance of their crimes,”
according to House Bill No. 1 of the newly sworn in 17th Congress.
After winning the May 9 election on
a crime-fighting campaign, Duterte vowed to work toward re-introducing the
death penalty, which had been abolished for a second time in 2006.
Duterte -- a lawyer by profession
-- served 22 years as the mayor of southern Davao, overseeing its
transformation from a crime-ridden hovel to a peaceful and investment-friendly
city.
He has pledged to curb corruption
and criminality within three to six months of his presidential term, which
began June 30.
In House Bill No. 1, Alvarez
underlined the need to revive the death penalty due to the country’s crime rate
having “grown to such alarming proportions requiring an all-out offensive
against all forms of felonious acts”.
“There is evidently a need to
reinvigorate the war against criminality by revising a deterrent coupled by its
consistent, persistent and determined implementation," Alvarez and Castro
said.
Listed among the “heinous crimes”
that could be subject to the death penalty are human trafficking, illegal
recruitment, treason, rape, qualified piracy and bribery, kidnapping and
illegal detention, robbery with violence against or intimidation of persons,
terrorism and drug-related cases.
“The imposition of the death
penalty for heinous crimes and the mode of its implementation, both subjects of
repealed laws, are crucial components of an effective dispensation of both
reformative and retributive justice,” the bill’s authors stressed.
The Philippines became the first
Asian country to prohibit the death penalty under its 1987 Constitution,
drafted after the overthrow of late dictator President Ferdinand Marcos.
Capital punishment was restored in
the 1990s -- as allowed under the constitution with the approval of Congress --
before being abolished in 2006.
As Davao City mayor, Duterte
imposed bans on public smoking, and the selling of alcohol and the operation of
entertainment spots past midnight.
In 2015, however, Amnesty
International alleged that “death squads” under his control were responsible
for 700 extrajudicial executions in the region. Duterte reported to have responded
that it was more like 1,700.
No comments:
Post a Comment