» Articles » PMID: 35308868

Death in the Time of Covid-19: Efforts to Restore the Death Penalty in the Philippines

Overview
Specialty Forensic Sciences
Date 2022 Mar 21
PMID 35308868
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The Philippine Congress recently passed a bill amending the Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002 and reimposing the penalty of life imprisonment to death for specific-drug related offenses. House Bill No. 7814 also allows the presumption of guilt in certain drug-related crimes unless otherwise proven, thereby overturning the long-standing constitutional presumption of innocence. The bill has been sent to the Senate for its concurrence and could only be several steps away before being signed into law by President Rodrigo R. Duterte. This paper discusses the ramifications of the new bill and the questioned timeliness of its passage when the country continues to have a large and overcrowded prison population and a significant number of deaths due to SARS-CoV-2 in Southeast Asia. The government's lapses in following the 2021 national vaccination plan became apparent in the 31 March 2021 assessment made by the congressional health panel on the government's response to the pandemic. From the authors' perspective, the urgency of using the country's limited resources to help medical frontliners and local government units prevent further infections and save lives should have outweighed the efforts exerted to pass a law that legalized the death penalty for the third time in the Philippines.

References
1.
Simbulan N, Estacio L, Dioquino-Maligaso C, Herbosa T, Withers M . The Manila Declaration on the Drug Problem in the Philippines. Ann Glob Health. 2019; 85(1). PMC: 6634291. DOI: 10.5334/aogh.28. View

2.
Go M, De Ungria M . Forensic sciences and the Philippines' war on drugs. Forensic Sci Int Synerg. 2020; 1:288-289. PMC: 7219145. DOI: 10.1016/j.fsisyn.2019.05.003. View

3.
De Ungria M, Jose J . The war on drugs, forensic science and the death penalty in the Philippines. Forensic Sci Int Synerg. 2020; 2:32-34. PMC: 7219165. DOI: 10.1016/j.fsisyn.2019.11.002. View

4.
Kahambing J . Philippine prisons and 'extreme vulnerability' during COVID-19. J Public Health (Oxf). 2021; 43(2):e285-e286. PMC: 7928820. DOI: 10.1093/pubmed/fdaa259. View

5.
Montoya-Barthelemy A, Lee C, Cundiff D, Smith E . COVID-19 and the Correctional Environment: The American Prison as a Focal Point for Public Health. Am J Prev Med. 2020; 58(6):888-891. PMC: 7164863. DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2020.04.001. View