Appeal for an ‘Iran Solution’ for Philippine prisons

THE Philippine prison system has the highest congestion rate in the world at 605 percent.

Overcrowded cells and the direst lack of the barest essentials for health — nutritious food, clean drinking water, adequate medical care, and even soap — have resulted in steep death rates in the country’s 933 prisons that house a total population of 188,278 inmates, where 75.1% are pre-trial detainees.

The Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP), which supervises jails for those undergoing investigation and trial, said its death rate is 300 to 800 inmates a year. This means one to two prisoners die every day in BJMP jails.

The Bureau of Corrections (BuCor) said about 20 percent of the 26,000 inmates at the New Bilibid Prison (NBP), Muntinlupa City die annually, a situation which the NBP hospital head during Senate hearings last October described as “critical” when compared to global standards.

The BuCor says this amounts to one death every day at the NBP but the BuCor’s own figures in fact indicate that 5,200 inmates at the NBP die every year or 14 every day.

Given the high congestion and mortality rates of the prison system, should the national government wait before the deadly COVID-19 unleashes even more catastrophic consequences inside Philippine jails?

KAPATID, the support organization of political prisoners in the Philippines, calls on the national government to immediately adopt the “Iran Solution” wherein the Iranian government has been releasing en masse thousands of prisoners to control the rising death toll from the new coronavirus. As of March 9, the Iranian government has already released 70,000 prisoners.

Meantime, we cannot turn a blind eye to the prison riots spreading in Italy as prisoners in desperation decry the impact of the lockdown on prison facilities, which they fear puts their lives in greater danger of contamination because of poor prison conditions.

KAPATID appeals to the Philippine government, in particular the Office of the President, the Department of Justice, the BuCor and the BJMP, to initiate immediate steps for the mass release of low-level offenders as in the Iran example, plus the very elderly and the very sick, the accidental victims of political arrests or what Government of the Republic of the Philippines Peace Panel head Secretary Silvestre Bello terms as “riders” (“sabit”), and one spouse from each of the ten political prisoner couples to allow one to care for the other and many of whom are also mere “riders” in political arrests.

We are ready to dialogue at the soonest time. The regulations, mechanics, and procedure for this forward measure, whether on temporary release as in the Iran solution, can be defined by the Department of Justice as the lead agency.

As we have proposed, the KAPATID network of support from among university human rights centers and legal and paralegal volunteers can readily be harnessed to immediately fast-track this effort to secure the lives of Filipino prisoners.

This is not only an urgent matter of life and death but also of justice. Let us note the Supreme Court’s own data of a 71.77 percent judicial error rate on death penalty cases — wrongful convictions by courts, affecting especially prisoners belonging to the lowest socioeconomic class.

A Free Legal Assistance Group study also reports a high judicial error rate of illegal arrests, ranging from 73 percent to 90 percent. This simply means that over half of the prison population should not even be in jail because of the broken judicial system. And they especially include the 601 political prisoners, who are victims of manufactured charges such as planted firearms and explosives and baseless common crimes designed to criminalize them and lock them up in indefinite detention.

KAPATID likewise appeals to the BuCor and BJMP to immediately and regularly supply prisoners with soap to help battle COVID-19, ensure clean water especially drinking water and nutritious food, and immediately upgrade health facilities, resources, and protocols, especially the number of medical doctors and nurses and the provision of medicines as well as maintenance medicines for prisoners with chronic illnesses.

While we recognize the health basis for the lockdown of jails, we maintain that no prison is a closed environment because prison personnel come and go inside the facilities, exposing the already most vulnerable to the spread of infection. We thus press the BuCor and the BJMP to:

(1) adopt procedures per prison facility to allow families of political prisoners and common prisoners to pass on maintenance medicines, soap and detergent, and food to help our loved ones SURVIVE this public health crisis, and

(2) issue regular bulletins about the status of prisoners, including political prisoners who are particularly most vulnerable because of repeated measures singling them out for harassment.

Yet we stress, only a forward-looking strategy like the Iran Solution of mass release of prisoners as enumerated can protect congested, ill-equipped prisons from the rapid spread of COVID-19. Implement this now, please, before more lives are exposed and succumb to its contagion. – FIDES LIM, spokesperson, KAPATID <kapatid.pp@gmail.com>

1 COMMENT

  1. Subject: U R G E N T – The right moment to (temporarily) release inmates 70-up (as President Duterte said before) because of the Corona virus

    Dear Mr. President ,

    You announced in September 2019 that you want to release prisoners older than 70 years old.
    Then now it is the perfect time to turn your words into deeds. An act of compassion and humanity.
    The criterion is simple, hard and clear: when you are 70-up you are (temporarily) released. So that can be done very quickly.

    After all, the prisons in the Philippines are very overcrowded. So the coronavirus will spread there very quickly.
    The departure of the old seniors will also reduce the overpopulation pressure somewhat.

    In addition, the virus is much more deadly for men over 70 years of age.
    Mortality rate: 20 – 39 y.o. = 0.2% 70 – 79 y.o. = 8%. That’s 40 times higher!
    Certainly in view of the lack of medical facilities in jails / prisons, the mortality rate among the over-70s due to the coronavirus will be considerable. A kind of application of death penalties.

    So please (temporarily) release the over-70s, or at least suspend their detention. For the inmates with a pending court case too, so they can await the result safe at home.

    Also Iran already has temporarily released 139,000 prisoners in the fight against the COVID-19 virus. The risk of spreading in full prisons is too great, the authorities say. And so did Turkey and other countries.

    Unusual circumstances call for unusual measures!

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