Congress Proposes for a “High Profile Detention Center”
On
Wednesday, June 18, 2014, the Manila Bulletin reported that members of the
House of Representatives propose for a creation of a high profile detention
center.
A photo taken from google.com. |
House
Bill (HB) No. 1360 or the “High Profile Detention Center Act of 2013” would
create a separate detention center for “high criminals” but the proponents of
said bill were quick to comment that such proposal won’t accord undue special
treatment for the accused.
AKO-BICOL
Party-list Representative Rodel Batocabe and ACT-CIS Party-list Representative
Samuel Pagdilao defended the salient features of the said bill at a news forum
held at the House of Representative on Tuesday.
“High
profile cases” as the defined in the said bill, they refer to those that have
attracted attention and publicity by reason of the relative position of the
parties in society, cases imbued with public interest or cases which involve
national security and safety.
“It
would cover sensational incidents like multi-billion peso pork barrel scam or
the 2009 Maguindanao massacre, both of which implicate influential people and
powerful government officials”, the lawmakers said.
If
it would be realized, accordingly, it would prevent the current practice of
resorting to temporary holding centers like Fort Sto. Domingo in Sta. Rosa,
Laguna (in the case of the alleged pork barrel scam mastermind Janet
Lim-Napoles) or Camp Crame (for some Maguindanao massacre suspects) insofar as
high profile cases is concerned.
Batocabe
added that segregating high-profile detention prisoners from ordinary ones
makes sense since reality dictates that the former are subject to high risk.
Pagdilao,
a vice chairman of the House Public Order and Safety Committee, clarified that
while the envisioned detention center would house all accused of high profile
crimes under one roof, they would still be “separated by walls” or held inside individual
cells.
He
further said that it is truly a detention cell.
There can be no air-conditioning or a refrigerator inside, alluding to
common notions of benefits supposedly given to jailed VIPs (very important
prisoners).
Pagdilao
even said that in other countries, they have separated perpetrators of
high-profile cases from other prisoners.
“Once
this bill becomes a law, it will be very clear for the judge, who is the ultimate
authority, to decide which jail facility or what category that person would be
detained at”, Pagdilao concluded.
Sourced from the report written by Ellson A. Quismorio in Manila Bulletin on June 18, 2014.
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