Lagman cites 12 ‘overriding reasons’ why lawmakers are hesitant to support reimposition of death penalty


Administration critic Rep. Edcel Lagman (Ind, Albay) on Friday cited 12 “overriding reasons” why lawmakers are hesitant in supporting President Duterte’s fresh bid for the restoration of the death penalty in the country.

Rep. Edcel Lagman (FILE PHOTO / MANILA BULLETIN)

Lagman said the “muted applause” from the gallery when Duterte made the announcement on his State of the Nation Address last Monday was a glaring indication of the lack of support for the revival of the death penalty for drug-related offenses.

“The President’s recommendation to the Congress to reimpose the death penalty aggravates his failure to disclose and discuss his administration’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic which is a death sentence to countless Filipinos,” said Lagman.

He added: “The hesitance of the Members of the Congress to express their assent is obvious because there are no less than 12 overriding reasons against the reimposition of capital punishment.”

Lagman said the following are the 12 reasons why the return of the death penalty is unpopular:  

First, there is no empirical data in the Philippines and worldwide which documents that the death penalty is an effective deterrent to the commission of heinous crimes. In fact, while the death penalty has been imposed since the dawn of civilization, heinous crimes persist and mock the capital punishment.

Second, the death penalty desecrates the right to life which is sacrosanct and inviolable, and it is an affront to human dignity. Pope Francis instructs that the “inviolability of life extends to the criminal.”

Third, the death penalty exacerbates the culture of violence and its revival adds to the unabated extrajudicial killings consequent to the Duterte Administration’s deadly campaign against the drug menace. 

Fourth, the death penalty cannot be prioritized over the long-delayed reforms in our flawed police, prosecutorial and judicial systems which make genuine justice illusory to the vast majority of our people.

Fifth, the death penalty further marginalizes and victimizes the poor who can neither retain competent counsel nor influence court decisions, unlike the rich and powerful.

Sixth, capital punishment enforces punitive and retributory justice instead of promoting the modern and progressive concept of penology on restorative justice which aims to reform the convict and prepare his reintegration into society. 

Seventh, the revival of the death penalty utterly fails to consider that human justice is fallible and even the innocent can be executed.

Eighth, the 1987 Constitution abolished the death penalty, although the Congress is allowed to reimpose it on heinous crimes for compelling reasons. These two conditions on “heinous crimes” and “compelling reasons” are separate but concurrent. The heinousness of a crime is not determinative of the compelling reason. They are not synonymous.

Ninth reason, as a State Party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Second Protocol on the ICCPR, the Philippines is committed to abolish the death penalty and not to reimpose it. 

Tenth reason: There are serious economic repercussions if the Philippines reimposes the death penalty as we would lose free tariff privileges on our exports to European Union countries which require adherence to human rights.  

The 11th reason: If the death penalty is revived, the Philippine will lose moral ascendancy in negotiating for the lifting of the death sentences of Filipino OFWs numbering almost 100 worldwide. 

And 12th reason, the irreversible trend is the diminishing number of countries imposing the death penalty. Only 37 out of the 195 countries in the world still allow execution of convicted criminals. China, Iran, Pakistan, and South Africa account for 90 percent of executions.