Enforced
Disappearance now a crime after Senate stamped Chiz’s bill
By Office of Senator Chiz
Escudero
October 17, 2012
PASAY CITY –
Involuntary or enforced disappearance is now a crime punishable with
life imprisonment after the Senate unanimously approved on Tuesday the
bicameral conference committee report on Senate Bill 2817 authored by
Senator Chiz Escudero.
The senator, who chairs the
Committee on Justice and Human Rights and principal author of SBN 2817
or an Act Defining and Penalizing Enforced or Involuntary
Disappearance, called the passage of the bill by both houses of
Congress very significant for human rights.
The bill now awaits the
signature of President Benigno Aquino III.
Enforced or involuntary
disappearance is defined in the bill as “the arrest, detention,
abduction or any other form of deprivation of liberty committed by
agents of the State or by persons or groups of persons acting with
authorization or support from the State, followed by a refusal to
acknowledge the deprivation of liberty or by concealment of the fate
or whereabouts of the disappeared.”
“The act of involuntary
disappearance is not yet considered a crime under our existing laws.
We bear witness to cases of forced disappearances, and more often,
these cases are left in oblivion without putting those persons
responsible for the commission of the disappearances accountable,”
Escudero said.
Once enacted into law,
perpetrators of involuntary disappearance will be meted the penalty of
reclusion perpetua or life sentence which is equivalent to 20 years
and one day to 40 years imprisonment.
The measure also prohibits
the issuances of “orders of battle” – official or otherwise – by the
military, police or any law enforcement agency to justify an enforced
or involuntary disappearance.
Escudero said the bill also
provides that prosecution of persons responsible for the commission of
enforced disappearance shall not be prescribed unless the victim
surfaces alive, in which case the prescription period shall be 25
years starting from the date of reappearance.
The bill also mandates the
expeditious disposition of habeas corpus and amparo
proceedings and immediate compliance with any release order by virtue
of such proceedings.
“There must be no compromise
on strong legislation with effective corrective penal measures, even
if it would mean tilting the balance much more in favor of individual
rights and human dignity. There should be enough of desaparecidos,
because enforced disappearances have emotionally, mentally and
physically displaced mothers and fathers, sisters, brothers, children.
These disappearances have caused us to be put under the tight watch of
local and international rights groups and even foreign governments”
the senator said.
Within six months after the
measure is enacted, all related government agencies are mandated to
submit an updated inventory of all officially recognized and
controlled detention facilities and the list of detainees under their
respective jurisdictions.