108 FACING DEATH PENALTY
    3,732 Filipinos in foreign jails

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    CITY OF SAN FERNANDO – No less than 3,732 Filipinos languished in jails in 53 countries as of this year’s accounting, including 108 in death row in six countries.

    In a report emailed to Punto yesterday, Senate President Pro-Tempore Sen. Ralph Recto said of those in the death row, 69 are in Chinese jails who remain hopeful for clemency. Department of Foreign Affairs officials, however, gave a lower figure of 80 Filipinos in death row in seven countries, with 28 in China, when they appeared before a House committee last week.

    According to Recto, Malaysia hosted the most number of Filipinos behind bars, with 2,236, mostly immigration cases as the country had launched a crackdown against undocumented aliens. Next was China, including Hong Kong and Macau (345), followed by Saudi Arabia (277), USA (208), Italy (97), United Arab Emirates (75), Kuwait (72), Japan (59), Peru (37) and Qatar (34).

    As to sex, at least 476 of the Filipinos imprisoned abroad are female and 865 are male, Recto said. The gender of the 2,391 was not indicated in the reports filed by the country’s 60 embassies and 20 consulates abroad.

    Reports of these diplomatic posts were later collated into a 732-page “Status of OFWs Report” which the DFA submitted to the Senate last June. “Overall, 7,601 Filipinos, including those already in jail, were in trouble with their host country’s law as of Dec. 31, 2012.

    If some of them will be convicted, the number of Filipinos in jails abroad will rise,” he said. As to the nature of the cases Filipinos were facing, one-third or 2,236, were work disputes or immigration-related, Recto said.

    “What is worrisome is the number two cause, which is the possession or trafficking of illegal drugs. This accounted for 646 cases. In fact, most of those in death row were there because of drugs,” Recto said.

    “One consulate alone, Shanghai, reported that they were monitoring the cases of 32 Filipinos who were either in the dock or already in jail serving sentences for heroin smuggling,” Recto said.

    It is because of drugs that 3 Filipinos were in jail high up in the Andes in Peru, he said. Next to drug cases
    were those lumped up by the DFA as “morality cases”, which was responsible for the haling to the court or the hauling off to jail of 510 Filipinos.

    Running afoul with local customs sent 151 men and 11 women in Saudi Arabia and Qatar to the slammer.

    Their violation: drinking alcohol. Six women in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on the other hand, were facing “witchcraft” charges, according to the DFA report cited by Recto. Other cases were theft (297), murder and homicide (114), fraud (105).

    However, diplomatic posts failed to specify the nature of 3,446 cases. Recto said the DFA report also bared the continuing scourge of illegal recruitment and human trafficking. “In the Middle East and Africa alone, 2,013 of these cases were reported from June to December last year,” Recto said.

    “The dispersal of Filipinos worldwide has also resulted in the incarceration of many of them. Some of those who have joined the great Filipino Diaspora never found their own Promised Land,” Recto said.

    Recto said a reading of the DFA’s OFW situationer “would bring one to places, some with exotic sounding names, where you wouldn’t imagine that a Filipino would land in a jail there.” Because of the rising number of OFWs in jail, Recto called for the augmentation of the “Assistance- to-National Fund”.

    Under the proposed 2014 budget of the DFA, the said fund will increase to P300 million from P150 million this year. “But this is still a drop in the bucket compared to the P1 trillion that OFWs are forecast to remit this year,” Recto said.

    Last year, overseas Filipinos funnelled back to the country $21.4 billion through formal channels.

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