
Article 1: Death Penalty (Description)
By: Larissa G. Alejandro & Theo Dens Razonable
Death penalty, also known as the capital punishment law, is death given by the court of law to anyone who committed any very serious crimes. It covers wide issue relating to informal way of death for different heinous crimes. Heinous crimes are hateful and illegal crimes that also deserve censure or condemnation.
The most common form of execution for death penalty is thru Lethal Injection. Lethal injection is injecting more than one drug to the sentenced prisoner like barbiturate, paralytic, and potassium solution for immediate death. This was first proposed on January 17, 1888, by Julius Mount Bleyer because he knows that this is cheaper than the other forms of execution. Other forms of execution are: Electrocution, Hanging, Lethal gas, Firing Squad, and Gas Chamber.
According to Capital Punishment in the Philippines from Wikipedia (2017, January 5)
The Philippines was the only country aside from the United States that used the electric chair, due to its being introduced during the US colonial period. Until its first abolition in 1987, the country reverted to using death by firing squad. After re-introduction of the death penalty in 1993, the country switched to lethal injection as its sole method of execution.
In the Republic of the Philippines the death penalty is guided by the Republic Act no. 7659. This is described as an act to impose the Death Penalty on Certain Heinous Crimes, amending for that purpose the revised penal laws, as amended other special penal laws and for other purposes.
According to The Republic Act no. 7659 (1993, December 13)
WHEREAS, the Constitution, specifically Article III, Section 19 paragraph (1) thereof, states “Excessive fines shall not be imposed nor cruel, degrading or inhuman punishment inflicted. Neither shall death penalty be imposed, unless, for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes, the Congress hereafter provides for it. . .”;
WHEREAS, the crimes punishable by death under this Act are heinous for being grievous, odious and hateful offenses and which, by reason of their inherent or manifest wickedness, viciousness, atrocity and perversity are repugnant and outrageous to the common standards and norms of decency and morality in a just, civilized and ordered society;
WHEREAS, due to the alarming upsurge of such crimes which has resulted not only in the loss of human lives and wanton destruction of property but also affected the nation’s efforts towards sustainable economic development and prosperity while at the same time has undermined the people’s faith in the Government and the latter’s ability to maintain peace and order in the country;
WHEREAS, the Congress, in the justice, public order and the rule of law, and the need to rationalize and harmonize the penal sanctions for heinous crimes, finds compelling reasons to impose the death penalty for said crimes.
Article 2: Death Penalty (Narration)
By: Larissa G. Alejandro & Theo Dens Razonable
The story of Mary Jane Veloso
Mary Jane Veloso, She was a domestic helper, a single mom, and mother of two. She was born in Cabanatuan, Nueva Ecija. She was arrested and executed in Indonesia by Firing squad because of drug smuggling charges. However, she insisted that she was framed up and she was set-up unknowingly as a drug mule.
In February 2009, Mary Jane went to Dubai United Arab Emirates to work as a servant in a 2 year contract. After 10 months of her work, she decided to go back to Philippines on December 31, 2009 because someone attempts to rape her. As she go back to her family with insufficient amount of money to provide for her kids. So she went in an agency in Manila to re-apply to another country. After few months of trying, the agency did not contacted her and she lost hope.
A good news. After months of finding a work. Christine, Her family friend and neighbor, offered her a work. Christine is well known in their province because every week she goes to Malaysia and comebacks to Philippines with a lot of things or “pasalubong”. She offered Mary Jane to work in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia as a servant. Mary Jane excitedly agreed but worrying because she don’t have enough money to buy a plane ticket. But Christine offered her a plane ticket though she said Mary Jane will pay her with her 2 months salary.
April 21, 2010. Mary Jane Veloso and her friend Christine went to Malaysia. Mary Jane, with her 2 pairs of cloths in her back pack, stayed in Sun Inn Lagoon Hotel near Pyramid Mall. In 3 days staying there. She and her friend always goes out to eat together and to buy personal stuffs. One day, she said to her friend that her bag cannot accommodate her cloths so Christine asked her Boyfriend to buy Mary Jane a bag. After a day, Christine’s boyfriend arrived with a new bag.
Christine asked Mary Jane to go to Indonesia to spend holiday for a week and to meet Christine’s friends. And after the week, she will go back to Malaysia and she will start her work. Mary Jane has no choice because she only thinks her family.
April 25, 2010. She arrived in an airport in Malaysia. And Christine told her that as she arrives in Indonesia everything will be alright because her friends will pursue her and they will go to hotel. And her plane took off.
As she arrived in Indonesia. She struggled as he walks in an x-ray machine. The security personnel checked her bag over and over again as her things put aside in her bag. Then the security brought her to the office and asked her what is inside her bag. And the officers cut her bag and they see an aluminum foil with light brown powder. And the officers asked her again if she knew what that was. And she answer that she did not know what is inside her bag. All she did was cry because she knew her life will be finished because of her friend Christine.
Article 3: Death Penalty (Exemplification)
By: Larissa G. Alejandro & Theo Dens Razonable
Death Penalty started from the year 1888. Since then a lot of people have been sentenced, tortured and executed.
According to The 10 death-row inmates and their stories from Inquirer.net (2017, January 7)
Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, Australian
Andrew Chan, 31, and Myuran Sukumaran, They were apprehended by customs on April 17, 2015 at Ngurah Rai International Airport for attempting to smuggle 8.3 kilogram of heroin to Australia.
They were both sentenced to death on February 14, 2006. And they were detained in Kerobokan Prison and went rehabilitation programs such as workshops, lessons and sports. In 2010, they filed an appeal about their sentences but both rejected after a few months. The two lost chance to save their lives in the death row in a case review after the District Court rejecting their plea.
Zanial Abidin, Indonesian.
Zainal was arrested at his residence on December 21, 2000 at Palembang, South Sumatra, because of possessing 58.7 kg of marijuana. In his country, possession of marijuana is illegal, although marijuana is legal in some countries.
He was given drug trafficking charges and 15 years of imprisonment. However his 15 year imprisonment charge increased to death penalty in 2001. The Supreme Court confirmed his sentence. Zanial filed an appeal for clemency earlier that year. But President Jakowi rejected it without mercy.
Mary Jane Veloso
Mary Jane, age of 30 and a mother of two. She worked as a housemaid in Philippines. She was arrested at Adisucipto International Airport in Yogyakrta on April 2010 for possessing 2.6 kg of heroin. And the District Court sentenced her a death penalty on October 2010.
On December, she filed an appeal at the higher Court but also rejected. And Supreme Court confirmed her sentence and President Jakowi rejected her clemency on May 2011.