HUMAN RIGHTS - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Philippine Prisons' Crushing Problem |
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by Richard C. Paddock The Los Angeles Times Entered into the database on Monday, June 06th, 2005 @ 12:21:51 MST |
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MANILA — Ranilyn Geronimo spent her 14th birthday locked in a jail cell
with 50 women. Two months later, she is still there. The cell is so crowded that
the prisoners sleep on the floor packed tight in rows, all of them lying on their
left side. During the day, the temperature routinely soars above 100 degrees.
Her best friends are accused murderers. Her crime: stealing a fish. Ranilyn, boyish-looking with her hair cut short, was caught at the Manila fishing
port and taken to the Navotas Municipal Jail about four months ago. She says
her family is so poor that she was eating only one meal a day before her arrest.
Her bail was set at $37, but no one she knows has that kind of money. At the jail, sunlight filters through small, grimy windows high in the walls
of cells the size of a large bedroom. Hammocks hang from the bars like spider
webs. Some of the prisoners have red sores all over their arms and legs. A few
inmates cough from tuberculosis. During the month's highest tides, seawater
seeps inside, sometimes rising as high as the prisoners' knees. "When I think of freedom," Ranilyn said, "I just want to cry." Across the Philippines, growing economic hardship and widespread poverty have
triggered a sharp increase in property crimes, particularly theft. The number
of arrests has soared and the volume of prisoners has skyrocketed far beyond
the capacity of the jail system. Federal rules call for juveniles to be housed separately from adults, but the
requirement is widely ignored. Minors are frequently kept in detention centers
with adults, and often in the same cell. The court system is so clogged that some prisoners spend more time in jail
awaiting trial than they would serve if they could get before a judge, plead
guilty and be sentenced. "Thousands of children in jail in the Philippines are daily subjected
to violence and trauma which should not allow any of us to sleep at night,"
said Nicholas Alipui, UNICEF representative to the Philippines, who backs legislation
that would require separate detention facilities for children. In February, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, acknowledged the appalling
state of the country's jails as she defended her decision not to carry out executions.
"You know, given our conditions in jail, [being imprisoned] is a fate
worse than death," she said. Increasingly, Filipinos are holding Arroyo accountable for the country's continuing
economic slide and the widespread corruption that bleeds the government of resources
to provide basic services. "What kind of president would not be helping children in jail?" asked
Ranilyn, who turned 14 on April 4. "Some inmates get sick and don't get
medicine. Why isn't she helping?" Growing Desperation The Philippine economy, once one of the strongest in Southeast Asia, has declined
steadily over the last few decades. Today, a third of the labor force is either
unemployed or has found work overseas. Poverty is so extreme in some parts of
the country that the child malnutrition rate exceeds that of North Korea, according
to figures released by UNICEF last month. Arroyo, who took office with military support in 2001 and was elected to keep
her job last year, is facing mounting calls to step down. In recent months,
it is believed that a group of active and retired military officers have been
quietly organizing an effort to topple her. "We are ripe for another coup," said Rex Robles, a retired navy commodore
and intelligence officer who is now a security analyst. Since Arroyo has come to power, the number of economic crimes has soared even
as violent crimes have declined slightly, according to Philippine National Police
statistics. From 2000, the year before Arroyo took office, to 2004, thefts increased by
44%, police figures show. During the same period, the rate of violent offenses,
including murder, rape and assault, dropped from 2.73 per 100,000 people to
2.46, records show. Many of the thefts are small, often just enough to provide something to eat.
But for the destitute, getting caught can lead to months behind bars. Aneza Marivic de la Cruz has been locked up at the Quezon City Female Dorm
since October on charges that she shoplifted a Milo energy drink and four small
bottles of Head & Shoulders shampoo from a convenience store. The 37-year-old admits putting the items in a shopping bag and trying to walk
out of the store. They were worth 491 pesos, or barely $9. She said she planned
to sell them so she could buy rice for her husband and two daughters, 4 and
11. The typical sentence for petty theft in the Philippines is six months. De la
Cruz has already spent seven months in jail waiting for her case to be heard.
Her bail was set at $92. "No one could raise that in my family, because we are very poor,"
said De la Cruz, whose family has had little to live on since her husband lost
his job in 1999. Clean and brightly lighted, the Quezon City facility is one of Manila's better
jails. Designed for 84 inmates, it houses 581. According to the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology, jails in the city
on average are holding more than six times their stated capacity. The Makati
City Jail in Manila's wealthy financial district is the most crowded, operating
at 15 times its intended capacity. At the squalid Navotas jail, the shortage of funding is obvious. Here, 560
inmates are crammed into a facility built for 63. Four years ago, the jail held
200. The warden, Deogracias Tapayan, points out that the jail is so crowded
that each inmate has less than 4 square feet of space. During the day, most of the prisoners sit crowded together on the floor in
their dimly lighted cells, sometimes watching videos, sometimes doing nothing.
Other inmates hang out in the long corridor between the rows of cells, which
doubles at night as an overflow sleeping area. Many are awaiting trial. Others
are serving sentences of up to three years. Grimy electric fans provide small relief from the heat. When the power goes
out, as it often does, the prisoners fan themselves with pieces of cardboard.
The government has banned karaoke night, an inmate favorite, in all jails to
save on the cost of electricity. Outside, the most trusted male and female prisoners mix together in a small
courtyard, where they cook for the other inmates over open fires, bathe, wash
laundry, give each other haircuts and meet with visitors. Others are allowed
out for a short period once a day. The prisoners eat three times a day, usually
rice with a sprinkling of fish or vegetables. Among the prisoners at Navotas are 18 juveniles, of which Ranilyn is the only
girl. The boys, who are 15 to 17, are housed with 10 young men who were arrested
as juveniles but turned 18 while awaiting trial on charges including theft,
glue sniffing and murder. Some of them have been in jail for as long as a year
and a half. One older inmate, an accused rapist in his 50s, is assigned to live in the
cell and watch over the boys. The cell has two bunks and no window, but with only 28 prisoners, it is the
least crowded in the jail. Most of the boys sleep on the concrete floor on pieces
of cardboard and plastic sheeting. A Family History Among them is Robert Laurel, who turned 15 last month. He was scrounging fish
from the Navotas Fish Port in January when he was arrested on suspicion of stealing. Robert said his 12-year-old brother, Luis, died after he was jailed in the
same cell in December 2003. Luis was serving a six-month sentence for stealing
a watch. A jail official said the cause of death was edema. Robert, who left school after the first grade, has a wispy mustache that makes
him appear older than he is. He has a nasty scar on his cheek that looks like
it was made by a knife. Robert said he was so drunk on cheap gin, he doesn't
remember how it happened. He said he was arrested twice before for stealing, first a necklace and then
some Levis. The charges were dropped both times, but he admits to the thefts.
This time he maintains he was unfairly arrested and plans to fight the charge,
although he has already been in jail for nearly five months. Robert said he often went to the port to help the fishing crews sort through
their catch. For his efforts, the men would slip him fish of such poor quality
it would otherwise have been sold to make fish sauce. He would take the fish
to feed his family, selling some to neighbors so he could buy rice. On the day of his arrest, he said, he was leaving with about 10 pounds of fish
in a plastic bag when he was stopped by a police officer unfamiliar with his
arrangement. Robert says he cannot name the crew member who gave him the fish
without getting him in trouble. He hopes to get a court hearing next month. He said he would prefer to be kept in a cell with only juveniles, but there
have been no problems with the man assigned to look after them. "We call him Father," Robert said. The boys' cell is at the end of the corridor directly across from the women's,
which has six bunks, one toilet and a stove for its 51 occupants. The men are even worse off: They're packed 120 to a cell. Yearning for Freedom Ranilyn says she feels lucky because she has a sleeping spot at the end of
the row facing a wall, not in the middle. "The whole floor is covered with people," she said. "You have
to decide which side you are going to sleep on because you can't switch in the
night." But there is really no debate. The cell's tradition is to sleep on the left. Ranilyn has been befriended by three women, two accused murderers and an alleged
drug dealer. She says the women protect her and have taught her how to cope
in jail. She wears two elastic wristbands, one pink and one blue, they gave
her for her birthday. When the power went out recently, Ranilyn stood fanning
one of her friends as she lay on a lower bunk, reading a magazine with photos
of scantily clad women. Ranilyn, who left school after the fourth grade, lived with an aunt in Navotas
before her arrest. She said she was hungry all the time but avoided the habit
of glue sniffing, common among children in the area. "That's not my vice," she said. "My vice is cigarettes and booze." Sometimes, she would go to the wharf in the hope of finding food. Hanging out
there in February, she was watching men haul tubs of fish when she saw her opportunity.
A fish fell out of a bin onto the ground, and she walked over, kicked it away
and picked it up. Moments later, a security guard hit her in the back of the neck with another
fish. She said the guard beat her with the fish until she was black and blue,
shoved her face down on a crate of fish, then arrested her. Ranilyn would like to plead guilty to stealing the fish, which was worth $1.15,
but can't until a judge hears her case. "I don't understand why I can't be free without bail," she said.
"It's a small offense." When she gets out, she said, all she wants to do is find a little peace by
locking herself inside her aunt's house. "I have a goal now," she said. "Not to come back here."
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