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Tiny proportion of small firms linked to global supply chain — PIDS

ONLY A SMALL SHARE of Philippine small businesses are connected to the global supply chain, with 1.3% of 530 surveyed companies directly exporting in 2016, the Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS) said.

A PIDS study published this month found that Philippine small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are unable to compete with their Southeast and East Asian counterparts in connecting to export markets.

“Since most local SMEs lack the ability to scale up production, they miss out on economies of scale, resulting in higher cost per unit of their products relative to their competitors,” the report said.

The Obstacles of Philippine SMEs’ Participation in Global Value Chains research report added that most Philippine exporters are at the low end of the value chain, exporting raw materials instead of processed, high-value products.

Philippine SMEs also find it challenging to meet international standards and regulatory requirements.

“Most of them have limited access to finance and skilled labor and lack the entrepreneurial mind-set and skills to expand their business,” the report said, adding that customs inefficiencies increase export and import costs.

According to the survey, 57% of the exporting small businesses — or four out of seven — were from the services sector. The remaining 43% were in manufacturing.

Some 485 of the surveyed SMEs were from the services sector, which means the exporting services companies make up 0.8% of the total.

The report said SMEs may also be connected to the global value chain through linkages with large domestic firms and multinational enterprises, which either export directly or sell products and services to exporters.

Only 23.4% of the surveyed SMEs sold to large firms, as most sell to either other SMEs or retail clients.

SMEs also form other formal linkages, with 14.5% of those surveyed experiencing being subcontracted, outsourced, licensed to manufacture a product, or engaged in a joint venture, strategic alliance, or consortium with either large domestic businesses or foreign companies.

The report said that industrial SMEs such as manufacturing companies are more connected to the global value chain than services companies.

“This could imply that there are either more GVC (global value chain) linkage opportunities for SMEs in the industry sector or obstacles in the industry sector are easier to overcome than in services.”

Industrial SMEs are more likely to engage in subcontracting and outsourcing, as well as receive manufacturing licenses. Services SMEs engage in joint ventures, alliances, and consortiums.

These formal linkages by industrial SMEs guarantee them revenue, while activities by services companies do not guarantee increased sales or profits, the study found. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Tax appeals court rejects BIR appeal on Metro Rail tax assessment

THE Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) denied for lack of merit an appeal of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) seeking to overturn the cancellation of the P1.63-billion deficiency tax assessment against Metro Rail Transit Corp. (MRTC).

The BIR filed the motion for reconsideration against the amended decision on Oct. 2, which cancelled the tax liabilities assessment for 2007 due to a void Letter of Authority (LoA) for revenue officers (RO) to assess the company.

It said in its motion for reconsideration that the issue on the authority was raised only by MRTC in its supplemental motion for partial reconsideration, claiming that it should not be allowed to raise an issue that has not been raised “at the administrative forum, nor during the pretrial of the present case.”

In a five-page resolution on Dec. 4, the court’s special second division, the court, however, said it finds the arguments of the BIR “untenable.”

“Section 1, Rule 14 of the Revised Rules of the Court of Tax Appeals, as amended, provides that this Court may not limit itself to the issues stipulated by the parties but may also rule upon related issues necessary to achieve an orderly disposition of the case,” according to the ruling.

It also cited a Supreme Court decision which affirmed the authority of the CTA to settle issues on scope of authority of revenue authorities in conducting an audit although it was not raised by the parties in pleadings and memoranda.

The court also noted lack of authority of ROs to assess through a valid LoA puts into question the validity of the assessment. It said that the lack of an LoA meant the nullity of the assessment.

“Be it noted that in the absence of such an authority, the assessment or examination is a nullity. An invalid assessment bears no valid fruit. The law imposes a substantive, not merely a formal requirement,” the court said.

“To proceed heedlessly with tax collection without first establishing a valid assessment is evidently violative of the cardinal principle in administrative investigations: that taxpayers should be able to present their case and adduce supporting evidence,” it added.

The court also rejected the claim of the BIR that a referral memorandum is sufficient to authorize ROs to continue the audit of a taxpayer.

It cited revenue Memorandum Order No. 29-07 which said that an RO can conduct examination of a taxpayer through an LoA issued by the regional director or by that assistant commissioner/head revenue executive assistants.

For re-assignment, a new LoA is not needed, provided that the letter or notice or memorandum for the re-assignment was signed by the Assistant Commissioner/Head Revenue Executive Assistants of the Large Taxpayers Service.

In the case, however, the referral memorandum was signed by the chief of the Large Taxpayers Audit and Investigation Division I, which is not sufficient to authorize an RO to continue the investigation.

“Indeed, taxes are the lifeblood of government and should be collected without hindrance. Yet, the collection of taxes should be exercised reasonably and in accordance with the prescribed procedure,” the court said.

Associate Justice Catherine T. Manahan wrote decision which was concurred in by Associate Justice Juanito C. Castañeda. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

DAR transfers functions to BARMM counterpart

THE Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) said it has turned over its functions to the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Agrarian Reform (MAFAR) of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM).

“We are confident that under the leadership of MAFAR Minister Mohammad Yacob, agrarian reform will be implemented in all of Bangsamoro and rural development will flourish. Our farmers are in good hands,” Agrarian Reform Secretary John R. Castriciones said in a statement Thursday.

Republic Act. No. 11054, or the Organic Law for the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, abolished the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM). BARMM is composed of five provinces: Lanao del Sur, Sulu, Maguindanao, Basilan, and Tawi-tawi, as well as the city of Cotabato.

MAFAR merges the ARMM’s former agriculture, fisheries, and agrarian reform agencies.

DAR’s functions and powers as stated in Executive Order No. 129-A, series of 1987 which were transferred to MAFAR include the implementation of agrarian laws, formulation of policy, acquisition and distribution of land, as well as providing farmers with free legal services and support services through credit and rural infrastructure, and approving or disapproving land conversion.

The adjudicatory functions of DAR were not officially transferred, since the MAFAR still needs to form an agrarian reform adjudication board like that of DAR’s, which is part of its Agrarian Legal services.

“Our mission is to empower farming and fishing communities by ensuring equitable access to support services and optimum economic benefits,” MAFAR Minister Mohammad Yacob said.

In a separate statement, the department said that 1,742 hectares of land in Basilan, Maguindanao, and Tawi-Tawi were distributed to 793 agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs) from BARMM. This is the first land distribution under MAFAR.

There were also 93 individual certificate of land ownership awards (CLOA) distributed, which covers 238.9 hectares.

BARMM agrarian cooperatives were also given machinery, which include transplanters, cultivators, incubators, spindle machines and tractors, as well as seedlings under DAR’s Climate Resilient Farm Productivity Support program, which will benefit 500 ARBs and non-ARBs. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

DENR meets biodiversity targets

DENR logo

THE Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) said it has surpassed its 2019 targets for biodiversity preservation.

Environment Secretary Roy A. Cimatu said the Biodiversity Management Bureau (BMB) exceeded its targets for cave assessment and the issuance of wildlife permits as early as October.

“This is palpable evidence that the DENR is not only focused on the rehabilitation of Manila Bay and Boracay, but also in the conservation of the country’s flora and fauna,” he said in a statement.

The DENR noted that the BMB assessed 52 caves, compared to its annual target of 38. It has also issued 7,926 various permits for handling, collecting, exporting and farming wildlife, against the target of 4,026.

The bureau’s Philippine Operations Group on Ivory and Illegal Wildlife (Task Force POGI) also confiscated 72 animals and 15.6 kilograms of agarwood. This task force includes personnel from the BMB, the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI), and the Philippine National Police (PNP).

It also maintained 42 wildlife rescue centers, 89% more than the target, and 384 ecotourism facilities, 98% more than the target, across the country.

Republic Act No. 9147, or the Wildlife Resources Conservation and Preservation Act, charges the department with conserving and protecting “the country’s wildlife resources and their habitats for sustainability,” as well as to promote ecological balance and improve biological diversity, and to regulate the collection and trade of wildlife. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

Peso ends flat on cautious trading ahead of year’s end

THE PESO ended sideways on Thursday as the market opted to stay on the sidelines as the year comes to an end.

The local unit closed at P50.821 against the greenback yesterday, appreciating by less than a centavo from its Dec. 23 finish of P50.83 per dollar, according to data published on the Bankers Association of the Philippines’ website.

The peso opened the session at P50.80 versus the dollar. Its weakest showing was seen at P50.85, while its intraday best was at P50.675 against the greenback.

Dollars traded climbed to $1.076 billion from $757 million on Monday.

UnionBank of the Philippines, Inc. Chief Economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion said sideways trading has been the trend for the past few days.

“As the year ends, the movement is usually sideways. Market players are staying on the sidelines and would rather wait for next year,” Mr. Asuncion said in a text message.

Meanwhile, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC) Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort attributed the slight appreciation of the local unit to positive signals about the US-China trade talks.

“The peso exchange rate slightly strengthened amid improved global market risk appetite recently after US President Donald J. Trump signalled that a preliminary US-China trade deal is done,” Mr. Ricafort said in a text message.

For today, UnionBank’s Mr. Asuncion sees the peso moving within the P50.70-50.90 band, while RCBC’s Mr. Ricafort gave a forecast range of P50.50-50.80.

Meanwhile, most Asian currencies firmed in year-end trade on Thursday as comments from China boosted expectations of Washington and Beijing signing a trade deal early in the new year.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry on Wednesday said their economic and trade teams were in close communication about detailed arrangements for the Phase 1 deal’s signing and other follow-up work.

On Tuesday, US President Donald Trump said he and Chinese President Xi Jinping would have a signing ceremony to sign the deal agreed to this month.

Beijing has not yet confirmed specific components of the deal that were released by US officials, but a spokesman for China’s Commerce Ministry said last week the details would be made public after the official signing.

The Chinese yuan, however, weakened 0.1% after Wednesday’s strong gains. The central bank lifted its official midpoint prior to the market open, breaching a key threshold.

The South Korean won and the Taiwan dollar strengthened 0.2% and 0.3%, respectively. — L.W.T. Noble with Reuters

PSEi falls as volume thins ahead of year’s close

By Vincent Mariel P. Galang, Reporter

PHILIPPINE SHARES failed to sustain their gains on Thursday as investors anticipate little market activity as the year comes to an end.

The 30-member Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) fell 30.32 points or 0.38% to close at 7,842.28 on Thursday, while the broader all shares index declined 2.13 points or 0.04% to end at 4,643.20.

“It was a slow trading day for the market today as the market came from the Christmas holidays and also anticipated the coming long weekend for the new year,” Papa Securities Corp. Sales Associate Gabriel Jose F. Perez said in an e-mail on Thursday.

He said the index even fell as much as 99 points, but was able to recover by about 30 points on Thursday.

“The 7,900 mark still remains to be the level to beat for the last day of the year where the 200-day MA (moving average) resistance lies. Potential year-end window dressing could push us past this mark and into the 8,000-territory,” he added.

He noted that the most active stock yesterday was Manila Water Co., Inc., which went up 1.53 points or 17.85% to close P10.10 each, adding that it had the second highest turnover on Thursday with P471 million, after SM Investments Corp.’s P567 million.

For Regina Capital Development Corp. Head of Sales Luis A. Limlingan, the main index reflected the “muted Christmas Even trading in the US and little market activity right before the last trading session of the year.”

On Wall Street, Dow Jones Industrial fell 36.08 points or 0.13% to 28,515.45, the S&P 500 index fell 0.63 points or 0.02% to 3,223.38, while the Nasdaq Composite increased 7.24 points or 0.08% to 8,952.88.

For Asian markets, Japan’s Nikkei 225 gained 142.05 points or 0.60% to 23,924.92; Kospi Index increased 7.85 points or 0.36% to 2,197.93; HongKong’s Hang Seng index fell 42.20 points or 0.15% to 27,864.21; and Shanghai Composite gained 25.47 points or 0.85% to 3,007.35.

Back home, all sub-sectors fell except mining and oil, which gained 172.53 points or 2.19% to close at 8,027.93 and financials, which was up 11.37 points or 0.61% to end at 1,860.71.

Meanwhile, property fell 50.39 points or 1.19% to end at 4,157.52; holding firms decreased 27.30 points or 0.35% to close 7,653.77; industrials dropped 30.48 points or 0.31% to 9,623.84; and services gave up 3.72 points or 0.24% to 1,527.97.

Value turnover on Thursday stood at P3.60 billion with 911.47 million shares changing hands, down from Monday’s P8.30 billion.

Stocks that gained outnumbered those that fell, 105 to 81, while 50 issues closed unchanged.

Net foreign buying totalled P143.38 million yesterday, a turnaround from the previous session’s net outflows worth P1.22 billion.

Duterte wants Maoist leader to come home

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte wants Maoist leader Jose Maria C. Sison to come home from the Netherlands so they could have a “one-on-one talk” and possibly resume peace talks.

“The president is daring him to come home to the Philippines and have a one-on-one talk with him,” presidential spokesman Salvador S. Panelo said at a briefing on Thursday.

Mr. Sison won’t get arrested once he comes home, he said.

In a statement, Mr. Sison said the “revolutionary struggle” would continue even if peace talks resume.

“So long as there is yet no final agreement that ensures a just peace, the people and their revolutionary forces have all the right to wage the revolutionary struggle,” he said.

He added that talks could only resume if the government grants a general amnesty and release all political prisoners; approve articles of the Comprehensive Agreement on Social and Economic Reforms, and coordinate a unilateral ceasefire.

Mr. Duterte earlier said he would send Labor Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III to the Netherlands, where Mr. Sison lives in exile, before peace discussions resume.

Mr. Bello headed a government panel in charge of peace talks last year before it got dissolved earlier this year.

The Philippine Army on Thursday accused New People’s Army rebels — the armed wing of the Communist Party of the Philippines — of attacks in Camarines Sur and Iloilo on Monday, despite a ceasefire announced by Mr. Duterte. The ceasefire will run until Jan. 7.

Mr. Duterte would give the communist rebels a chance to explain the alleged cease-fire violation, his spokesman said.

“Since the president has always been open, giving a little window to the pursuit of peace, he will wait for the explanation.” Mr. Panelo said. — Gillian M. Cortez

Korean wanted for cyberfraud stopped from leaving airport

IMMIGRATION agents stopped a Korean national wanted in his country for cyberfraud from leaving the country on Dec. 19, the bureau said in a statement on Thursday.

In a report, Immigration port operations division chief Grifton SP. Medina said the Korean had tried to board a flight to Hong Kong from the Ninoy Aquino International Airport.

The suspect was on the Interpol’s database of wanted foreign fugitives and the Interpol issued a red notice against him in December 2018 after Korean authorities reported that he was wanted for prosecution. The suspect allegedly victimized 42 people.

The Immigration bureau said the Korean government had canceled his passport and a district court in Daejeon, South Korea had issued a warrant for his arrest.

The suspect was booked on the next available flight to Korea, where authorities were waiting for his arrival.

Reports of lawyer Rommer Tacorda, chief of border control and intelligence unit, showed that the Korean was accused of operating an illegal call center in Dalian in China, which was engaged in voice phishing activities targeting Koreans.

The bureau said Korean prosecutors alleged that the suspect and his cohorts had defrauded 42 people of 2.2 billion Korean won or about $1.7 million.

It added that the suspect and his cohorts had their victims by pretending to be police detectives or prosecutors. They threatened them with arrest and prosecution unless they paid. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

MMDA cites loopholes, but supports single ticketing bill

THE METROPOLITAN Manila Development Authority (MMDA) on Thursday expressed support for the bill that seeks to institutionalize a single ticketing system for traffic violations in the National Capital Region (NCR). In a position paper submitted last month, MMDA said it “staunchly” supports House Bill (HB) 1021, or the Single Ticketing System Act, but noted ambiguities in the proposed law. “It is not clear in the proposed bill whether it only refers to the uniformity of the traffic ticket to be issued, or if it includes also the procedure of apprehension and adjudication of contests/protest,” the MMDA said. The agency gave recommendations to improve the measure, such as the harmonization of local ordinances regarding traffic penalties and apprehension procedures. The NCR is composed of 16 cities and one municipality. MMDA also recommended a clear provision on the sharing of fines collected between the agency and the local governments. It also called for clarification on the rule for confiscating a driver’s license in cases of minor traffic offenses. HB 1021, authored by Quezon City Rep. Precious Hipolito Castelo, seeks to “rationalize and streamline the best practice in the area of issuing violation tickets or receipts related to traffic laws and regulations” to avoid confusion or jurisdictional conflicts among traffic enforcers. The bill is pending deliberation before the House committee on Metro Manila development. — Genshen L. Espedido

Ending impunity

The guilty verdict on some of the principals responsible for the Nov. 23, 2009 Ampatuan Massacre is the first instance in which members of a powerful warlord clan have been convicted as masterminds in the killing of journalists in the Philippines. No masterminds and only 14 assassins had previously been convicted of the killing of the remaining 133 journalists out of the 165 who have been murdered for their work since 1986.

But as significant and as unprecedented as the verdict is, it does not mean the end of the culture of impunity. Despite the Duterte regime’s claims — and its shamelessly taking credit for it — neither is it likely to halt the harassments and threats against, and even the killing of journalists.

Promulgated on Dec. 19, 2019, the decision of Judge Jocelyn Solis-Reyes convicting those who planned and carried out the murder of 58 men and women including 32 journalists and media workers is an important step in that direction. It can help discourage those who would silence journalists from doing what the Ampatuans and their band of police, military and paramilitary thugs did. But it does not eliminate those factors that have made the killings and impunity possible and practically inevitable.

Among them are the weaknesses of the justice system, particularly at the community level where there is a shortfall of prosecutors and where, in some cases, the prosecutors available cannot do their jobs out of fear for their lives. There is also the collusion between local officials, the police, and the military and the paramilitaries under its command, and the dominance of warlord rule in many localities. Ending impunity demands, among other measures, the dismantling of warlord power and the local dynasties’ use of public security forces as their private armies. Strengthening the justice system by assuring its independence and providing the funding and the prosecutors it needs to enable it to effectively prosecute wrong-doers is also an urgent imperative.

In 2009, civil society and journalists’ organizations urged the dismantling of the paramilitaries in the aftermath of the Ampatuan Massacre because of the involvement of the military-trained and -funded Civilian Volunteer Organizations (CVO) in the worst case of election-related violence in the Philippines and the worst attack on journalists in human history. But the Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo presidency did nothing about it, and neither did the Benigno Aquino III administration that succeeded it in June, 2010. To both regimes, the use of the paramilitaries to augment police and military forces in their war against the New People’s Army (NPA) and other armed groups was a priority over the need to stop local warlords’ using them against their rivals and even against journalists. Given its enshrinement of the use of force as its first and last resort in dealing with the country’s problems as well as its critics, among them independent journalists, the Duterte regime is unlikely to act differently.

And yet it is the government that has the means, the Constitutional responsibility, and the power to stop not only the paramilitaries’ serving as the private armies of the warlord clans dominant in a number of provincial communities. Government can also curb the political dynasties’ recruitment of police and military forces as their personal bodyguards and security forces for their fiefdoms, and address the shortage of prosecutors at the community level. Even more significantly can government help curb impunity by encouraging and protecting free expression and press freedom as part of its responsibility under a Constitutional order that explicitly prohibits their abridgment.

Despite the Constitution, press freedom and the right to free expression have nevertheless been under siege in this country for decades, among other reasons because those responsible for the attacks against them have escaped punishment. The phrase “culture of impunity” was first used by the New York-based press freedom watch group Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) in 2003 to explain the killing of journalists in the Philippines. But wrong-doers and criminals have been getting away with various offenses including murder since the country’s independence was recognized by the United States in 1946. It can even be argued that the culture of impunity goes farther back in Philippine history. Instead of being punished, the killers of Andres Bonifacio and Antonio Luna prospered and were acclaimed as heroes. Those in command of the US troops who razed entire communities and killed thousands during the Philippine-American War also got away with it. Some of the traitors who collaborated with Japanese occupation forces during World War II became the country’s first leaders after 1946.

In 1965, Ferdinand Marcos became President and eventually amassed a huge fortune out of public funds that even now has eluded recovery. Neither has the gang of military and Constabulary cutthroats responsible for the abductions, torture, rapes, enforced disappearances, and extrajudicial killings during the Marcos terror regime been punished for their crimes. Rodrigo Duterte himself has bragged about killing someone during his younger days, and has even admitted encouraging the Davao Death Squad responsible for the murder of hundreds of alleged criminals including children, but was nevertheless elected President in 2016.

Deeply embedded in the country’s past and present, the culture of impunity is specially evident in the killing of journalists and media workers. Most of the killers of the journalists slain since 1986, and the masterminds behind them, have escaped prosecution and punishment. The members of the Ampatuan clan who have been found guilty of planning and executing the Ampatuan Massacre could be the exceptions among the masterminds — but could still get away with murder, depending on the outcome of their appeal in the higher courts.

The entire country and press community must closely watch future developments as those convicted by Judge Solis-Reyes appeal her verdict in the higher courts, and quite possibly all the way to the Supreme Court. The final decision on this case, and its implementation, will be crucial to the defense of press freedom and the need to put an end to the impunity that has encouraged the use of violence against the independent press and other truth-tellers.

Because government is unwilling to take the steps needed to do either, the press needs the protection of the citizenry to stop the killing of journalists and to dismantle the culture of impunity. Much of the public has met the killings with little outrage, among other reasons because they are either unaware of the value to their lives of the work journalists do, or because they have been convinced by its detractors in and out of government that the press does them more harm than good, and that its practitioners are corrupt purveyors of false and biased information.

The journalism community must put its own house in order by demonstrating through honest, accurate, fair, and relevant reporting, commentary, and analysis the value and role of the press in truth-telling as indispensable to democratic discourse and to the people’s lives. By doing so it can earn the protection of the citizenry from those who would silence the independent press by killing journalists and who usually get away with it.

Only by waging it on several fronts can the campaign against the killings and the culture of impunity be won. Getting the guilty punished is an important front in that battle. But the press community’s doing everything it can to be better at its tasks is also one of the many fronts in stopping the killings and ending impunity.

 

Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro).

www.luisteodoro.com

BARMM launches job portal site

AN ONLINE job portal has been launched by the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) government as it undertakes the formal three-year transition period starting Jan. 1. The Bangsamoro JOB Portal (https://jobs.bangsamoro.gov.ph/) was launched Dec. 23 during the regional government’s 30th Cabinet meeting in Cotabato City. In a statement, BARMM Chief Minister Ahod Balawag Ebrahim said the “portal is an avenue to screen aspiring applicants based on merit and credibility, following the necessary qualifications.” The portal is already accessible, but is currently limited to registration functions. As of Thursday early afternoon, over 20,000 have already registered with more than half of those already “activated.” The BARMM government said “vacant positions shall be posted soon.”

Justice served?

It is to be expected — the conviction after 10 long years of Zaldy Ampatuan and some others for the murder of 58 people back in 2009. How can it be otherwise?

These facts stand out: the number of people that were killed in one incident that included many journalists, the manner of killing, and the notoriety of violence and impunity in the locality. The victims figured there was strength and safety in numbers, and by traveling in a convoy of vehicles in daylight, afforded coverage of their cause and the mantle of protection.

Ranged against them, the perpetrators who were probably thinking that “by amassing together, [they are trying] to scare us!” and “how dare they challenge our power frontally!” The result was described as the “trial of the century.”

Another thought they may have had was “so what, who would dare point to us, or who can arrest us?” Even if the case would get to court, there are a thousand ways to evade jail and imprisonment — to suborn or intimidate witnesses, bribe the prosecutors and judges, hire the best defense lawyer that money can buy. There are always punishing delays and the confusing rules.

Delay is built into the justice system. The adversarial system and the technical requirements of evidence and procedure that we mindlessly copied from the Spanish and American codes is a major reason. We forget that these countries have since undertaken major penal reforms. Our legislators meanwhile go about commenting on anything like gadflies while failing to study the root causes of the problems and the requisite solutions.

A case in point: our general penal code, the Revised Penal Code, dates back to 1930. It is way past time for a modern criminal code instead of continuously legislating piecemeal criminal statutes that conflict with one another and make everyone more and more confused.

Delay makes people forget. The string of Marcos cases are more than 20 years in the docket. What happened over the past 20 years? An ordinary estafa case takes three to five years to resolve. Pity the victims and glory to the fraudster.

Delay results in costs, not only in financial terms but the human costs of unresolved issues, open wounds, and mental anguish. Victims are victimized twice over and more.

The award of damages to the family of the victims may at least assuage their pain but it can never compensate. In jurisdictions that allow for blood money, i.e. payment for an injury or wrong, this is limited when the crime is a killing as there is no resurrection for the victim and no redemption for the victim’s family.

The endless motions and appeals are to be expected while the accused are out on bail. When bail is not granted, the wealthy accused are most probably in hospital suites, yet the subject of special motions. When the documentation is finally exhausted after another 10 or so years, the accused is by now staying in a prison suite with the amenities of a modern day luxury hotel. Who says crime does not pay?

If the convict behaves meekly, good conduct statutes allow for early release — unless a pardon was successfully lobbied. Either way, this results in a “get out of jail” pass. It is not as if, in the meantime, there are no trips out of prison for a hundred reasons.

Our national prison, Bilibid, is due for modernization and transfer. There is no sense for it to be occupying a few hundred hectares of prime property that can be used optimally for housing and better road connections in the south of the capital. Its location makes it difficult to manage, and in effect it is a very porous system the consequences of which we witness frequently.

There is no active and sustained effort from the administration to finally solve this well-known problem that infects the whole justice system. The corrections facility is the recipient of the “output” of the courts, that is, the convicted prisoners.

And so the wheel turns — a sentence, a conviction, and a judgment of guilt to restore our confidence and faith in the justice system. Justice is served today, for a day, and it means a little more peace this season for the families of the victims. The collective tragedy impelled their constant advocacy and vigilance to see the case till the end. Justice served? Yes, in a most dangerous way, in a most arduous manner, and in most complicated mode.