Paradise lost

Credit to Author: Tempo Desk| Date: Wed, 11 Sep 2019 16:30:41 +0000

 

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IN response to President Duterte’s order to surrender within 15 days or be hunted as fugitives, many hei­nous crime convicts have chosen to give up the paradise that they have enjoyed briefly through the freedom granted them erroneously.

Out of almost 2,000 convicts who gained freedom under the controver­sial Good Conduct Time Allowance (GCTA) law, 74 have already surren­dered as of Saturday, according to the acting head of the national peni­tentiary. Of this number, 38 returned to the Bureau of Corrections while 36 surrendered to the police.

They opted to surrender rather than wait for the 15-day grace pe­riod to expire. When this happens, the GCTA-released convicts would automatically be considered fugitives and hunted down.

Department of Justice (DOJ) Sec­retary Menardo Guevarra assured those who would surrender would be treated with utmost respect and fairness.

The DOJ and the Bureau of Cor­rections (BuCor) suspended the implementation of GCTA, which al­lows prisoners to be released early depending on their behavior during incarceration.

A female witness has already ex­posed the freedom-for-sale scheme, through the GCTA, being offered allegedly to families and loved ones of convicts to hasten the latter’s release.

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General Oscar Albayalde, Philippine National Police (PNP) Chief, ordered all police units nationwide to receive the prisoners who were released through GCTA and would heed the President’s order to surrender.

Albayalde also said they would not hesitate to obey the President’s shoot-to-kill directive against those who refuse to surrender and resist arrest.

Department of Interior and Lo­cal Government (DILG) Secretary Eduardo Año announced that tracker teams would be deployed i
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