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Manila urged to consider utilizing public funds for blood money

MANILA: The Philippine government should study the possibility of utilizing public funds to raise ‘blood money’ for distressed overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) so that they can be saved from execution.

The suggestion was made by Escudero following the execution of Filipino construction worker Joselito Zapanta in Saudi Arabia on December 29 after the Philippine government fell short of raising $1 million, or roughly PhP46 million, Sun Star reported.

The government was only able to accommodate PhP23 million for 35-year-old Zapanta, who was convicted of robbery and murder of his Sudanese landlord in 2009, the report said.

However, Escudero reportedly said that before making such move, the government should first determine its legality by seeking guidance from the Commission on Audit and the courts.

“It is the policy of the government to help raise funds for blood money from voluntary sources, but not to allocate funds from the national treasury for this purpose,” Escudero added.

“This policy should be reviewed considering that there are still around 79 Filipinos on death row around the world and based on the record of the Department of Foreign Affairs, with some of them requiring blood money,” he was quoted as saying.

Sun Star quoted Escudero as saying the government should also go beyond raising blood money by making sure that every OFW facing criminal charges abroad is accorded legal assistance from the time the crime was committed until the case is resolved.

He also reportedly said it is the government’s duty, through its embassies and consulates to ensure that the rights of a Filipino accused of any crime abroad are protected at all times, whether he is guilty or not.

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