Senator Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. has filed a resolution directing the Senate to conduct a full review of the country’s efforts against human trafficking to prevent another case similar to that of Mary Janes Veloso.
In his Senate Resolution No. 1325 filed last May 6, Marcos asked the appropriate committee to conduct a review of Republic Act No. 10364 or the Expanded Anti-Trafficking Act of 2012 and the performance of the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking (IACAT).
”Review is not only timely but also critically important to ensure that Mary Jane Veloso’s case would be an isolated one and the last of its kind,” Marcos said.
He noted that most convictions involving human trafficking involved domestic cases, hence the need to up the ante on cases involving cross-border trafficking as exemplified by the Veloso case.
“There is an urgency to this proposal for a thorough review of the expanded anti-trafficking law considering that there are 92 other Filipinos on death row in other parts of the world for various crimes, and we need to determine whether some of them may also have been victims of trafficking in persons” Marcos said.
The resolution formalizes the senator’s earlier call for such a review after the last minute-reprieve granted to Veloso by the Indonesian government to enable her to testify against her alleged illegal recruiter.
Veloso was sentenced to death by the Indonesian government for bringing in over two kilos of heroin to that country in 2010.
She claimed, however, that Ma. Kristina Sergio, who recruited her to work as domestic helper, tricked her into carrying the suitcase packed with illegal drugs.
Following the filing of criminal charges against Sergio and her partner Julius Lacanilao in connection with Veloso’s case, several other complainants against them have surfaced.
Marcos cited the need to review IACAT’s performance to enhance its capability to provide assistance and protection to victims of trafficking.
The senator noted that since 2011, the United States government has classified the Philippines in the Tier 2 category, referring to countries that have shown significant but not overwhelming progress in the fight against human trafficking.
“It is important that the Philippines show firm, consistent and unquestionable resolve in protecting the welfare of migrant Filipino workers and ensuring their safety when seeking jobs abroad, from time of recruitment to onsite services, as well as towards future reintegration and reunification with their families back home,” Marcos said. (MNS)