Search PinoyPress                                                                                                                                                       Subscribe       Follow us on

January 08, 2009                             Manila, Philippines
NEWS & FEATURES    |    BLOGS & COLUMNS    |    ANALYSIS    |    SPECIAL REPORTS    |    PHOTOGRAPHS    |    VIDEO    |    SPECIAL COVERAGE    |    PRESS RELEASES
Politics & Governance   |   Economy   |   Business   |   Human Rights   |   OFWs & Migration   |   Environment   |   Insurgency   |   Entertainment   |   Lifestyle   |   Technology
    » ZTE Scandal     » Corruption    » President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo     » The Financial Crisis     » Extrajudicial Killings     » Islamic Separatism

RELATED STORIES

Philippines: Save Marilou Ranario

Kuwaiti Court Affirms Ranario’s Death Sentence

Arroyo to Plead with Kuwait Emir Today for OFW’s Life

FILED UNDER: » *, Top Stories » Ranario Family Hopes for Release, Not Commutation

Ranario Family Hopes for Release, Not Commutation

PUBLISHED ON November 25, 2007 AT 7:19 PM

As the family of Marilou Ranario, an OFW in death row in Kuwait, awaits for the promulgation of the decision of the Kuwait’s highest court on November 27, they hope that she would eventually be released. They fear that Marilou would not be able to survive life imprisonment in a Kuwaiti jail given her health condition.

BY AUBREY SC MAKILAN
Bulatlat

The father of Marilou Ranario, an overseas Filipino worker (OFW) on death row, said that the possible commutation of her daughter’s sentence from death to life imprisonment would not make a big difference.

“Masakit din sa kalooban ko kung life imprisonment dahil hindi ko rin s’ya makikita,” said the 64-year old father Rosario. “Parang balewala dahil ‘di s’ya makakapiling ng mga anak n’ya.” (It would also be difficult for us if the sentence would be commuted to life imprisonment because still we would not see her. It’s as if nothing would change because she would not be with her children.)

Rosario is also worried that Marilou will not be able to bear being imprisoned for the rest of her life because of her deteriorating health condition.

“Dapat padoktoran nila dahil tingin ko…depressed na s’ya,” (They should have her checked up by a doctor because I think she is depressed.) he said, as he recalled that her daughter has turned skinny and did not talk when they visited her in Kuwaiti jail in April 2006. “Sa tingin ko hindi n’ya kakayanin sa ganu’ng lagay ang habambuhay na pagkabilanggo.” (I don’t think she would be able to survive long with her condition if she would be imprisoned for life.)

Marilou languishes in death row after a Kuwaiti Court sentenced her to death by hanging in September 2005 for killing her female employer. An appeals court upheld this decision in February 2007. Marilou’s case is under final appeal with Kuwait’s highest court, the Court of Cassation. Oral arguments were held on November 13 with the final decision expected on November 27.

Dismayed

Rosario told Bulatlat that he was not informed by concerned Philippine officials regarding the date of the promulgation of the decision on his daughter’s case.

“Medyo may hinanakit nga ako,” (I have msigivings.) he said, adding that he was not even informed about the outcome of the November 13 oral arguments, including the scheduling of the promulgation of the decision set on November 27. Even Marilou’s siblings, Weng and Allan, were not informed even through text messages, Rosario said.

Rosario was also dismayed when he, together with Migrante leaders, tried to hold a dialogue with officials from the Department of Foreign Affairs November 19 during a protest action led by Migrante International. Migrante International leaders accompanied Rosario inside the department to inquire about his daughter’s case.

To his disappointment, Rosario and Migrante leaders waited for almost half an hour at the gate.

“Bilang magulang, bakit nila ako hindi pinapasok. Sana sa loob na lang ako pinaghintay,” (As a parent of an OFW why did they not let me in. They could have made me wait inside.) he lamented.

Meanwhile, Lian Santos, Migrante deputy secretary general, said that it was only last November 22, after a series of protest actions in front of the DFA, were they provided with the documents containing details of the oral arguments.

Pages: 1 2

RSS feedSubscribe via email Discuss

Leave a Comment

IMPORTANT NOTICE: While the comments posted on PinoyPress are not moderated, we do not tolerate abusive, offensive and obscene language and will edit them accordingly (or delete them if needed). If a commenter persists in posting offensive comments, we will mark the comment as spam and block the IP address.

Advertisement

LATEST STORIES FROM BULATLAT.COM
2008: Workers Under Attack, but Gains were Made
NPA Blames Military for Delay in the Release of Army officer
How Israel is Multiplying Hamas by a Thousand
Guns, Butter, and Obama
Ushering of a New Day.

LATEST STORIES FROM DAVAOTODAY.COM

Philippines most dangerous country in Asia-Pacific for radio broadcasters, says IFJ
Impact welcomes video footage of POW; calls for Peace Negotiations
Formal talks to negotiate substantive reforms must not be preconditioned and negated by protracted ceasefire
Only Arroyo can solve housing foreclosures — Duterte
STORIES BY CARLOS H. CONDE
Generation left behind by Filipino migrant workers
Ferry capsizes in the Philippines, killing at least 23
Troops and separatists clash in southern Philippines
Manila Gets Set for the Downturn
The melamine stain: One sign of a worldwide problem

Anti-Israel Protest. Filipino and Chinese activists, two of them pictured above, held protest rallies in front of the Israeli consulate in Hongkong recently to denounce Israeli's continued bombardment of the Gaza Strip, which have killed scores of Palestinians. The protest in Hongkong was organized and led by by the Asia Pacific Students and Youth Association. (Photo courtesy of arkibongbayan.org)

40 Years -- And Still At It. Fighters of the New People’s Army belonging to the Pulang Bagani Command celebrate the 40th founding anniversary of the Communist Party of the Philippines somewhere in the hinterlands of Davao City on Friday, Dec. 26. The communists have been fighting for the establishment of a Marxist state in the Philippines since 1968. The party today issued a statement about a five-year plan to intensify its struggle. It said the plan’s “overriding objective” is to “increase the strength of the revolutionary forces and approach the goal of destroying the ruling system and replacing it with the people’s democratic state.’’ ((Photo by Keith Bacongco/AKP Images)

Santa Juana. Juana Change's Christmas offering

Juana Change. This is the video of Juana Change that is a hit on Youtube.

Star-Struck. Grade 6 pupils of the Broce Central Elementary School of Peace in Datu Odin Sinsuat dramatizes the children's story entitled "Ang Bagong Golis" read by action star and Robin Padilla and written by Bea Sapal, an IDP from Pikit, North Cotabato on Tuesday, December 2, 2008. Broce became a School of Peace in 2006, the first in the ARMM. The School of Peace is one of ACT for Peace Programme's strategies in promoting the "petals of peace" which are dismantling the culture of war; living with compassion and justice; building cultural respect, reconciliation and solidarity; promoting human rights and responsibilities; living in harmony with the Earth; and nurturing inner peace. Padilla is in Mindanao to promote peacebuilding and peace advocacy efforts in partnership with the ACT for Peace Programme. (AKP Images / Ruby Thursday More)

"Butcher, Keep Out!" Members of progressive organizations called National Security Adviser Norberto Gonzales a berdugo (butcher) in a recent picket outside the Ateneo de Davao University where Gonzales spoke for the Mindanao Peace of Week celebration. Leftist activists say Gonzales heads the Inter-Agency Legal Action Group and is the mastermind of arbitrary arrests and fabricated charges of their fellow-activists -- a major component of Oplan Bantay Laya (OBL). Under the OBL, they say, killings and enforced disappearances of legal activists are implemented by the agents of the Arroyo government. (davaotoday.com photo by BARRY OHAYLAN)

Shoe Attack. This is a video of US President George W. Bush being attacked by an Iraqi journalist, who hurled his shoes at the president during a press conference on Monday in Baghdad.

Spawn. This photo, taken by photojournalist Sonny Espiritu, won the Best Single Photo award in the recent annual PopDev Awards. The photo was first published by the Philippine Human Rights Reporting Project with this caption: "An urban poor woman feeds her youngest child while washing clothes for a living and looking after other children. Modern contraception advocates say having fewer children would help fight poverty and hunger, but the predominent Catholic Church says there is no link between poverty and population, of which the Philippines has now almost 90 million."

End The Violence. Members of the women's group Gabriela make known their sentiments about violence against women. They commemorated yesterday, Nov. 25, the "International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women. (Photo courtesy of arkibongbayan.org)
Sweet Misery: A Poisoned World is a documentary about the dangers of aspartame, the artificial sweetener now being marketed relentless in the Philippines. Known through the brands Equal, NutraSweet and others, it is the sweetener used for such popular products as diet soda. But critics of the sweetener allege that it causes diseases and is, for all practical purposes, poisonous. Learn more about documentary here. Learn more about the dangers of aspartame here.

Anti-GMA Protest in LA. Members of GABNet, the progressive Filipino women's group in the United States, outside the LAX Sheraton in Los Angeles last week to protest the persecution and killing of political activists in the Philippines. The protest was timed for President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo stopover en route to Peru for the Apec summit. (Photo courtesy of Ninotchka Rosca/GABNet)

Tagaytay on a Sunday. Kite-flying has become a favorite activity at the Picnic Grove in Tagaytay. On an overcast but generally pleasant afternoon last Sunday, dozens of kites colored the skies, complementing the view of Taal Volcano in the background. (Photo by Ayi Muallam)

Downed. The Moro Islamic Liberation Front released today this photo of some of its members playing with what the group claimed was an unmanned spy plane that crashed earlier this month. The front said the alleged drone was a property of the US military. More details here.

Hunger Amid War. This child refugee is one of the thousands affected by the war in Mindanao. The situation in North Cotabato and Maguindanao has deteriorated since renewed fighting between government forces and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) broke out in Aleosan and Midsayap, North Cotabato last Aug. 8, according to groups that held last month the National Interfaith Humanitarian Mission in North Cotabato and Maguindanao. (Photo courtesy of Kalinaw Mindanao/arkibongbayan.org)
TOP STORIES
Can Philippine Economy Withstand Crisis in 2009?
Why Rizal Did Not Deserve to Be the Philippines’s National Hero
Pangandaman Defends Self, Sons; ‘Victims Started Fight’
Daughter Recounts How Arroyo Secretary’s Son Mauled Her Dad, Brother
Anti-Mining Activist Gunned Down in ComVal
Farmers, Advocates Push for Land-Reform Extension
‘No Election’ Plot Revived; Arroyo Vows to Veto It
Worsening Storm for Philippine Economy?
Smart to Junk Thousands of E-Load Dealers?
With Guns Blazing, de Venecia Testifies, Links Arroyo to ZTE Bribery Scandal
As US Economy Tanks, Philippines Gets Set for Downturn

SPECIAL COVERAGE

TAGS
BLOGS & COLUMNS
A Challenge to Bambee dela Paz and Other Bloggers
January 3, 2009, 11:05 AM

CARLOS H. CONDE   Bloggers who benefited from the power of blogging to correct the injustice done to them have a duty to pay society back. And the only way I can think of is for them to raise hell, too, about the injustice done to other people.

Years From Now
December 29, 2008, 06:39 PM

NINOTCHKA ROSCA   While lining up for kona coffee ($1.95 per 8-ounce Styrofoam cup) at the central kiosk of the food court of the Ala Moana Center, I suffered a mild fugue. Like palimpsest, the image of the food court at the Ali Mall in Quezon City, Philippines, seeped through the environs; surely, that must have been the ancestor of all food courts in the world.

Nasser Pangandaman Jr.: The Warlord of Masiu
December 28, 2008, 10:20 AM

CARLOS H. CONDE   A Cabinet secretary and peace negotiator condoning the violence his son and friends were inflicting on an old man and a 14-year-old boy? By doing nothing to stop the beating, Pangandaman Sr. betrayed his skewed ethical and moral sense. President Arroyo should fire him.

The Message of Christmas
December 24, 2008, 02:15 PM

FR. SHAY CULLEN   The really big thing about Christmas and the birth of Jesus Christ is that Christ brought a message of equality for all, and established the dignity and rights of women and children.

Cory Aquino’s Betrayal
December 24, 2008, 10:16 AM

CARLOS H. CONDE     What other ignominious crap will Corazon Aquino inflict upon us? An icon of democracy and moral leadership? Hah! She is an icon of everything that is wrong with this country.

RECENT COMMENTS
Nasser Pangandaman Jr.: The Warlord of Masiu (74 Comments)
    eninoy: I’m a Porbinsyano - But I’ve travelled and studied all over the world. I’m referring to...
    anisah: cultura ng maranao, hindi mabago. politician pa/ BAWAL ang baril sa public places ! armalite pa !
    eninoy: The ploy being played here is simple enough to be seen. Someone is coming out with a counterfeit story to...
A Challenge to Bambee dela Paz and Other Bloggers (8 Comments)
    Jon: Mr. Conde, do check on this update[1] from the people who monitor this firsthand. Let us not be swayed too...
    Vicki: Mr. Carlos Conde, I am not a blogger. My question is, do all bloggers write truthfully and accurately? How...
    Anon: Oh you Pangandamans, along with those members of the political elite who play God with your goon-supported and...
Why Rizal Did Not Deserve to Be the Philippines’s National Hero (5 Comments)
    baye: So what if other countries have heroes that led the revolution? Our history is different, heroes are not...
Australia Offers 150 Scholarship Slots for Philippines, Asia-Pacific (36 Comments)
    Hazel Arenas: May i ask if u know som1 hu doesn’t hv anymor a child to send to skul this yr, & could have...
Back to Main Page | About PinoyPress | Contact Us | Advertise | Archives | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Credits
Copyright © 2008 PinoyPress | Manila, Philippines | Hosting & design by Web Host Philippines
News & Journalism - Top Blogs Philippines