Refleksi: Bravo president Arroyo! Itu namanya presiden! Sekalipun tubuh 
presiden Filipina kecil, tetapi berani berjuang untuk membela warganegaranya 
yang berkesusahan, bukan seperti petinggi-petingginya Indonesia badan 
besar-besar malah bekas militer berbintang-bintang mengkilat di pundak maupun 
di dada tetapi hanya berani menjongkok-jonkok assalamalaikum.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=104469&d=10&m=12&y=2007

Monday 10 December 2007 (30 Dhul Qa`dah 1428)


      Kuwait Spares Filipino Maid's Life
      Julie Javellana-Santos, Arab News 
        
      MANILA, 10 December 2007 - Kuwait's ruler yesterday spared the life of a 
Filipino maid who had been condemned to die for killing her employer, the 
presidential palace in Manila said yesterday.

      In a press statement, Malaca?ang said Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber 
Al-Sabah agreed to reduce Marilou Ranario's death sentence to life imprisonment 
during a 25-minute meeting with Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo at 
Kuwait's Bayan Palace just after lunchtime yesterday.

      Arroyo visited the Gulf state on her way home from a weeklong visit to 
Spain and the United Kingdom in a bid to save Ranario, a teacher from the 
southern Philippines who came to Kuwait to work as a domestic helper.

      Ranario was first sentenced to death by a Kuwaiti criminal court in 
September 2005, or nine months after she was arrested for stabbing to death her 
40-year-old Kuwaiti employer, Najat Mahmoud Faraj Mobarak.

      The commutation of Ranario's death sentence is said to be one of the rare 
times Kuwait's ruler has intervened in his country's judicial system.

      "Normally, I don't interfere in the judicial process. But since you are 
here to personally appeal for her, I will not sign the decree of execution. 
That is within my power," the emir was quoted by Philippine presidential 
spokesman Ignacio Bunye telling Arroyo.

      "I will reduce the penalty to life and when the other parties sign the 
forgiveness, I will further reduce the penalty," the emir was further quoted as 
saying.

      Under Kuwaiti law, only the emir has the authority to reduce the sentence 
of a convicted person.

      Ranario's case was trumpeted by Manila as a triumph of the personal 
diplomacy of Arroyo, who has remained widely unpopular among Filipinos due to 
persistent corruption woes plaguing her government.

      Last year, she also made a personal appeal to Custodian of the Two Holy 
Mosques King Abdullah to pardon at least 50 Filipinos languishing in Saudi 
jails for various offenses.

      The king responded by releasing more than 300 as a goodwill gesture.

      Bunye, in an e-mail to Malaca?ang Palace in Manila, said Arroyo thanked 
the Kuwaiti ruler for his "compassion."

      "The life of every overseas Filipino is important," Bunye quoted the 
president as saying, before Arroyo and a small party headed to Kuwait for a 
four-hour visit just to see the emir.

      With Arroyo's delegation were Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto Romulo, 
Sen. Edgardo Angara, Ambassador Ricardo Endaya, and House of Representatives 
member Aurelio Gonzalez Jr.

      Arroyo earlier sent her vice president, Noli de Castro, to deliver her 
letter of appeal to the Kuwaiti ruler after Kuwait's Court of Cassation 
affirmed the death verdict on Ranario on Nov. 27.

      The emir had two to three months to decide whether to sign Ranario's 
death warrant.

      Earlier reports said the Philippine government had obtained a letter of 
forgiveness (tanazul) from the victim's mother, paternal brothers and a sister.

      But the victim's estranged husband refusal to pardon Ranario gave the 
court a basis to affirm the death sentence.

      The Philippine Embassy in Kuwait earlier recommended to Arroyo to make 
available $70,000 as blood money for the victim's estranged husband in exchange 
for tanazul.

      Another Filipino maid is also on death row after Kuwait's appeals court 
in September confirmed her death sentence for killing her employers' two 
children early this year. 

      She is awaiting the final verdict of the Supreme Court.

      Contentious Issue

      Ranario's case has drawn widespread attention in the Philippines, where 
the economy relies heavily on remittances from nearly eight million Filipinos 
working overseas.

      Of that eight million, about 73,000 work in Kuwait. Some 60,000 are women 
employed mainly as maids and earning less than $200 a month on average, labor 
groups say. 

      "A million thanks to the emir of Kuwait for having a big heart and to 
President Arroyo for going out of her way to save the life of a compatriot," 
said Imee Manalang in Alkhobar. Manalang is the president of the United 
Surigaonon Association, a group of Filipinos from Surigao province, where 
Ranario is from. 

      Ed Nicdao, chairman of the Cabalen Aguman Capampangan group in the 
Eastern Province, cited the Kuwaiti ruler for his humanitarian act. He also 
hoped that Filipinos would start considering Arroyo's dedication in saving the 
lives of compatriots when they judge her presidency.

      In Riyadh, overseas workers' rights advocate Ronnie Abeto said: "It is 
euphoric news for Ranario's family as well as for OFW communities; it only 
proves that if our top government officials will intervene timely, OFWs like 
Marilou can be saved from death. There were many Ranario's waiting to be saved, 
but unlike Marilou, their cases were not highlighted by media and remain at the 
back of klieg lights."

      Abeto also reminded the Philippine government that some 35 OFWs are in 
death row abroad and thousands more are languishing in jail for various crimes.

      "Do we need to stage a daily street protest, a daily vigil and be at the 
front page of both local and international media to get the attention of the 
president that will force her to do the same negotiation she has done to 
Marilou's case?" said Abeto, a senior action officer of the Pusong Mamon Task 
Force, a group helping distressed Filipinos in the Kingdom.

      "If this is so, advocates like me should start organizing a daily protest 
and requests all our media friends to publish all the OFWs in death row.

      "But how about those who have been raped and courageously fighting for 
their rights to bring her perpetrators under the guillotine and those whose 
culprits escaped already?" he said. (With reports by Dinan Arana in Dammam and 
Agencies
     

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