(I will resume news postings on Sunday, July 2)


June 27


CANADA:

U.S. murder suspect seeks protection in Canada


The suspect charged with killing an Easley, S.C., pawn shop owner earlier
this month has filed for refugee status in Canada.

Roger Eugene Shephard, 21, will face cruel and unusual punishment if sent
back to the United States because he could face the death penalty, said
Marie Helene Giroux, one of Mr. Shephard's lawyers.

"The goal is to receive assurance from the U.S. that he will not go for
the death penalty," Ms. Giroux said.

Since 2001, Canada has asked prosecutors to promise to not seek the death
penalty before sending fugitives back to the United States, said Chris
Girouard, spokesman for the Canadian Department of Justice.

Mr. Shephard is charged with murder in the killing of John Bruin, 65, at
his Action Pawn shop.

Surveillance video from June 15 shows a man talking to Mr. Bruin before
pulling out a gun and shooting him in the chest. The man then puts some
guns and other items into a bag and leaves, police said.

Mr. Shephard was arrested 2 days later in Montreal.

Mr. Shephard faces a deportation hearing Tuesday to determine if he can
stay in Canada as a refugee. But even if Mr. Shephard's request is denied,
it could be years before he is returned to the U.S., Ms. Giroux said.

"It's a long process," she said.

(source: Associated Press)






PHILIPPINES:

Pope on death penalty abolition: Well done


Pope Benedict XVI hailed the Philippines yesterday for abolishing the
death penalty during a meeting with President Arroyo here.

"Well done," the Pope told Mrs. Arroyo as she presented him a maroon
booklet containing a copy of Republic Act No. 9346 repealing the 1994
death penalty law, which she signed last Saturday.

It was her 2nd gift to the pontiff, the first one of which was a one-foot
replica of the statue of the Nuestra Seora de Guia, or Our Lady of
Guidance, the oldest Marian image in the Philippines enshrined in Ermita,
Manila.

"These two gifts are the expressions of faith of the Filipino people,"
Mrs. Arroyo told the Pope.

Benedict gave Mrs. Arroyo a pat on the back when he expressed his
satisfaction over the abolition of capital punishment.

Mrs. Arroyo arrived here at around 11 a.m. and was welcomed with a short
ceremony by the Swiss Guards before meeting with Archbishop James Foley.

Benedict and Mrs. Arroyo first met at the room of Saints Peter and Paul.
"Hello, Holy Father," she said.

"Welcome, its an honor," the Pope replied.

They then went inside the papal library and had a private talk for about
15 to 20 minutes.

During the exchange of gifts, the Pope gave Mrs. Arroyo a set of coins of
the pontificate. He handed a red box to Mrs. Arroyo and explained the
significance of each coin.

Mrs. Arroyo was accompanied by First Gentleman Jose Miguel "Mike" Arroyo,
her brother-in-law, Negros Occidental Rep. Ignacio "Iggy" Arroyo, their
son, Diosdado, and his wife, Maria Victoria Celina, and daughter Eva
Victoria.

Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto Romulo, his wife Lovely Rose, Speaker
Jose de Venecias wife Gina, the parents of Maria Victoria Celina  Rufino
and Maria Aurelia  and the First Gentlemans chief of staff Juris Soliman
also accompanied Mrs. Arroyo.

Benedict gave the male members of the delegation a coin of the pontificate
each and a rosary for the women, with a prayer booklet he made himself.

He also touched the face of 2-year-old Eva Victoria.

Mrs. Arroyo told reporters later that she informed the Pope about her
plans for the country, including changing the form of government and was
encouraged by the words of the Holy Father.

She said she discussed everything she wanted to do in line with her theme
of "life, solidarity and prosperity."

Mrs. Arroyo also met with the Cardinal of State Angelo Sodano at his
office at Vatican Square.

She also offered prayers for the late Pope John Paul II, whose crypt she
visited at the Saint Peters Basilica.

Last Saturday, on the eve of her trip to the Vatican, Mrs. Arroyo signed
the law abolishing the death penalty, but vowed she would never relent in
battling terrorists and criminals.

"In signing the abolition of the death penalty, we celebrate life in the
most meaningful way, by gathering our institutions together to repeal the
death penalty," she said.

Congress two weeks earlier had approved a bill abolishing capital
punishment despite protests from anti-crime activists, who believe Mrs.
Arroyo, a staunch Roman Catholic, rushed its approval to please the pope.

The Roman Catholic Church has been at the forefront of the clamor to
abolish capital punishment.

Filipinos are divided on the death penalty issue. Supporters argue it is
an effective deterrent against crime.

Opponents argue that the death penalty has been ineffective and claim that
more efficient law enforcement and a speedy justice system are the
solutions.

The 1987 Constitution abolished the death penalty, which the government of
late dictator Ferdinand Marcos used to execute about a dozen people
convicted of rape and drug charges.

However, the Charter also gave Congress the prerogative to restore it.

Fueled by public uproar over a series of high-profile murder cases,
capital punishment was restored in 1994 for a number of "heinous" crimes
such as rape, kidnapping-for-ransom, murder, drug trafficking and treason.

On April 16, Easter Sunday, Mrs. Arroyo commuted all death sentences to
life and, weeks later, certified as "urgent" pending bills in the Senate
and the House seeking the repeal of Republic Act 8177, which restored
capital punishment in 1994.

The bill passed without dissent in the Senate on June 6 after a more
contentious vote in the House of Representatives.

The lives of more than 1,200 death-row convicts  including at least 11
al-Qaeda-linked militants  will be spared due to the abolition of capital
punishment.

7 convicts were put to death between 1999 and 2000 until President Joseph
Estrada declared a moratorium on executions amid pressure from the
Catholic Church and rights groups. A devout Catholic, Mrs. Arroyo
continued the moratorium.

(source: Philippine Star)




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