A SECOND CHANCE: WHY INTERNATIONAL PRISONER EXCHANGE SHOULD BE A NATIONAL POLICY
A SECOND CHANCE: WHY INTERNATIONAL PRISONER EXCHANGE SHOULD BE A NATIONAL POLICY
Every time I hear of a Filipino executed
abroad, I feel a punch in the gut. The most recent was on October 8, 2024, in Saudi Arabia. A fellow
Filipino, convicted of murder, met the full force of the law. The Philippine
government tried—sent legal help, even a presidential letter—but the victim’s
family refused to accept blood money.
He was executed
anyway.
As of March 2023, there were 83 Filipinos on death row across the
globe: Malaysia, UAE, Indonesia, China, Japan, and even the USA. Most of them
are there for drugs or theft. Some were duped, others took risks, and a few may
truly be guilty. But they all share one thing: they are Filipinos who ended up on foreign soil with no way out.
We hear these
stories so often, we grow numb. At first there’s outrage, then despair, and
finally, silence. Even government efforts eventually taper off. After all the
appeals, negotiations, and legal motions—there comes a point when even our own
government gives up.
But should we really give up?
Let me tell you
a story you may remember: Sarah Balabagan.
She was a teenager, a domestic helper in the United Arab Emirates, accused of
murder in 1994. She faced the death penalty. She would have been another sad
statistic—another compatriot
lost—if not for one man who refused to give up on her.
That man was my
late brother, Ambassador Roy Villareal
Seneres.
Roy dug deep,
not just into law but into principle. He found a loophole: under British law, life sentences were not
allowed, so how could a British national
in the UAE demand one? He used diplomacy, logic, and relentless effort to save
her life. And he succeeded. Sarah came home alive.
But not every
ambassador is like Roy. Not every case has a legal gray area to exploit. That’s
why I believe we need another approach—something
institutional, not situational. Something built into the fabric of our foreign
policy.
That
“something” is prisoner exchange.
It’s not a new
idea. It’s a long-standing diplomatic
practice, as old as diplomacy itself. And in this case, it can mean
more than diplomacy—it can mean redemption.
Imagine this:
instead of letting OFWs rot in foreign jails or worse, face execution, why not bring them home? Let them serve the rest
of their sentence in Philippine custody, closer to their families, their
culture, their language, and maybe even a shot at rehabilitation.
This isn’t just
a dream. The ASEAN Regional Correctional
Conference in 2025 already laid some groundwork. The Bureau of Corrections discussed ways to
transfer Filipinos home to finish their sentences. Even the case of Mary Jane Veloso, imprisoned in
Indonesia, has sparked conversations about swaps.
In September 2024, there were discussions
about exchanging Alice Guo, a
former mayor accused of trafficking, for Gregor
Johann Haas, an Australian drug offender in Indonesia. It never
materialized—but the seeds were planted.
Here’s the
truth: we have the leverage. The
Bureau of Immigration, BuCor, and BJMP all hold foreign nationals in custody. Why not use
this for a humanitarian cause?
But we must go
beyond isolated deals. We need a national
policy on prisoner exchange—backed by clear guidelines, legal
frameworks, and a comprehensive
database of Filipinos incarcerated abroad. We must prioritize cases based on urgency,
legality, and humanitarian grounds.
Why should
Russia and Ukraine—nations at war—be able to do prisoner swaps, and we, a
country that preaches compassion, cannot?
Let’s stop
treating these cases as individual heartbreaks. Let’s start treating them as
part of a system we can fix.
To President
Ferdinand Marcos Jr., I say: you have spoken about digitalization,
modernization, and protecting OFWs. This is a golden opportunity to lead with humanity and foresight.
I recommend
forming an inter-agency task force
under the Department of Foreign Affairs,
with support from the Department of
Migrant Workers. Let’s begin building a legal and logistical framework
for prisoner exchange. Let’s identify which Filipinos can be saved, and which
foreign prisoners we can offer in return.
This isn't just
about diplomacy—it’s about dignity. About giving our people a second chance,
even when they are far from home.
And if the DFA
needs my help, I am here.
Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres
iseneres@yahoo.com,
09088877282, senseneres.blogspot.com
08-01-2025
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