Are Soulmates A Universal Truth Or Just A Social Construct?

Soulmates are romanticized in culture, but real relationships require much more than fate.

Why Traveling On A Budget Is About Purposeful Choices Not Just Cutting Costs

Cheap travel done right is about balance: knowing where to save and where to spend.

BOTO MO, BUKAS MO: G Ka Na Ba Sa May 12?

Election season in the Philippines brings the chaos of family reunions, loud and full of opinions that might lead you astray. Remember, your vote shapes your future. Don’t just follow the crowd; do the homework. Research candidates, scrutinize their promises, and safeguard your power. BOTO MO, BUKAS MO. Make your choice count, or live with the consequences.

Bangsamoro Opens Pioneer Dialysis Center In Lanao Del Sur

Matagumpay na na-inaugurate ang unang dialysis center ng Bangsamoro sa Lanao del Sur, na nagbibigay ng pag-asa sa mga pasyente.

Drilon Wants DFA To Cancel Passport Of Alleged ‘Drug Queen’

Drilon Wants DFA To Cancel Passport Of Alleged ‘Drug Queen’

66
66

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon asked the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) to cancel immediately the passport of alleged “drug queen” Guia Gomez Castro, who can be considered a fugitive from justice.

The former village chief of Barangay 484 Zone 48 in Manila was confirmed to have left the country last Sept. 21 on board a Cebu Pacific flight for Bangkok, Thailand.

Drilon said that under Republic Act 8239 or the Philippine Passport Act, the foreign affairs secretary is authorized to cancel a passport “in the interest of national security” or when the holder of the passport is a fugitive from justice.

“It appears that Mrs. Castro does not intend to return to the country and face the warrants of arrest issued against her since 2002 for violation of Republic Act 6425 or the Dangerous Drugs Act. Hence, she is a fugitive from justice,” Drilon said.

The former justice secretary explained that well-settled jurisprudence defines fugitive from justice as a person, who, having committed a crime, flees from jurisdiction of the court where crime was committed, departs from his usual place of abode and conceals himself and is found within territory of another.

Drilon said that based on jurisprudece, conviction is not a requirement to consider a person as a fugitive from justice, saying that filing of charges prior to flight is not always an antecedent requirement to label one a “fugitive from justice”.

“The jurisprudence clarifies that mere commission of a crime and subsequent flight thereto sufficiently meets the definition of a fugitive,” Drilon said.

“Hence, the DFA, to avoid miscarriage of justice and by virtue of the Philippine Passport Act, can validly and lawfully cancel her passport so we can restrict Castro’s movement, and summon her back to the country to face charges against her,” he said. (senate.gov.ph)

Photo Credit: facebook.com/frankdrilon