MANILA — Detained Sen. Leila de Lima is asking Senate President Aquilino Pimentel III to back her bid to seek occasional furloughs so that she could cast her vote in crucial landmark legislation.
In a letter to Pimentel dated May 11, De Lima asked for a “modicum of support from your office as Senate President or at least a semblance of assurance, that you do still care for your fellow Senators — under whatever circumstances they might find themselves in…”
“The minimum that I request is an expression of support for my desire to be occasionally be granted furlough by the court in charge of my detention, for purposes of voting on crucial landmark legislation, on a case-to-case basis,” she said in the letter released to the media by her office.
De Lima said this was the only available recourse for her since the Supreme Court had earlier ruled against detained lawmakers the privilege of attending all legislative sessions or hearings or being placed under the custody of Congress.
De Lima is currently detained inside a Philippine National Police facility in Camp Crame, Quezon City as she awaits trial for drug-related cases she had said were trumped-up charges brought against her by the Duterte administration.
In her two-page letter, she told the Senate President she was seeking Senate help as she reminded that she has “not yet been stripped of my office, and no penalty has yet been imposed on me.”
“At present, I am a mere detention prisoner in full possession of political and civil rights the exercise of which are limited only by the deprivation of my physical liberty, but not by the deprivation of rights which by law have not yet been denied me,” De Lima said.
De Lima noted that detained prisoners for one in recent elections had been allowed by the Commission on Elections to register as voters and vote in municipal and city jails.
She said this could be applied in her case as she has not been convicted of any crime and has continued to have the mandate of 14 million Filipinos who voted for her in the May 2016 polls. She said she should exercise the right “to vote for them as one of the representatives in the Senate.”
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