Malacañang has left to the wisdom of lawmakers whether or not to push for a bill seeking mandatory autopsies on crime victims in the country.
Presidential spokesman Salvador Panelo explained that the Palace will not meddle in the affairs of the Legislative branch.
“Kung ‘yan ang gusto nila, eh di gawin nila,” Panelo said in a radio interview. “We will not intrude into the wisdom of the lawmakers who want to pass this into law. Hayaan mo na sila,” he added.
Sen. Francis Pangilinan recently refiled Senate Bill No. 428 seeking mandatory autopsies on crime victims in a bid to hasten the murder investigation.
Under the bill, there will be mandatory autopsies on bodies of those “believed to have died in a violent, suspicious, questionable, unusual, and or unnatural manner.” The measure was first filed last January 2017 but has been pending on the committee level.
When asked if the measure will be certified as urgent by the President, Panelo insisted that it was up to the lawmakers to make the decision. “Nasa kanila ‘yun. Sa Palasyo, hindi kami nag-i-interfere or nakikialaam sa isang sangay ng gobyerno,” he said.
The proposed Mandatory Autopsy Act has been refiled amid the second anniversary of the killing of 17-year-old Kian delos Santos during a police operation in Caloocan City. (Genalyn Kabiling)