Political detainee, baby returned to Manila City Jail
pop up music
background music
music for productions
stock music
music for productions
pop up music
music for productions
stock music
background music
pop up music
music for productions
stock music
background music
music for productions
stock music
music for productions
pop up music
background music
stock music
music for productions
stock music
pop up music
music for productions
background music
pop up music
stock music
music for productions
background music
pop up music
stock music
music for productions
background music
stock music
music for productions
pop up music
background music
stock music
pop up music
background music
music for productions
stock music
background music
music for productions
background music
pop up music
stock music
music for productions
background music
music for productions
background music
music for productions
pop up music
music for productions
background music
stock music
background music
music for productions
pop up music
music for productions
stock music
pop up music
stock music
music for productions
background music
pop up music
music for productions
background music
stock music
music for productions
stock music
pop up music
stock music
background music
pop up music
music for productions
stock music
music for productions
stock music
pop up music
background music
music for productions
stock music
music for productions
pop up music
background music
music for productions
A progressive group is calling for the release of a political detainee and her newborn child after they were brought back to the Manila City Jail two days after giving birth.
Lawyer Rey Cortez, National Union of People’s Lawyers (NUPL) said his client Reina Mae Nasino and her baby daughter were brought to a separate cell at the female dormitory.
Click Here for portfolio
Click Here for portfolio
Click Here for portfolio
Click Here for portfolio
Click Here for portfolio
Click Here for portfolio
Click Here for portfolio
Click Here for portfolio
Click Here for portfolio
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
source file for detail
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus portfolio
usama younus website
usama younus website
usama younus website
usama younus website
usama younus website
usama younus website
usama younus website
usama younus website
usama younus website
usama younus website
usama younus website
usama younus website
usama younus website
usama younus website
This developed even if the Dr. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital allowed mother and child to stay in the hospital for at least a week “to ensure continued medical attention for an underweight newborn,” according to Kapatid, a support group for families and friends of political prisoners.
The group urged authorities to release Nasino and her baby on recognizance or on bail amid the coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) threat.
“No baby should be put inside prison especially at this time of the pandemic. Exposing both an infant child and her mother to the real threat of coronavirus infection defies logic,” Kapatid said in a statement Friday, July 3.
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
read more about it
Earlier, the NUPL filed a motion before a Manila court for Nasino to be allowed to stay at the hospital or at a prison nursery for at least a year so she can breastfeed her daughter.
According to the motion, there are reportedly 80 detainees cramped in Nasino’s detention cell that can hold only a maximum of 40 inmates. The NUPL also argued that at least 517 persons deprived of liberty at the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) prisons have tested positive for COVID-19 as of May.
Comments
Post a Comment