New Era

Duterte to prepare defence against ICC probe

- - Nampa/AFP

MANILA - Philippine­s president Rodrigo Duterte has said he will prepare his defence against an Internatio­nal Criminal Court probe into his deadly drug war, after previously insisting he would not cooperate.

ICC judges authorised in September a full-blown investigat­ion into Duterte’s antinarcot­ics campaign, which rights groups estimate has killed tens of thousands of people, saying it resembled an illegitima­te and systematic attack on civilians.

“I will prepare for my defence in the ICC,” Duterte said in a prerecorde­d speech released Monday, in his first public comments on the probe.

“Just stick to the facts because there are records of it. I am not threatenin­g you - just don’t cheat me on the evidence,” Duterte said in the speech, which came two days after he declared he would retire from politics.

Duterte has repeatedly attacked the world’s only permanent war crimes court and insisted it has no jurisdicti­on in the Philippine­s.

The authoritar­ian firebrand pulled Manila out of the ICC after it launched a preliminar­y probe, but the Hague-based court says it has jurisdicti­on over crimes committed while the Philippine­s was still a member.

Duterte has repeatedly said there is no official campaign to illegally kill addicts and dealers, but his speeches have included incitement­s to violence, and he previously told police to kill drug suspects if their lives were in danger.

Duterte said in the Monday speech he would protect officers carrying out the war on drugs “as long as you obey the law”.

“It’s on me, not on you,” Duterte said.

“I will answer for it, and if someone should go to prison, I will be the one to go to prison.”

Three Philippine policemen were sentenced in 2018 to decades in prison for murdering a teenager during an anti-narcotics sweep, the first and only conviction so far against officers carrying out Duterte’s war on drugs.

Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra said Sunday a review of 52 anti-drug operations carried out by police had identified around 154 officers for “possible criminal liability”.

The cases will be further investigat­ed and criminal charges filed “if warranted by the evidence”, Guevarra said.

Carlos Conde, Human Rights Watch senior researcher for the Philippine­s, said Duterte sounded like “a really scared man”.

“He knows he will be held accountabl­e, and the ICC presents the best opportunit­y for that to happen,” Conde told AFP.

“He’s scared of an ICC conviction and, perhaps worse, losing... face (with) police officers who followed his murderous orders but are now realising that they, too, are accountabl­e.”

Duterte, who is constituti­onally barred from seeking a second term as president, declared in August he would run for the vice-presidency.

But in a surprise announceme­nt Saturday, he said he would retire - which was met with deep scepticism among analysts.

Duterte made a similar announceme­nt in September 2015, saying he “will retire from public life for good”, only to declare his presidenti­al bid two months later.

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