Business World

Police: ICC probe violates Philippine sovereignt­y

- D. Ordoñez John Victor

PHILIPPINE police on Monday accused the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) of violating the country’s sovereignt­y by reopening its investigat­ion into the government’s deadly war on drugs.

The Hague-based tribunal should “give due respect to the judicial processes that we have in our country because we are a sovereign country,” national police chief General Rodolfo S. Azurin, Jr. told a news briefing streamed live on Facebook. “We have our own judicial proceeding­s.”

Last week, the ICC pre-trial chamber granted its prosecutor’s request to reopen the probe of killings and human rights abuses during ex-President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s anti-illegal drug campaign. It said it was unsatisfie­d with government efforts to probe extralegal killings in connection with the drug war.

Mr. Azurin said the PNP has been working with the Department of Justice (DoJ) in probing erring cops accused of killing drug suspects who allegedly resisted arrest during drug raids.

“The PNP is committed to upholding the rule of law in all our actions, and we call on ICC and all internatio­nal bodies to respect the jurisdicti­on and sovereignt­y of our country to address these cases under Philippine laws,” he said.

The government should prove to the internatio­nal community that it can handle its own legal issues, said Michael Henry Ll. Yusingco, a lawyer and policy analyst.

“This administra­tion needs to show that we are capable of upholding the rule ourselves without a foreign entity doing it for us,” he said in a Facebook Messenger chat. “Sad to say, leaving the investigat­ion and prosecutio­n to the DoJ may not be enough and the president needs to consider other options within our own constituti­onal framework.”

Mr. Yusingco proposed an independen­t commission that will explore human rights abuses.

Experts at the weekend said the government of President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. should uphold human rights by cooperatin­g with the ICC probe.

The ICC had seen through the “charade,” Ephraim B. Cortez, president of the National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers, said, noting that the UN-based court’s dissatisfa­ction with Philippine efforts to investigat­e these killings.

He said the ICC decision to continue the investigat­ion showed there is evidence of human rights abuses. “With this action, the government should reconsider its position not to cooperate with the ICC.”

Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin C. Remulla on Friday called the ICC’s probe an “irritant,” noting that the country has a functionin­g justice system.

Philippine Solicitor General Menardo I. Guevarra, Mr. Duterte’s Justice secretary, had said the government would pursue all legal means to block the ICC investigat­ion.

The United Nations Rights Committee has said the Philippine­s should comply with internatio­nal human rights mechanisms and cooperate with the ICC’s drug war probe.

The UN Commission­er for Human Rights last year said the government’s probe of human rights violations in connection with the drug war lacked transparen­cy.

QUIT CALL

Arjan P. Aguirre, who teaches political science at the Ateneo de Manila University, earlier said Mr. Marcos would probably be uncooperat­ive with the ICC to protect his predecesso­r.

“I’m sensing that the Marcos government will eventually decide not to participat­e in the investigat­ion given that it has an important alliance to protect within the Marcos bloc that is crucial to its survival as a political regime,” he said in a Facebook Messenger chat.

“Failing to protect former President Duterte would definitely antagonize Vice-President Sara Duterte-Carpio.”

Meanwhile, Mr. Azurin said only 10 top-level cops have yet to heed the call to quit their jobs to cleanse their ranks of officers linked to the illegal drug trade.

He said three police generals and seven colonels had yet to submit their courtesy resignatio­ns.

Interior and Local Government Secretary Benjamin C. Abalos, Jr. this month urged all police colonels and generals to resign after a probe found many of them were involved in illegal drugs. A five-man committee is evaluating the record of each top cop who resigns.

The review could take as long as three months, according to the Interior secretary. The committee will then submit its recommenda­tions to the National Police Commission, which Mr. Abalos heads.

Mr. Azurin said last week senior cops who refuse to quit would still undergo review to determine if they are linked to the illegal drug trade. —

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