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The ICC and arresting Philippine public officials

- JEMY GATDULA

Solicitor General Menardo Guevarra admitted that the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) can indeed issue a warrant of arrest. Carrying it out though is another matter: “Without any cooperatio­n from the Philippine government it will be very difficult to enforce that warrant in Philippine territory.” Although that’s not actually accurate.

Article 127.2 of the Rome Statute does provide that “A State shall not be discharged, by reason of its withdrawal, from the obligation­s arising from this Statute while it was a Party to the Statute, including any financial obligation­s which may have accrued. Its withdrawal shall not affect any cooperatio­n with the Court in connection with criminal investigat­ions and proceeding­s in relation to which the withdrawin­g State had a duty to cooperate and which were commenced prior to the date on which the withdrawal became effective, nor shall it prejudice in any way the continued considerat­ion of any matter which was already under considerat­ion by the Court prior to the date on which the withdrawal became effective.”

And yet, it’s hard to argue that the present proceeding­s fall within that provision. Even the ICC itself was utterly divided on that question, with two members of the deciding Appeals Chamber doubting the validity of the proceeding­s. They essentiall­y pointed out the simply commonsens­ical: the ICC cannot exercise jurisdicti­on over the Philippine­s considerin­g the latter already withdrew from the Rome Statute before the Prosecutor requested authorizat­ion to commence the investigat­ion.

Judges Marc Perrin de Brichambau­t and Gocha Lordkipani­dze (by way of their Dissenting Opinion, July 18, 2023) went on to say, correctly, that “the Pre-Trial Chamber erred in law in concluding that the Court had jurisdicti­on over the Philippine­s Situation despite the Philippine­s’ withdrawal from the Rome Statute. xxx [Consequent­ly, we would have] directed the Pre-Trial Chamber to withdraw its authorizat­ion for the Prosecutor’s investigat­ion and discontinu­e all proceeding­s in the situation.”

Consequent­ly, despite an internatio­nal tribunal’s compétence de la compétence authority, the ICC’s principle of complement­arity alongside that of Philippine sovereignt­y should therefore prevail.

Even then, assuming purely for the sake of discussion that the ICC proceeding­s are valid, although various arguments can be said for warrants issued against former and even certain incumbent public officials, the same cannot specifical­ly apply to the sitting Vice-President, as media commentary would have us believe.

For one, from the very beginning and as late as the “Judgment on the appeal of the Republic of the Philippine­s against PreTrial Chamber I’s ‘Authorizat­ion pursuant to Article 18(2) of the Statute to resume the investigat­ion’” (July 2023), no mention was ever made of Vice-President Sara Duterte, except once: that she took over as vice-president in 2022. Her sudden inclusion — should such be true — smacks of a denial of due process.

Which leads to this point: she is the sitting vice-president, for which Article XI.2 of the Constituti­on is relevant: “The President, the Vice-President, the Members of the Supreme Court, the Members of the Constituti­onal Commission­s, and the Ombudsman may be removed from office, on impeachmen­t for, and conviction of, culpable violation of the Constituti­on, treason, bribery, graft and corruption, other high crimes, or betrayal of public trust. All other public officers and employees may be removed from office as provided by law, but not by impeachmen­t.”

In other words, while charges may arguably be filed against a sitting vice-president, to arrest such an official normally removeable only through impeachmen­t is another matter. And if a local court is proscribed from arresting an incumbent vice-president (which would effectivel­y “remove” such official from office), even more then should a foreign tribunal’s warrant of arrest be considered invalid and without effect.

Granted, the Rome Statute’s Articl e 27.2 does provide that “immunities or special procedural rules which may attach to the official capacity of a person, whether under national or internatio­nal law, shall not bar the Court from exercising its jurisdicti­on over such a person.” However, the same remains inapplicab­le for the reasons mentioned above and because of our Constituti­on.

Because the fact remains that treaties merely form part of the laws of the land (Constituti­on, Article II.2) and in our jurisdicti­on are of a level subservien­t to the Constituti­on. While indeed there may be a need to comply with treaty obligation­s (e.g., the Rome Statute’s Article 86 and 87.7), neverthele­ss, that obligation is subordinat­e to the primacy of — and the duty of our officials to follow — the Constituti­on. And as per Article VIII.5.a, the Supreme Court is expressly mandated to strike down any treaty going against our Constituti­on.

Finally, this needs to be keenly considered: a public official that causes the arrest of anyone listed in Article XI.2 arguably commits a “culpable violation of the Constituti­on,” which could either lead to impeachmen­t of the former (if such an official is also included in Article XI.2) or arrest under related criminal laws, including the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, that possibly negates the immunities provided for in the Constituti­on’s Article VI.

The views expressed here are his own and not necessaril­y those of the institutio­ns to which he belongs.

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 ?? ?? JEMY GATDULA read internatio­nal law at the University of Cambridge. He is the dean of the Institute of Law of the University of Asia and the Pacific, and is a Philippine Judicial Academy lecturer for constituti­onal philosophy and jurisprude­nce. https://www.facebook.com/ jigatdula/ Twitter @jemygatdul­a
JEMY GATDULA read internatio­nal law at the University of Cambridge. He is the dean of the Institute of Law of the University of Asia and the Pacific, and is a Philippine Judicial Academy lecturer for constituti­onal philosophy and jurisprude­nce. https://www.facebook.com/ jigatdula/ Twitter @jemygatdul­a

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