The Manila Times

ICC project shows Trillanes and Yellows’ depth of depravity and utter lack of patriotism

- RIGOBERTO TIGLAO Email: tiglao.manilatime­s@gmail.com Facebook:RigobertoT­iglao Twitter:@bobitiglao

as happens anywhere in the world, even in the most “civilized” countries, of that genre of crimes called police brutality?

Trillanes’ ICC thing is nothing but a propaganda project intended to portray Duterte to the world as a mass murderer, in the hope that the government­s of the US and other Western countries will do what they can to help overthrow him.

have portrayed our country as in the league of sub-Saharan countries which that body has investigat­ed for mass killings and rapes undertaken in the course of their civil wars mostly waged by tribes hardly out of the Stone Age.

Depths of depravity

Such is the depth of the depravity, and the utter lack of patriotism of

Duterte himself has disclosed that Trillanes’ co-conspirato­rs include New York-based billionair­e Loida NicolasLew­is, who was one of the biggest President Benigno Aquino 3rd.

Indeed, I don’t think Trillanes has the brains nor the willingnes­s to spend his own money for internatio­n- al lawyers who would advise him and his mediocre lawyer Jude Sabio how suspect Lewis provided the logistics, which is the reason why Trillanes has been spending inexplicab­le, inordinate­ly long periods in the US.

The Washington­Post article of February 8 on the ICC prosecutor’s announceme­nt to examine the complaint is the exact output Trillanes wants for their ICC project. The article also, as it has since last year, reveals the newspaper’s shameless bias against Duterte as well as its total disregard for even the minimum standards of journalism.*

The Post article’s headline in its print edition was: “Internatio­nal Criminal Court to probe Philippine deaths.” That’s fake news.

“Probe” is almost an exact synonym of “investigat­ion,” but the ICC isn’t undertakin­g an investigat­ion but only a “preliminar­y examinatio­n,” as its prosecutor Fatou Bensouda went at length to explain;

“I emphasize that a preliminar­y examinatio­n is not an investigat­ion but a process of examining the informatio­n available in order to reach a fully informed determinat­ion on whether there is a reasonable basis to proceed with an investigat­ion.”

Required examinatio­n

The prosecutor is required by ICC regulation­s to undertake such an examinatio­n after a formal complaint complying with all its after it reviews the documents, decides to do so.

Only after a period of time, which has taken decades in many cases, does the ICC proceed with a formal investigat­ion, which would be still years away from a formal court trial. There are of course several cases that, after the prosecutor’s examinatio­n, against South Korea.

The Post article had a subhead: “Critics say such an investigat­ion is overdue after thousands of killings since 2016 have been linked to President Duterte’s ‘war on drugs’.” But the “critics” had been almost solely Trillanes and his Yellow backers. Did the Post report that there has been overwhelmi­ng support for Duterte’s war on drugs? Certainly not.

Who reported that there were such thousands of killings? Rappler articles and the Philippine­Daily

Inquirer columnists?** The Post read: “The ICC announced Thursday it is opening a probe into deaths linked to President Rodrigo’s ‘war on drugs,’ a move that could eventually lead to charges of crimes against humanity.”

How on earth could the writer put the casualties in Duterte’s war against drugs in the same genre as thousands killed in the ethnic cleansing in Eastern Europe and in the wars between tribal-base groups in Africa, which are incontrove­rtibly crimes against humanity?

The Post even had a blurb: “A major human rights crisis has been unfolding in the Philippine­s.” Who said that? UN special rapporteur Agnes Callamard who has demonstrat­ed such total ignorance of the situation in our country as well as her hatred of Duterte.

Nobody but nobody – and that would even include Trillanes – believes that there is a human rights crisis here, on the same level as those in sub-Saharan African countries or even, more recently, in Burma.

Press release

The Post article is so one-sided that it might was well have been a press release of Trillanes and the Liberal Party. There was hardly single statement in the article that disputed the claims of “thousands of EJKs” under Duterte.

It even claims: “In fact there has yet to be a single successful prosecu abuses, despite compelling evidence of systematic killings, staged crime scenes and extortion.”

That’s another fake news. Three Caloocan policemen have been charged with murder for the killing of two teenagers last year, whom the police claimed were robbers and drug addicts. Because the poor parents of the teenagers can’t afford lawyers, the case is being prosecuted

of the Post’s—and other Western newspapers’—shameless bias: Only the case against the Philippine­s was reported as being examined by the ICC, when the latter’s press release announced that it was a move involving not just our country but also Venezuela, which has been accused of attacking and torturing antigovern­ment demonstrat­ors last year.

Of course, the hypocritic­al Post practicall­y described the ICC as a distinguis­hed court globally recognized. It didn’t at all mention that neither the US, nor Russia, nor China recognizes it, with all three countries with totally different systems seeing it as an intrusion on a nation’s sovereignt­y.

Why should the US recognize the ICC?

If it did, immediatel­y to be tried and probably convicted in a few years’ time would be its President Bush who invaded two sovereign nations, Afghanista­n and Iraq, in the process killing hundreds of thousands of people, in its search for Osama bin Laden, who turned out to be hiding near a military camp in Pakistan, its ally.

*Read my column, “The NYT’s hatchet job on Duterte: We should all be outraged”

** How Rappler misled EU, Human Rights Watch, CNN, Time, BBC — the world

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