Philippine Daily Inquirer

DU30: I’LL LISTEN ONLY TO PNP, AFP ON ML

‘Until the police and the Armed Forces say the Philippine­s is safe, this martial law will continue. I will not listen to others. The Supreme Court justices, the congressme­n, they are not here’

- STORY BY AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

JOLO, SULU— President Duterte has said he will ignore the Supreme Court and Congress as he enforces martial law in Mindanao, despite the Constituti­on giving them oversight.

Mr. Duterte on Tuesday imposed martial law in Mindanao, home to 20 million people, following deadly clashes in Marawi City between government forces and terrorists linked to the Islamic State (IS) group.

“Until the police and the Armed Forces say the Philippine­s is safe, this martial law will continue. I will not listen to others. The Supreme Court justices, the congressme­n, they are not here,” the President told soldiers here on Saturday.

“Are they the ones dying from loss of blood, bleeding, hemorrhagi­ng because there is no help, no reinforcem­ent? They’re not,” he added.

Constituti­onal limits

The 1987 Constituti­on imposes limits on martial law to prevent a repeat of the abuses carried out under the regime of dictator Ferdinand Marcos, who was deposed in the 1986 Edsa People Power Revolution.

The Constituti­on requires Congress to approve the President’s declaratio­n of martial law and limits military rule to 60 days.

If the President wants to extend the duration of martial law, he or she must again get congressio­nal endorsemen­t.

The Supreme Court can also review the declaratio­n of martial law.

“The Supreme Court will say they will examine the factual (basis). Why, I don’t know. They are not soldiers. They do not know what is happening on the ground,” Mr. Duterte said.

A day after declaring martial law, Mr. Duterte described the nine years of military rule under Marcos as “very good,” and said his would be similar.

“During martial law, your commanders, you, you can arrest any person, search any house. There is no more warrant needed,” the President told troops on Friday.

Mr. Duterte’s comments contradict­ed a government statement released on Saturday to explain martial law.

“Warrants of arrest or search warrants should be issued,” the statement from the government’s informatio­n agency said. “No person may be arrested and detained without orders coming from these civil courts.”

Mr. Duterte has overwhelmi­ng support in Congress, which is widely expected this week to endorse his declaratio­n of martial law.

But Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno on Friday ex- pressed concerns about martial law.

Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman on Sunday warned of a “constituti­onal controvers­y” should the leaders of the House of Representa­tives and the Senate insisted that they did not need to hold a joint session to review the martial law declaratio­n in Mindanao.

Validate ML

According to the opposition lawmaker, only a joint session would “validate” the position of each member of Congress on whether he or she votes for the acceptance of the President’s martial law proclamati­on.

“One member, one vote,” Lagman said over dzBB, insisting that it should be Congress “voting jointly.”

“This can be brought before the Supreme Court. That’s a political question but it is a constituti­onal controvers­y. I think the Supreme Court can hear this,” Lagman said.

Lagman insisted that the failure of Congress to sit in a joint session would be a violation of the Constituti­on.

House Majority Leader Rodolfo Fariñas Jr. said the House would convene into a committee of the whole to allow lawmakers to tackle Proclamati­on No. 216 on Wednesday.

Fariñas said the committee would consider the President’s report on his action and would decide whether it would “move for the revocation of the proclamati­on.”

“The position of each legislator may be expressed in the sessions of the [House of Representa­tives] and the Senate when they separately consider the report of the President. If either House finds that there is no need to revoke the martial law proclamati­on of the President, a joint session may not happen,” he added.

The Executive Department and security officials will brief the House on the current security situation and why the President was compelled to declare martial law.

The Senate will have its briefing today.

Lagman also said that the discussion of the President’s report on Wednesday should not be in executive session, and the public and the media should be allowed to listen.

Fariñas earlier said the briefing and discussion would be done in executive session as the report could contain sensitive informatio­n.

According to Lagman, it is not a committee of the whole that the Constituti­on directs Congress to convene, but a joint session.

“If anyone would file a petition challengin­g the factual basis of the declaratio­n of martial law, because the Supreme Court has jurisdicti­on over this, it can include the issue of derelictio­n of duty of the leaders of the two Houses of Congress,” Lagman said.

 ?? —MALACAÑANG­PHOTO ?? CONDOLENCE President Duterte gives words of comfort to the family of Cpl. Alawi Julhari, whowas killed in an ambush by Abu Sayyaf bandits, during his visit on Saturday at Camp Teodulfo Bautista Station Hospital in Jolo.
—MALACAÑANG­PHOTO CONDOLENCE President Duterte gives words of comfort to the family of Cpl. Alawi Julhari, whowas killed in an ambush by Abu Sayyaf bandits, during his visit on Saturday at Camp Teodulfo Bautista Station Hospital in Jolo.
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