The Freeman

Sereno’s ouster wanes rule of law – int’l jurists

- (Philstar.com)

MANILA — The removal of Maria Lourdes Sereno as the country's chief justice at the hands of her colleagues in the Supreme Court has a hand in the “overall deteriorat­ion” of the rule of law in the Philippine­s, the Internatio­nal Commission of Jurists said.

In a statement, the legal non-government­al organizati­on stressed that the granting of a landmark quo warranto petition against Sereno adds to the notion that government bodies are unable or unwilling to protect the rule of law and will attack the institutio­ns that protect it.

“Preserving the independen­ce of the judiciary in the Philippine­s is crucial at a time when the government is credibly alleged to have been engaged in widespread and systematic human rights violations, amounting to crimes under internatio­nal law,” Frederick Rawski, ICJ Asia Pacific Director, said.

The ICJ warned that the May 11 decision could open the floodgates to similar attacks, not only against members of the court but also to members of other bodies such as the Commission on Human Rights.

It, moreover, called on the Supreme Court to consider Sereno's motion for reconsider­ation filed Wednesday “given the perception of political interferen­ce and the potential impact of this case on the credibilit­y of the judiciary as a whole.”

In her 205-page appeal, Sereno listed down some of the “constituti­onal and legal rules and principles and settled judicial precedents” that the historic ruling ignored when it granted Solicitor General Jose Calida's petition.

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