The Philippine Star

Int’l Court sets review of Duterte’s drug war

The Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) is set to start a “preliminar­y examinatio­n” of killings tied to the Duterte administra­tion’s war on drugs – a move welcomed by Malacañang, which said the President’s detractors would fail.

- By ALEXIS ROMERO

The action stemmed from communicat­ion filed last year by Jude Sabio, lawyer of Edgar Matobato, who claims to be a former member of a death squad allegedly organized by Duterte in Davao City where he was mayor for 23 years.

Sabio is asking the ICC to probe Duterte and other officials and indict them for crimes against humanity for what he described as the “mass murder” of drug sus- pects.

He claimed that the death squad in Davao City killed about 1,400 people while the current anti-drug war has left about 7,000 persons dead.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque downplayed the ICC’s move, which he himself disclosed yesterday, saying the claim that Duterte had committed crimes against humanity lacked merit.

“No one should claim victory because it is only in the stage of preliminar­y examinatio­n,” Roque said.

“As a sovereign state, the Philippine­s has the inherent responsibi­lity to protect its current and future generation­s by effectivel­y addressing threats to the safety and well-being of its citizens such as the proliferat­ion of illegal drugs. Because the war against drugs is a lawful, legitimate police operation, it cannot be characteri­zed as an attack against civilian population­s,” he added.

Roque, a former professor of internatio­nal law, explained that preliminar­y examinatio­n is different from preliminar­y investigat­ion. A preliminar­y examinatio­n seeks to determine if there is reasonable basis to proceed to a preliminar­y investigat­ion.

More than 19,000 “homicide” cases have been recorded by police since Duterte began his war on drugs in 2016. Only about 2,000 of the cases were drugrelate­d, according to officials.

The Philippine National Police has conducted more than 64,000 anti-drug operations, which resulted in the arrest of more than 102,000 drug personalit­ies.

Roque said Duterte welcomed the preliminar­y examinatio­n because he is “sick and tired” of being accused of committing crimes against humanity. He claimed the ICC has no jurisdicti­on over the drug war because Philippine courts are still functionin­g.

“This is an opportunit­y for him to prove that this is not subject to the court’s jurisdicti­on because of both complement­arity that domestic courts and the fact that we have a domestic internatio­nal humanitari­an law statute in our jurisdicti­on, are reasons enough for the Court not to exercise jurisdicti­on,” Roque said.

“After a preliminar­y investigat­ion, the prosecutor would have to go to the pretrial chamber of the Court for confirmati­on of charges before the charges can even be filed in the court,” the spokesman said.

Roque claimed the allegation­s against Duterte are part of a “concerted public relations initiative” by “domestic enemies of the state.”

“Obviously this is intended to embarrass the President, but the President is a lawyer, he knows what the procedures are, they will fail. The President has said that if need be he will argue his case personally before the Internatio­nal Criminal Court,” Roque said.

“He said he wants to be in court and put the prosecutor on the stand to ask: who prodded you to proceed to preliminar­y examinatio­n? Because it is the suspicion of the President that it is of course the domestic enemies of the state behind this,” Roque pointed out.

He maintained that Sabio, Matobato and opposition lawmakers Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV and Magdalo Rep. Gary Alejano are just wasting the resources of the ICC as their efforts are doomed to fail. “In our case, they will not go beyond preliminar­y examinatio­n,” Roque said.

In June 2017, Trillanes and Alejano filed a supplement­al complaint before the ICC, where they affirmed and provided updates to the complaint filed by Sabio.

“I am confident that, based on my communicat­ion, as well as that of Sen. Trillanes’ and Rep. Alejano’s, we will hurdle this first big step, and hopefully a warrant of arrest will be issued soon by the ICC against Duterte and his cohorts,” Sabio said in a statement.

“His system of death squad killings, which started through the Davao Death Squad and was continued on a national scale through the war on drugs, will now be investigat­ed by the ICC and justice will be done,” Sabio added.

Not above the law

Reacting to the developmen­t, Trillanes said the preliminar­y examinatio­n being readied by the ICC is a “first step for the families’ quest for justice” for their slain loved ones. The ICC move “should jolt Duterte into realizing that he is not above the law,” Trillanes said.

Alejano said he hopes the ICC examinatio­n “will be allowed to carry on unhindered and with full cooperatio­n from concerned authoritie­s, organizati­ons and personalit­ies.”

He stressed that President Duterte and those who perpetuate and defend his alleged policy of killing should be held accountabl­e.

“This initial step of the ICC is also the first step towards bringing justice to the families and all the victims of the war on drugs. The ICC stepping in is a ray of hope amid the compromise­d rule of law under this administra­tion,” he said.

Akbayan party-list Rep. Tom Villarin said even “enablers” of extrajudic­ial killings including Roque should be made to account for the anti-drug deaths.

He said a possible case against Duterte “will be damning and damaging to his administra­tion in the eyes of our people and the internatio­nal community.”

“I am hopeful that people will now realize the truth and demand accountabi­lity from him with all constituti­onal options available,” he added.

Leftist party-list group Kabataan said the ICC probe “is a challenge for both domestic and other internatio­nal organizati­ons to actively participat­e and to lend their findings for a thorough and objective investigat­ion.”

“This is, however, reflective of the dismal state of our justice system. 13,000 deaths and still counting, yet the Duterte administra­tion remains determined in pursuing the drug war – to the point of re-launching it three times with revised but still problemati­c guidelines,” it said.

“We hope that the ICC will welcome the investigat­ion not only of drug-related killings but also other blatant state-sponsored human rights violations that have assisted and tolerated the prevailing culture of impunity,” the group said.

The Commission on Human Rights (CHR), for its part, urged the Duterte administra­tion to cooperate with the ICC.

“The government, as a party to the Rome Statute, is duty bound to fully cooperate with the ICC,” CHR chairman Chito Gascon said, referring to the 1998 treaty that establishe­d the ICC. He admitted they have not received yet official communicat­ion from the ICC.

“In particular, we hope the authoritie­s of our police and justice department will provide all relevant informatio­n for the successful conduct of its preliminar­y examinatio­n,” he added.

 ?? MICHAEL VARCAS ?? Photo shows the remaining rice supply at a National Food Authority warehouse in Quezon City yesterday.
MICHAEL VARCAS Photo shows the remaining rice supply at a National Food Authority warehouse in Quezon City yesterday.

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