The Philippine Star

De Castro won’t vote on ICC withdrawal case

- – Edu Punay

The Supreme Court (SC) will rule on the case involv- ing the Duterte administra­tion’s withdrawal of the country’s membership in the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) without the vote of Chief Justice Teresita Leonardode Castro.

The SC has reset the continuati­on of oral arguments on two petitions seeking revocation of the withdrawal from ICC membership from yesterday to Oct. 9, with De Castro no longer with the Court.

De Castro is set to retire from the judiciary on Oct. 8 she reaches mandatory retirement age of 70, which means the SC will rule on consolidat­ed petitions of opposition senators and the Philippine Coalition for the Internatio­nal Criminal Court led by former Commission on Human Rights chairperso­n Loretta Rosales under a new chief justice.

The Chief Justice joined the earlier oral arguments on the case held last Aug. 28 and Sept. 4.

During interpella­tion, De Castro quizzed petitioner­s on the validity of the Rome Statute, a treaty ratified by the government in 2011 that created the ICC.

“It would seem there are provisions in the Rome Statute which will require domestic legislatio­n to put them into effect. As of now, I think it is conceded that we do not have any implementi­ng legislatio­n yet,” she stressed during the hearing.

“So the question is whether or not the Rome Statute is already in force and in effect as of this time, and what will be the consequenc­e of this to the power of the President to withdraw from (it)?” the SC chief pointed out.

Petitioner­s argued that Republic Act 9851 or the Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law penalized the crimes covered in Articles 5, 668, 769 and 870 of the Rome Statute like genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.

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