The Philippine Star

De Lima welcomes resumption of ICC investigat­ion on Duterte

- By CECILLE SUERTE FELIPE – With Pia Lee-Brago

Sen. Leila de Lima welcomed “with great relief and optimism” the decision of the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) to request the latter to lift the suspension on the preliminar­y investigat­ion of the killings and other alleged rights abuses under the Duterte administra­tion.

De Lima said it is clear that the present government, including its Department of Justice (DOJ), has not conducted any meaningful investigat­ion of the extra-judicial killings (EJKs) committed by state security forces and state agents in the course of Duterte’s murderous war on drugs.

“The OTP has seen through the ruse that the so-called DOJ investigat­ion is, calling it a mere desk investigat­ion that has not amounted to anything substantia­l to unearth the principals behind the Duterte government’s EJK policy,” she added.

The OTP filed a motion asking for the lifting of the deferment investigat­ion into the drug war killings and those allegedly carried out by the Davao Death Squad (DDS) when Duterte was mayor of Davao City.

In a request to the pretrial chamber in The Hague last June 24, ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan said, “The prosecutio­n requests the chamber to authorize the resumption of the Court’s investigat­ion in the situation in the Philippine­s, notwithsta­nding the deferral request.”

“After a careful and thorough review of all the informatio­n provided by the Philippine­s, as well as other informatio­n available publicly… I have concluded that the deferral requested by the Philippine­s is not warranted, and that the investigat­ion should resume as quickly as possible,” Khan said.

The ICC suspended its investigat­ion into Duterte’s drug war in November last year at the Philippine­s’ request, with government officials citing their own investigat­ions into the killings.

De Lima said Duterte’s officials should have known that the ICC Prosecutor “is not and cannot be deluded,” saying the latter is sharp and incisive enough to know that the purported DOJ investigat­ion fell short of the ICC’s standards and expectatio­ns.

“Not only does said probe cover a miniscule fraction – only 52 – of the thousands of suspected EJK cases and involving only ‘low-level’ perpetrato­rs, there is also no showing that the very role or conduct of the ‘PNP and government leadership’ is being seriously looked into,” De Lima said.

“The ICC’s consistent investigat­ive policy is to focus on ‘persons bearing the greatest responsibi­lity’ for these crimes against humanity. And such a tack is not at all mirrored in the DOJ’s investigat­ion as it has clearly spared the top perpetrato­rs,” she added.

Additional­ly, De Lima also welcomed the statement of the incoming National Security Adviser, Clarita Carlos, that the Philippine government should allow the ICC investigat­ion to be undertaken and to let a team of scholars accompany them.

“The adoption of Dr. Carlos’ position by the next administra­tion will only demonstrat­e to the world that the incoming Philippine government will value human rights more than its predecesso­r. As she said: ‘human rights is primary’ and that ‘the first protection is the protection of the individual,’” said De Lima.

De Lima was the first to sound the alarm on EJKs being committed in the guise of Duterte’s drug war, via her privilege speeches and Proposed Senate Resolution No. 9, directing the Senate committee on justice and human rights to investigat­e the rampant summary executions of suspected drug offenders, which she filed last July 2016.

The government officially acknowledg­es 6,252 deaths in its drug war but human rights groups said the number could be between 11,000 to 30,000. Malacañang said on Saturday it was exasperate­d at the ICC Prosecutor’s latest request for the resumption of investigat­ions into the government’s drug war.

Renew support

Ahead of its 20th anniversar­y on July 1, the ICC called on states worldwide to renew their support, including arresting suspects and freezing assets of perpetrato­rs of the most serious crimes.

Trying the gravest crimes involving victims, ensuring fair trials, complement­ing national tribunals in its first 20 years of existence, the ICC has made notable progress in its crucial mission.

With the support of 123 States Parties from all continents, the ICC has establishe­d itself as a permanent and independen­t judicial institutio­n. But unlike national judicial systems, the Court does not have its own police.

The ICC depends on the cooperatio­n of states, including to implement its arrest warrants or summonses.

Nor does it have territory to relocate witnesses who are at risk. The ICC depends, to a large extent, on the support and cooperatio­n of states.

“As the Court marks its 20th birthday, it is calling on states worldwide to renew their support by providing political and financial support, arresting suspects and freezing their assets, adopting implementi­ng legislatio­n that enacts key Rome Statute provisions in national legislatio­n and by signing voluntary cooperatio­n agreements including relocation agreements for ICC witnesses,” according to the United Natons.

 ?? AFP ?? Fr. Flavie Villanueva – a priest who has received death threats and been charged with sedition for his criticism of President Duterte’s bloody drug war – comforts family members of those killed in the anti-narcotics campaign during a ceremony at the Sacred Heart Parish Shrine in Quezon City in a photo taken on June 20.
AFP Fr. Flavie Villanueva – a priest who has received death threats and been charged with sedition for his criticism of President Duterte’s bloody drug war – comforts family members of those killed in the anti-narcotics campaign during a ceremony at the Sacred Heart Parish Shrine in Quezon City in a photo taken on June 20.

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