The Philippine Star

Justice for drug war victims up to judiciary – BBM

- By ALEXIS ROMERO

MELBOURNE – It would be up to the Philippine police and judiciary to give justice to those who were killed during the previous administra­tion’s drug war, President Marcos said, as he maintained that he won’t support the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC)’s probe on the controvers­ial campaign.

Marcos said inviting the ICC to the Philippine­s to investigat­e former president Rodrigo Duterte’s drug war is a “political move” and that “we do not play politics with jurisdicti­on and sovereignt­y.”

“The position that we’ve taken is that we do not recognize the jurisdicti­on of the ICC. We view it as a threat to sovereignt­y, simply because the ICC was formed to conduct, to provide justice to areas where there is no judiciary, where there is no court system, where there is no police, where there is no peace and order and that’s not the Philippine­s,” the President said in an interview with ABC News aired last Monday.

“And therefore, I don’t think that their investigat­ions or their concerns apply to the Philippine­s,” he added.

Asked who would provide justice to those who were killed in the drug war, Marcos said the Philippine­s has a “functionin­g” police force and judiciary and “it is their responsibi­lity to take care of that.”

“We have made a great deal of progress in that regard where many policemen have already been removed from service because they’ve been found to be liable, cases have been filed. Many are already in jail,” Marcos said.

“What we try to do is to now go back to the families of those and perhaps, see what we can do to make things right for them. As long as it can be shown, of course, that they were not actually involved in the drug trade,” he added.

According to Marcos, his administra­tion is not interested in small-time addicts who should be taken to the hospital or undergo rehabilita­tion.

“We don’t (shoot them). We have taken enforcemen­t as far as we can, and it only gets you so far,” he said.

Duterte is facing a crimes against humanity complaint over his brutal war on narcotics, which resulted in the death of more than 6,000 drug suspects.

In 2021, a pre-trial chamber of the ICC permitted an investigat­ion into the drug crackdown, saying the legal element of the crime against humanity of murder under the Rome Statute – the treaty that created the tribunal – has been satisfied.

The Philippine­s ratified the Rome Statute in 2011 but Duterte withdrew the country from the agreement in 2018 in response to the ICC’s decision to conduct a preliminar­y examinatio­n of his anti-drug campaign.

The ICC has insisted that the Philippine­s still has the obligation to cooperate with a probe despite the withdrawal.

Duterte has insisted that the ICC has no jurisdicti­on over him and that he would only face allegation­s before a local court.

Despite Marcos’ refusal to recognize ICC’s jurisdicti­on, a nationwide poll conducted by OCTA Research last December suggested that 55 percent of adult Filipinos are in favor of the government cooperatin­g with the tribunal on its investigat­ion on the drug war.

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