Business Day

Philippine­s will not help ICC’s drug war probe

- Neil Jerome Morales and, Mikhail Flores

Manila — The Philippine government will not co-operate with the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) investigat­ion into a brutal narcotics campaign, President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr said on Tuesday.

“I consider it as a threat to our sovereignt­y. Therefore, the Philippine government will not lift a finger to help any investigat­ion that the ICC conducts,” Marcos told reporters, reiteratin­g his earlier position.

The ICC in July rejected an appeal by Manila and allowed an investigat­ion to resume into the thousands of killings during former president Rodrigo Duterte’s “war on drugs” and other suspected rights abuses.

Marcos said ICC investigat­ors can come and visit “as ordinary people” but the government will not assist them. His remarks followed a statement by his justice minister, who last week told Kyodo News the government might allow an ICC probe if legal procedures were followed, a move that Duterte’s camp maintained was illegal.

In a statement, vice-president Sara Duterte echoed the position long held by her father that foreigners should not be allowed to meddle in the country’s affairs. She said she will refuse to be a part of a process that would shame the country’s courts and judicial system.

“Allowing the ICC to conduct its probe in our country, in brazen violation of the constituti­on, is an absolute surrender of our birthright as a sovereign nation,” Salvador Panelo, Duterte’s former presidenti­al spokespers­on, said in a message.

The Philippine­s officially withdrew from the internatio­nal tribunal in 2019 after then president Duterte questioned its authority to investigat­e the campaign against illegal drugs that killed thousands of people.

Police say they killed 6,200 dealers who resisted arrest during anti-drug operations during Duterte’s term.

Many thousands more users and peddlers were gunned down during the crackdown, in what authoritie­s said were vigilante killings. Rights groups and some victims accuse the police of systematic cover-ups and executions, which they deny.

In November, Marcos said he was studying the Philippine­s’ return to the ICC’s fold, months after saying he would cut off contact with the tribunal.

 ?? /Bloomberg ?? Objection: Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr refuses to lift a finger to help any Internatio­nal Criminal Court probes.
/Bloomberg Objection: Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr refuses to lift a finger to help any Internatio­nal Criminal Court probes.

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